Well, we *are* a relatively small firm. But, we've got about 230
people on site, including about 80-90 (if memory serves) hardware and
software engineers, and then there are the sales staff, and our
customer installation/support staff, etc.

We do need relatively serious bandwidth, though we couldn't justify
the cost of a full DS3. We have a 5mbit soft cap on the DS3 - if we
exceed that limit at the 95th percentile of the course of the month,
it's an extra $100/mbit - I can't remember what the base cost is, but
I think it's in the $1100 range. We've never exceeded the cap for more
than about an hour at a time, and when you factor in the down times
overnight and on the weekends, it works out really well. But it's
*really* nice to have it for those really large downloads.

We got a screaming deal on it because the fiber was in the building,
not being used, and NTT was looking for money. We also have a T1, from
a different ISP, which isn't being used at the moment. I had planned
on implementing BGP on the router I built, but that might have to wait
a while.

It seems that the manufacturer of the DS3 interface card I bought two
of (Sangoma A301) has dropped support for FreeBSD, and only supports
Fedora Core and CentOS. I'm not a fan of Linux, so I'm considering my
options, and got a quote for a Cisco machine that does DS3 and has a
couple NICs in it for about $11k. But, given that there are some
interesting drop-in packages for open source routing, I might
investigate one of those. Something like XORP, Vyatta, Quagga, or one
of the others. I'll have to learn how to configure BGP, but I figure I
can get the ISPs to help out with that.

Kurt

On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 17:57, Richard Stovall <[email protected]> wrote:
> <questions prompted by bandwidth envy>
>
> DS3?  Holy cow!  Haven't you written here that you're at a small mfg
> facility or something like that?  What on earth do you use all that
> bandwidth for?
>
> </questions prompted by bandwidth envy>
>
>
>> I *love* my Sidewinders. When I purchased them it was from Secure
>> Computing, but they've since been bought by McAfee, I'm afraid.
>>
>> They have excellent prosy services, which some find annoying, but I
>> find very reassuring.. I also find them easy to manage.
>>
>> I have two at HQ in an HA configuration in front of my DS3, and two
>> smaller ones, one in each of my foreign offices. Very nice to manage.
>> Of course the reseller was a good part of that. We got them through
>> NCA, and the folks I dealt with there were stellar.
>>
>> I cannot comment on Cisco firewalls, since I've never used them.
>>
>> Kurt
>>
>> ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
>> ~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~
>>
>
> ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
> ~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~
>
>

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

Reply via email to