The exchange point is my best bet. As in what? - hosting my server? (i think Hari has posted this in a mail i have not received) Why would i? I can host my server anywhere in Uganda and it should be very speedy accesible by all ISP's in the country. Which ISP is absolutely irrelevant. What is slow is traffic over the satelite, that is really what you want to prevent. But as long as all ISP's have their routing set correctly (Which they have at the moment), local speed should not be an issue. Besides this, it is only the downloads I want to protect, not the whole server. (remember, its a webserver)
or as in: - Asking for the list of IP's? As mentioned in earlier threads, if you want to communicate with the people involved in the UIXP, here is the best bet. (it did work quite wonderfully before) eh, saturday night. time for a beer. reinier On Saturday 17 November 2007 17:24:01 Mark Tinka wrote: > On Saturday 17 November 2007 20:09, Reinier Battenberg > wrote: > > > In the end, the problem is not how to calculate a CIDR > > prefix length (i really had to google that), the problem > > is what the most accurate way is to tell if a website > > visitor is coming from Uganda or not, excluding VSAT. For > > this I would like to find a source that is > > 1. accurate, > > 2 easily updateable. > > I hate to say this again, but the exchange point is really > your best bet here. It is both authoritative and quite > up-to-date. > > Cheers, > > Mark. > -- rgds, Reinier Battenberg Director Mountbatten Ltd. +256 782 801 749 www.mountbatten.net _______________________________________________ LUG mailing list [email protected] http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/lug %LUG is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/ The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way. ---------------------------------------
