You might look at mccowntech.com,
they make surge suppressors geared toward
the wireless provider market which are pretty good.
(not associated, we just use their products).
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Tue August 13 2019 13:22, Javier J wrote:
> I'm working with a client site that
It has been updated it appears:
Registry Expiry Date: 2019-12-14T23:05:47Z
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Mon December 17 2018 06:34, Siyuan Miao wrote:
> All,
>
> routeviews.org is pending delete now.
>
> Domain Name: ROUTEVIEWS.ORG
> Registry Domain ID: D48496876-LROR
It seems to work http and redirects to the original server.michogarcia.org
link.
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Mon September 24 2018 11:35, Edward Dore wrote:
> Is that URL correct? https://beta.networkatlas.org/ isn’t working for me –
> I can’t establish a TLS connection:
>
&
would be enough :(
Believe Mikrotik boxes support CALEA, you might check www.mikrotik.com
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
download (almost, not all)...
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
realistic answers are probably going to require an address or physical
location to be able to quote services. Know there are several Fixed wireless
providers in AL, you might look at www.wispa.org as I believe they have some
information as to which wisps service which areas.
--
Larry Smith
lesm
the delay you
are seeing (each server trying to find a PTR with each of its upsteams) until
they all time out...
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
might not be in the
right places for rwhoisd to find them (but depends upon how heavily
your copy has been modified also)...
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Wed May 4 2011 14:40, Landon Stewart wrote:
Hello NANOG,
I sent this information to the rwhoisd mailing list originally but I've
been
I use Squish (www.squish.net/dnscheck) for this purpose. Reasonable
web interface and gives lots of info about where things are breaking
down...
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Tue January 25 2011 08:38, p8x wrote:
+1, also a quick check to make sure your name servers are actually set
require a master whitelist as well as to not be blocked
from our own networks.
Any current solutions or ideas ??
Private BGP session with Zebra or Quagga on a linux box
adding the selected IP to a null route.
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
, I'm specifically interested APNIC and AFRNIC.
Regards,
Michael Holstein
Cleveland State Unviersity
Since blackholes.us went away, the only other one I have found
semi-reliable is Country IP Blocks at http://www.countryipblocks.net
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
+1
On Thu April 8 2010 20:50, Aaron Wendel wrote:
Please.
-Original Message-
From: Will Clayton [mailto:w.d.clay...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2010 8:43 PM
To: Beavis
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: BGP hijack from 23724 - 4134 China?
Do share!
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010
is the fourth octet IP).
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
?
thanks,
-Drew
Have you looked at OpenNMS ??
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
enables and disables (adds/removes)
the customer from radius for payment/non-payment and therefore does
not require any technical support to turn on/off customers.
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
removing their entry from a central radius database.
--
Larry Smith
lesm...@ecsis.net
On Wed April 22 2009 12:25, you wrote:
As opposed to SNMP and a script that would shut the port down via SNMP
when the customer is disabled?
Larry Smith wrote:
On Wed April 22 2009 11:01, Curtis Maurand
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