tokhss wrote: » is it running in production or in lab
tokhss wrote: » considering this is for my lab and i am trying to save money here.. im really thinking of testing some of these fakers and seeing if they hold up enough to pass my exams..
tokhss wrote: » i just read an article that the us govt bought a ton load of fake gear that was sold by their gold cisco partners lol.. this was back in 2008.. wonder how well it ran or didnt !
jeanathan wrote: » How can you tell if the gear is fake? If it is fake then how does it work?
jeanathan wrote: » I mean a fake CPU would not be compatibly with an intel i series motherboard. So how does a fake Cisco VWIC2 work on a 2800 series router?
jeanathan wrote: » I know a fake designer dress or suit is hard to tell because the knockoff is assembled in a textile plant that is very similar to that the designer uses.
jeanathan wrote: » For that matter I could get a sticker than says Intel i7 CPU and sell you an Intel i3 at the price of an i7.
jeanathan wrote: » So is a fake VWIC2 actually a VWIC1 card for the 2600 series being marketed as a VWIC2, that isn't a discounted knockoff. That is fake as in listing a VWIC2 for $70 and sending you a pair of shoes in mail, out and out fraud.
tiersten wrote: » Missing holograms. Bad soldering. Usage of different component brands. Different silkscreening.
they're from the actual factory that makes the real cards and somebody is running the production line without Cisco's knowledge.
Never said it was like that.
jeanathan wrote: » That is messed up. So theoretically if they did a good enough job only the a paper trail, say the s/n of device, could tell you one way or another. Makes you wonder about equipment on eBay, I see why you would never use eBay equip. in a real network even if you could save cash.
jeanathan wrote: » Didn't mean to imply that, I was thinking out loud.
tiersten wrote: » Pretty much. If you're putting this into a production network then I'd say go find a Cisco partner who gets their stock directly from Cisco if you can.