At 03:50 PM 4/3/2008, Derek J. Balling wrote:
So your theoretical maximum draw is NOT "1/2 the total"... in a nicely
populated chassis it will draw more than 1/2 the total and complain
the whole time about it.
That should probably have read in a well designed and fully populated
chassis... I
At 02:11 PM 3/29/2008, Alex Pilosov wrote:
Can someone please, pretty please with sugar on top, explain the point
behind high power density?
More equipment in your existing space means more revenue and more profit.
Raw real estate is cheap (basically, nearly free). Increasing power
density p
At 10:15 AM 3/26/2008, Lamar Owen wrote:
One thing I haven't seen discussed, though, is the other big issue with
high-density equipment, and that is weight.
Those raised floors have a weight limit. In our case, our floors, built out
in the early 90's, have a 1500 lb per square inch point load
At 09:59 AM 3/26/2008, you wrote:
> Is there a multiport card out there on to which some of the
> forwarding responsibilities can be offloaded? Perhaps the
> CPU doesn't need to see every packet that arrives on the machine.
Am I the only person who has heard of Google?
It didn't take me long
At 09:44 PM 3/25/2008, you wrote:
On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 1:59 PM, Chris Grundemann
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greg has laid out a great bit of information and I would like to add just
> one possibility to the list of budget 10GE routers: Vyatta. According to a
> recent press release from th
Hello all,
I located our new midwest datacenter site, but I'm going to need
connectivity to Chicago. At which other middle of the country places
should we connect? We will obviously connect back to our network in
New York and Los Angeles, but I'm not familiar with other carrier
hotels or IX
At 07:39 PM 12/27/2007, AD wrote:
hello,
does anyone have any experience with peering in S. America? I am
looking to move a lot of data between NewYork/LA and a few south
american countries and looking for some ISPs that have reliable
peering into those countries.
Any recommendations wo
At 10:10 PM 8/8/2007, you wrote:
Is anyone else having trouble with Level 3 in New York ? We have
circuits down, etc.
An OC192 is down we have about 80 T1s down on the Broadwing/L3 network.
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - Global Hosting Solutions Since 1995
http://www.tellurian.com | 888-TEL
At 02:17 AM 8/3/2007, you wrote:
Hi,, group
I need some help.
Which equipment is better ( perfomance, availability,
scalability, features, Support, and Price ($$$) ) ???
Some experience in the real life
Dependent on your interface needs, if GigE, 10G, (40G & 100G in the
future) an
At 09:30 AM 8/2/2007, Craig D. Rice wrote:
For four months dozens of our users who are Comcast subscribers have
had difficulty reaching St. Olaf College's and Carleton College's
network services.
We have worked through everything we can think of with our Onvoy
(regional ISP) network engineer
At 01:22 PM 7/26/2007, you wrote:
Let us not forget that network vendors are now capitalising on the
requirement to purchase expensive licensing for such features as
native IPv6 routing and 6PE, on their mid to high end kit.
I dont feel this sort of behaviour is helpful, I can understand
ask
At 08:10 PM 7/25/2007, Sean Donelan wrote:
Sometimes you need to revisit the rules. For example, for folks
thought having automatic water sprinklers in data centers was a bad
thing. Slowly folks have started to rethink it, and now automatic
sprinklers are
found in more data centers. I don't
At 11:29 PM 7/15/2007, Steven Haigh wrote:
I'm wondering if there is anyone willing to share any experiences they
have had with Cisco 7200 series equipment (specifically relating to
the G2 NPE) and any 12.4 based IOS.
We were initially advised by Cisco to run 12.4(4)-XD7, however upon
introduci
Omaha is right in the middle of the US and it seems to be a point on
most carriers' national backbone maps. There has to be some type of
carrier hotel there somehere, but I can't seem to find it. Can anyone
provide insight on the 60 Hudson or One Wilshire or 111 8th or Westin
of Omaha? Thank
At 02:22 PM 4/26/2007, Dennis Dayman wrote:
Can anyone point me to or send me a copy of a standard disaster recovery plan.
