From: Paul Dardinski (pauld@marshallcomm.com)
Date: Thu Apr 17 2008 - 06:38:20 ART
David,
I think you are a bit confused. The 2611xm will support the AIM-CUE. There is no requirement for NM-CUE. I am using the AIM in my rack. The difference is that you don't have to also support WAN connectivity in the same box, that part is up to how you want to set it up. For example in my rack the 2611xm sits behind the gw, connected only via IP (no pstn).
IF you really want to also support WAN connectivity in the same box then you would install an NM-HDV (w/pvdms and mft-t1) into the available single slot in the 2611xm.
PD (#16842 RS/Sec)
________________________________
From: nobody@groupstudy.com on behalf of davidytk
Sent: Wed 4/16/2008 11:26 AM
To: Paul Dardinski; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
Paul,
I know 2611xm + NM-CUE can do for CUE lab. However the price for one NM-CUE
is over US1000 in ebay. That's why I want to buy AIM-CUE instead of NM-CUE
as it is quite cheaper.
However AIM-CUE is installed inside the router. So how can I connect the
2611xm to other network to simulate the CUE function (is it only need extra
T1 connection or etc).
Please advice.
Thanks
Best Regards
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Dardinski [mailto:pauld@marshallcomm.com]
Sent: 2008-04-16 23:12
To: davidytk; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
David,
I'd spend some time on the CCO to evaluate platform interoperability. As to
your below:
1) AIM-CUE - this is one of two options for Unity express, other option is
the NM-CUE. The AIM-CUE actually goes inside the router platform, it is not
an external exposed module. The 2611XM is the lowest cost AIM supporting
platform afaik
2) router 1760/2811 - the 1760 will not support AIMs, the 1760 will support
native insertion of a VIC to act as low-end gateway. The 2811 will support
both the AIM and MFT, but it is a much more expensive platform
3) NM-HDV + MFT 1T/E1 - the HDV module is only needed if the routing
platform doesn't support native VIC (ie. 26/36xx series routers).
PD (#16842, RS/Sec)
________________________________
From: davidytk [mailto:davidytk@netvigator.com]
Sent: Wed 4/16/2008 10:43 AM
To: Paul Dardinski; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
Hi Paul
If I am not getting wrong. For using AIM-CUE
I need to following equipment.
1. AIM-CUE
2. router (1760/2811)
3. NM-HDV + MFT 1T/E1 (for connecting PSTN router)
Am I correct?
Also does 3640 or other router support AIM-CUE?
I know if I use 2811 router, I need to use NM-HDV2 instead NM-HDV, right ?
Thanks
Best Regards
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Dardinski [mailto:pauld@marshallcomm.com]
Sent: 2008-04-16 22:21
To: davidytk; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
David,
The AIM-CUE is a module that will go inside any AIM compatible platform, it
doesn't sit in an NM slot. Either way, for T1/E1 connectivity you will need
either an NM-HDV to carry the MFT-T1/E1 for older platforms or can use the
VIC native to other platforms (ie. 1760/2811, etc)
PD (#16842 RS/Sec)
________________________________
From: davidytk [mailto:davidytk@netvigator.com]
Sent: Wed 4/16/2008 10:19 AM
To: Paul Dardinski; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
Hi Paul
Does AIM CUE still have connection T1 port for me to connect to other device
??
________________________________
From: Paul Dardinski [mailto:pauld@marshallcomm.com]
Sent: 2008-04-16 22:13
To: davidytk; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CUE for CCIE voice
David,
The main difference between the AIM-CUE and NM-CUE is capacity and of course
platform compatibility. I have the AIM-CUE in my rack as this is less
problem prone (no hard drive) and easier to procure at lower price point
(Ebay).
PD (#16842 RS/Sec)
________________________________
From: nobody@groupstudy.com on behalf of davidytk
Sent: Wed 4/16/2008 8:48 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: CUE for CCIE voice
Hi All
I would like to know what module/network should I need to purchase for the
CUE in voice CCIE
Thanks
Best Regards
David
Pass the CCIE in six weeks, Guaranteed!
http://www.certscience.com/CCIE
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