On 05 May 2008 16:07:03 +0000 Paul Vixie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > But yes, Joe's ISC TechNote is an excellent document, and was a big > > help in figuring out how to set this up a few years ago. > > and now for something completely different -- where in the interpipes > could a document like that have been published, vs. ISC's web site? > the amount of red tape and delay involved in Usenix or IETF or IEEE > or ACM are vastly more than most smart ops people are willing to put > in. where is the light / middle weight class, or is every > organization or person who wants to publish this kind of thing going > to continue to have the exclusive and bad choice of "blog it, or > write an article for ;login:/ACM-Queue/Circle-ID, or write an > academic paper and wait ten months"? isn't this a job for... NANOG?
I did some checking on this topic a few years ago. The consensus among the people I talked to was that NANOG itself seemed to generate too little that was publishable in a formal way to warrant a specific mechanism. A web site like arxiv is good for some stuff. But -- should there be a link from nanog.org to operational content? Should nanog.org have its own archive? Should there be a peer review process? If not, what should the criteria be for an "official" note of the paper? --Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb _______________________________________________ NANOG mailing list NANOG@nanog.org http://mailman.nanog.org/mailman/listinfo/nanog