Many resources including a template are available here:
http://www.drj.com/
http://www.drj.com/new2dr/samples.htm
R
Tellurian Networks - Global Hosting Solutions S
A lot of different theoretical things have been discussed, but
basically, if you are running Windows XP, 2000, or 2003 over a WAN
with anything more than 10-20ms of latency, make the following change
to the registry and you will find a world of difference. Ideally, you
would make the change
At 04:26 PM 3/27/2007, Philip Lavine wrote:
I have an east coast and west coast data center connected with a
DS3. I am running into issues with streaming data via TCP and was
wondering besides hardware acceleration, is there any options at
increasing throughput and maximizing the bandwidth? Ho
At 05:48 PM 3/20/2007, you wrote:
I wonder what their security process is for other types of routers?
Try [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/products_security_vulnerability_policy.html#Problems
-Robert
-- Forwarded message --
Date: 20 Mar 2007 20:31:01 -
At 02:10 PM 3/12/2007, you wrote:
| I cannot even call their toll-free help lines, as the figer cut apparently
| is affecting that as well, according to their local NOC people, who cannot
| chd any more light on this.
I was able to get through to their NOC.
there was a cut, but the person I spo
Hello all,
In December 2006, I asked for input from people on their experience
with Foundry since we were leaning toward them for our new core
router standard for our current backbone upgrade cycle. About 50
people replied and asked me to update them with my choice and
information I gathere
At 07:30 PM 1/24/2007, you wrote:
Upon leaving a router at telx and asking one of their techs to plug
in the equipment for me, I came back to find all my cat5 cables
neatly tied with some sort of waxed twine, using an interesting
looping knot pattern that repeated every six inches or so using
Hello,
I am posting here because I haven't been able to find what I need
despite much searching and a previous unanswered post to cisco-nsp
and I'm hoping someone here will have the answer. I need to find the
SNMP OID for monitoring ISIS / CLNS neighbors:
I tried walking:
1.3.6.1.3.37.
a
At 10:29 PM 1/10/2007, you wrote:
route-views.oregon-ix.net>sh ip bg 203.10.63.0
BGP routing table entry for 0.0.0.0/, version 2
Paths: (1 available, best #1, table Default-IP-Routing-Table)
Not advertised to any peer
286
134.222.85.45 from 134.222.85.45 (134.222.85.45)
Origin IGP,
At 01:52 AM 1/6/2007, Thomas Leavitt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If this application takes off, I have to presume that everyone's
baseline network usage metrics can be tossed out the window...
Interesting. Why does it send so much data? Is it a peer to peer type
of system where it redistribute
Hello all,
I am looking for a faster solution for our core. Our backbone
connections are almost all exclusively Fast Ethernet, GigE, with some
10GE stuff on the horizon. We need something which can run at wire
speed and take full routes now and for for the next 3-4 years. The
Foundry MLX loo
At 06:58 PM 11/9/2006, you wrote:
automatic systems are fine if you decide you want to do them, i was
specifically responding to the author who suggested he would build
the filters himself, my point was that this seemingly good intention
is in fact causing real operational problems on The Inte
At 09:23 AM 11/9/2006, you wrote:
On Thu, Nov 09, 2006, Robert Boyle wrote:
> You should also create a bogons list for your BGP routes which you
> accept from your upstream. Block all RFC1918 space and unassigned
> public addresses too. Just keep on top of it when new allocations
You should also create a bogons list for your BGP routes which you
accept from your upstream. Block all RFC1918 space and unassigned
public addresses too. Just keep on top of it when new allocations are
put into use. We see all kinds of crazy things which people try to
announce (and successf
At 06:55 PM 11/8/2006, you wrote:
Were looking for something which is difficult to find in the area we are in.
I need a gigabit loop between us and a provider or two...
