On Wed, 2 Oct 2002, James Earl wrote: > > I'm in a similar position, but on a smaller scale. I'm trying to figure > out where these Switched Gateway/Routers/Firewall/VPN devices that are > coming on the market fit in, and where it is better to use our favorite > FreeBSD machine to do the work? Would I be wrong in assuming these little > hardware devices are faster at the job than a FreeBSD machine?
In my opinion, unless a) you have a corporate policy which says what to deploy or b) you have a very large scale project which needs "Big Iron" or c) you need dedicated hardware/software only available for the "hardware solution" (ie EIGRP, or some very specialized WAN card) there is no reason to install a dedicated "hardware solution" instead of a BSD box. They may be atractive in the beginning, but you need to factor the costs and availability of support, software licences/updates, replacement parts and the like. Have you ever asked how much an extra 100BT card for a Cisco costs? :) One of the main advantages of the BSD/Linux solution is the hardware availability. If a NIC blows, you can get another one in less than one hour for less than $80. You don't need a dedicated (Cisco|Nokia|whoever) hardware. Fer > > James > > To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message > To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message