F5 Fires Back On Open Source SSL Accelerator
Random Feature writes "In response to Build an Open Source SSL Accelerator, in which o3 magazine detailed how to build a solution comparable to an F5 BIG-IP 6900 on the cheap, F5 Fires Back claiming it's not as cheap as it appears and pointing out the potential performance implications of a 'cobbled together set of components designed to mimic similar functionality.' The discussion on the performance of the Open Source solution based on Opteron RSA operation processing capabilities brings into question the validity of the 'more SSL TPS for cheaper' argument presented by o3."
Finally, someone who isn't a raisin sack aptly describes all of FOSS: 'cobbled together set of components designed to mimic similar functionality.'
Ah, FOSS may be cobbled together at times, and it also may be as polished and clean as many commercial apps, but it still does not erase the bottom line that F5 is still charging an asinine amount of money for their hardware. And in this economy, the financial bottom line tends to speak volumes over F5 coming out and trying to justify their price tag with a weak "yeah, but yours sucks" argument.
This reminds me of my first time opening up the lid on a $30,000 Nokia Firewall-1 rack-mount firewall "appliance". They wanted to sell me a $2000 "upgrade". When I slid the mobo out of the fancy chassis, I found I was staring at a generic Intel mobo with a slot-1 celeron proc and 64MB of SDRAM. I then found out that the $2000 "upgrade" was merely a Pentium Proc and 256MB SDRAM stick. Needless to say, I've been rather tainted with justification for commercial hardware.