We have successfully used SBC in southern CA for Ethernet loops and
their prices are pretty reasonable and their footprint i
At 05:09 PM 11/2/2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dave Rand) wrote:
Over the last few years, I have worked with many ISPs. The majority of the
problems had little to do with the format/style/volume of abuse complaints,
and a lot to do with empowering the abuse desks to take action. "you
suck" was not
At 11:21 AM 10/26/2006, you wrote:
Unfortunately, as Jared has pointed out, the equipment vendors have
to help the operators support this. So let's all call your favorite
router vendor and ask them when they will have the "ip bcp38" config
option. :)
Even better would be the option: "no ip bc
At 03:24 PM 9/6/2006, you wrote:
Once upon a time, Sean Donelan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> You don't have to exchange E-mail with either Google, Comcast or any other
> Mail Service Provider if you don't want to.
Just wait until "Net Neutrality" laws require you to.
...or with spammers! That'
At 10:04 AM 6/23/2006, you wrote:
Then again, this is the same person that tried to tell me that 768
OC-192s are carried on a single DS1.
Now THAT is impressive compression! I don't know what your former
company did, but they should focus on selling that compression
technology. ;) The buffer
All,
Just in case any of you want to see how the other half lives... and
destroy some infrastructure after learning more about how to build it
this week. :)
Work with
JOHN DEERE Equipment
to build REAL utilities in a REAL work setting.
Dig BIG takes place at the best place on the plan
At 11:33 AM 5/25/2006, you wrote:
Citation on the $1M/day, please? (I'm sure the *aggregate* take is well
over that, but what *single entity* is seeing that magnitude losses?)
Although we all see lots of attempts at phishing and it gets lots of
press coverage, it is very small compared to reg
Hello all,
Is 401 West Broad in Philadelphia equivalent to 1 Wilshire, 60
Hudson, 165 Halsey, 55 Market Post Tower, the Westin Building, etc?
or is it much smaller? I have been given this address as THE carrier
hotel for the Philadelphia area by one of our fiber providers. I
would apprecia
At 06:51 AM 4/21/2006, you wrote:
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 09:34:41AM -0700, Philip Lavine wrote:
>
> Can someone tell me if I am out of luck. I am trying to get a
10x10 cage in New Jersey (Jersey City area) but it seems everybody
is at capacity. What happened?
My guess (this being NJ) is an
At 09:50 PM 4/17/2006, Christopher L. Morrow wrote:
How about this idea... are your corporate VPN services (assuming there is
one aside fromm 'ssh to the bastion host' of course) prepared to
double/quadruple/more-uple their normal concurrent user counts? During the
fallout of Katrina we observed
At 02:02 PM 4/1/2006, you wrote:
Could be either. Did you happen to catch the woman from Verizon at
the last NANOG who was sure parts of New Orleans were 2 miles below
sea level? Maybe that was a really early AFJ.
Maybe it's the lost city of Atlantis or maybe she was confused about
meters v
At 11:37 AM 3/27/2006, you wrote:
Speaking of Backhoes, there was a picture I had saved at one point,
can't find it now, maybe someone else has it..
It shows a backhoe, half-fallen down into a hole, on fire, huge tower of
flames coming up out of the hole. Sitting right next to the hole (this
pi
Sorry folks,
I'm up too late. I replied to the wrong list! Have a good night everyone.
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Connection
http://www.tellurian.com | 888-TELLURIAN | 973-300-9211
"Well done is better than well said." - Benjamin Franklin
At 05:29 PM 3/20/2006, you wrote:
I've got a customer running a few 3660s with 12.2.29 on them. We
went back to 12.2.29 because we saw all sorts of evil stuff with 12.3.16
on our test box - we'd drop all BGP sessions and end up with half a
dozen obviously foreign prefixes listed as directly
At 06:20 PM 3/5/2006, Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
What might be useful -- ask an EE, not me -- is a circuit with an
isolated ground. In that case, the ground wire from the power plug is
routed all the way back to the breaker panel, and isn't connected to,
say, the local electrical box that the co
At 12:01 PM 1/19/2006, you wrote:
This is really stupid. Assuming the terrorist actually have the
dozens of backhoes needed to completely erase meaningfull internet
connectivity in north america, they would probably prefer to use them
to smash cars and kill people on the interstate highways or
At 12:06 AM 1/18/2006, you wrote:
(snip)
wrong prediction, the technique suffers very high MLU (as high as 140%).
