I as well have to agree with all the posts so far. The switching and routing products have never failed us and the Netsight suite of tools is in one word great.
We went through a similar process a few years ago, and Enterasys won. I was a little leery at first as I had never heard of the product before then, but have never regretted the decision since. We installed in 26 schools across multiple WAN styles and it just works. Hope this helps. Jeff enterasys@listserv.unc.edu on Thursday, April 07, 2011 at 8:40 AM -0600 wrote: >I agree wholeheartedly with all these posts but let's not forget about price. >You can't beat it. Period. > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Rockie Lam" <r...@torstar.ca> >To: "Enterasys Customer Mailing List" <enterasys@listserv.unc.edu> >Sent: Monday, April 4, 2011 8:50:54 AM >Subject: RE: [enterasys] Enterasys vs Cisco, Brocade and Juniper > >Hi Charlie, > >Like all previous replies, Netsight is one of our top tools. Try going a >day without using Compass/NAC and time yourself? >Maybe Inventory can be visited weekly but these are all time saver >products and excellent troubleshooting tools. Oneview looks like another >good product in the making. > >Regards, >Rockie Lam | Technical Consultant | Torstar Group IT Supporting >Metroland & Star Media Group | b: (416) 869-4878 | m: (416) 580-4878 > >-----Original Message----- >From: Read, Simon [mailto:simon.r...@nashua-communications.com] >Sent: April 4, 2011 8:42 AM >To: Enterasys Customer Mailing List >Subject: RE:[enterasys] Enterasys vs Cisco, Brocade and Juniper > >Hi Charlie, > >If you have any area's on your Campus which require frequent >configuration changes, the NetSight Policy Command Console, (PCC), >(bundled with NetSight Policy Manager), is beautiful in its simplicity. > >Let the Network Admins set PCC up and from then on non-technical staff >can make configuration changes on just their own classroom switches. >This all done through a web interface at the touch of a button. >Non-techies get no access to the switch itself. This allows Trainers to >change VLAN and Policy configurations as classroom requirements change. >Perhaps for changing course's, allow/deny/rate limit certain protocols, >(e.g. HTTP) or when it's time for the students to access the exam >server. > >We have PCC running at a number of Training Centres and have PoC'd to >potential customers who need to make frequent configuration changes. >Always had very positive feedback. > > >Kind regards, > >Simon Read >Service Engineer > >Nashua Communications (Pty) Ltd. >Unit 10 Growthpoint Business Park, >No 2 Tonnetti Street, Midrand, 1685 >M: +27 84 676 9200 >Fax: +27100012500 >simon.r...@nashua-communications.com >www.nashua-communications.com > > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Borel, Reese [mailto:rbo...@ppg.com] >Sent: 04 April 2011 02:09 PM >To: Enterasys Customer Mailing List >Subject: RE:[enterasys] Enterasys vs Cisco, Brocade and Juniper > >Just like all others that replied. We're using LC03's on 62.5MMF in our >entire facility (most pushing the 2K limits). No problems to report. > >Mike put it best. Netsight is the best kept secret in the industry and >only getting better with each release. > >Being a college it seems to me the ability to do Policy should make your >decision for you. There are amazing things you can do with Policy for >your computer labs, faculty, students, etc... > >Hope this helps your decision (not that any of us in THIS mailing list >are biased...), >Reese > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Charlie Prothero [mailto:charlie.proth...@keystone.edu] >Sent: Sunday, April 03, 2011 7:30 PM >To: Enterasys Customer Mailing List >Subject: [enterasys] Enterasys vs Cisco, Brocade and Juniper > >Greetings, Enterasys gurus! I work for a small private college (limited >resources, lots of needs) in northeastern PA. Our network consists of >hundreds of ports across 30 mostly small buildings, one big Layer 2 VLAN >(because we never got around to segmenting it), and edge switches that >are well past their prime. The system has served us well, but it's time >for a forklift upgrade, edge to core. > >We went through an RFP process, accepting proposals for Brocade, Cisco, >Enterasys and Juniper. All four proposals have merit, so the decision >process is proving difficult. > >Our campus is in a rural area, with lots of space between the buildings, >and much of our fiber plant is older multimode. We would like each >building to have a gig connection back to the data center. However some >of the buildings are beyond the typical 500 meter distance limit for gig >over multimode. The multimode daisy-chains through some buildings that >now have singlemode; so Brocade, Cisco and Juniper have proposed feeding >the multimode buildings from them - essentially distributing core >functions. Enterasys, on the other hand, offers optics (LC03) that can >do gig over multimode for 2 KM, so all buildings would be able to >home-run back to the data center. That has its appeal, and I would >appreciate some feedback from others using LC03's over long MMF runs. >Is that better than keeping MMF runs <500M and distributing core >functions to remote buildings? > >The other thing that attracts our attention is the Netsight suite. We >have a small staff, and at times have struggled to troubleshoot >anomalies in the switching environment. I have heard from a couple of >schools that Netsight really makes a big difference over what they had >before. Anyone have good war stories on that? > >I've gathered that Enterasys employees participate in this list, but I >am looking specifically for feedback from users. > >My apologies if this has been discussed before, but I could not find a >link to a searchable archive. > >Thanks! > >Charlie > > >Charlie Prothero >Chief Information Officer > >Keystone College >Information Technology Building >One College Green >P.O. Box 50 * La Plume, PA 18440-0200 >570-945-8015 > > >--- >To unsubscribe from enterasys, send email to lists...@unc.edu with the >body: unsubscribe enterasys rbo...@ppg.com > > >--- >To unsubscribe from enterasys, send email to lists...@unc.edu with the >body: unsubscribe enterasys simon.r...@nashua-communications.com >Nashua Communications, exclusive provider of Siemens Enterprise >Communications and Panasonic Telecommunications in Southern Africa. > >The information in this e-mail is confidential and is intended solely >for the addressee. 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