3com to Compete with Cisco 181
RNelson writes "3com has announced its new lines of routers poised to compete with Cisco. 'The company claims that these routers will cost 30 percent to 50 percent less than similar offerings from market leader Cisco.' The new routers compete the Cisco's 3725, 3745, and 83xx routers."
but will it (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:but will it (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm especially interested since my team purchased and manages both Netscreen and Neoteris (before either went through the current tree of aquisition) products. And unfortunately, all we've gotten for the Juniper name is an increased maintenance cost and decreased quality of service. We'll hav
Re:but will it (Score:3, Interesting)
As we've all seen before... it is possible to kill a great product by overcharging for crappy service. Now... I'm not saying that's where we are now. It's too early to t
Re:but will it (Score:2)
Re:but will it (Score:2)
Foolish move... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Foolish move... (Score:2)
I knew that Cisco make routing equipment, but I didn't know they had also branched out into gear making!
I'm expecting that when they repair the clock tower in my home town they'll be a "Powered by Cisco" sticker on the side of the thing.
Mod this AC down (Score:2, Flamebait)
Cisco does not own 3Com. Now perhaps if the AC said "lol 3com - c15co \/\/1|_|_ 0wnz ju", an Insightful moderation would be appropriate.
30-50% less? (Score:5, Insightful)
3com knows this, I suspect, which is why they are lowballing them. I would even suspect they think high enough of their name to not charge less than 30-50% less than cisco stuff.
You want to entice purchasing managers, but keep your name "good" in their eyes as well.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:5, Interesting)
So obviously this is much better and we're all relieved, and then it dawns on us: Who else other than Cisco can buy PC133 sticks of RAM in bulk for probably $10 a pound, stick a "Cisco Certified" sticker on them, then sell it to you for $450 a stick, and make you feel like you're getting a good deal?
Re:30-50% less? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Informative)
It's a standard power cable with a notch cut above it.
I think we can easily pull together a dozen or so more odd things cisco does to rape their customers.
Soon we can say, No one ever got fired for buying Cisco!
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2, Funny)
We sell auctioned Cisco equipment some times, and it takes us 30 min to carve up a power cable for it.
UGH.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Are they, really? I always thought they were higer rated cables (more amperes capacity).
I have had some dinky cables heat up when connected to some medium size equipment.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
It's a standard power cable with a notch cut above it.
WRONG I'm not going to defend Cisco at all for things they've actually DONE, but try to learn something before spouting off on things about which you clearly have no knowledge.
The power cable plug you are most likely referring to is a C15. It looks like a C13 with a notch in it. But it's not. A C15 is rated for more amperage and higer temperatures.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple's almost as bad. $75 for 256MB of DDR333 for the eMac. That's over three times what I paid for the same RAM to upgrade my Mother-in-law's eMac.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Interesting)
that one should have went back, but it didn't because corporate had already cut the check and bossman had to save face - "Now our e-mail server is fas
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Funny)
Apparently, 3Com has never heard of eBay.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:5, Interesting)
Contrast that with Cisco: Last time I had a Cisco with a dead port they sent me the replacement overnight delivery and then told me I had three weeks to return the old one or be sent a bill.
Cisco's advantage is their customer service. They have your back when things go bad. 3Com doesn't understand this and until they do I won't consider them a serious player.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2, Funny)
That's what real men do on slashdot. People who need technical support are wussies, or have jobs, or silly crap like that.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Cisco might have already had your company's billing information and thus they were happy to send you a new unit overnight without first asking for the billing info. But if you hadn't returned the broken one, they would have charged you for the second, surely.
Ju
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:3, Interesting)
HP is similar as far as their network gear goes--lifetime warranty where the replacement part shows up on your doorstep the next morning with a prepaid label in the box to ship the defective unit back.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Same here. Their switch quality has taken a dive the last couple years. They're put together with flimsy sheetmetal and no standoffs (sheetmetal screws!). They flex so bad we had new ones coming in with screws rattling around inside. We quit using them immedtately thereafter but while we still had some in stock we had to open every one of them to make sure everything was still connected properly. Not to mention how the PCB's flap in the breeze...
