When I did post the following, I did not, as it turns out, have good
documentation of how TLMC actually works.
I do hope that what I've done during these days, can describe TLMC
better than the current website can.
So there is a file called 'document packages' on the site right now.
(tlmc-20
ailto:asko...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Alex Brooks
Sent: 04 February 2013 16:13
To: Kyle Camilleri
Subject: Re: Global caches
Hi,
On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 2:03 PM, Kyle Camilleri
mailto:kyle.camill...@melitaplc.com>> wrote:
Dear Nanog Community,
Some CDN providers such as Akamai and Google (often call
Does anybody know of any other CDN providers that offer similar caches?
Yes.
The Last Mile Cache.
http://tlmc.fredan.se
It's an completely open solution for everybody, both the ISP (Internet
Service Provider) and CSP (Content Service Provider).
--
//fredan
While I would agree with that, having peering helps but certainly doesn't
replace a localized CDN. Certainly better than nothing though. It also of
course depends on the size of your network. If you are paying to carry that
traffic (leased backhaul, etc.) from your peering point to your customer
On Mon Feb 04, 2013 at 02:03:54PM +, Kyle Camilleri wrote:
> Does anybody know of any other CDN providers that offer similar caches?
Most CDN providers also provide free access to "super node" caches at major
datacentres and peering points - depending on where you are located, which
datacentre
On 02/04/13 08:33 -0600, Dan White wrote:
On 02/04/13 14:03 +, Kyle Camilleri wrote:
Some CDN providers such as Akamai and Google (often called Global Google
Cache) are offering caches to ISPs. It is very convenient for small ISPs
to alleviate bandwidth towards the provider, but also the CDN
On Feb 04, 2013, at 09:03 , Kyle Camilleri wrote:
> Some CDN providers such as Akamai and Google (often called Global Google
> Cache) are offering caches to ISPs. It is very convenient for small ISPs to
> alleviate bandwidth towards the provider, but also the CDN provider benefits
> by putting
On 02/04/13 14:03 +, Kyle Camilleri wrote:
Some CDN providers such as Akamai and Google (often called Global Google
Cache) are offering caches to ISPs. It is very convenient for small ISPs
to alleviate bandwidth towards the provider, but also the CDN provider
benefits by putting source of dat
Dear Nanog Community,
Some CDN providers such as Akamai and Google (often called Global Google Cache)
are offering caches to ISPs. It is very convenient for small ISPs to alleviate
bandwidth towards the provider, but also the CDN provider benefits by putting
source of data closer to the user re
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