Insert your own "Master/slave relationship" comment here.


----- Original Message -----
From: John Neiberger
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2001 5:57 PM
Subject: Re: Errata for Howard's "Designing Addressing Architectures"
[7:8424]


I know exactly how you feel.  When it comes to dating, we're looking for
adjacencies!!  But so many times I heard the phrase, "I'm sorry, can't
we just be neighbors?"  :-(

But alas I'm married now.  Is marriage a Mandatory, non-transitive
attribute?  I would think so, and dating would involve optional and
transitive attributes.  Hmmm.... food for thought.

>>> "Howard C. Berkowitz"  6/13/01 3:34:38 PM >>>
>But what about the Mandatory, Optional, Transitive, and
Non-Transitive
>Berkowitzes?


Is THAT why dating is so confusing now that I'm single again after 16
years?  Attributes I don't know about?  It's bad enough just figuring
out who is available for peering, much less the interdomain routing
policies.

>
>>>>  "ElephantChild"  6/13/01 2:05:53 PM >>>
>On Wed, 13 Jun 2001, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote:
>
>>  >Has anyone come across an errata for "Designing Addressing
>Architectures
>>  >for Routing and Switching" by the well-known Howard C. Berkowitz?
>Or,
>come
>>  >to that, for "Designing Routing and Switching Architectures for
>Enterprise
>>  >Networks", although I haven't read that one yet?
>>  >Yes, I have checked the MTP website, and tried emailing New
Riders
>(they
>>  >appear to have taken over MTP), but no response.
>>
>>  The well-known Howard C. Berkowitz hasn't found one, which is one
of
>
>>  the reasons he works with Wiley these days, not
>>  Pearson/MTP/NewRiders/etc.
>
>If there are well-known Berkowitzes (Berkowitzen?), logic dictates
>that
>there should be dynamically allocated Berkowitze[sn] too. Has anyone
>seen one of those?
>
>--
>"Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I
>was
>about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject
>made
>me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as
driving
>people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me




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