Thank you Jason! Big week ahead for http://as714.peeringdb.com
Cheers! -ren.pr...@gmail.com > On Sep 18, 2017, at 5:48 AM, Christopher Morrow <morrowc.li...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> On Sun, Sep 17, 2017 at 11:05 PM, JASON BOTHE <jbo...@me.com> wrote: >> >> My best experience with Apple has been directly peering with them. >> Definitely handles the update issue without putting strain on transit >> links. Apple is very well connected. >> >> https://www.peeringdb.com/net/3554 >> >> > apple is AS714 though, right? or are they having the trucking company do > their delivery of bits? > > >> >> >> >> >> Sent from my iPhone >>> On Sep 17, 2017, at 21:50, Mel Beckman <m...@beckman.org> wrote: >>> >>> It is still there. MacMiniColo. >>> >>> -mel beckman >>> >>>> On Sep 17, 2017, at 7:48 PM, Mel Beckman <m...@beckman.org> wrote: >>>> >>>> There used to be a Mac mini "hotel" at Switch networks in Vegas. I >> think it's still there. >>>> >>>> -mel >>>> >>>>>> On Sep 17, 2017, at 4:44 PM, Jean-Francois Mezei < >> jfmezei_na...@vaxination.ca> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> On 2017-09-17 19:37, Eduardo Schoedler wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> Server is an app now, any MacOS can have it running. >>>>> >>>>> But do carriers/ISPs really want to deal with a rack unfriendly Mac >> Mini >>>>> or iMac at a carrier hotel? If the Server App could run on Linux, or >> if >>>>> OS-X could boot on standard servers, perhaps, it it seems to be a very >>>>> bad fit in carrier/enterprise environments. >>>>> >>>>>> Implementation will be a little tricky, because you need your >>>>>> customers to look a record in your domain. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I've tried reading some about it. >>>>> The cache server app registers with Apple its existence and the IP >>>>> address ranges it serves >>>>> >>>>> When a client wants to download new IOS version, Apple checked and >> finds >>>>> that the client's IP is served by the caching server whose "local" IP >> is >>>>> a.b.c.d (akaL the inside NAT IP address). Tells client to get version >> of >>>>> software from that IP address. >>>>> >>>>> The DNS TXT records are used by the Caching Server to get the list of >> IP >>>>> blocks it can serve. (not needed in the target small office >>>>> environments where everyone is on same subnet and the caching server >> can >>>>> tell the apple serves the one subnet it seves). >>>>> >>