Yech. And 3Com us
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Not with that employer(too cheap) I told them I didn't have one. Cisco will replace a dead switch even without it. When I got to the second level tech I simply read him the post error and he demanded my shipping address to send the replacement to.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Taco, you're posting as an anonymous coward again [slashdot.org]. And you're still sucking up to Anne Tomlinson.
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Re:30-50% less? (Score:2)
Still some juice in 3Com hopefully.. (Score:2)
i remeember having this ethernet card from 3Com that really performs faster than another taiwanese card which i've got, albeit at 3X the price.
i've got to admit their support really sucks, not that i've tried it before, but something about them.. they seem too arrogant, even http://support.3com.com smells of "fuck off, we don't want to see you here"
Interesting move for 3Com... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Interesting move for 3Com... (Score:3, Informative)
Info about the suit [theregister.co.uk]
Info about the settlement [theregister.co.uk]
Re:Interesting move for 3Com... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting move for 3Com... (Score:3, Funny)
Heh (Score:5, Funny)
Hehe.
The new routers compete the Cisco. 3com have no chance to survive make your time.
Re:Heh (Score:3, Informative)
From URL:http://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2004/prod_0914 0 4.html?CMP=ILC-001):
New features appear to include a higher and easie
i rather like 3com network software (Score:3, Interesting)
also i hate all the different software versions (SMI, EMI, etc) that comes preinstalled in cisco switches.
Re:i rather like 3com network software (Score:2)
That's how Cisco got to where they are today. They kept bundling every single possible protocol into their boxes as fast as they could. Everything from TCP/IP to ATM to Berkeley trailer packets. If they couldn't get graduates straight out of university, they'd buy out their competitors and add their software.
I worked for a medium sized company that made routers/bridges/network probes back in the mid
Should I bother with my CCNA and CCNP, (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Should I bother with my CCNA and CCNP, (Score:2)
Confused (Score:2, Interesting)
I can't think of any reason to particularly give a hoot about either, but this non-news article could only have been posted as a chance to flame a company we hate, or praise a company we love.
Re:Confused (Score:2)
Re:Confused (Score:2)
Faster Better Cheaper, pick two.... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Faster Better Cheaper, pick two.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Used to work for Cisco (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, you don't just pay for the name, you pay for the brand, the relationship, the support, and the leadership. They do something similar to what Microsoft does, but in a much more benign way, IMHO. They make sure their products work well and give advantages in the way they interact with other Cisco equipment, but then they work with others on interoperability as well. This creates a level playing field and allows "innovation" in important areas, but then they work closely with standards bodies to standardize the parts that "deserve" to be universally applied across the whole internet.
One such example is multicasting. There are many different standards for multicasting, *even across Cisco's own line*! However, they will work to standardize it and then implement that standard on all of their routers and encourage others to do the same through marketing, partnering, and collaborative development. They line up everyone in advance, even competitors, and work to get such a standard universally accepted.
Basically, they really do have true leadership. They choose the protocols and technologies that have a chance of getting wide adoption, and make sure that they are the ones behind them. That increases their visibility and credibility in a self-perpetuating cycle.
Of course, I might be biased from having worked with them, so I would love to hear other opinions. I came away thinking that it's a first class organization, and while not perfect, is certainly a model for how competition, cooperation, and coordination should interact.
Re:Used to work for Cisco (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Used to work for Cisco (Score:2)
3Com, by comparison, has some of the worst command-line stuff I've ever had to work with. Their hardware quality sucked. The last straw for them was the way they exited the Enterprise market. One of the local Universities had a 3Com ATM backbone. They had a problem where the whole set of backbone switches would crash, requiring a power cycle to recover. They called 3Com - 3Com support's answer was "Sorry, we don't support that a
Wait and see (Score:4, Insightful)
3com have some good products, but in my experience they don't scale. If I was installing a 10 person office, a 3com firewall and switch is fine. But I wouldn't put 3Com anywhere except the access layer.
