Gyrene,
If you go to Cisco's web site, click Services and Products, you'll see a section for Small Business. The RVS 4000 is one of the routers there. And to perform static routing between a 3 perimeter devices and a (single) ISP router to support a network of 20 employees and 35 systems - I shouldn't NEED an enterprise class router.
Did I mention that all I needed was to route a single 10Mbps connection from my 3 border devices to one IP at the ISP? Did you notice that it's supposed to support static routing (as well as RIP 1 and 2, which as mundane as that is, was more than I needed?) I can assure you it can be configured that way.
Besides which - the day I need to buy a $700 + router from any vendor to get one that actually you know, works!!! to route IP between 4 systems without having to reboot the router every day is the day I buy another companies products. Wait!!!! I already did....
And frankly, In my opinion if they don't want to be in the business of providing products to those market segments, then they should get out of the business of targeting products at them. From my experience, they are, one customer at a time... And maybe they might even want to stop buying companies whose entire lines of business are the markets that you say they are stating that they don't want. (And no, I actually hadn't heard that they had an interest in withdrawing from those markets.)
All I know is that I won't buy another overpriced, underperforming Cisco product - or another "works for a while then quits Linksys" - which has been experience with every Linksys-branded device I've bought in the last 2 years or so - as long as Cisco owns them.
What anyone else does is, of course, up to them.
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Reschke - you don't need to worry about QOS on the switch, or SNMP. You aren't going to ever perform software monitoring of the switch - you are going to plug it in and then it's going to be like an ethernet cable - it just works. And you aren't going to be simultaneously running 2 or more different (anything) to any one device that are so bandwidth intensive on your home network that you will EVER need to care whether some packets have priority over others or not.
Where you might potentially someday care is at the router, but even that's not all that likely.
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