-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Great to see Seth! I'm looking around Perth area at the moment for
cheaper bandwidth but can't seem to find anything near that kind of
price. A bit of a shame but it's the reality given Australia's poor
internet.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Versio
On Sat, 02 May 2015 00:52:07 -0700, Geo Rift
wrote:
I would love to see some more nodes in Australia. I'm located in Perth
and the speed of the network it horrible.
Tim, just deployed an exit node to Sydney location, feel free to test it
out:
https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/E1E1059D
On Sun, 03 May 2015 11:50:25 -0700, nusenu wrote:
I'd say 7$ for 2TB/mo on 1GB RAM is expensive if you compare it with
100mbps unmetered and lets say you are able to saturate ~50% =
~30TB/mo (~50 mpbs* in one direction) for ~15$/mo with 1GB RAM (in HU,
0.6% CW).
Can't argue with that.
The dif
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
> OVH is pretty good value,
>
> CAD$2.99/mo for 1GB RAM and unlimited transfer at 100Mbps (it’s
> speed limited after 10,000GB) and both IPv4/6.
>
> However there are 424 OVH relays across 12 countries might not fit
> with your goal to add more di
OVH is pretty good value,
CAD$2.99/mo for 1GB RAM and unlimited transfer at 100Mbps (it’s speed limited
after 10,000GB) and both IPv4/6.
However there are 424 OVH relays across 12 countries might not fit with your
goal to add more diversity
https://compass.torproject.org/#?exit_filter=all_rela
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
> * Price (hardware bang for the buck. SSD, 1000GB bw/mo in most
> locations. Starter pkg is $5/mo)
I'd say 7$ for 2TB/mo on 1GB RAM is expensive if you compare it with
100mbps unmetered and lets say you are able to saturate ~50% =
~30TB/mo (~50 mp
On Sat, 02 May 2015 14:37:04 -0700, nusenu wrote:
Is there a specific reason why you limit yourself to vultr?
Yes, there are several.
* Price (hardware bang for the buck. SSD, 1000GB bw/mo in most locations.
Starter pkg is $5/mo)
* Features/usability (really like their control panel and web
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
>> You might also want to consider the exit probability and use that
>> in addition or instead of CW.
>>
>> I don't know if VULTR has multiple ASes but if they do you might
>> also want to have a look at the group by AS results (if they
>> allow you
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
I would love to see some more nodes in Australia. I'm located in Perth
and the speed of the network it horrible. Not usable for day to day
internet which is unfortunate, hopefully it will pick up soon.
I might look into setting up a node here as my
On Fri, 01 May 2015 10:01:45 -0700, nusenu wrote:
It might be oversimplified but using compass with group by country
ordered by consensus weight (or in your case exit probability) shows
you where most of tor network capacity is currently located. The goal
is to setup relays in new or rarely used
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Hi Seth,
> I'm standing up a new exit relay on the VULTR network. How would a
> person go about determining which location is in most need of
> additional exit relay capacity?
thanks for taking network diversity into account when setting up new
re
11 matches
Mail list logo