>All,
>
>A simple question for those who have related exprience/knowledge:
>If we want to switch to another ISP, how soon we need to finish our
>readdressing?
There's no formal rule, although 30-60 days typically can get negotiated.
As a side comment, remember that when you do switch, it's prob
If you really have a /16 out of public space, I would suspect that would be
yours to keep. I would encourage investigation of this. That is a whole
lot of space.
Brian
"JP" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
98muap$qvu$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:98muap$qvu$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
> A
ginal Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Brian
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2001 4:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ISP related question
If you really have a /16 out of public space, I would suspect that would be
yours to keep. I would encourage investig
I made a mistake in the original email, we own the /16, but there are a
bounch of /24 which we got from our ISP. We are not globally routing the
/16, so this makes the story different. We just need to replace those /24s
from the new ISP, probably get something continious. I guess the big concern
i
>I made a mistake in the original email, we own the /16, but there are a
>bounch of /24 which we got from our ISP. We are not globally routing the
>/16, so this makes the story different. We just need to replace those /24s
>from the new ISP, probably get something continious. I guess the big conce
I know, but that will take a multination company many years to do that.
Yes, we do not have DHCP.
JP
--
""Howard C. Berkowitz"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:p05001927b6d5f6ddd97d@[63.216.127.100]...
> >I made a mistake in the original email, we own the /16, but there are a
> >bounc
>I know, but that will take a multination company many years to do that.
>Yes, we do not have DHCP.
A multinational company should look at the costs of not having an
aggressive program of introducing mechanisms that make it easy to
renumber. Also, in an Internet economy, any organization that
If you're not advertising the /16, then how exactly are you allowing your
inside hosts to access the Internet? If you're NATing, then wouldn't it make
sense to convert your inside network to private address space, and return the
/16 to the IANA/InterNIC for re-allocation to an organization and/or
oward C. Berkowitz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2001 7:17 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ISP related question
>All,
>
>A simple question for those who have related exprience/knowledge:
>If we want to switch to another ISP, how soon we need to finish
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