We are in the process of evaluating Equinix and CRG West in LA. Before we ink a
deal, can anyone give some feedback on CRG West? I have had some minor direct
operational experience with them in the past with a former employer. If anyone
has some history with them; good, bad or informational on
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 16:51, wrote:
> Folks, you might be interested in checking out a network monitoring
> tool we launched today, Netalyzr. It's a Java applet you can run by
> surfing to netalyzr.com. It aims to measure a bunch of the properties of
> and end user's network access, particularl
On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 10:26 PM, Nathan Ward wrote:
> On 11/06/2009, at 2:16 PM, v...@ee.lbl.gov wrote:
>
>>> didn't want to spring for a cert for that eh? www.startssl.com ... hey
>>> lookie! free certs!
>>
>> ? We bought a cert from Thawte specifically so people wouldn't find that
>> it's suspe
On 11/06/2009, at 2:16 PM, v...@ee.lbl.gov wrote:
didn't want to spring for a cert for that eh? www.startssl.com ...
hey
lookie! free certs!
? We bought a cert from Thawte specifically so people wouldn't find
that
it's suspect. Does it look funny when your browser presents it to
you?
On Jun 10, 2009, at 10:16 PM, v...@ee.lbl.gov wrote:
didn't want to spring for a cert for that eh? www.startssl.com ...
hey
lookie! free certs!
? We bought a cert from Thawte specifically so people wouldn't find
that
it's suspect. Does it look funny when your browser presents it to
you
> didn't want to spring for a cert for that eh? www.startssl.com ... hey
> lookie! free certs!
? We bought a cert from Thawte specifically so people wouldn't find that
it's suspect. Does it look funny when your browser presents it to you?
Vern
didn't want to spring for a cert for that eh? www.startssl.com ... hey
lookie! free certs!
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 6:51 PM, wrote:
> Folks, you might be interested in checking out a network monitoring
> tool we launched today, Netalyzr. It's a Java applet you can run by
> surfing to netalyzr.com.
At the moment it appears as tho the blackberry email storm has
subsided. I thought I'd share a most excellent letter I got from
Blackberry after one of the Nanog users was kind enough to forward my
email along to them:
> Hello Mark,
>
> Thank you for contacting BlackBerry Customer Support.
>
> W
I use mtr with the "--report" and the "--report-cycles" switches + cron
rm
AFAIR, you can configure the MoCA adapters to a certain unique ID, not
unlike garage door openers. In single-home settings there's usually enough
cable loss that sharing is not a problem, but in an apartment complex, you
may want to consider making sure there is a return trap on your cable so
that
Thank you. Very interesting story and useful info.
I'm also curious about the signal generated from customers from MoCA
(multimedia over coax) devices. How many neighbors would be sharing the
same coax medium?
Does anybody have a guess? I'm guessing neighbors that are connected by
the same dr
Best thing I've seen is from the network guys at NCAR/UCAR. And it has
the right price too!
http://www.cisl.ucar.edu/nets/tools/trcheck/
Dylan Ebner wrote:
My company uses it's internet connection primarily for VPN tunneling. I
have always wanted a tool that I can enter the peer ip addresses
I recall an Article that talked about this and found it quickly...
http://www.slate.com/id/2167389
has some links and info you might find useful
~J
-Original Message-
From: Kee Hinckley [mailto:naz...@somewhere.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 2:41 PM
To: Dongsu Han
Cc: nanog@nanog
On Jun 10, 2009, at 3:28 PM, Dongsu Han wrote:
I'm also trying to find out whether my neighbors would be able to
overhear the MoCA signal from my apartment. Anyone knows the answer?
I can't speak to what they are *supposed* to do, but my experience is
that things can be overheard. Last summ
Hi All,
I'm trying to find out how coax cables are wired in a residential area
to each house. I found out that "drop amp" amplifies the signal just out
side the building, and a few neighbors share the drop amp (basically a
powered splitter). What other devices are there?
I'm also trying to fin
>> Can someone please point me in the direction of an rwhoisd solution to
>> be run on a CentOS Linux platform? ARIN is now punting rwhois queries
>> to us and frankly i've been unable to find an easy to install/use
>> solution to answer these queries. I've seen the rwhoisd at
>> projects.arin.net
On Tue, 9 Jun 2009, Dylan Ebner wrote:
My company uses it's internet connection primarily for VPN tunneling. I
have always wanted a tool that I can enter the peer ip addresses and it
will every 8 or 12 hours run a traceroute and log it so I can build
historical maps of the path our traffic is ta
I used this guide and it worked quite well. The writer was using
FreeBSD but I installed onto Ubuntu and ran into little to no issues.
http://www.unixadmin.cc/rwhois/
---Chris
On Jun 6, 2009, at 10:37 AM, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
NANOGers,
Can someone please point me in the direction of an
If anyone has a contact within Blackberry.net's email department, I'd
greatly appreciate it if you could get me in touch with them. We're
getting hundreds of connections a second from their mail servers and
have had to block them.
Thanks in advance,
Mark Pace
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