Basically, I have the following two questions:
1. In the traces I have, there exist several intervals with a
huge, sudden increase of traffic on some links. The prediction
At 12:54 PM 1/5/2006, you wrote:
Thanks Thomas, something really useful. One thing I am still curious
about, I read that there were other image formats can be used in an
exploit, GIF, .BMP, .JPG, .TIF can also be used, according to
F-Secure. I find this a little confusing, if that dll only de
At 12:56 PM 12/22/2005, you wrote:
P.S. 204/8 was not the only problem, there were problems with 128/8 and
133/8 as well so my apologies to people who may have noticed problems
overnight.
199.128.0.0/9 too.
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Connection
http://www.tellurian.
At 08:52 AM 11/7/2005, you wrote:
On Mon, Nov 07, 2005 at 06:43:35AM -0500, J. Oquendo wrote:
> the center of the information security vortex. Because IOS controls the
> routers that underpin most business networks as well as the Internet,
I think in general this is an argument against
At 03:32 PM 9/28/2005, Paul Vixie wrote:
> PS. Is there some sort of secret net.kook cabal which I was not aware of?
i thought this (nanog) was it. maybe i'm not in the loop, though.
--
Paul Vixie
Paul,
That's the _secret_ part! ;)
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Conn
...for the terrible grammar and incomplete sentences in the message I just
sent. It was the result of replying to a post while performing other tasks
and not taking the time to properly proofread before hitting send.
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Connection
http://www.t
At 10:39 PM 9/27/2005, you wrote:
Actually, I think you've got it backwards. .us and all of the other
country-specific TLDs are the last vestiges of nationalism. The
Internet is only the second piece of truly global infrastructure. As
a key component in the ongoing trend towards a unified glob
At 10:20 PM 8/31/2005, you wrote:
Eesh... I grabbed a copy of this thing. In a cursory over-read... I am
afraid if people (people defined by lim(clue) -> 0) start implementing
datacenters by this guide. This would be a BRILLIANT document as the
reading material for a college-level course. Howe
At 10:51 AM 7/31/2005, Joe Abley wrote:
I agree that implementation sooner rather than later is a good idea, but
all of us already have a 2-Byte AS so although we care in theory and
believe it is a good idea, we don't _really_ care as much as the first
guy who gets a 4-Byte AS will.
The firs
At 01:12 AM 7/31/2005, you wrote:
This kind of response does have a certain market-based logic to it, I must
admit, but its highly risky. I don't think its all that wise for this to be
delayed indefinitely until the point at which its turning from an orderly
transition into a last second panic
At 11:32 PM 7/30/2005, Henry Yen wrote:
On Sat, Jul 30, 2005 at 10:11:28AM -0400, Robert Boyle wrote:
> >I'm interested in people's experiences with consumer-grade routers
> >functioning in non-NAT mode; that is to say, running PPPoE to the ISP
> >and routing a /29
At 09:41 PM 7/30/2005, Robert E.Seastrom wrote:
OK, not really "in the core", but the subject made you look at least. :)
That's for sure! ;)
I'm interested in people's experiences with consumer-grade routers
functioning in non-NAT mode; that is to say, running PPPoE to the ISP
and routing a
At 11:20 PM 7/29/2005, you wrote:
Naah. My money's on laziness; it's usually the case. 8-)
Never attribute to laziness that which can be explained by incompetence. :)
R
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Connection
http://www.tellurian.com | 888-TELLURIAN | 973-300-9211
"Well
At 05:02 PM 6/30/2005, you wrote:
> Of course, if you're going to do this, you should also be doing
> at least SMTPAUTH and preferably TLSSMTP, but then again many clients
> are broken and don't support these technologies or don't support them
> correctly.
