Re: Savvis quality?

2009-06-02 Thread Jo Rhett

On May 27, 2009, at 10:35 AM, David Hubbard wrote:

Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
from a web host perspective.  Considering a
connection.



I wouldn't touch them with a 10g pole.  They were the first and only  
provider we have dropped for inability to provide reasonable service.


1. They have problems in the bay area (and I've heard other places but  
I can't confirm) coming up with ports to connect to people on.  We had  
long since outgrown 100mb (was 1g or higher with everyone else) but  
they couldn't come up with a 1g port to sell us.  Then when one became  
free, they demanded a 700mb commit to get it.  After I argued that we  
never run ports at that level of congestion they backed down to a  
500mb commit but that was as low as they'd go.  They had no budget to  
deploy more ports in any of the bay area peering facilities.


2. Their national NOC staff was gut-stripped down to 3 people.  24  
hours a day I'd find the same person answering issues we reported.   
Often outages weren't resolved until they could wake the engineer up.   
(this isn't surprising in a small company, it's very surprising in a  
network the size of Savvis)


3. We had repeated issues that needed escalation to our salesperson  
for credit.  We never got calls back on any of these, even when we had  
escalated through phone, email and paper letters to him.


4. One day they changed the implementation of their community strings  
to start putting other providers and international customers in their  
US-Customer-Only community strings.   We escalated this issue through  
management, and the final conclusion was that their community strings  
advertised to us had to be inconsistent to meet their billing needs.   
(ie get peers to send them traffic they shouldn't have gotten)  We  
were forced to drop using their community strings and instead build a  
large complex route-map to determine which traffic should be routed to  
them.   That's nonsense, and was the final straw.


In one of the marathon phone calls with the NOC staff about this, a  
NOC manager frankly told me that Savvis had been stripped and reamed,  
and they were just trying to stay alive long enough to sell the low- 
cost carcass to another provider.


Yeah, I think that pretty much sums it up.

--
Jo Rhett
Net Consonance : consonant endings by net philanthropy, open source  
and other randomness







Re: Savvis quality?

2009-06-02 Thread Seth Mattinen
Jo Rhett wrote:
 On May 27, 2009, at 10:35 AM, David Hubbard wrote:
 Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
 opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
 from a web host perspective.  Considering a
 connection.
 
 
 I wouldn't touch them with a 10g pole.  They were the first and only
 provider we have dropped for inability to provide reasonable service.
 
 1. They have problems in the bay area (and I've heard other places but I
 can't confirm) coming up with ports to connect to people on.  We had
 long since outgrown 100mb (was 1g or higher with everyone else) but they
 couldn't come up with a 1g port to sell us.  Then when one became free,
 they demanded a 700mb commit to get it.  After I argued that we never
 run ports at that level of congestion they backed down to a 500mb commit
 but that was as low as they'd go.  They had no budget to deploy more
 ports in any of the bay area peering facilities.
 
 2. Their national NOC staff was gut-stripped down to 3 people.  24 hours
 a day I'd find the same person answering issues we reported.  Often
 outages weren't resolved until they could wake the engineer up.  (this
 isn't surprising in a small company, it's very surprising in a network
 the size of Savvis)
 
 3. We had repeated issues that needed escalation to our salesperson for
 credit.  We never got calls back on any of these, even when we had
 escalated through phone, email and paper letters to him.
 
 4. One day they changed the implementation of their community strings to
 start putting other providers and international customers in their
 US-Customer-Only community strings.   We escalated this issue through
 management, and the final conclusion was that their community strings
 advertised to us had to be inconsistent to meet their billing needs. 
 (ie get peers to send them traffic they shouldn't have gotten)  We were
 forced to drop using their community strings and instead build a large
 complex route-map to determine which traffic should be routed to them.  
 That's nonsense, and was the final straw.
 
 In one of the marathon phone calls with the NOC staff about this, a NOC
 manager frankly told me that Savvis had been stripped and reamed, and
 they were just trying to stay alive long enough to sell the low-cost
 carcass to another provider.
 
 Yeah, I think that pretty much sums it up.
 

