{Side note: it's so nice to be able to type 'L' to reply to the list in mutt again. (^chewie hugs his procmail filters.)} In referencing the release notes for the Cisco 1605R, it looks like they do provide a Firewall image for the router. This is not the simplest or cheapest route for the library to take, but I would be comfortable in saying that it'd probably be the most secure (if we exclude the SNMP bugs that "ALL" Cisco equipment is succeptable to) and most supported. Cisco has some nice Windoze management software for the router, and if all else fails, can be accessed from the serial port for the IOS command line. An added bonus may be that the ISP the library is currently getting service from could manage the router as well. The library wouldn't have to worry about configuring things or screwing things up, and can rely upon the ISP's expertise in this field. That alone would offset the cost of having someone develop an in-house expertise for such things. Libraries, I can assume, don't really have the buget or personel to spare. I would only suggest such an organization take on Linux if they have either in-house expertise with time to manage it, or if they can find someone to provide service for them in either a per-incident/hourly basis or some sort of contract basis. The cheapest solution isn't always the best solution. I learned that the hard way. -- ^chewie -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 232 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20020227/77bc8e9a/attachment.pgp