Or you support POP AUTH, which j
At 10:30 PM 6/28/2005, Paul Wouters wrote:
I applaud his move, and wish more groups did the same.
It would have been better if he had just installed SPF, and published DNS
records for his own domain, and rejected them based on that. Then other
people receiving forged emails with his do
At 05:17 PM 6/28/2005, Mark Tombaugh wrote:
On Thu, 2005-06-23 at 09:54 -0400, Robert Boyle wrote:
> we enabled a global rule which blocks
> any email from accounts such as billing, root, postmaster, antivirus,
> abuse, security, etc. which don't originate from our management IP
At 03:16 AM 6/25/2005, you wrote:
I have no idea if this is on or off topic (apolgies if the latter).
Right now we're running 48 1u servers in a cabinet off AC. We're
considering switching to DC power supplies with the hope that any cost
increase in the power supply and rectifier would be mo
At 10:41 AM 6/23/2005, you wrote:
We did as well, but we did not yet find a solution for legit bounces..
it naturally breaks that.
I've been thinking about what you said, but I can't imagine a scenario in
which this would affect bounce delivery to or from our admin-type
addresses. Incoming b
At 05:37 AM 6/23/2005, you wrote:
Hi guys. I notice a large increase in recent weeks of ISP directed
phishing - largely because of worms moving backward to using the user's
own domain for the spam, but not just in the from: address.
I believe this started out as a "let's feel this out" or "wow,
> How about an anycast address implement(ed|able) by every network
> provider that would return a zipcode?
>
> $ telnet 10.255.255.254
> Connected
> 33709
> Disconnected.
> $
>
are you -REALLY- arguing for the return of "finger" ??
--bill
Not finger, but something like this could work. The
At 07:32 PM 4/9/2005, you wrote:
David Conrad wrote:
- Amount of code
Again, what should be counted? Should you include rsync? Should you
include utility programs like check-namedconf, axfr-get, rbldns, walldns,
walldns-conf, etc.?
You need only count the lines of code needed by the daemon/s
se
At 01:09 PM 4/1/2005, you wrote:
On Fri, 1 Apr 2005, Church, Chuck wrote:
Incorrectly chosen switching path can now result in lost packets AND
indigestion.
Is this mitigated by activating Nabisco Express Forwarding?
That would be really bad! You would almost immediately gain 300lbs if you
enabled
At 11:45 AM 4/1/2005, you wrote:
Priceless. ;-)
The Register:
Published Friday 1st April 2005 15:22 GMT
"Cisco Systems and Kraft Foods shocked investors today
with an unlikely mega-acquisition that will see Cisco
buy Kraft's Nabisco unit for $15bn. Perhaps even more
surprising, former RJR Nabisco a
At 11:45 PM 2/14/2005, Christopher L. Morrow wrote:
uhm, thats the '70 billing departments' ... or so said the SEC's info
about how many billing systems were 'integrated' during the
bernie-dynastic-times.
I remember reading in IT Week or Infoweek or some other trade rag that they
had over 2400 sof
At 06:14 PM 1/21/2005, you wrote:
are authentication packets between routers and radius
servers encrypted or clear-text?
All clear text, but passwords are sent as an MD5 hash which is the result
of a shared secret on both the radius server and the router.
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate
At 03:19 PM 10/13/2004, you wrote:
ls there any websites to provide the information
about AS no and IP?
When typing the AS no, it can display all the
information fo the company
and IP belongs to this company also
http://www.fixedorbit.com/search.htm
Have fun!
-Robert
Tellurian Networks - The Ultima
At 02:23 PM 9/25/2004, you wrote:
engagement is fair trade. Lessaiz Faire economics was tried about 100
years ago. It resulted in the Great Depression and children dying of
tuberculosis in the factories. Why does anyone think it'll work today?