I'd also avoid 3coms VoIP solutions. I don't like their WoS, and the NBX is a dog. I'm not about to recommended Cisco because I have no experience with it, but 3Com won't even make it to the short list.
Didn't know about the NetGear/Juniper fusion. Juniper's high-end stuff is great, but way more than all but the largest enterprises and carriers would need. The Netgear lines will complement this well.
Re:Wait and see (Score:3, Funny)
Your comparisons are insightful, indeed. But you forget that THERE CAN ONLY BE ONE!
*runs screaming into net ops room, kitana drawn...*
access router competition (Score:2, Interesting)
Cisco is in an interesting position in spite of buying linksys, they will face competition from 3com (who is positioned below them in the market now) and from above by Juniper. Both Juniper and 3Com are getting into the access router comptetion.
I'd like to know if 3com has some or any of the convergence features (voip, ipv6, qos, multicast) that new networks often need. Cisco access routers may cost, but it is easy to implement a network with some excellent modern features. Cisco has a modular product
Too late, and no voice support (Score:4, Interesting)
The author mentions that these products compete against the Cisco 3725, 3745, and 83xx (that should read 8xx series) routers.
In related news, Cisco today announced three new router families, the 1800 series, the 2800 series, and the 3800 series, which are positioned to replace the 1700, 2600, and 3700 series. Nice of 3Com to position against an obsolete technology platform
Competitors are crawling out of the woodwork with products positioned against Cisco's old tired iron, but Cisco isn't exactly sitting back on its laurels and scratching its head.
What all these competitors are missing is that Cisco's router strategy has subtly changed in the last 18 months: voice features and services are a key part of Cisco's differentiation, and none of its competitors, be it Juniper, ADTRAN, Tasman, Enterasys, or 3Com, have stepped up to challenge Cisco on that front.
VoIP is an ideal in the branch office, and Cisco is in a cushy position to get a corner on that market unless some of its competitors get their act together.
Re:Too late, and no voice support (Score:2)
3Com's got a nasty habit..... (Score:2, Interesting)
3Com's history (Score:5, Informative)
Two months after my installation was complete, 3Com EXITED the market. Yes - they immediately discontinued ALL of the brand new gear that we had just purchased. No notice. On a Monday morning, it was in the papers.
They botched their rep ALL over the place. I doubt I'd touch their new gear with a 10 foot pole. They're one of the flakiest companies I've ever had the misfortune to work with. Good gear, but absolutely horrid management.
3Com Routers (Score:4, Insightful)
I just don't know how quickly people will be to jump on the bandwagon with an organization that left many of there customers hanging with a "we're not doing this business anymore" message 3-4 years ago.
Atrocious quality (Score:3, Informative)
My first experience was a 10-pack of 3com network cards about 8 years back: Some were fast, some were slow, some produced so many bugs that the router (Cisco) disabled the interface. These were cards with consecutive serial numbers! My explanation is very poor Q/A on the cards. I never have had this type of problems with any cheack RTL8xxx card from Taiwan.
The second experience was an unusable "Office" switch, that had a noisy and very poorly designed switching regulator in it. That was 1 year back. The switch finally died becayse they also had cut the leads of the power semiconductor too long and in short-circuited. I declined a replacement, since it also ran so hot, that it would have dies in a few months anyway. I have now a far cheaprt router by Netgear, with no such problems and overall far more solid design and manufacturing. And cheaper as well.
Re:Atrocious quality (Score:2)
3com was fairly lax about the whole thing and the switches were eventually canned and Cisco green sits in their place. (The switches were purchased by managment somewhere along the line, judging by price alone)
On a side note, one of the signs of intelligent life
I'm sure I'm not the only one (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd pay more for an unknown brand because at least I have a chance at it working.
