Dear colleagues,
We have now started de-bogonising 2a10::/12!
As part of this, we are announcing a couple of prefixes out of 2a10::/12
from AS12654 (RIPE's Routing Information Service, RIS). Pingable targets
have been configured in these prefixes, and we invite network operators
to test for thems
Hi,
I need contact with AS45102 because there is a lot networks with ROA wrong
and invalid.
Nobody knows some technical people inside this AS ?
Thanks for your help.
Kind regards,
Marco Paesani
Skype: mpaesani
Mobile: +39 348 6019349
Success depends on the right choice !
Email: ma...@paesani.it
Hi,
My client is looking to buy conduit with coverage of the affluent parts of
Chicago. Access to manholes, buildings on-net and near-net are important
ingredients. Second best solution is to purchase fiber manufactured in the last
five years. 144-846 pairs is the likely range.
Thanks.
Regard
Marco,
tor. 16. jan. 2020 12.50 skrev Marco Paesani :
> I need contact with AS45102 because there is a lot networks with ROA wrong
> and invalid.
> Nobody knows some technical people inside this AS ?
>
No succes using the contacts listed in their PeeringDB entry?
https://www.peeringdb.com/net/6
Anyone out there willing to share sample config of a Telco Systems T-Mark 300
unit. A config using Q-n-Q would be welcomed. Thanks.
~Nick
--
Checked by SOPHOS http://www.sophos.com
Hi Chriztoffer,
nobody answer to email.
For this reason I had try in NANOG.
Thanks,
Marco Paesani
Skype: mpaesani
Mobile: +39 348 6019349
Success depends on the right choice !
Email: ma...@paesani.it
Il giorno gio 16 gen 2020 alle ore 14:48 Chriztoffer Hansen <
chriztof...@netravnen.de> ha s
The right people are fixing it.
Thanks for reporting this.
Davey
Marco Paesani 于2020年1月16日 周四19:53写道:
> Hi,
> I need contact with AS45102 because there is a lot networks with ROA wrong
> and invalid.
> Nobody knows some technical people inside this AS ?
> Thanks for your help.
> Kind regards,
>
We are trying to design a physically diverse network in China and have been
challenged. All of the major carriers say that they cannot provide us KMZs or
similar detailed route information. Has anyone been able to crack this code?
G. Gabriel Cole
*RTE Group, Inc.*
*Strategic Consulting for Mis
Le 16/01/2020 à 06:37, Mark Tinka a écrit :
On 15/Jan/20 12:20, Alexandre Petrescu wrote:
Arcep (the regulator) today mentions 5G in 2020 will be mostly an
improved 4G, not the full plain 5G. (makes think of 4G+ which is
already widely available since some months).
This is an importan
In my environment I've been running Kea dhcp6 against Ciscos of varying
platform (7600, ASR920, etc) and just them as a relay. In this case, the Cisco
itself is installing a route as it snoops the relay action automatically. This
was one of the harder things to wrap my head around before just sl
I’ve had good luck with PCCW operating as my China liaison since we terminate a
lot of circuits in Hong Kong and Singapore. It’s not cheap I’ll tell ya but
they can get the info and deliver.
J~
> On Jan 16, 2020, at 10:21, Gabe Cole wrote:
>
>
> We are trying to design a physically diverse
I have experienced the same thing. I think it is motivated by national security
paranoia.
Regards,
Roderick.
From: NANOG on behalf of Gabe Cole
Sent: Thursday, January 16, 2020 3:10 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: China Network Diversity
We are trying to de
Brandon, I vaguely recall that the dhcp relay snooping function is able to
add those routes to the local route table. and then redistribution into the
routing process occurs
Question similar to yours was asked here in 2017 - September.
https://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2017-September/0
I think the issue is mainland China, not Hong Kong or Singapore.
From: NANOG on behalf of JASON BOTHE via NANOG
Sent: Thursday, January 16, 2020 5:30 PM
To: Gabe Cole
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: China Network Diversity
I’ve had good luck with PCCW operat
Arista/Cisco have commands like this:
ipv6 dhcp relay install routes
You place on the interface to make this happen.
- Jared
> On Jan 16, 2020, at 11:27 AM, Chris Gross wrote:
>
> In my environment I’ve been running Kea dhcp6 against Ciscos of varying
> platform (7600, ASR920, etc) and just
The iPhone 11 does not have a 5G (NR) capable modem. The 3.5Ghz freq
support is for the CBRS bands in the US.
Support for 5G is not just a freq band support, it requires a chipset/modem
capable of support the NR protocol.
Shane
On Thu, Jan 16, 2020, 11:24 AM Alexandre Petrescu <
alexandre.petre.
I’m having an issue with a customer who
for some reason is sent to the Mexican
walmart site when they load it from USA.
If anyone knows which geoip service they use or have a contact in Walmart for
geoip issues please advise on or off list. (May be helpful to others)
Norman
Hi Norman,
At the risk of suggesting something obvious you've already considered:
What language setting do they have in their browser?
Have they cleared their cookies and offline content?
Is the recursive resolving DNS server they use in the U.S.?
Regards,
Bill Herrin
On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 11
On 16/Jan/20 11:50, Alexandre Petrescu wrote:
>
>
> The list of bands seems long, much longer than what my eye is used to.
> It is an expression of new chips extremely parametrable and generic.
>
> The band 71 seems to have inside some specifics to 5G, somewhere in
> the UHF (hundreds of megahe
On 16/Jan/20 19:23, Shane Ronan wrote:
> The iPhone 11 does not have a 5G (NR) capable modem. The 3.5Ghz freq
> support is for the CBRS bands in the US.
>
> Support for 5G is not just a freq band support, it requires a
> chipset/modem capable of support the NR protocol.
Yes, exactly.
Word is
I thought this might be relevant to many:
GPS reception may be unavailable or unreliable over a large portion of
the southeastern states and the Caribbean during offshore military
exercises scheduled between January 16 and 24.
The FAA has posted a flight advisory for the exercises that will
requi
21 matches
Mail list logo