Subject: Visio-fu Date: Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 08:20:34PM + Quoting Warren
Bailey (wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com):
All,
I have been searching our beloved internet endlessly for months on
information regarding Visio technique. Does anyone have a good resource(s)
for advanced
On 25 February 2013 23:22, Michael Hallgren m.hallg...@free.fr wrote:
Le 25/02/2013 23:15, Warren Bailey a écrit :
I've seen smart draw. I wish these drawing software companies would port
their application over to mac.. Every big design guy I know is a mac fanboy,
Adobe has it figured out
Owen DeLong o...@delong.com writes:
N on 5Ghz takes advantage of the increased bandwidth of the 5Ghz
channel where A merely replicated G on 5Ghz for all practical
purposes.
You have that backwards, actually, but the legacy support in 802.11g
for 802.11b clients does represent a performance
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 11:47:44AM -0600, Naslund, Steve wrote:
[a number of very good points ]
Geoblocking, like passive OS fingerprinting (another technique that
reduces attack surface as measured along one axis but can be defeated
by a reasonably clueful attacker), doesn't really solve
I think it is safe to say that finding a foothold inside of the United
States from which to perform/proxy an attack is not the hardest thing
in the world. I don't understand why everyone expects that major
corporations and diligent operators blocking certain countries'
prefixes will help. That
Perhaps I don't understand.. Generally in wireless we look at two things; bits
to hertz and noise components. If the noise is LESS and the carrier is the same
power spectral density, you will have a greater c/n. I've always wondered why
wifi didn't implement an array of modcods which can be
I purchased omni, but it is pretty difficult to get the hang of.. :/
From my Android phone on T-Mobile. The first nationwide 4G network.
Original message
From: Måns Nilsson mansa...@besserwisser.org
Date: 02/26/2013 12:01 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: Warren Bailey
Hello all,
I have an application that needs to gather BGP RIB data from the routers
that connect to all of our upstream providers. Basically I need to know
all the routes available from a particular provider. Currently I'm
gathering this data via SNMP. While this works it has its draw backs,
Personally, I would just use BGP on a PC to collect this information.
Place some import/input policy on your eBGP sessions on your edge
routers to add communities to the routes such that you can recognize
which peers gave you the route.
Then, use an iBGP session to a BIRD or Quagga instance from
On Mon, 25 Feb 2013 19:07:20 -0600, Jimmy Hess said:
If the domain in a certificate were not interpreted as a FQDN by the
client, this would mean, that the certificate for
CN=bigbank.example.com
might be used to authenticate a connection to https://bigbank.example.com
which do the local
On 26/02/13 17:19, Warren Bailey wrote:
Perhaps I don't understand.. Generally in wireless we look at two things; bits
to hertz and noise components. If the noise is LESS and the carrier is the same
power spectral density, you will have a greater c/n. I've always wondered why
wifi didn't
On 26/02/2013 17:24, chip wrote:
Currently I'm gathering this data via SNMP.
whoa, you must really hate your router to do that to it.
While this works it has its draw backs, it
takes approximately 20 minutes per view, its nowhere near real-time, and
I'm unable to gather information for IPv6.
I'll chime in with what we are doing with quagga and bgpmon.
The question though would be for how many peers? If it is
for the sake of discussion, less than 20, something like this
might work.
http://bgpmon.netsec.colostate.edu/download/src/bgpmon-7.2.4.tar.gz
On 02/09/2013 07:55 PM, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
When you are staying at a 3* hotel, should you have no expectations
that you'll be getting at least a 3Mbps pipe and at least an under
100ms average latency, and won't be getting a balancer that would be
breaking up your ssh sessions?
On Tue, 26 Feb 2013 17:45:18 -0800, Jeroen van Aart said:
Correct, one should not have expectations of fast reliable internet with
low latency in a hotel.
The part that always puzzled me is why a major high-tier chain like Hilton
can't get it right, but a Motel 6 can... :)
pgp_nmdk5jzCn.pgp
- Original Message -
From: Jeroen van Aart jer...@mompl.net
- internet connectivity at a hotel is just another free amenity like
after shyave or a hair net, be glad you can at least check your email
:-)
It is like hell. It is very often not one paid, but *unreasonably*
expensive
- Original Message -
From: Valdis Kletnieks valdis.kletni...@vt.edu
On Tue, 26 Feb 2013 17:45:18 -0800, Jeroen van Aart said:
Correct, one should not have expectations of fast reliable internet
with low latency in a hotel.
