Went through this AM. Here in the SF BA, alerts went out on the airwaves around
11:20am today.
-Mike
> On Sep 27, 2017, at 21:01, Aaron C. de Bruyn via NANOG
> wrote:
>
> I didn't see a blip on my TV, or hear anything on the local radio
> stations. I didn't even get an alert on my cell phone
I didn't see a blip on my TV, or hear anything on the local radio
stations. I didn't even get an alert on my cell phone. Did I miss
it, or did it get cancelled?
-A
On Wed, Sep 27, 2017 at 9:03 AM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>> And your upstream(s) to work. And their upstream(s) to work. etc. If 90%
On Wed 2017-Sep-27 00:00:56 -0500, Joel Whitehouse
wrote:
I had an ipv6-only lab environment cease being able to browse much of
the internet on Monday. Tracked the issue down to google's public
DNS64 service; the following queries should return DNS64 responses
from the 64:9bff::/96 prefix,
> Telecommunications:
Pictures posted on twitter of joint restoration meeting between..
What twitter feed was this?
I didn't catch it.
On Wed, Sep 27, 2017 at 5:44 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
> After a week without power, all the stationary batteries throughout the
> telecommunicatio
Microsoft, Facebook, Telxius.
160TB, presumably each way, but no technical detail in this piece:
https://interestingengineering.com/microsoft-and-facebook-just-laid-a-6600-km-cable-across-the-atlantic-ocean
Cheers,
-- jra
--
Jay R. Ashworth Baylink j...@ba
On Wed, 27 Sep 2017, Jean-Francois Mezei wrote:
After a week without power, all the stationary batteries throughout the
telecommunications network are likely completely drained.
from the point of view of cell sites, wouldn't battery autonomy be
measured in hours rather than days? I could see s
On 2017-09-27 17:44, Sean Donelan wrote:
> After a week without power, all the stationary batteries throughout the
> telecommunications network are likely completely drained.
from the point of view of cell sites, wouldn't battery autonomy be
measured in hours rather than days? I could see some
After a week without power, all the stationary batteries throughout the
telecommunications network are likely completely drained. This makes
restoration even more difficult, like a dead car battery needing a jump
start.
I am focusing on U.S. territories, but there is also disaster response
On 09/26/2017 11:00 PM, Joel Whitehouse wrote:
> A forum topic [0] suggests this behavior might be intermittent but no
> official response from google there.
I have seen intermittent issues with IPv6 queries to google's
nameservers as well. Some sites simply would not load, which is what
caused me
I had an ipv6-only lab environment cease being able to browse much of
the internet on Monday. Tracked the issue down to google's public DNS64
service; the following queries should return DNS64 responses from the
64:9bff::/96 prefix, however, I'm getting 0 DNS64 answers from dig on
both their s
And your upstream(s) to work. And their upstream(s) to work. etc. If 90%
of the stations in the EAS web are down you may end up with nothing
working.
6% of TV stations are operating in Puerto Rico
15% of radio stations are operating in Puerto Rico
Nationally, there are about 28,000 cable syste
On Tue, 26 Sep 2017 17:02:51 -0400, Lee Howard said:
> Right. How many residential market gateways support any routing protocol
> at all?
Depends on how flabby a definition you use. Does "ask for a default route"
count? :)
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On Wed, 27 Sep 2017, Sean Donelan wrote:
Things are better and worse in Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands.
Help is needed, but anyone wanting to help in the field, be certain you
understand what you would be doing, and whether you are actually helping
or hindering on the ground efforts.
On Tue, 26 Sep 2017, Blake Dunlap wrote:
Isn't this the topic area that the home networking working group was
supposed to resolve?
HOMENET was never looking into running a routing protocol between the ISP
and the HGW. It was all about running a routing protocol WITHIN the home,
not between t
And your upstream(s) to work. And their upstream(s) to work. etc. If 90% of the
stations in the EAS web are down you may end up with nothing working.
On Sep 27, 2017, at 9:21 AM, Edwin Pers
mailto:ep...@ansencorp.com>> wrote:
The telecommunications damage in PR and USVI will be a good test how
> The telecommunications damage in PR and USVI will be a good test how well the
> EAS works during extreme telecommunications damage.
From my brief time as a radio station tech, all you need for EAS to function
properly is power to the receiver/decoder and for the station's transmitter to
be al
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