Dell 407-BBOO, SFP, 10000 m, 1310 nm, 1000BASE-LX
Bewertungen von Dell 407-BBOO, SFP, 10000 m, 1310 nm, 1000BASE-LX
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Dell switches have been pretty rock solid--they're far cheaper than Cisco/Juniper, have a lifetime warranty, and a good feature set. The most annoying thing about them over time--from the PowerConnect through the X Series--has been the rather awkward way you need to set up the IP address for managed mode, and the awful "Getting Started" guide that really doesn't reflect the switch. The X Series before the X1052 was effectively the same as for the PowerConnect (managed mode switch, then have to set a machine to the default subnet to reprogram the switch network config). With the X1052, the good news is it's much easier. The switch takes its IP address from DHCP--despite the sticker on the switch claiming it's still using 192.168.2.1--and the console actually has a USB UART, so it's trivial to connect to using a USB cable. However, the documentation doesn't reflect these changes; be aware.
Dell switches have been pretty rock solid--they're far cheaper than Cisco/Juniper, have a lifetime warranty, and a good feature set. The most annoying thing about them over time--from the PowerConnect through the X Series--has been the rather awkward way you need to set up the IP address for managed mode, and the awful "Getting Started" guide that really doesn't reflect the switch. The X Series before the X1052 was effectively the same as for the PowerConnect (managed mode switch, then have to set a machine to the default subnet to reprogram the switch network config). With the X1052, the good news is it's much easier. The switch takes its IP address from DHCP--despite the sticker on the switch claiming it's still using 192.168.2.1--and the console actually has a USB UART, so it's trivial to connect to using a USB cable. However, the documentation doesn't reflect these changes; be aware.
Dave Ihnat
20. November 2016