Re:I'm sure I'm not the only one (Score:2)
But their name sold. There were a number of times I had to tell people I saw in the store "Just grab the $10 OEM NE2000. It's a fraction of the cost and will work with everything."
3com? Boo! (Score:5, Informative)
Also, where I used to work they bought a 3com RAS solution. The CLI was pretty bad compared to my favorite at the time, Livingston Portmasters. It was overpriced, and just seemed like a botched design with the CPU in one box and a $2000 add on with 4 modems in it.
Some people seem to have a thing for 3com. I think it is mostly the people that used their cards when 3com was the major player. Their earlier switches do seem rugged, but I'd probably look to SMC Tigerswitch (owned by Enterasys now?) before 3com for a SOHO deployment. I'm odd, even for SOHO I like managed switches and rackmount. And metal boxes, I dig NetGears form factors. PS, is NetGear still tied to Bay? Bay was sold to Nortel, Netgear used to be Bay Networks. Is Netgear Notel or the existing Bay Networks? Confusion.
I'd imagine it is management that plauges 3com. They announced the end of all high end products a while ago, since Cisco's market share was owning them (and others like Riverstone, Extreme, Enterasys, Foundry). They wanted to concentrate on their NICs (one word, intel Pro 10/100) and little baby network devices.
Cisco dominates the market. I own a few pieces of Cisco gear, ALOT of Cabletron/Enterasys surplus and many of the smaller vendors. Cisco gear is indeed nice, I like it but there is a premium to be paid (unless your like me and buy from eBay, a practice Cisco tried unsuccessfully to stop).
There have been alot of small players that might have competed but the major players buy them up. Prominet got bought by Lucent, their products became the Cajun family (and Intel resold some of their stuff). There are others (ELS series from Cabletron was a smaller company that got bought out). You can see it when you dig thru the firmware binaries
Re:3com? Boo! (Score:2)
Their switches and routers are a different story, I'll grant you that. We had really old 3Com switches and routers in here that are hard to use and not as reliable, and I've personally witnessed before a single Cabletron card taking out connectivity to all the sites of a
I won't trust them again. (Score:3, Interesting)
One of our customers bought about $50k worth of 3Com broadband over cable equipment, called a few days later to ask about a firmware upgrade, and were informed that 3Com had never made such a piece of equipment.
Classy.
-Matt
Re:I won't trust them again. (Score:3, Informative)
The 3Com CMTS 1000 system based off the TotalControl (which was a USR platform anyways) chassis, was DOCSIS 1.0 , so much do CableLabs chose it as the standard platform for DOCSIS testbed.
The earlier platform wasn't DOCSIS, then again before y2k neither were many popular CMTS systems (Terayon's CDMA)
http://www.3com.com/corpinfo/en_US/pressbox/pre
Re: (Score:2)
I only take my routers three ways... (Score:3, Informative)
Free [freesco.org]
Secure [openbsd.org]
Any combination of the above three.
Re:I only take my routers three ways... (Score:2)
You don't need them for high bandwidth pipes, do you?
Re:I only take my routers three ways... (Score:2)
But granted, for the typical home user, they are more than enough
Software (Score:2, Interesting)
My 3com experience (Score:2, Informative)
Where I really draw experience from 3com is their switches and routers, neither of which I'll ever use again.
Scenario:
1 x 7513 connected to a switch via a PA-2FE on a VIP2-50
1
Of course! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Of course! (Score:2)
IOS-like CLI? (Score:4, Insightful)
Only if 3Com provided a IOS-like command line interface will they be able to gain market share among trained CCIE/CCNA/... personnel. Of course, they will have to provide high quality (*cough*) equipment too...
