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Cisco Application Control Engine (ACE): Application Delivery Controller (now discontinued) Cisco UCS B-Series Blade Servers (Mini, B460 M4, B420 M4, B260 M4, B200 M4, B480 M5, B200 M5, B200 M6) [14] Cisco UCS C-Series Rack Servers (C460 M4, C240 M4, C220 M4, C480 M5, C240 M5, C220 M5), [15]
Cisco 12000 series routers feature a high-performance switched backplane providing 2.4 Gbit/s across 16 switched ports simultaneously. [2] The Multi-Service Blade module (introduced for the XR 12000 line) provides firewall and acts as a session border controller .
The inside of a Cisco 1900-series switch. Catalyst is the brand for a variety of network switches, wireless controllers, and wireless access points sold by Cisco Systems.While commonly associated with Ethernet switches, a number of different types of network interfaces have been available throughout the history of the brand.
The press release (reference) also claims that, the CRS-X 400 GE Line Card with Cisco AnyPort Technology uses Cisco’s CMOS photonic CPAK to reduce power consumption, heat dissipation and increase 100 GE port densities by a factor of three compared to competitive solutions. The Universal Port concept adds the option of using a 100G port as 2 ...
The PoD is a repeatable design pattern, and its components maximize the modularity, scalability, and manageability of data centers." [ 1 ] The modular design principle has been applied to telephone and data networks, for instance through a repeatable node design describing the configuration of equipment housed in point of presence facilities.
Avaya - acquired Nortel, networking business sold to Extreme Networks [2] AVM; Barracuda Networks; Brocade - acquired Vyatta, purchased by Broadcom [3] Billion Electric; Calix; Cisco Systems; Control4 - acquired by SnapAV; Cradlepoint - acquired by Ericsson; Dell - acquired Force10; Digi International; DrayTek; D-Link [4] ECI Telecom
Cisco 6509 switch with four line cards and dual supervisors. The Cisco Catalyst 6500 is a modular chassis network switch manufactured by Cisco Systems from 1999 to 2015, capable of delivering speeds of up to "400 million packets per second". [1] A 6500 comprises a chassis, power supplies, one or two supervisors, line cards, and service modules.
The Cisco 2500 series routers are a series of 19" rack mount access routers typically used to connect Ethernet or Token Ring networks via ISDN or leased serial connections (i.e. Frame Relay, T1 etc.). The routers are based on a Motorola 68EC030 CISC processor. [1] This line of routers is no longer sold or supported by Cisco Systems. [2]