[c-nsp] Bandwidth/capacity per demand

Alex ecralar at hotmail.com
Tue Jan 11 10:01:24 EST 2011


Juniper sells MX5, MX20 and MX40 bundles, all based on MX80 hardware but 
with 10G ports restricted.
Talk to your nearest Juniper rep if you need more details.
Rgds
Alex

--------------------------------------------------
From: "Jeferson Guardia" <jefersonf at gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2011 1:23 PM
To: <cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>
Subject: [c-nsp] Bandwidth/capacity per demand

> Hi,
>
> I work with other telecom geat and Ive been seeing very often the concept 
> of
> capacity per demand.
>
> For example:
>
> A customer buys a powerful hardware but doesnt want to pay for it, but
> someday he might need it, so what happens is:
>
> They sell the powerful hardware with a good throughput and etc, but 
> limited
> to what he paid. If one day he needs more capacity, he would
> pay an additional and get a new "license" and be able to have more 
> capacity
> in terms of performance.
>
> I dont know if any of you have worked with any product that is set up this
> way, but I was wondering if Cisco has ever came up with something like 
> this?
>
>
> I am only asking you that because today I had a customer interested on
> planning a small IP backbone this way, saving money and at the same time
> being
> able to scalate easily to support drastic changes.
>
> Rgs,
> _______________________________________________
> cisco-nsp mailing list  cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net
> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
> archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
> 


More information about the cisco-nsp mailing list