Ports Fibre
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB DUAL PORT FIBRE PCI E 5945684 594 5684 US $917.56
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB DUAL PORT FIBRE PCI E 371432501 US $917.56
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB DUAL PORT FIBRE PCI E QLE2562SUN US $917.56
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB DUAL PORT FIBRE PCI E 371432502 US $917.56
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![]() IBM 4 Gbps Dual Port Fibre Channel PCI X DDR Adapter US $900.00
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![]() Nokia MAASAI ADP FIBER BOARD AssyN806709003 12 port GB US $899.00
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![]() LIGHTPULSE 8GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E SGXPCIE2FCEM8 US $885.07
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![]() LIGHTPULSE 8GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E LPE12002SUN US $885.07
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![]() LIGHTPULSE 8GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E 371430601 US $885.07
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![]() LIGHTPULSE 8GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E 3714306 US $885.07
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![]() IBM LIGHTPULSE 8GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E 10N9824 US $878.70
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![]() IBM 1905 1 port 4GB fibre channel Adapter dzx1 US $859.99
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC QLE2560SUN US $760.07
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC 371432401 US $760.07
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![]() SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC SGXPCIE1FCQF8Z US $760.07
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![]() 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E LPE11002SUN US $690.00
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![]() QLOGIC SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE CHANNEL PCI E HBA QLE2560DEL QLE2560 DEL US $686.04
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![]() DELL SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC H05TJ US $686.04
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![]() DELL SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC 6H20P US $686.04
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![]() QLOGIC SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC QLE2560E US $686.04
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![]() EMULEX LIGHTPULSE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PCI E LPE12000 US $685.18
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![]() IBM QLOGIC 8GB 1 PORT FIBRE CHANNEL HBA PCI E ADAPTER CARD 42D0501 US $568.51
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![]() IBM SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC QLE2560IBMX US $568.51
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![]() IBM SANBLADE 8GB SINGLE PORT FIBRE PC 42D0507 US $568.51
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![]() NETAPP QLOGIC SANBLADE 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E X1089AR6 US $477.11
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![]() NETAPP SANBLADE 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E QLE2462ANAP US $477.11
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![]() QLOGIC SANBLADE 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E QLE2462WB US $477.11
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![]() 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI X QLA2462SUN US $447.57
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![]() 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E 594201802 US $447.57
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![]() 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E QLE2462SUNXO US $447.57
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![]() QLogic QLE2462 Dual Port PCI E 4Gb Fibre Channel Adapter US $434.58
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![]() EMULEX FC1010472 01 1 PORT 2GB FIBRE CHANNEL PCI ADAPTR US $429.00
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![]() EXPANSION MODULE PCI 64 FIBRE CHANNEL 2 PORTS X6727A US $422.43
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![]() DELL 4GB DUAL PORTS FIBRE PCI E FF340 US $420.44
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What Are The Benefits Of Using HP Switches For A Global Network?
HP ProCurve Switches are enterprise class switches that help global corporations conduct business operations 24/7, efficiently and smoothly, and in a transparent way. These switches help connect servers, PCs, laptops, and other shared resources that are situated in various global offices. Office employees can email colleagues, access files and databases hosted on different servers, and more. Here are the advantages of using HP ProCurve Switches:
1. The switches are Power Over Ethernet-compliant. Each port gets adequate power that enables IP phones, webcams and other wireless access points to function smoothly. This helps save money and enhances office monitoring across remote locations.
2. Any office employee can speedily access any information on any server in any global location (so long he is granted access). HP ProCurve Switches facilitate fast speeds and low latency by incorporating a wire-speed non-blocking and switching architecture.
3. These switches have a dual-personality. They feature 10/100/1000 ports or mini-GBC slots for optional fibre connectivity. So, redundancy is adequately built in.
4. IT Network managers can set up automatic routing to several external routes in IP networks. This makes data transfer and data access speedier and smoother.
5. HP ProCurve Switches also feature a rapid convergence procedure, which enhances the network uptime by retrieving failed links very quickly.
