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Cisco Ships Mexican Folk Music On VPN Client CD

jemduff writes "So we receive our brand new firewall from CISCO and all goes well with the setup... until we try to upgrade our VPN client and we discovered that the installation CDs from CISCO contain 12 tracks of Mexican music!!? Not too bad if you're into that kind of music ... too bad if you need to get onto your corporate network. How much did those routers cost, again? 5,000,000 pesos?"

10 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Well, of course by wandazulu · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Windows version uses OLE.

    1. Re:Well, of course by Kooty-Sentinel · · Score: 5, Funny

      The Linux version comes with Samba ;)

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  2. Uh-oh by Yvan256 · · Score: 5, Funny

    An american company outsources its CD-pressing to China and ends up with Mexican folk music on the discs.

    I don't why but I'm sure that someone, somewhere, is blaming Canada for this.

  3. That software has bugs, specifically by geekoid · · Score: 4, Funny

    la cocoracha!

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    1. Re:That software has bugs, specifically by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 4, Funny

      la cocoracha!

      The chocolate-roach?

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  4. Re:Meanwhile... by santiagoanders · · Score: 4, Funny

    Los chicanos no compran esos CDs. Se venden copias en la calle, y esos son mas baratos. Vive la Raza!

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  5. OK guys... by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Funny

    I must admit: this is funny. I picture the whole situation, and the mariachi music coming out of the speakers of the laptop, and I laugh my ass off. Just imagine those CCIEs with the WTF look on their faces.

    I wish I was there, with a camera.

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  6. Re:Translation by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 4, Funny

    I guess the funnier part is, thousands of Traditional Mexican music lovers haven't noticed the squeals and chirps coming from their CD players.

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    "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
  7. Re:Translation by lysergic.acid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    these kind of things happen. and considering the size of the company involved (and the volume of product they ship), it's almost guaranteed to happen once in a while.

    in this case it might not have been a problem on Cisco's end, unless they press their own CDs. whenever you depend on third parties (i.e. outsourcing manufacturing) you expose yourself to these type of factory screw ups, and no amount of QA will prevent it unless you have complete vertical integration.

    all you can do is pick your suppliers carefully and obtain compensation for factory mistakes such as these. and if you're lucky, the screw up won't damage your company's reputation or customer relations.

    at my work we've gone through several different printers and CD/DVD manufacturers for this exact reason. we didn't have any mixups this bad, but there have been many sub-standard shipments causing delays.

    but by far the worst case was when my boss, against my warnings, decided to pursue DRMed audio CDs. i forget the name of the DRM scheme we went with, but it was a popular DRM technology that many of the majors were using at the time. we ended up getting a flood of complaints from customers who couldn't get their CDs to play on their computer or CD players. it ended up costing the company a ton of money and likely drove away a lot of customers. the stupid thing is, there was no evidence that our music was being pirated, and sales were actually on the rise due to the newly launched online store.

  8. Mexican here, shedding some light by Tatisimo · · Score: 4, Informative
    The song sample is one of the crappy bootleg remixes that wanna be DJs sell on swap meets. Also, it's crappy "Narco Corridos" (check out what wikipedia has to say http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcocorrido), a genre that some songwriter friends of mine define as "the cancer that is killing Mexican music". The first thing is the cliche echo deep voice, frequent in remix CDs, followed by some guy singing about how much he loves drugs. Oh, and the pic is totally unrelated. I've never heard narco corridos played by a mariachi band!

    Not that this will help solve the mystery, but whoever pulled this prank has a very poor taste in music, I'd say.

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