Re:IOS-like CLI? (Score:2)
The only non-NIC 3com device I'm familiar with is my $300 OfficeConnect Dual 56k LAN modem (I didn't see anything else out there like it at the time). While "everything" is "supposed" to be configurable, there is an undocumented, unsupported, disavowed CLI interface [hal-pc.org] accessable through Telnet that does a lot more than their port 80 stuff can do (like, say, filtering). Unfortunately, it's malformed (as if the people who made it cobbled it together l
Cisco Equipment (Score:2, Informative)
I would consider Juniper or Foundry equipment for certain applications, but not without demo hardware first to see how they integrated into our stricly Cisco ne
3Com tried this before. (Score:5, Informative)
I love it when bean counters decide that years of end-user pain and agony is worth $500 or $1000 savings on a cheap piece of hardware.
I've installed, maintained, configured, and troubleshooted hundreds of routers over the past 10 years. Hardware costs are not the only thing to consider. If you think saving 30%-50% in hardware costs is great, how about spending 200% more in labor costs, year after year? How about outfitting your NOC with an expensive new monitoring package exclusively designed for your new hardware? How about facing growth limits? How about watching your network go from 99.9999% uptime to something less?
What do you tell your customer/client base? "We're saving $1000 per router. I'm sorry that you'll have to live with ______ and ______ for the next few years." What is that worth to you? When there is trouble, listen to the vendors bicker over the reason(s). What is it worth to wait 1 year or more for a bug fix? And then discover that in order to get that bug fix, you might have to buy new hardware?
People don't realize what's involved in building a network. Reliability, room-for-growth, and features are everything. There are problems in every network. Giving your users a productive, working environment is the ultimate goal. Gambling with new hardware is not something I'd like to do very often.
I can guarantee this: I'll pay double for a reliable piece of hardware that does EXACTLY what I want, all the time when I know that the other end is the same brand of hardware. Plus, the carrier in between is using the same hardware. Plus, it's been lab tested by everyone. It gets better: One phone call and all my problems and answers are readily available. Every one of those things saves time and money. User experience is more positive because features are better, and there isn't any finger pointing between hardware vendors. I don't have to spend money buying multiple hardware platforms to labtest. I don't have to worry about mixed-vendor networks. Have you ever installed a mixed-vendor network? It's one of the most painful experiences you could ever have. I would put it right up there with kidney stones, and having fingernails forcibly removed with a pair of pliers.
Bean counters that want cheap hardware are usually going to pay increased labor costs. They will have workarounds and painful experiences for their end-users. It's NOT WORTH IT! If you want 99.9999% uptime, error-free performance, buy the best product available.
Cheap hardware is almost always feature-less, inflexible, and painful to live with. How many people remember 3Com's last go-around with routers? Easy to configure, but limited flexibility, and lacking features makes it harder to live with in the long run. Oh, and darn near impossible to troubleshoot. We had to outfit all of our technicians with $100K protocol analyzers to prove the trouble to cheap 3Com (and other) hardware because of the finger-pointing.
Look at it another way: If you're buying a Cadillac for the home office, why would you buy a Ford Pinto for the remote offices? It doesn't make sense. If you were building a space shuttle... are you going to use the cheapest hardware? Why would you do that with your network? There's a reason why Cisco has 90% of the market. Cisco has the most features. Everything hinges on software. While there are bugs in software, Cisco OS is fantastic. Features like EIGRP and HSRP make Cisco worthwhile. Interoperability with Cisco's LAN equipment make it worthwhile. Also, think about training, grey market materials, and used goods. Cisco is out there, commonly available. If you pick 3Com access routers, you've got to hire/train people to handle a new brand of unknown hardware. Training is expensive. And if your best-trained expert leaves, you've got to go find someone else. Finding Cisco people is easier.
People talk about Juniper. Juniper excels at one specific niche. The big, big router... basically IP to OC48 stuff. How many of those do you need? Juniper talks about the "pepsi challenge", but frankly, they'll have to go over and above Cisco to win my vote. There are other products, but you still end up with a mixed-vendor network.
