Sounds like you have at least 2 static IPs, 1 for your router and 1 for your Exchange server. Assuming that the Exchange server is going out that router, it would mean that NAT on the router for outbound is not set up correctly. For whatever reason, AOL's spam filters apparently don't like the...
I guess I'm confused about your config -- your router appears to have 2 interfaces assigned to the LAN side, but none to the WAN side. Aren't you using it as a router?
The way you describe your network, you need 2 subinterfaces on the router's LAN side (10.1.1.0/24 and 172.16.0/24) and then a...
Two options.
First, easiest, is use the GUI (web browser, point it at the IP address of the CUE). From there you can do most of your move/add/change/PW reset stuff.
Second option -- assuming the CUE is running in a Network Module (NM-CUE or a subsequent variant):
do a "sh run" and scroll down...
No, it is not. Just tell your customers the truth, they'll be okay with it.
A PRI, by definition, runs over a T1 type circuit from the smartjack in my building to the CO. Now, your offering may emulate a PRI circuit in terms of how my gateway router process calls and signalling, but that does...
The whole SIP PRI/virtual PRI thing is really annoying to me for some reason. A PRI has always meant one particular thing -- it's a telco circuit that provides 23+1 channels, has its own features and characteristics, and was a known quantity. Everyone in the biz liked PRIs because of their...
Why a 3560 switch? Throw a fastethernet POE card in the 2811 and call it a day.
If you insist on a standalone switch check out the 2960 - they make an 8 port POE version.
The downside of the Apple phone system is every 2 years you have to forklift replace the entire thing, including handsets, and run all new cabling in your building every 3 refresh cycles. [bigsmile]
What are things you can't do with just a Cisco ASA"
[ponder]
Seriously, you're going to need some external filtering to accomplish that, unless you want to rate-limit the speed of the pipe all day long to stay below the cap.
My guess? Your ISP either changed your WAN IP address, or mangled the routing tables when they changed you over to the faster line.
It's also possible they messed up the config on the Adtran -- it's not a "copy" as you suggest, someone has to actually translate from Cisco to Adtran.
There's always a niche market for people who specialize in nursing along dead technology -- a good friend of mine makes a fair living maintaining COBOL code for a consortium of companies. I'm sure it's boring, tedious work but he works for cheap so it keeps him busy and pays the bills.
Not sure if it would cause the duplex issue, but you can manually set the speed/duples of Gi1/0/2.
You may have to initialize the VLAN database since you did a copy/paste of the config:
config t
vlan database
exit
(you'll get an error about command being depracated blah blah, ignore it).
For future reference, here's a handy calculator from MS that will show the breakeven point for each type of license.
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/howtobuy/licensing/calc_2.htm
It's labelled for 2003 but still applies (it's linked from the 2008 R2 licensing site).
If you're looking toward virtualization, I can't imagine why you'd pay for Standard licenses. One Enterprise license allows you to run 4 virtualized instances of 2008, so depending on your pricing with Microsoft you're getting 1 or 2 VMs free. Or, if numbers make sense, Datacenter edition is the...
Not sure what OES is, at least in this context?
The thing to be aware of is that hypervisors (ESX, Hyper-V, Xen) are all bare-metal systems, meaning that they are installed first. You don't have a choice of "install Windows now and add on Hyper-V later". You would need to backup your Windows...
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