The part that always puzzled me is why a major high-tier
--- On Tue, 2/26/13, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
From: valdis.kletni...@vt.edu valdis.kletni...@vt.edu
Subject: Re: 10 Mbit/s problem in your network
To: Jeroen van Aart jer...@mompl.net
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Date: Tuesday, February 26, 2013, 6:30 PM
On Tue, 26
*received-routes*?
If you still enable soft-reconfig-inbound on your routers(customer-facing
sessions not withstanding), you most certainly hate your routers more than
OP...;-)
./Randy
--- On Tue, 2/26/13, Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
From: Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org
Subject: Re:
On Feb 26, 2013, at 5:45 PM, Jeroen van Aart jer...@mompl.net wrote:
On 02/09/2013 07:55 PM, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
When you are staying at a 3* hotel, should you have no expectations
that you'll be getting at least a 3Mbps pipe and at least an under
100ms average latency, and won't
Clearly a person making a comment about high speed Internet not being important
in hotel rooms has not tried to stream the type of entertainment generally
viewed in a hotel room. You view a movie that buffers every 10 seconds, it
has a fantastic way of killing the moment.. ;)
From my Android
And the fact that a motel 6 is generally owned by a private owner, versus big
box chains that are massively corporate. As Internet is free, it's a it a
concern to them. The little guy has to Try harder, which leads to generally a
better service.
From my Android phone on T-Mobile. The first
On Feb 26, 2013, at 6:49 PM, Jay Ashworth j...@baylink.com wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Valdis Kletnieks valdis.kletni...@vt.edu
On Tue, 26 Feb 2013 17:45:18 -0800, Jeroen van Aart said:
Correct, one should not have expectations of fast reliable internet
with low latency in a
Original Message -
From: Owen DeLong o...@delong.com
[ quoting me ]
Ironically, I suspect that it's for the same reason that East Germany has
right up to the minute telephony services these days, while West German is
still sucking hind tit:
The big properties are, over all,
On 2/26/2013 10:57 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
In fact, many of the hotels that have solved this intelligently have
simply placed DSLAMs in the phone room and run DSL to each room with a
relatively inexpensive (especially when you buy 500 of them at a time)
DSL modem in each room. Some also have
On Tuesday, February 26, 2013 7:58 PM, Owen DeLong mailto:o...@delong.com
wrote:
In fact, many of the hotels that have solved this intelligently have
simply
placed DSLAMs in the phone room and run DSL to each room with
a relatively inexpensive (especially when you buy 500 of them at a time)
- Original Message -
From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
In fact, many of the hotels that have solved this intelligently have
simply placed DSLAMs in the phone room and run DSL to each room with
a relatively inexpensive (especially when you buy 500 of them at a
time) DSL modem
On 2/26/2013 11:35 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
I don't spend a lot of time in a lot of hotels, but every hardwire I
have seen with my own personal eyeballs was indeed DSL. Cheers, -- jra
Hrmm... Ramada Inn, Okaloosa Island resort outside Fort Walton Beach
(kinda your neighborhood Jay) two years
Hello All!
Just a quick question. Anybody here had experience with Falcon-X of
Fibrolan?
How do you rate itas a MetroE ringswitch? They have a very competitive price
and we are now considering using them.
P.S.
I'm not sure if this kind of questions are allowed to be on this
On 26 February 2013 20:03, Jay Ashworth j...@baylink.com wrote:
Original Message -
From: Owen DeLong o...@delong.com
[ quoting me ]
Ironically, I suspect that it's for the same reason that East Germany has
right up to the minute telephony services these days, while West German is
On Feb 26, 2013, at 8:23 PM, Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com wrote:
On Tuesday, February 26, 2013 7:58 PM, Owen DeLong mailto:o...@delong.com
wrote:
In fact, many of the hotels that have solved this intelligently have
simply
placed DSLAMs in the phone room and run DSL to each room with
On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 8:39 AM, Kyle Creyts kyle.cre...@gmail.com wrote:
I think it is safe to say that finding a foothold inside of the United
States from which to perform/proxy an attack is not the hardest thing
in the world. I don't understand why everyone expects that major
corporations
Hello,
On Tue, 26 Feb 2013 12:24:00 -0500
chip chip.g...@gmail.com wrote:
I have an application that needs to gather BGP RIB data from the routers
that connect to all of our upstream providers. Basically I need to know
all the routes available from a particular provider. Currently I'm
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