I would strongly disagree that Cisco products lack in reliability or quality. I have several "low-end" Cisco routers that have been up for years without a hitch or a single moment of down-time.
There is a significant difference between the consumer routers sold by Linksys (part of Cisco), Netgear, and the other low-end vendors, and the commercial targeted routers sold by Cisco. Commercial routers require extreme robustness and uptime plus advanced features (firewall, security, etc.).
If someone really wants a router for their home (and trading) that will be up ALL the time then they should pay the little bit extra and get a robust commercial grade router.
Cisco 871 - $459.99 at CDW
http://www.cdw.com/shop/products/default.aspx?edc=788536
- Greg
There is a significant difference between the consumer routers sold by Linksys (part of Cisco), Netgear, and the other low-end vendors, and the commercial targeted routers sold by Cisco. Commercial routers require extreme robustness and uptime plus advanced features (firewall, security, etc.).
If someone really wants a router for their home (and trading) that will be up ALL the time then they should pay the little bit extra and get a robust commercial grade router.
Cisco 871 - $459.99 at CDW
http://www.cdw.com/shop/products/default.aspx?edc=788536
- Greg
Quote from fundjunkie:
I believe this is something of a misdirection. The strengths of Cisco routers does not lie in their availability, certainly not at the low end of the market. Of course, the perception is that they're the best - that's why they have #1 market share - but that status is down to their consistency and product strategy as much as out and out quality of their products.