Yesterday I had a discussion with our Internet/point-to-point provider.  I am 
considering increasing my point-to-point bandwidth connections at all of my 
sites.  Cox, my provider, has a new product called "Metro Ethernet" which 
essentially brings ethernet to the WAN, and this would be an option.  My PTP 
connections would be replaced with ethernet.  I could plug the ethernet cable 
into my router or for small sites just right into the office switch (and vlan 
do whatever as I would please).  Cox tells me this is the "next generation" of 
WAN routing.  It would be up to me to tag traffic that I consider critical 
(voice, ICA, etc) which would receive priority.  Easy enough.  
 
Here is some info:  http://www.coxbusiness.com/products/data/metroethernet.html 
 
This could simplify things here and I would not have to purchase routers for 
all of my remote sites if I didn't want to do so.  And for my core switches 
here I wouldn't need those expensive PRI/T1 cards that I currently use.
 
Anyone using this?  I'm not a routing expert (I do enough to get the sites 
connected but spend most of my time on other things) so opinions/comments 
appreciated.  Cost-wise it's a little more per month but with less hardware it 
would probably be a wash.
 
If it matters my Cox point-to-point circuits are very reliable and rarely go 
down.  Only the type-2 circuits have issues (Verizon issues usually).
 
Thanks,
 

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