on 04-05-2012 09:18 PM
Recently, HP Networking published a blog post attempting to counter the favorable third party Miercom report on our Cisco® 200 and 300 Series Smart and Managed switches:
http://h30507.www3.hp.com/t5/HP-Networking/Setting-the-record-straight-Fallacies-of-Cisco-SMB-Managed/ba-p/109877
The purpose of this note is to provide a high-level and detailed point-by-point response to HP’s blog. HP’s primary argument is that the Miercom report is flawed because it compares “apples and oranges.” However, it’s evident from the Miercom report that Cisco is indeed comparing apples to apples. The report showed that Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches functionally meet or exceed a full list of HP switches—2520, 2510, 2620, 2810, and 1810G switches —and are highly competitive in terms of pricing, features, services, and warranty. The fact that Cisco is marketing these switches as Small Business switches does not invalidate the results of the Miercom report.
We think the reality is that HP was caught a bit off guard by the capability and competitiveness of the Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches, and that this blog post is HP’s way of covering up the results and adding misleading information. Instead of directly addressing the Miercom comparisons between the Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches and HP switches, HP decided to make comparisons directed at Cisco Catalyst® switches and to purposely avoid any direct comparisons with the Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches. The reason is evident—HP was outmatched.
We’ve punched a big hole in HP’s overall “anti-Cisco” positioning. The Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches round out Cisco’s switching portfolio for small and medium-sized businesses and, in HP’s argument, maybe even in Enterprise switching.
Below is our “apples to apples” comparison to address head on every argument HP listed in its blog.
Here are the facts from the Miercom report:
[Editorial Note (2/27/2014) - It was suggested in the HP Blog and in the comments to their blog that HP 1910 is a better comparison. The following link is a detailed document showing Cisco 300 Series has 100+ intelligent features not present in HP 1910 - https://supportforums.cisco.com/docs/DOC-40056]
With regard to HP’s discussion of the Miercom report’s findings on energy efficiency:
Findings in the Miercom report that HP did not argue with:
HP calls Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches “oranges.” But the fact is that Cisco’s “oranges” beat HP’s “apples” in every single category: performance, usability, energy efficiency and power consumption, features, and more. Does the fact that these Cisco switches are being marketed as “Small Business” invalidate the results of the Miercom report? We don’t think so. HP wants to shift focus away from the fact that it was beaten badly. It wants customers to focus on what a product is called instead of what it does. And what the Cisco 200 and 300 Series switches do is outperform the HP switches in every way.
Read the Miercom test report and decide for yourself:
BTW, I posted the following comment on HPs Blog Page. So far they have not approved it for everyone to see
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Cisco has posted a response to this blog. You can find the comments at the following link:
https://supportforums.cisco.com/docs/DOC-23732
I also want to respond to a few of the comments from others on this blog from HP:
1) The 300 series switches were tested under load as shown in the report. The testing was performed at numerous packet sizes and the switches were proven to perform at wirespeed non-blocking performance. Check the report. BTW, the same results were found by the Tolly Group - see http://blogs.cisco.com/smallbusiness/tolly-report-cisco-300-series-managed-switches/
2) The products in the test were chosen with the following criteria:
a) A broad cross-section representative of HPs products for SMB and low-end Enterprise (accomplished with selection of 1810, 2510, 2520, 2610, 2620, 2810)
b) The top HP products as measured by revenue at the time this test was performed according to US NPD in the SMB and low-end Enterprise (accomplished with the models selected). This also explains why the 19xx switches were not part of this test.
3) To specifically address the comments on the HP 19xx switches relative to Cisco’s 300 series switches:
Cisco 300 series switches offer (relative to HP 19xx switches):
a) More Capacity – larger table sizes (VLANs, MAC address tables, ACLs)
b) More Advanced Energy Efficiency capabilities such as EEE (Energy Efficient Ethernet) in addition to the items offered on the HP 19xx switches
c) More Advanced Features far beyond 19xx:
- IPv6 capabilities – Multicast, Unicast, Management, ACLs, and QoS
- Q-in-Q, VLAN Mirroring, TCP Congestion Avoidance, MLD Snooping, IGMP Querier, etc
d) Unique Cisco added capabilities such as Auto Smartports, CDP, and Network-wide Auto Voice capabilities
Just the facts.
BTW, I posted the following comment on HPs Blog Page. So far they have not approved it for everyone to see
can you throw me the link to that?
Here's the link. They still have not approved my comments on their blog:
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