The faceplate of the device sports a small LCD along with six small recessed buttons and five status LEDs showing power, temperature, network, and disk status/activity.
The rear of the device is where all the ports are located, including a serial/console port, two USB ports, and six copper network ports. There is a standard IEC power connector and a small power switch.
Once the machine has been booted and the initial addresses, (IP, subnet, gateway) and password set via the LCD, the system reboots and the administrator can then access it via a browser using HTTPS and port 2456. Then a preliminary configuration wizard runs. Some of the systems features in addition to firewalling are; VPN, content filtering, antivirus scanning, intrusion detection, and prevention, as well as hardware encryption.
Symantec developers have certainly exercised a prodigious amount of Java coding to create this management interface. Reports can be generated directly from the interface, and saved in either PDF or HTML format â€" there are even options for page sizes. There are also 38 different types of report that are available to be generated at the click of a button.
Overall this is a well-designed device with plenty of scalability. The management and administration interface may take a little time to get used to.
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How can you test all firewalls and leave the marketleader out ? All these are toys ! :)checkpoint rules