Guard Feature Key Keygen
Enterprise Networking Routers, Switches, Firewalls and other Data Networking infrastructure discussions welcomed. New Visitors are encouraged to read our. This subreddit allows:. Enterprise & Business Networking topics such as:.
Design. Troubleshooting. Best Practices.
Educational Topics & Questions are allowed with following guidelines:. Enterprise /Data Center /SP /Business networking related. No Homework Topics without detailed, and specific questions.
Networking Career Topics are allowed with following guidelines:. Topics asking for information about getting into the networking field will be removed. This topic has been discussed at length, please use the search feature. Topics regarding senior-level networking career progression are permitted. This subreddit does NOT allow:.
Home Networking Topics. We aren't here to troubleshoot your 'advanced' video game latency issues. Home Networks, even complex ones are best discussed elsewhere like. HomeLab discussions, as a tool for learning & certifications are welcomed.
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Getting Started
Braindump / Certification Cheating. These topics pollute our industry and devalue the hard work of others. These posts will be deleted without mercy. Blogspam / Traffic Redirection. This sub prefers to share knowledge within the sub community.
Directing our members to resources elsewhere is closely monitored. You may announce the existence of your blog/YouTube Channel.
You may share a URL to a blog that answers questions already in discussion. But harassing members to check out your content will not be tolerated.
Low-quality posts. Any post that fails to display a minimal level of effort prior to asking for help is at risk of being Locked or Deleted. We expect our members to treat each other as fellow professionals. Professionals research & troubleshoot before they ask others for help. Please review to avoid this issue. Early-Career Advice. This sub-reddit is dedicated to higher-level, more senior networking topics.
and are all available for early-career discussions. We don't do your homework for you. Don't ask us what we would buy for a given project. Don't ask us how to subnet. Show us how you think you should solve those issues, and we will validate or offer enhancement to your initial attempt.
Recommended & Related Sub-Reddits: Related IRC Channels. Rule #1: No Home Networking. Rule #2: No Certification Brain Dumps / Cheating. Rule #3: No BlogSpam / Traffic re-direction.
Rule #4: No Low Quality Posts. Rule #5: No Early Career Advice.
Rule #6: Homework / Educational Questions must display effort. Please, now I know you're full of shit. There is categorically NOTHING worse than the old Junipers. I'd rather use Java-based firewall running on a raspberry pie. I call your depth of experience into question! Seriously though, Watchguards are fine for what they are. SME/SMB grade UTM.
Stupid easy to configure, relatively fully featured, cheap. I'd take them over Sonicwall, Sophos, and the other ilk of that scale. For more serious I'd move into Fortigate, then Checkpoint, then in the most extreme of cases Cisco. You realise Cisco uses Java for their ASDM right?
Anyhow each to their own. If you want a piece of shit that allows asymmetric routing, shit monitoring/logging adapted for troubleshooting purposes, and a box that won't allow you to apply policy if your license expires, crack on. Nothing more useful than a box that doesn't allow you to seive through policy using a search function to find if something should be allowed or denied. It's almost funny how my first job at my new place of work is to remove every WatchGuard firewall from the network and replace it with an ASA. Wonder if that's cos the WatchGuards were so good, the company couldn't take the goodness anymore. Or maybe, just maybe, the box was complete horse shit. The fucking policy isn't even broken down into interfaces, it's just a global policy that you apply stuff too.
It's like someone who has just discovered a firewall in the 1990's, and still believes it's a good piece of code in 2017. I'd rather use an Acorn PC, with a Linux emulator to implement an un-stateful iptables configuration, with a gameboy as the input device than use a WatchGuard firewall. And I'd do it with that fucking grey gameboy original with broken buttons, and a hole where the 'A' key should be.
Knowledge Base
Enterprise Networking Routers, Switches, Firewalls and other Data Networking infrastructure discussions welcomed. New Visitors are encouraged to read our. This subreddit allows:. Enterprise & Business Networking topics such as:.
Design. Troubleshooting. Best Practices. Educational Topics & Questions are allowed with following guidelines:. Enterprise /Data Center /SP /Business networking related.
No Homework Topics without detailed, and specific questions. Networking Career Topics are allowed with following guidelines:. Topics asking for information about getting into the networking field will be removed. This topic has been discussed at length, please use the search feature. Topics regarding senior-level networking career progression are permitted. This subreddit does NOT allow:. Home Networking Topics.
We aren't here to troubleshoot your 'advanced' video game latency issues. Home Networks, even complex ones are best discussed elsewhere like.
HomeLab discussions, as a tool for learning & certifications are welcomed. Braindump / Certification Cheating.
These topics pollute our industry and devalue the hard work of others. These posts will be deleted without mercy. Blogspam / Traffic Redirection. This sub prefers to share knowledge within the sub community. Directing our members to resources elsewhere is closely monitored. You may announce the existence of your blog/YouTube Channel. You may share a URL to a blog that answers questions already in discussion.
But harassing members to check out your content will not be tolerated. Low-quality posts. Any post that fails to display a minimal level of effort prior to asking for help is at risk of being Locked or Deleted. We expect our members to treat each other as fellow professionals.
Professionals research & troubleshoot before they ask others for help. Please review to avoid this issue. Early-Career Advice. This sub-reddit is dedicated to higher-level, more senior networking topics. and are all available for early-career discussions. We don't do your homework for you. Don't ask us what we would buy for a given project.
Don't ask us how to subnet. Show us how you think you should solve those issues, and we will validate or offer enhancement to your initial attempt. Recommended & Related Sub-Reddits: Related IRC Channels. Rule #1: No Home Networking. Rule #2: No Certification Brain Dumps / Cheating. Rule #3: No BlogSpam / Traffic re-direction. Rule #4: No Low Quality Posts.
Rule #5: No Early Career Advice. Rule #6: Homework / Educational Questions must display effort. Please, now I know you're full of shit. There is categorically NOTHING worse than the old Junipers. I'd rather use Java-based firewall running on a raspberry pie.
I call your depth of experience into question! Seriously though, Watchguards are fine for what they are.
SME/SMB grade UTM. Stupid easy to configure, relatively fully featured, cheap. I'd take them over Sonicwall, Sophos, and the other ilk of that scale. For more serious I'd move into Fortigate, then Checkpoint, then in the most extreme of cases Cisco. You realise Cisco uses Java for their ASDM right?
Anyhow each to their own. If you want a piece of shit that allows asymmetric routing, shit monitoring/logging adapted for troubleshooting purposes, and a box that won't allow you to apply policy if your license expires, crack on.
Nothing more useful than a box that doesn't allow you to seive through policy using a search function to find if something should be allowed or denied. It's almost funny how my first job at my new place of work is to remove every WatchGuard firewall from the network and replace it with an ASA. Wonder if that's cos the WatchGuards were so good, the company couldn't take the goodness anymore. Or maybe, just maybe, the box was complete horse shit. The fucking policy isn't even broken down into interfaces, it's just a global policy that you apply stuff too.
It's like someone who has just discovered a firewall in the 1990's, and still believes it's a good piece of code in 2017. I'd rather use an Acorn PC, with a Linux emulator to implement an un-stateful iptables configuration, with a gameboy as the input device than use a WatchGuard firewall. And I'd do it with that fucking grey gameboy original with broken buttons, and a hole where the 'A' key should be.