Scott Haneda wrote: > OpenDNS prohibits commercial use, meaning servers are out.
Since when has commercial use been prohibited? I've been using OpenDNS Basic (the free version) for a long time without any problems (of course I have an account created there). I've not received any notice from OpenDNS that I'm operating in any manner that is against their terms of agreement. In fact, they even have instructions on how to configure your DNS (whatever it may be) server to work with OpenDNS. OpenDNS is my main DNS provider outside of my local win2k3 dns server. The main advantage I have using it is that I can block certain categories of websites that I don't want people viewing in my organization (which I wouldn't be able to do near as easily if it were just my company's dns server). And you can just as easily unblock a domain name if you need to (say if it weren't correctly classified). While I'll agree that a local dns server will always be fastest, for 2000+ emails a day, OpenDNS works just fine (especially since ASSP also caches its DNS queries). I could care less if dns resolve is a few extra milli-seconds. Web browsing works just fine as well (no noticeable delays). Kind Regards, Brett ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Join us December 9, 2009 for the Red Hat Virtual Experience, a free event focused on virtualization and cloud computing. Attend in-depth sessions from your desk. Your couch. Anywhere. http://p.sf.net/sfu/redhat-sfdev2dev _______________________________________________ Assp-test mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/assp-test