Curtis,
I tried to stay out of this since it isn'
At 08:25 AM 7/21/2004, you wrote:
Normally in Europe when you order an E1 (G.703) connection the Telco
delivers a
NTU (Network termination Unit) which normally is a (S)HDSL modem
converting from
two-wire DSL to four-wire E1 electrical. The cable between the NTU and
the Router
is normally very s
At 03:20 PM 7/9/2004, you wrote:
time. After the rapid DNS update is implemented, the elapsed time
from registrars' add or change operations to the visibility of those
adds or changes in all 13 .com/.net authoritative name servers is
expected to average less than five minutes.
Very cool! Kudos! Th
At 12:11 PM 6/7/2004, you wrote:
ever heard of multilayer security?
Absolutely and I am a huge believer in it and all of our systems and our
network is designed with many layers of protection... which is why I am
against running ssh AND leaving it open to the world since that leaves only
a singl
At 07:14 PM 6/6/2004, you wrote:
On the SSH/SSL front: IMHO these technologies give a false sense of
security. Sniffing cleartext management sessions is a concern, yes, but
actual incidents where it occurs, especially within your own network
infrastructure, are vanishingly rare compared to the com
At 02:27 PM 4/19/2004, you wrote:
> >I can burn a CD from ISO in about 5 minutes - how about you?
> >I'm talking about XP users who haven't even updated as far as SP1.
> >Win98 users who have never run an update in their life...
> >Win2k users are usually the most patched up that I've seen - becaus
At 01:26 PM 3/29/2004, you wrote:
I'd be very grateful to hear of any solutions that you guys have come up
with in this arena. Also, any recommendations for generators? I'm not
looking for something huge, just something that can be mounted on a roof.
If I have to pour diesel into it every couple
At 04:04 PM 3/16/2004, Petri Helenius wrote:
No. It´s "self defending network".
It was the little girl with the really cool game! :)
R
Tellurian Networks - The Ultimate Internet Connection
http://www.tellurian.com | 888-TELLURIAN | 973-300-9211
"Good will, like a good name, is got by many actions
At 12:32 PM 3/6/2004, Brian Bruns wrote:
Lovely. So not only do we now have to fend off attacks from script kiddies
and packet monkies, we now have to fend off attacks from idiot sysadmins who
set this tool up and allow it to go all out on supposed 'attacks' against
their systems.
I think the comp
At 05:43 AM 2/20/2004, you wrote:
Hence the reason why I want the route to cease being advertised if the box
"fails."
I'm trying to avoid putting yet another server load balancer box in front
of the windows box to withdraw the route so a different "working" box will
be closest. It may be an oxymor
At 12:24 PM 2/9/2004, you wrote:
Do you honestly think that any IT manager is going to be successful getting
an entire company to dump Outlook/Exchange and stop using anti-virus
software? Do you have an example (within the North American area of
interest to NANOG members) where this has actuall
At 12:00 AM 2/7/2004, Adi Linden wrote:
> > There are valid reasons not to run antivirus software,
>
> And they are?
P90w/32MB running Win95 used for email only...
Odd... When that was a state of the art machine for which I paid $3k+ in
1995 (IRC) I used a CLI virus scanner and before I opened an
At 09:41 AM 1/16/2004, you wrote:
>>According to the article, somebody maanged to patent the selling of
>>www.something.somethng.com. Which seems a bit assanine to me, since the
>>ISP I worked for in 1993 offered custoemrs www.customer.ccnet.com.
Uh, no, that's not what the article said and it's n
At 09:37 PM 1/6/2004, you wrote:
Oh, also, on the subject of used market pricing...
It's been a while since I looked at Cisco ChDS3 PA
pricing in any serious detail, but as I recall they
were valued as though they were made of gold and
personally blessed by Pope John Chambers when compared
to used
At 05:18 PM 12/19/2003, you wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2003, Ejay Hire wrote:
> Lucent Pipeline 130, Superpipe 95, or Superpipe 155.
Well 2 minutes on Froogle tell me your definition of cheap and mine don't
match. For the same price range I would get a netopia R4522 or 5300 which
will reliably do NAT
At 04:08 PM 12/17/2003, Jared wrote:
Close to what we see at one location:
Router#sh ip ca flow
IP packet size distribution (17137M total packets):
1-32 64 96 128 160 192 224 256 288 320 352 384 416 448 480
.004 .621 .068 .029 .013 .007 .005 .006 .003 .005 .006 .006 .
