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How to protect your firm from vendor lock-in

How to protect your firm from vendor lock-in By:  Greg Meckbach On: 01 Oct 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Gartner Group’s Mark Fabbi questions claims that expensive hardware can reduce total cost of ownership and advises users to consider installing different vendor’s equipment in different parts of the network. Find out why Legal Aid Ontario uses both Juniper and Cisco gear.



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TORONTO - Companies could save millions if they would consider separate contracts with different vendors for each part of their network, according to a Gartner analyst.

“You have to think about the network as a layered model, not as one big mass,” said Mark Fabbi, Toronto-based vice-president of Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc.

Fabbi, who predicted three years ago that enterprises would waste US$100 billion on network technologies and services, made his remarks to about 80 users at a conference Tuesday at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto. It was clear Juniper Networks Inc. organized the conference in an attempt to sell IT managers using Cisco routers and switches to consider adding Juniper hardware to the mix.


Mike Banic, vice-president of Juniper’s Ethernet group, presented a chart claiming a data centre with 3,000 servers and a 225 Gigabit per second firewall would cost $9.6 million if it used Cisco Catalyst 6500 and 4948 switches but would only cost $4.6 million if it used Juniper EX 4200 and EX 8208 switches. Conference organizers handed out a study showing interoperability between Cisco and Juniper hardware.

One IT manager who presented at the conference advised users not to use equipment from only one manufacturer. Stan Yazhemsky, IT manager for Legal Aid Ontario, said his organization uses Juniper firewalls at its remote offices but also uses Cisco Catalyst 3500 series switches.

“When I joined, it was a pure Cisco network and managed by Bell Canada,” he said. “The quality of service was extremely poor.”

Legal Aid Ontario, which provides lawyers for low income people in Ontario, serves 4,000 clients a day from more than 200 locations. Yazhemsky said the 150 TB of information his organization stores is very sensitive, and the network must be very reliable to ensure that clients who need a lawyer immediately can get one.

Yazhemsky said Legal Aid Ontario saves $600,000 per year as a result of its network redesign. He added he is trying to figure out how to replace equipment made by Toronto-based Nortel Networks Corp., which has been operating under bankruptcy protection since January and agreed to sell its enterprise unit to Avaya Inc.

“Don’t take anything for granted,” Yazhemsky said. “Cisco can disappear as well. If Cisco disappears, I have Juniper. If Juniper disappears, I have Cisco.”

Fabbi said some chief information officers are reluctant to install equipment from more than one vendor because they are concerned they will need to retrain network administrators who were trained by a vendor. But he said most vendors have “delta training” programs designed to teach professionals already familiar with networking basics about their products.

“One or two days should be more than enough,” he said. “The training hurdle is pretty low.”


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Tags: network, vendor, Cisco
Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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