Data Sheet
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information.
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Cisco SRW2024 24-Port Gigabit Switch: WebView
Cisco Small Business Managed Switches
Highly Secure, Reliable, Intelligent Switching for Your Growing Businesses
Highlights
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24 high-speed ports optimized for the network core or to support bandwidth-intensive
applications
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Enhanced QoS helps ensure a consistent network experience and supports networked
applications including voice, video, and data storage
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Strong security protects network traffic to keep unauthorized users off the network
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Simplified, web-based management for easy installation and configuration
Figure 1. Cisco SRW2024 24-Port Gigabit Switch: WebView
Product Overview
Growing businesses require cost-effective networking solutions that can scale with ever-changing
business needs. The Cisco
®
SRW2024 24-Port Gigabit Switch (Figure 1) brings Gigabit speeds to
your users and servers while increasing the intelligence and security of the network infrastructure.
The twenty-four 10/100/1000 Mbps ports enable you to take advantage of the Gigabit Ethernet
interfaces shipping in the current generation of servers, workstations, and storage devices, in
addition to supporting your existing 10/100 Mbps clients. The optional Gigabit optical interfaces
allow you to expand the network as your business grows.
Network security is a top priority in any size business. Most business data networks, large and
small, are unsecure. Unauthorized access to the network and mission-critical data is a constant
concern. The Cisco SRW2024 helps secure the network through 802.1X port authentication and
MAC filtering. The 802.1X standard requires clients to authenticate themselves before the port will
pass data for them.
Businesses are recognizing the benefits of voice over IP (VoIP) and are quickly migrating their
voice services to IP-based platforms, requiring their local area networks to support both voice and
data applications. In unmanaged IP networks, bursty data sessions can disrupt voice packet
delivery, causing poor voice quality. With the enhanced quality of service (QoS) and traffic-