yeah a pm3 supports 2 pri t1s, giving a total of 46 usable lines per box..
Bri
- Original Message -
From: "Jeff Gercken"
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 8:48 PM
Subject: Re: Dial in/Dial Out modem bank [7:17929]
> You'd be better off with a PRI and a c
Well, I don't know if it is trippy or not, but take it out for
a test drive and see if it does what you need. AFAIK, it is no
longer supported by Cisco (watch wrap):
http://www.west-
point.org/users/usma1983/40768/chesinc/Dout354.exe
You will obviously need a properly configured access server
August 30, 2001 7:47 PM
Subject: Re: Dial in/Dial Out modem bank [7:17929]
> Brian,
>
> I was re-reading this thread, and I just caught what you were getting at
> (i.e. users connected to the network while having modem access from their
> PC) (it's been a long day =)
>
&g
You'd be better off with a PRI and a channalized T1 card & digital modem
card. You could then use a 3600. If you go with the async ports and modems
you won't be able to get the 56K(53K) compression. The PRI should be
cheaper than all those analog lines anyhow. Hunt around on ebay. There are
l
Brian,
I was re-reading this thread, and I just caught what you were getting at
(i.e. users connected to the network while having modem access from their
PC) (it's been a long day =)
That's why I replied with " Why's that so horrible? Sometimes it's the
only solution.."
I totally see
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 6:44 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Dial in/Dial Out modem bank [7:17929]
>
>
> You actually allow users to dial out from their desktops, while connected
> to a lan??
>
> The horror of it..
>
>
ailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 6:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Dial in/Dial Out modem bank [7:17929]
You actually allow users to dial out from their desktops, while connected
to a lan??
The horror of it..
Brian "Sonic" Whalen
Success = Preparation + Oppor
Agreed that the last thing you want is a bunch of "back door" modems..
However, incoming access to them is locked down via Radius, and outgoing
access is controlled via Radius and locked down software on the desktop...
Mike W.
"Tony Medeiros" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROT
support problem
becomes
> the absolutely clueless users, and they're always a problem anyway, so
> that's a wash. ;-)
>
> Enterprise networking...what a concept!
>
> -e-
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Brian Whalen"
> To:
> Sent: Thursd
Yeah, And all the money people spend on firewalls and such.
Nothing like a bunch of "back door" modems to worry about too. That's why
security is not my favorite thing. It's half politics.
Your right Brian, the horror.
Tony M.
#6172
> You actually allow users to dial out from their desktops,
es
> the absolutely clueless users, and they're always a problem anyway, so
> that's a wash. ;-)
>
> Enterprise networking...what a concept!
>
> -e-
>
> - Original Message -----
> From: "Brian Whalen"
> To:
> Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001
lem becomes
the absolutely clueless users, and they're always a problem anyway, so
that's a wash. ;-)
Enterprise networking...what a concept!
-e-
- Original Message -
From: "Brian Whalen"
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 3:43 PM
Subject: RE: Dial in/Dial Out modem ba
Why's that so horrible? Sometimes it's the only solution..
Mike W.
"Brian Whalen" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> You actually allow users to dial out from their desktops, while connected
> to a lan??
>
> The horror of it..
>
> Brian "Sonic" Whalen
> S
You actually allow users to dial out from their desktops, while connected
to a lan??
The horror of it..
Brian "Sonic" Whalen
Success = Preparation + Opportunity
On Thu, 30 Aug 2001, Jim Dixon wrote:
> Cisco AS5300 should handled your needs nicely.
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Mike
Mike,
I'm sure you could use a 26xx to do what you want. Just yesterday I put
this system into place:
Cisco 3640 (you could easily use 3620 as well)
1 - Dual-Channelized T1 with CSU module
2 - Digital Modem module with 24 modems each
We run two ISDN-PRI connections to the T1 controllers, and c
I don't have one that I recommend.
I have found that there are a few out there that claim to do the
desktop-modem-share task though.
They are: (in no particular order)
Stomper32
www.pflug.de/stompere.html
ModemShare by Artisoft
www.hallogram.com/modemshare/index.html
DialoutServer by Tactical S
Jim,
What software do you recommend for the user to use on his desktop to access
the AS5300 for dialing out. On our current platform we use a product called
ComIP.
thanks
Mike
>>> Jim Dixon 08/30/01 04:18PM >>>
Cisco AS5300 should handled your needs nicely.
-Original Message-
From:
Cisco AS5300 should handled your needs nicely.
-Original Message-
From: Mike Momb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 2:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Dial in/Dial Out modem bank [7:17929]
To all you cisco wizards,
What Cisco product would you recommend fo
a 2610 with a NM-16A would do the trick. A cheaper alternative would
be a 2511 but you would have to connect 16 external modems to the async
ports.
Dave
Mike Momb wrote:
>
> To all you cisco wizards,
>
> What Cisco product would you recommend for dial in/dial out capability on a
> LAN. We
I would look at VPN solutions such as the VPN3000 and skip the dial in
altogether... Let em dial to their isp and then VPN... Course if you don't
have a internet connection to the company this could be a problem...
Dennis
""Mike Momb"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED
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