6. The link aggregation feature in the switches combines multiple network connections to increase throughput. The result is that each connection gets much more power, and that helps network sustenance. The link aggregation feature also provides adequate redundancy.
7. These switches are very secure as they feature a control post-based access. This ensures that only authorised and qualified users get access to protected network access. It also eliminates external threats to the network. All HP ProCurve Switches are equipped with very powerful anti-hacking and authentication tools.
8. These switches feature a lockdown feature that does not allow anybody to unplug cables from the switch port and then plug in their laptop or other device into it, and then go on to steal vital data. If this feature was not available, anyone could steal critical data from the network.
9. The Terminal Access Controller Access-Control System (TACACS) in the switches is an authentication protocol that ensures that only authenticated office employees are allowed to access data. Further, this protocol can also be set to restrict employees from accessing critical information on the server that is not meant for them.
10. The Secure Shell and Secure Socket Layer in the HP ProCurve switches encrypt all data that is transmitted over remote networks. This ensures that even if the data is hacked into, all the hacker gets is pure junk and garble.
11. These switches have stacking and auto-adjust straight through capabilities. IT managers can also dynamically assign VLANs and map nodes to switch ports on a global scale.
Lastly, these switches come with an extended warranty and 24/7 support. This is how ProCurve Switches enable smooth global operations.
I cant get a new module fitted to a cisco 4507 switch to be be seen by my snmp monitor?
I have added a 6 port fibre card to a 4507 hot swap style. I cant power the switch -what a shock. And its not sending the new cards detail in the MIB but the existing ones are being sent. Any idea how I force ithe switch to re-evaluate the hardware and ammend the MIBs
Thanks for the effort guys but I dont want to repower the switch. the server owners would have a snit fit at the thought. And Ive used a mib browser (what a headache) to ensure the traps dont contain the info. Any other offers???
First of all make sure that the 4507 is seeing the card. One of the answers you received was incorrect in that the modules are not hot pluggable. If you insert a supported module into a 4507, then the 4507 will begine "seeing" the card and you should be able to start configuring its interfaces.
You can determine whether the 4507 recognizes the card by entering the show module command from command line enable mode. If its supported, and the hot insertion worked properly then you should see the module and its software rev information etc, in the output of the show module command.
I have had difficulty at times with online insertion actualy working correctly, and its quite possible that at some point your going to have to schedule a matinainance window and reload the switch, if the users want the card to work.
If you reload the switch and you still aren't seeing the card it is possible your current supervisor engine does not support the card, in which case you'll need a newer sup or an older card. I have had problems with Sup 2 engines on 6500's and Sup 4 and older cards in 4500 series not supporting some of the newer fiber cards available for those products and have to do a supervisor upgrade. You didn't specify what version of IOS that you have on the 4500, so it is also possible that if its been around for a while, that the IOS rev that your using does not upport the new card, in which case you'll need to upgrade to a newer rev. The easiest way to figure all this out is simply to open a TAC case, send them your hardware configuration and they will verify whether your hardware is supported. If you don't have a CCO account you should get these answers from your local Cisco SE.
Going back to rowing's roots (BBC )
A common assumption made about my rowing career is that, as a Cornish girl, I
must have started out in a pilot gig, and I was always ashamed to admit I'd
never even tried it.
I put that right on a beautiful, still, late summer's evening in the estuary
at Falmouth, which made a welcome change from the normally freezing mornings
and biting winds when training with the GB squad on the Thames.
The scene was only enhanced by the wooden pilot gigs, each one named and
painted in bright colours, and they really are beautiful constructions
compared to the forgettable yellow and black plastic German-made shells that
we race in.
The pilot gigs make for a spectacular scene at Falmouth. Photo: gigrower.co.uk
Cornish pilot gigs date back to the days of sail, when large ships attempted
to wind their way into the dangerous ports in Cornwall and the Scilly Isles
and needed someone with local knowledge and experience in navigation.
The licensed Trinity House pilots had crewed boats to row them out to the
incoming ships and, when one was spotted on the horizon, there was often a
race to get out to it as ...
SN6000 Stackable Fibre Channel Switches with 20Gb ISL
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