On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 3:14 PM, Rohyans, Aaron <[email protected]> wrote:
> In 15 years of working with this stuff, I can count on one hand how many fan
> failures I’ve had in Cisco gear…

  Well, from what you say, you change out your gear relatively often,
since that's part of your "technology and depreciation cycle".  Or so
you argued earlier.  So how it makes sense that you wouldn't see
failures that might happen after a longer period of time.

> My point is that HP knows this… as does Cisco… the odds
> of their gear failing like this are slim unless due to a defect in
> production…

  If Cisco knows that, why does Cisco exclude fans and power supplies
from their warranty?

  Equivocate all you want -- HP's got the better warranty.

>> “…In my experience, in many organizations, network equipment has a
>> much longer lifecycle than computers.  A great many places *still*
>> don't need anything more than 100 megabit to the desktop.  So a 10-15
>> year usable lifetime isn't unrealistic.  Obviously some shops need to
>> upgrade more often than that, but many don't.
>>
>>  I like that with ProCurve, I get to decide when my equipment is
>> obsolete; HP doesn't do it for me.”
>
> How is Cisco forcing you to change out your gear just because a product goes
> EoL?

  They aren't, but you are suggesting that if equipment is 5 years
past end-of-life, then one shouldn't be using the equipment any more.
Perhaps that's just your opinion, and not Cisco's mindset.  Fair
enough.  But if I'm still using that equipment, Cisco won't support it
--  HP will.

> “…What does that have to do with what switch I should buy?”
>
> It’s a lame attempt to acquire market share by offering free support on the
> product line.

  Offering a better warranty is a lame attempt to acquire market
share?  I'm perplexed.  You apparently think offering better support
is "lame".    <irony> I mean, how *dare* they offer better support!
The nerve!  </irony>  Does that also mean that if HP is  building a
better product, that is a "lame attempt to acquire market share"?

> Free support?  That sounds cheap to me… like
> consumer grade (NOTE that I am *not* calling HP ProCurve consumer grade).

  The cost of support is included in the cost of the product.  It's
not "free".  There was a time when if you bought something, customer
service came with it.  You didn't have to pay extra just to get a
company to stand behind their product.  HP has largely gotten away
from that, unfortunately, but their networking division still holds to
it.

> If I don’t have to pay for it, what kind of “brainchild” individuals are
> manning the TAC?

 I've found the ProCurve front line support techs to by quite
knowledgeable, cluefull,
willing and able to help.  How often have you called HP support?

> Why not offer free lifetime support/replacement on
> PCs/Servers/Monitors/etc?

  Again: What one division is doing has nothing to do with another division.

>> “…By that logic: Cisco owns LinkSys, LinkSys's stuff is cheap consumer
>> crap, therefore, all of Cisco's stuff must be cheap consumer crap.”
>
> Yep… that’s the exact logic I was trying get across.  A subordinate company
> sells junk, so that makes the parent company product junk.  Where in my
> statement did you draw that conclusion?  Seriously?

  So, I believe what you're saying is: What one division is doing has
nothing to do with another division.  Hmmm, that  sounds familiar...

> Again, you get what you pay for…  err, not pay for.

  I've found that while paying too little generally means you get
less, paying more doesn't always mean you get proportionally more.

> “… I believe HP has been making switches longer than Cisco has.”
>
> HP’s definitely been around longer than Cisco, yes… but making switches
> longer, no.

  Cisco purchased their switching division in 1993; it used to be
Crescendo[1].  I believe HP has been making network switches/repeaters
longer than that, although I don't have a source handy.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crescendo_Communications

> Unless you count the “old” days where HP marketed their
> “Ethertwist” line…

  Why shouldn't we count that?  It was an HP product line.  It
included network switches.  Why don't those switches count?

> ... but even then it was geared around networked devices… not
> networking devices.

  They made network switches.  I don't  know what you consider
"networking devices", but I count switches.

> What do you consider “huge”?  Cisco owns 72.3% of the Ethernet Switching
> market share…

  67% and dropping[2].

[2] http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/022210-ethernet-switch-market.html

> And what is “extensive” layer 2 knowledge?

  They've been making Ethernet gear for decades.  They design and
build their own switch ASICs.   HP claimed to be the second-largest
switch vendor in 2008, and to be growing more than three times as fast
as the rest of the industry[3].  Then, of course, they bought 3Com --
who literally *invented* the commercial Ethernet market.  So they've
got credentials, and they're in a position to know what they're doing.

[3] http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/newsroom/press/2008/080527a.html

> I doubt they have the knowledge “at the
> ready” to tackle complex switching problems.

  I doubt Cisco really has *that* much of an edge in knowledge.  So
now we're even: We both doubt the other's vague, unsourced,
unquantifiable statements.

>> “…They do indeed promise immediate shipment via next day carrier.
>> Strictly speaking, "delivery" is up to the carrier, I presume…”
>
> Interesting… so theoretically, it could take say, up to 10 days to get your
> replacement product?

  You asked about liability; I answered.  If the sun explodes, you'll
never get your replacement product.  But yes, they really do promise
to ship overnight, which Cisco does not.  In writing.

> Again, HP is simply taking worst-case verbiage from
> Cisco and turning it around to show you how much better they are... err,
> aren’t.

  Let me get this straight: HP quotes Cisco's own contract, and does
better, but that... doesn't mean they're better?

> “…In my experience, if HP doesn't have your part they'll ship you something
> better.”
>
> Example?

  I had a customer whose 10/100 managed repeater finally died.   HP
shipped a 10/100 managed switch.

  Others on this list have reported similar stories.

>Somehow I doubt they’re going to ship you “something better” on a
> lot of their products.

  Doubt all you want, that's what they've done.  But I guess you'd
rather deny facts than consider the possibility that Cisco is
overpriced.

> Can you point me to where in their warranty that
> this is expressed?

  Interesting.  Three paragraphs up, you're claiming that HP citing
Cisco's warranty *in writing* isn't a fair comparison.  But now you
want something in writing.

  But anyway: "HP will, at its option, repair or replace the affected
products."  Page 11 of our ProCurve license-and-warranty booklet, HP
P/N 5990-8862.  They don't promise something better, but they promise
to repair or *replace*.  In writing.

-- Ben

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

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