On Tue, 17 Dec 2013 08:54:15 -0600, Blake Dunlap said:
> All I remember from the TNT days is the meltdown when Code Red happened.
> Why exactly an access platform should melt down when a worm occurs still
> bothers me.
Have we gotten any better at control plane meltdown when somebody starts
poking
We had gear in the MFS Colo in Whippany, NJ. We had a couple routers (2501's
and a 4700M), a couple PM3's, and some other crap. Near us were TNT's and Total
Controls from ANS (remember them??).
Yeah, it got warm in there, especially when the single 10 ton AC unit failed
(about every other day)
That's the day we decided we needed better edge routers :-).. I watch a
modem pool infected with code red melt a cisco 3640. Had to throw a
Linux box in it's place while I waited for Cisco equipment.
Sam Moats
On 2013-12-17 09:54, Blake Dunlap wrote:
All I remember from the TNT days is the melt
All I remember from the TNT days is the meltdown when Code Red happened.
Why exactly an access platform should melt down when a worm occurs still
bothers me.
-Blake
On Tue, Dec 17, 2013 at 8:44 AM, wrote:
> Dell - Internal Use - Confidential
>
> I personally never ran the Ascend gear (outside
Dell - Internal Use - Confidential
I personally never ran the Ascend gear (outside of a setting up a customer's
Ascend Superpipe 95 dual ISDN router one time), but I heard that the TNT gear
doubled as space heaters. I remember one facility we were in that had a
catastrophic cooling failure and
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