On Fri, Jun 7, 2019 at 10:03 AM Romeo Czumbil
wrote:
> All new CL Internet get's provisioned on AS3356
> You would need a strong case for them to put you on AS209
>
> At this time they are not merging the two AS's
> And also define "quality" ;-)
>
> -Romeo
>
That isn't true in my recent experien
These are the two I'm most familiar with:
Lerman Senter, as Faisal mentioned: http://www.lermansenter.com/
Rini O'Neil: http://rinioneil.com/
--Eric
There is no such thing as an 'ISP license' in the US. I have a hard time
imagining Texas of all places would have such a requirement.
Depending on what exactly you are doing, there are various and highly
varied requirements, such as acquiring a SPIN number for E-Rate, filing FCC
477 if you do broa
There is no simple answer, as the characteristics of each link are unique,
thus the requirements for each potential upgrade are also unique.
Typically an engineering study will be done to determine what exactly is
required, and what the cost will be. It could be as simple and cheap as a
software l
I've been really happy with the Fiberstore muxes/demuxes, although I'm
using CWDM not DWDM.
They do the job, are entirely passive (no power needed), perform well (real
world losses seem to match the test reports to a tee), seem solid enough,
and this sort of stuff doesn't get any cheaper (that I'v
Those 'proposals' are really just things that would have been useful in
module form at one point or another, not necessarily anything that I've
given any serious thought to what sort of market they would have. Some are
probably impractical, some would probably be far too expensive to actually
be us
Hmm, wandering pie-in-the-sky module wish list...
MACsec would be great, hopefully in an easy to manage/replace form.
Separately tunable transmitters and receivers; in both DWDM and CWDM
flavors. This would reduce the number of different parts to track/stock,
and enable the use of simple splitter
Vlade,
When you say that "they still advertise your routes", do you mean:
A: That you were having them originate your routes, and they failed to stop
doing so when they had problems? Or...
B: That routes you were originating continued to be propagated by them,
even though your session with them
I'll add that if you are comfortable with MikroTik, and can wait a few
months, they have announced a device with 12 SFP slots, and one SFP+ slot.
It's the CCR1016-12S-1S+, and I expect it to come in well under $1k.
--Eric (not OP)
On Wed, Nov 27, 2013 at 8:32 AM, Andrew D Kirch wrote:
> Eric,
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