I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.
I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.
I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unf
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Design Help [7:15907]
I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.
I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.
I want to
From: Steve Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:10 PM
To: Ole Drews Jensen; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Design Help [7:15907]
Hey Ole, we use all 1720s at the lower end clients. The VPN features are
only there if the right IOS is there. The 2600 should be fine. Lo
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Design Help [7:15907]
I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys
and
girls out there.
I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to
Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.
I want
Depending on how many nodes, manageability wise, pick one router, this maybe
overkill for some sites, but in the long run having one model makes life
easier.
my 2 cent
At 02:42 PM 8/13/01 -0400, Ole Drews Jensen wrote:
>I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys a
re (probably not, but hey).
Symon
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 13 August 2001 20:28
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Design Help [7:15907]
The first question is how many locations are we talking about. I would
prefer the 1720 routers. Thes
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