It is a partnership and I may not be the most qualified to speak on the terms 
of the partnership. However, the non-commercial side is not-for-profit, but the 
commercial side is fully commercial. 

While building out our IX brand, of those that have been able to have a 
rational discussion about their anti-commercial IX position, almost all of them 
(or maybe even all of them) weren't really anti-commercial. They were just 
anti-800-lb-gorilla. They didn't hate the independent building out IXes in 
markets that maybe never had a functional IX, but surely didn't have one now. 
They hated Equinix, Coresite, etc. They just wanted someone that wasn't going 
to be a jerk to them. 

We don't have any aspirations to get to Equinix size. We know we're going to 
small time places and that we'll only ever have small time IXes in the big 
picture. The building we started at in Indy only advertises something like 20 
or 30 networks in the building. Now we've grown to other buildings and they 
aren't going to list every Tom, Dick and Harry, but it's not a 300 network 
market. We'll leave that to AMS-IX, DE-CIX, Megaport, etc. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Ken Chase" <m...@sizone.org> 
To: "NANOG ???[nanog@nanog.org]???" <nanog@nanog.org> 
Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2017 6:36:20 PM 
Subject: Re: St. Louis IX Launch 

congrats! 

I am curious, is the IX non-for-profit as well? The wikipedia entry for IX's 
doenst indicate which IX's are non-profit. Im curious as to the prevalence 
and size (as well as the relative successes) of such IX's vs for profit models 
(equinix etc). 

/kc 


On Sun, Jan 15, 2017 at 06:30:45PM -0600, Mike Hammett said: 
>If you know someone that may be interested, we have a launch event later this 
>week for our St. Louis IX. St. Louis is a bit different than our existing 
>market in that we've partnered with a local non-profit that will be focusing 
>on non-commercial Internet aspects. These sorts of things are innovation 
>neighborhoods, IoT, healthcare, education, public safety, etc. They may (or 
>may not) be the big volume things we're used to, but they need local, 
>low-latency connectivity just as much. 
> 
>https://www.eventbrite.com/e/st-louis-regional-internet-exchange-preview-tickets-30329718003?aff=NANOG
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>----- 
>Mike Hammett 
>Intelligent Computing Solutions 
> 
>Midwest Internet Exchange 
> 
>The Brothers WISP 
> 

-- 
Ken Chase - k...@heavycomputing.ca skype:kenchase23 +1 416 897 6284 Toronto 
Canada 
Heavy Computing - Clued bandwidth, colocation and managed linux VPS @151 Front 
St. W. 

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