On Mar 23, 2013, at 7:47 PM, Kyle Creyts <kyle.cre...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Will they really demand ubiquitous, unabridged connectivity?

Let's back up.  End users do not as a rule* have persistent inbound 
connections.  If they have DSL and a Cable Modem they can switch manually (or 
with a little effort automatically) if one goes down.

* Servers-at-home-or-small-office is the use case for Owen's magic BGP box.  
Which is true for many of us and other core geeks but not an appreciable 
percent of the populace.

I believe that full BGP to end user is less practical for this use case than a 
geographically dispersed BGP external facing intermediary whose connectivity to 
the "end user servers" is full-mesh multi-provider-multi-physical-link VPNs. 

It's a lot easier to manage and has less chance of a config goof blowing up 
bigger network neighbors.

Every time I look at productizing this, though, the market's too small to 
support it.  Which probably means it's way too small for home BGP...


George William Herbert
Sent from my iPhone


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