The "Nonfunctional" side is critical for the LPI obsessed C?O demographic, and is therefor mandatory for most products. I wish I didn't know that. Nick On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 1:03 PM, Howard C. Berkowitz <hcb@netcases.net>wrote:
On 12/23/2012 7:44 AM, Aled Morris wrote:
On 23 December 2012 01:07, Wayne E Bouchard <web@typo.org> wrote:
They serve quite well until I get to a switch that some douchebag
mounted rear facing on the front posts of the rack
I see this all the time with low-end Cisco ISR products (2... and 3... routers) since CIsco insist on having a "pretty" plastic fascia with their logo, model number, power LED etc. on the unuseful side.
Such routers have two fronts: a suit side and an operational side.
Less experienced
installers (being generous with my terminology) assume this is therefore the "front" and mount it facing on the front rails, leaving the connector side buried half way into the rack where only a proctologist can reach the plugs.
For further detail about the latter: http://f2.org/humour/songs/**crs.html<http://f2.org/humour/songs/crs.html>
I use this as a gauge of experience in interviews for engineers... "Here's a new router and here's the rack mount ears. Show me where they go."
Aled