30% less isn't hard (Score:2)
Cisco's routers at $9,000 and 3Com's undercutting those prices at $6,000 isn't hard to do when it's my understanding that you can do all or almost all of the features of those with a 233MHZ Pentium, a 1GB hard drive with CDROM, 64Meg of memory and any version of Linux or BSD and a couple of 4-port 100mbit
Failed once, doomed to fail again (Score:2)
Let's award Joe Geek for cutting out costs for network equipment this quarter.
Let's fire Joe Geek the next quarter when we start having problems and 3 Com provides the level of support we got for the savings....zero.
Ever try to explain to a CEO why his email is down and ho
How in hell is this news? (Score:2)
We have known about 3Com and their partnership with Huawei [theregister.co.uk] aka "Cisco of China" for almost two years now.
Huawei makes cheap knockoff copies of Cisco kit and bundles the IOS for free. They can afford to do this because they stole the documentation & the source code from Cisco and simply reproduce it for their own gear, software bugs, manual typos and all.
Cisco sued Huawei [theregister.co.uk] back in January 2003, but they pulled the software piracy suit [theregister.co.uk] 10 months later after Huawei agreed to "modify some of their p
Re:3COM (Score:2)
Re:3COM (Score:4, Informative)
I've always sworn by their network cards... they're always the first name I turn to.
Re:Cisco should be scared (Score:5, Informative)
Response to Cisco & Linksys (Score:2)
Come ON! Was: Response to Cisco & Linksys (Score:2)
You weren't around in the late 90's during the tech boom, were you? Cisco has always been notorious for purchasing companies to enter new market space. Many of the products Cisco offers today were originally produced by other companies, and when seen viable they were snatched up by Cisco.
I don't think it's that Cisco is scared. I think it's smart business. It's exactly actions like purchasing Links
Re:Come ON! Was: Response to Cisco & Linksys (Score:2)
I would argue that it is precarious - although I have no idea of thier existing market share, only that they seem (from my observations) to be priced on the border of the market. If they price themselves out of the market, it will be filled by other companies.
Re:Come ON! Was: Response to Cisco & Linksys (Score:2)
Re:Cisco should be scared (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Cisco should be scared (Score:2)
If you were more acquainted with networking equipment, you would know that Cisco makes impressive hardware. In a later post, you state that you're unsure of their marketshare. It's huge.
The breakdown goes something like this:
Home users - less than 1% Cisco (assuming you don't count Linksys, only proper Cisco hardware).
Enterprise networks - 60%-70% Cisco, depending on your source.
T
Re:backdoors (Score:2, Insightful)
Cisco at least provides publicly information about their security problems and makes timely fixes. It makes no sense bashing them - everyone else will have a problem sooner or later...
"Given Linux security history, switching to someone else might be a good idea."
Re:backdoors (Score:3, Funny)
Do you mean (Score:2)
Re:backdoors (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:backdoors (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:backdoors (Score:2)
They did release the source code, right?
No?
Really?
Oh...
Hmmm. That Cisco router is starting to look a little better...
Re:3com nics.. great.. 3com switches.. ugh.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes it hasn't been consistent historically. That's because the Catalyst 5000 line was a purchased product, using "Catalyst OS".
Nowadays, all switches are coming with IOS, unless you specify Cat OS (can only put Cat OS on the chassis switches)
Plus - it's not an apples to apples comparison to compare IOS on the 3600 (router) to IOS on a 3500 (switch). The functions are inherently different.
IOS is not hard once you learn a few basics. You can practially build the commands without ever looking at documentation. For that matter all the docs are freely available on Cisco's website.
I have never seen Alcatel's gear or the OS. From looking at the documentation, Alcatel's CLI is a knock-off of IOS. That would leave you using the web interface. Cisco has a web GUI as well. I wouldn't use it, but it's there.
Sounds like you don't do enough networking to even make an educated evaluation of hardware or operating system.