Out of curiosity, how recent was all this? It doesn't really match my
experience, however mine isn't very recent. I'm going to be
disconnecting my last SAVVIS circuit in a few months so I haven't really
tried to do anything new with them.

~Seth



RE: Savvis quality?

2009-06-02 Thread Blake Dunlap
This is quite similar to experiences we have had with them. Again the only 
carrier we have dropped for technical reasons.

Blake Dunlap

 -Original Message-
 From: Jo Rhett [mailto:jrh...@netconsonance.com]
 Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 9:59 PM
 To: David Hubbard
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Savvis quality?

 On May 27, 2009, at 10:35 AM, David Hubbard wrote:
  Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
  opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
  from a web host perspective.  Considering a
  connection.


 I wouldn't touch them with a 10g pole.  They were the first and only
 provider we have dropped for inability to provide reasonable service.

 1. They have problems in the bay area (and I've heard other places but
 I can't confirm) coming up with ports to connect to people on.  We had
 long since outgrown 100mb (was 1g or higher with everyone else) but
 they couldn't come up with a 1g port to sell us.  Then when one became
 free, they demanded a 700mb commit to get it.  After I argued that we
 never run ports at that level of congestion they backed down to a
 500mb commit but that was as low as they'd go.  They had no budget to
 deploy more ports in any of the bay area peering facilities.

 2. Their national NOC staff was gut-stripped down to 3 people.  24
 hours a day I'd find the same person answering issues we reported.
 Often outages weren't resolved until they could wake the engineer up.
 (this isn't surprising in a small company, it's very surprising in a
 network the size of Savvis)

 3. We had repeated issues that needed escalation to our salesperson
 for credit.  We never got calls back on any of these, even when we had
 escalated through phone, email and paper letters to him.

 4. One day they changed the implementation of their community strings
 to start putting other providers and international customers in their
 US-Customer-Only community strings.   We escalated this issue through
 management, and the final conclusion was that their community strings
 advertised to us had to be inconsistent to meet their billing needs.
 (ie get peers to send them traffic they shouldn't have gotten)  We
 were forced to drop using their community strings and instead build a
 large complex route-map to determine which traffic should be routed to
 them.   That's nonsense, and was the final straw.

 In one of the marathon phone calls with the NOC staff about this, a
 NOC manager frankly told me that Savvis had been stripped and reamed,
 and they were just trying to stay alive long enough to sell the low-
 cost carcass to another provider.

 Yeah, I think that pretty much sums it up.

 --
 Jo Rhett
 Net Consonance : consonant endings by net philanthropy, open source
 and other randomness








Re: Savvis quality?

2009-05-27 Thread Stefan
Have used them since the days of Cable  Wireless - almost flawless.

-- 
***Stefan
http://twitter.com/netfortius

On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 12:35 PM, David Hubbard
dhubb...@dino.hostasaurus.com wrote:
 Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
 opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
 from a web host perspective.  Considering a
 connection.

 Thanks,

 David





Re: Savvis quality?

2009-05-27 Thread Paul Wall
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 1:35 PM, David Hubbard
dhubb...@dino.hostasaurus.com wrote:
 Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
 opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
 from a web host perspective.  Considering a
 connection.

They might be a good provider for reaching Comcast (when they're not
advertising inconsistently), but so are Level3 and Global Crossing.

I hear they've got some pretty serious peering problems in the US.

Drive Slow,
Paul Wall



Re: Savvis quality?

2009-05-27 Thread Seth Mattinen
Paul Wall wrote:
 On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 1:35 PM, David Hubbard
 dhubb...@dino.hostasaurus.com wrote:
 Just wondering if anyone can tell me their
 opinion on Savvis bandwidth/company preferably
 from a web host perspective.  Considering a
 connection.
 
 They might be a good provider for reaching Comcast (when they're not
 advertising inconsistently), but so are Level3 and Global Crossing.
 
 I hear they've got some pretty serious peering problems in the US.
 

I got an offlist to my response asking about their peering issues. I
said I couldn't comment because I haven't personally experienced any
problems. If anything, I rerouted traffic through SAVVIS heavily during
the Sprint/Cogent peering thing since one of my upstreams is Sprint.

~Seth