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Cisco this week is scheduled to announce a complete refresh of its enterprise WAN access routers, promising customers a menu of faster and more reliable hardware for running security and VoIP services at the WAN edge.
Cisco's new 1800, 2800 and 3800 Integrated Service Routers will combine VoIP, VPN, firewall and intrusion-detection system (IDS) support. Customers today have to add these capabilities with modules and IOS software upgrades. The boxes will replace current 1700, 2600 and 3700 offerings and deliver more services with better performance in one platform, Cisco says.
Despite its 80% enterprise router market share, Cisco faces more competition than ever and needs this refresh to counter the momentum of Juniper, which announced its first corporate edge products in May.
Cisco also has to worry about low-cost competition from Asia. This week 3Com will launch a high-end edge router aimed at undercutting Cisco on price. The box is derived from 3Com's joint venture with Huawei.
"Clearly, the router wars are on," says Zeus Kerravala, an analyst with The Yankee Group. Over the past few months, Adtran, Juniper and Foundry Networks launched products that compete with those of Cisco, which made $5 billion in router sales last year. Other players include Enterasys Networks and Nortel.
For Cisco, the 1800, 2800 and 3800 routers represent the broadest upgrade to its enterprise router line in two years. Cisco says the new routers address two major concerns of customers: the upgrade costs associated with stacking service modules into previous router platforms; and reliability concerns about VPN, IDS, firewall, VoIP and other services running on a single processor in one box.
The 2800 series was tested this month on the WAN of RBC Dain Rauscher, a Minneapolis retail brokerage firm, owned by RBC Financial Group in Toronto. The firm, which has dual 2600s deployed throughout its 180 offices in the U.S., plans to upgrade its routers to the 2821 for an upcoming IP telephony deployment.
RBC runs firewall services and some VoIP on its 2600s now, says Rich Blesing, managing director of infrastructure services for RBC. But deploying the 2800s "will help cut the expense and the labor that goes into upgrading routers," he says, because voice and security services are built in.
Users and analysts familiar with Cisco routers say that adding security and voice features - through IOS and memory upgrades - and adding service modules can drive up the cost of a box by anywhere from 50% to 100% the device's list price. In large businesses distributed across multiple sites with hundreds or thousands of routers, those costs can add up fast.
Cisco says its routers now run embedded processing for VoIP and IPSec VPN encryption, as well as IOS firewall packet inspection and IDS functions. These services previously ran on various service modules fitted into older routers, and they used the router's CPU more heavily. The new architecture lets the embedded services talk directly to the router's system memory, freeing up the router CPU for faster packet routing. This leaves room for more service blades, such as content networking, integrated Unity voice mail or network management modules. Four- and nine-port Ethernet switch modules are available for the routers, which let smaller offices further consolidate equipment.
The 1800-3800 series includes up to five times the standard memory shipped with previous 1700-3700 series routers, Cisco says. A new IOS version - IOS 12.3.8T - also is part of the new product line.
Pricing for Cisco's Integrated Services Router 3800 series ranges from $9,500 to $13,500. The 2800 series is priced from $1,700 to $6,500, and the 1800 series will start at $1,400.
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