On Jan 26, 2012, at 1:00 PM, wireless-requ...@wispa.org wrote:
> --
>
> Message: 4
> Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2012 00:25:37 -0500
> From: "Tom DeReggi"
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Juniper Network
> To: , "WISPA General List"
>
> Message-ID:
> Content-Type: text/plain; fo
This should have nothing to do with AT&T. It sounds like Windstream has
incorrectly assumed that you are trying to announce something
owned/controlled by AT&T, or did you also ask them to allow your AT&T
/24s through as well? If so, you might be able to get them to allow the
ARIN /21 before p
Based on the information on robtex.com [1], windstream us AT&T as one of
their upstreams. Windstream need to advise all of their upstream providers
of any new prefixes which are to be advertised through their network, so
there may be some truth to what they are saying although two months is a
ridic
John,
I think this will happen faster than you predict. With the Lucent
light radio being software defined the technology already exists to do this.
Carrier engineering departments are just a bit slow to change. Carriers have
to look at the Pico cell design to increase capacity by more freq
Here are my predictions based partly upon the acquisitions we have
seen of Atheros by Qualcomm and now this latest play into Wifi by
otherwise generally licensed zealots of the mobile world:
The large mobile carrier equipment companies will supply Wifi
solutions to the national players who will th
You don't get out much, do you? :-p
Windstream is a rural ILEC in many parts of the country, but has
recently purchased Paetec, KDL\Norlight and I believe some others as
well. They are one of the more aggressive aggregators in the past couple
years. By some measures, they are one of the top 10
At 1/26/2012 10:22 PM, Travis wrote:
>This is the reason that AT&T costs more and Windstream (which I have
>never heard of until this message) is cheap. You get what you pay for...
>a company with real tech support and engineers that know what they are
>doing and get it done, and some "other" compa
This is the reason that AT&T costs more and Windstream (which I have
never heard of until this message) is cheap. You get what you pay for...
a company with real tech support and engineers that know what they are
doing and get it done, and some "other" company that doesn't. :)
Travis
Microserv
Two months ago, we received a /21 direct allocation of IPv4 addresses from ARIN.
We have two geographically diverse upstream providers. One is AT&T.
The other is Windstream.
The Windstream circuit is considerably cheaper per meg, than the AT&T
circuit. We are wanting to do away with AT&T.
After
We got the letter too!
-Mark
On 1/26/12 11:44 AM, "Jon Auer" wrote:
Is that https://ipaccess.fbi.gov/ ?
If so, capitalize the first letter of the username and password that
they gave you.
On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 12:47 PM, Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)
wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> We just got our
On Thu, 26 Jan 2012 00:25:37 -0500, "Tom DeReggi"
wrote:
--SNIP--
> With that said, We've been looking into Juniper lately, I like that
their
> new lines are all based on the same Juno OS, which is Linux. :-)
--SNIP--
Junos is not Linux, but is a set of processes that run on top of a FreeBSD
ker
It's not just the cellular industry. Comcast is deploying 18,000 outdoor
wi-fi nodes this year and giving that service for free to their customers to
keep them happy in a mobile environment and reduce churn. Time Warner is
planning I believe around 10,000 node in the LA market this year and after
t
Is that https://ipaccess.fbi.gov/ ?
If so, capitalize the first letter of the username and password that
they gave you.
On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 12:47 PM, Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)
wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
>
> I can't get into the web sit
I believe we talked about it on one of the members lists as well.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
On 1/26/2012 12:57 PM, Bret Clark wrote:
> A lot of service providers have been getting them, there was some
> chatter about it last week on NANOG list.
>
>
> We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
Anyone made up a form letter yet? Share?
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2011/november/malware_110911/image/dns-malware-graphic/view
4.2 million infected computers. A letter has gone out to ISPs with
addresses that showed up in the investigation. We had one customer with an
infected system.
marlon
- Original Message -
From
A lot of service providers have been getting them, there was some
chatter about it last week on NANOG list.
On 01/26/2012 01:55 PM, Faisal Imtiaz wrote:
> Use your code in the letter,
>
> and for last name : Representative ...
>
> or call the Toll free number in that letter..
>
> --
Use your code in the letter,
and for last name : Representative ...
or call the Toll free number in that letter..
--
BTW FWIW.
It appears that they are now activating the system, and getting everyone
setup so that all the different Fed. Agencies can use this as a common
means
Never mind, it worked the second time I tried.
marlon
- Original Message -
From: "Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)"
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2012 10:47 AM
Subject: [WISPA] fbi letter
> Hi All,
>
> We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
>
>
I have no idea what you are talking about.
On 1/26/12 1:47 PM, Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181) wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
>
> I can't get into the web site with the code they gave me. Anyone else
> finally get the list of infected ip addys?
>
>
Hi All,
We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
I can't get into the web site with the code they gave me. Anyone else
finally get the list of infected ip addys?
thanks,
marlon
WISPA Wants You!
In a sure sign that the
cellular industry is getting serious about Wi-Fi, telecom
networking giant Ericsson is buying BelAir Networks, adding its
high-performance outdoor hotspot technology to its portfolio,
sources told GigaOM. The deal could signal a big
I've been looking around at network appliance vendors (the people that
make the commercialized hardware that these guys build their platforms
off of) to find some with more power. There are a lot of people out
there making a lot of these things. So far the biggest I've found can do
16x 10GigE a
Hi Akin,
Better to get a purpose built network appliance like the powerrouter if you
need the extra horsepower, don't want to thrash HP, they make great servers
but the fewer moving parts you have on your routers the better
- - - - -
Olufemi Adalemo
On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 7:32 AM, Akinlolu C.
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