happy bday IGS-R
steve wolff
swolff at cisco.com
Fri Feb 16 01:32:11 UTC 2001
Well, mumble: NSF first got on the Internet through a P4200. It sat in my
office because MIS didn't want to have anything to do with it... -s
Brent Sweeny wrote:
>
>On Thu, Feb 15, 2001 at 02:27:53PM -0800, Sean Donelan wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, 15 February 2001, Hank Nussbacher wrote:
>> >
>> > An extra 10 if you have any printed manuals from that far back!
>> >
>>
>> Back then, ALL the manuals were printed. None of this funky
>> CDROM or download the page from the Cisco web site when your cisco
>> router isn't routing and you can't get to the cisco web site.
>>
>> And my favorite. You didn't have to pass a test to buy stuff
>> directly from Cisco. I got my first IGS-R for 50% off because
>> Cisco was competing against Proteon, and the Cisco sales person
>> was happy to sell me one.
>
>I remember way back then, when we were evaluating whether to buy Proteon
>or Cisco, scanning the hosts table (which still listed all the routers
>in the internet then, along with what KIND they were) to see what Cisco's
>market penetration was. it was growing fast enough that we thought they
>might stay in business. ;) it's still a good idea for cisco to remember
>proteon (and what they did wrong), though virtually no one from cisco today
>has ever heard of proteon, too bad--the lessons are still relevant, perhaps
>more than ever.
>
>and the entire manual set (hardware--all 3 models of routers--and
>software) all fit into one looseleaf manual. i still have mine from 6.x
>and 7.x, though i can't find earlier, darn.
> Brent Sweeny, Indiana University
>
>
--
Stephen Wolff 202 362 7110 voice
Office of the CTO 202 362 7224 fax
Cisco Systems 202 427 6752 mobile
More information about the NANOG
mailing list