Richard, I agree with the idea that Juniper made a one-way decision and the customers who used packet J series were cheated. At least they feel they are cheated. And when Juniper announced packet JUNOS deprecation, it was obvious the customers will feel cheated, despite the fact Juniper actually was not really marketing J series as an ISP oriented router (I remember the recommended scaling number for packet 9.3 was about 300k routes in RIB). But lots of customers did it and Juniper could have cared of them, really.
But excuse me. The way we discuss it here reminds me those teenager-style web-forums where they have been talking 'windows-must-die' for last 15 years. Everyone just thinks it's his duty to claim 'junos is so buggy, so buggy! I am going to buy cisco! Do you hear? I am going to buy cisco!' I think, almost everyone here picks the best (in his opinion) products of different vendors, isn't it normal? Let's be honest, people in cisco-nsp have not less reasons to turn the list into a holy-war platform, but they manage to not. Yeah, this is much more interesting sort of discussion than talks about networking, but why not just move to discussing girls or, I don't know, whisky? This is even more interesting and we could use even more familiar style. -- Pavel _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp

