What this really comes down to, I think, is figuring out how your "gut level" concerns fit into the big picture, and to then put that into terms that the people responsible for the big picture can use to make a good decision. Finances do matter. Getting your employer to spend money it doesn't have to on network equipment generally means there's less money available to spend on other things that might matter, like making your network bigger, hiring people to help you, or even keeping you employed. If you want to spend more on equipment than the bare minimum, you ought to have a reason. To get anybody else to come to the same conclusion, you ought to be able to explain that reason. That said, I think it's valid to buy something because you're comfortable with it, and valid to not buy something because you're not comfortable with it. "I don't want to buy new device X because I don't want to have to learn how to use it" sounds lazy, but most of us are busy, and if the device you're comfortable with will do the job for an affordable price, it's generally good not to create extra work for yourself. Saying "we shouldn't do that because I don't know how" is hard. It may be because something is new and complicated, and nobody has experience with it. Or it may be because you're not familiar with it when lots of other people are. You may have a different specialty, or it may be because you're less experienced than the people they could have hired if they'd paid or shopped around more. But, your expertise or lack thereof is a legitimate thing to take into account when making decisions, as is the likely expertise of people who will have to manage the system in the future. Unfamiliar network equipment is expensive to manage, whether the CLI is well done or not. Even in a one person shop, you won't yet have encountered the device's pitfalls -- its easily circumventable bugs, the configurations that seem intuitive but aren't, etc. It's going to take you longer to design and configure your networks, and you're going to create problems by doing the wrong thing more often. You're probably going cause some outages, or even buy equipment and then find that you missed something and need to buy something else. If you work with a large team, and maybe even have NOC people working the night shift in another location supporting the thing, it gets worse. All those people have to be trained on the new device, and come up to speed on it. It's also good to understand the reliability requirements for something you're building. We don't have licensing requirements for Network Engineers, but some other more established engineering professions do. If a structural engineer signs off on a building despite being unfamiliar with some aspect of the construction technology and the building collapses, that can be career ending. Internet networks that have become pretty important too. If you're building a network where a failure will cause a heart attack victim to not be able to call 911 from their VOIP phone, it isn't good enough to say "I've never seen this piece of equipment but I don't have any reason to think it won't work." If you're building a network to connect some office PCs, the stakes are probably lower. And, of course, there's also the option of learning about unfamiliar technology. Play with it in your lab. Put it in a peripheral site that can fail without causing too many problems. Get your NOC staff familiar with it. And maybe, in the end, you'll find that you actually like it. That it does something your old hardware doesn't. That cheap hardware lets you afford a level of redundancy, and thus reliability, that was simply unaffordable with you're previously preferred equipment. But that testing and familiarity has a cost, just as buying expensive equipment does, and just as running unfamiliar equipment does. It's a matter of balancing it all out, and coming to an agreement with your management on what the best strategy is. -Steve On Nov 25, 2011, at 8:15 AM, Joel Maslak wrote:
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 12:01 AM, Robert Bonomi <bonomi@mail.r-bonomi.com>wrote:
The trick to deailing with this as a propellorhead[sic] is to include a *monetized* estimate of the increased manpower OPEX of using the 'dog to work with' box. And a TCOS figure over the projected lifetime of the units. No need to 'fight' with management about it, just understand 'how' they make the decisions, and give them the informatin they need to make the decision come out 'your way'.
I'd say that the ethical thing to do is to give them the information they need to make a decision, not to get it your way. I see, for instance, people buying local closet switches from brand A when brand B is much, much cheaper (but lacks the prestige of brand A), had a perfectly workable management interface, and will perform identically, with similar support offered by both vendors. But they are an ACNA or whatever, or they've just heard of (insert brand here), so they buy it. Because it's easy and familiar.
It's also possible that a web managed switch (which I despise) might actually be the right choice for a business - because factors other than a technologist's distaste might be important.
Part of being ethical (and NOT like the business people we might all despise!) is to be honest. So we don't compare brand A to brand B unfairly. We don't inflate the cost of brand B by adding brand B's management infrastructure to the cost when we darn well know we just will need a minor tweak to our scripts that can already manage brand A. That sort of thing.
I generally agree with what Robert said: It's about what makes sense to the business. If operating expenses will increase ("Well have to grow headcount by 3 to support this"), then bring that up. A caution though: "Takes less effort to run" doesn't equate to dollars (the question a former manager would ask me when I tried that line was, "So who do you think we should lay off then to get the dollar savings?" Fortunately he was a good manager who wasn't serious, but was rather trying to get me to think about what I'm saying). I like paychecks, which is why I work for a living - it's about the dollars. So it's not unreasonable for my management to also care about the money (since it's a key motivation for myself, after all!). Yes, I'm fortunate to do a job I love and get paid for it at the same time.
I can say, for a CUI interface, operations over low-speed links (wireless VPN when I'm away from the office and in a bad cell zone, for instance) is likely important. So is ability to script common tasks to allow people like the help desk to do their jobs at low risk. Flexibility is also important - when I'm stuck with this piece of gear (which is shiny today) in 5-7 years, when it's not so shiny, is it going to have flexibility to last a bit longer if the business needs to conserve cash - or will a minor change in how we do business make this thing functionally obsolete?
Relating to the discussion on the tier 1 mentor thread, someone who wants to go far in networking won't be married to a particular vendor or way of doing things. They'll excel and find ways to overcome challenges, including less than perfect equipment, that they might have to deal with. They'll do so in a way that makes the customer and their own management happy. A highly paid network engineer who complains about work being difficult probably won't do that. One that finds a $500 replacement for a $5000 router probably will stick around, provided they can actually deliver what they promised (the guy that puts the $500 replacement in only to have to replace it in a year with a $5000 router again won't go far, so be careful! And you better have figured in the real costs of running a network with $500 routers, not just the cost of the router).