At 09:27 PM 10/16/2003, you wrote:
I agree that an application level solution at the edge is the best.
I like the idea of having a user configurable parameter in the client
browser to allow the ``finder'' URL to be set. The browser
``manufacturer'' would of course put their own default and the ISP
At 06:03 PM 10/13/2003, you wrote:
From the PDF, regarding DREN implemention of ipv6:
No great incentive for DREN sites to implement IPv6
no near term win
additional effort and complexity, generally not funded
Can't deploy in a safe and secure manner
Existing DREN intrusion detection (IDS) archit
At 04:43 PM 10/13/2003, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 7600 is also vertical boards whereas the 6500 is horizontal.
Yep, I think from now on, we should make this a primary distinction
between switch and a router: If a device has vertical line cards, it is a
router, if horizontal, it is a switch.
Work
At 02:06 PM 10/8/2003, you wrote:
> Let's hope we can append "not for long" if they keep this stuff up. :)
The great thing about the web is a newspaper can bury its mistakes without
having to admit it in the "Corrections" page.
ZD.NET has modified the article the originally posted. ZD.NET added t
Wow. This guy is completely delusional.
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1107_2-5087746.html
I have been up for 24 hours working on a router upgrade and a simultaneous
DS3 problem so I'm in no frame of mind to respond. Perhaps one of the more
eloquent (and less tired) folks here can politely beat th
At 12:57 AM 10/5/2003, you wrote:
At 2:11 AM + 10/5/03, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
For more fun, consider that you are [EMAIL PROTECTED], and get those
It's the anti-virus ones that drive me nuts. "Someone in your domain sent
us a virus which always forges the from line, but we're going t
At 02:57 PM 10/2/2003, you wrote:
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, Marshall Eubanks wrote:
> I have found a possible source of satellite bandwidth for this, assuming a
> critical mass of users could be accumulated to pay for it. Interested
parties
> should send me an email off list please.
If a critical mass
At 10:07 PM 9/28/2003, you wrote:
I am seeing the same. ARIN is completely off the air
box02rsm-en01.twdx.net> sh ip bgp 192.149.252.16
% Network not in table
I see them via a UUNet announcement through Veroxity and Sprint transit,
but I don't see it via any other peer or transit provider. Are t
At 06:29 AM 9/23/2003, you wrote:
I hate to point this out but this sounds spammy as hell, and while I've
been on this list a very short time, very very big alarm bells went off
when I read it.
I have no financial interest in the company and I was just letting the list
know about a cheap solutio
From time to time this thread pops up. I found something which looked
interesting and the price was right. I bought one and WOW! It is VERY
impressive stuff for any price especially considering how cheap it was. I
purchased 10 individual temperature sensors and two temp/humidity sensors,
and
At 05:54 PM 9/4/2003, you wrote:
Communigate Pro is not a Windows mail server... It runs on nearly
everything; and can handle millions of accounts (it has extensive
clustering support). Check their website: www.stalker.com for specs.
I stand corrected. I was only familiar with the Windows version.
At 02:35 PM 9/4/2003, Brad Knowles wrote:
and most *nix platforms, look at Surgemail from http://www.netwinsite.com
It is incredibly scalable and VERY fast.
Got any benchmarks?
We have tested all of them. We process several million messages per day for
tellurian.com. The only server whic
At 11:02 AM 9/4/2003, you wrote:
This is my first post so please be gentle.
I would like to get some opinions on the Best Mailserver in the Universe.
Is there a more appropriate list for this question?
I have looked at Communigate Pro, IMAIL, and others.
I am interested in integrated solution tha
At 12:39 PM 8/28/2003, you wrote:
> Along these lines, how does this limiting affect akamai or other 'ping for
> distance' type localization services? I'd think their data would get
> somewhat skewed, right?
Perhaps they'll come up with a more advanced system of
monitoring?
probally
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