Re: Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet

2018-07-22 Thread Scott Weeks
--- r...@invaluement.com wrote: From: Rob McEwen The bottom line is that there is no trend of recently observed sea level rising data that is even close to being on track to hit all these dire predictions within the foreseeable future And, again, there were articles like this 10, 15,

Re: Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet

2018-07-22 Thread Rob McEwen
For the past 100+ years, the sea levels have been rising by about 2-4 mm per year. If you go to the following two sites: https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/sealevel.html https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/sea-level/ You'll see all kinds of scary language about dire predictions about how the

Re: Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet

2018-07-22 Thread Colin Baker
On 2018-07-22 20:01, Sean Donelan wrote: https://www.popsci.com/sea-level-rise-internet-infrastructure Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet, sooner than you think [...] Despite its magnitude, this network is increasingly vulnerable to sea levels inching their way higher, acco

Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet

2018-07-22 Thread Sean Donelan
https://www.popsci.com/sea-level-rise-internet-infrastructure Rising sea levels are going to mess with the internet, sooner than you think [...] Despite its magnitude, this network is increasingly vulnerable to sea levels inching their way higher, according to research presented at an acad

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Niels Bakker
* na...@radu-adrian.feurdean.net (Radu-Adrian Feurdean) [Sun 22 Jul 2018, 13:27 CEST]: On Wed, Jul 18, 2018, at 15:45, Mike Hammett wrote: Fast.com will pull from multiple nodes at the same time. I think there Here in Europe, fast.com consistently proven to be 100% UNreliable, especially on

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Mark Tinka
On 22/Jul/18 15:25, Mike Hammett wrote: > As someone that has built his own last-mile ISP and knows first hand > literally hundreds of others and coaches thousands more through social media > and a podcast, yes, I realize what I'm saying when I say to build your own > last mile. Hell, what

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Keith Stokes
Typical electrical breakers are not instantaneous devices and likely will not trip at .5% over rated load until they've been run near limit for extended periods of time. - Keith Stokes > On Jul 22, 2018, at 5:52 AM, Radu-Adrian Feurdean > wrote: > >> On Tue, Jul 17, 2018, at 18:12, And

Re: issues through CGNat (juniper ms-mpc-128g in mx960)

2018-07-22 Thread Ca By
On Sun, Jul 22, 2018 at 6:23 AM Radu-Adrian Feurdean < na...@radu-adrian.feurdean.net> wrote: > On Thu, Jul 19, 2018, at 16:34, Aaron Gould wrote: > > I don't know if it's fixed on the endpoints, or in the cgnat config or > what. > > Not specific to Juniper, but it's NOT fixed. > You'll either sta

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Mike Hammett
As someone that has built his own last-mile ISP and knows first hand literally hundreds of others and coaches thousands more through social media and a podcast, yes, I realize what I'm saying when I say to build your own last mile. - Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://

Re: issues through CGNat (juniper ms-mpc-128g in mx960)

2018-07-22 Thread Radu-Adrian Feurdean
On Thu, Jul 19, 2018, at 16:34, Aaron Gould wrote: > I don't know if it's fixed on the endpoints, or in the cgnat config or what. Not specific to Juniper, but it's NOT fixed. You'll either start spending time on work-arounds or you start selling a new service with dedicated public IPv4 - more ex

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Radu-Adrian Feurdean
On Wed, Jul 18, 2018, at 15:45, Mike Hammett wrote: > Fast.com will pull from multiple nodes at the same time. I think there Here in Europe, fast.com consistently proven to be 100% UNreliable, especially on high-speed FTTH. OOKla and nPerf gave better results for high-speed connections 100% of

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Radu-Adrian Feurdean
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018, at 18:12, Andy Ringsmuth wrote: > I suppose in reality it’s no different than any other utility. My home > has 200 amp electrical service. Will I ever use 200 amps at one time? No, because at 201 Amps instantaneous the breaker will cut everything. > Highly highly unlikely

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Mark Tinka
On 22/Jul/18 09:46, Radu-Adrian Feurdean wrote: > You may argue that some of those issues do not apply in North America (the NA > from NANOG), but NANOG became pretty much global :) I am certain that there are places in (North) America where you cannot "build your own" or "order 10% more"...

Re: Proving Gig Speed

2018-07-22 Thread Radu-Adrian Feurdean
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018, at 16:42, Mike Hammett wrote: > Build your own last mile or order that 10% more? Do you realize what you are saying ? Let me offer a few translations: 1. "Don't spend N00 Currency/month for X Mbps from your customer to your aggregation DC on an existing NNI, but pay someth

Re: using expect to log into devices

2018-07-22 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Sun, 22 Jul 2018 00:10:06 -0400, J Crowe said: > Have you looked into utilizing Ansible? Yes, we use Ansible heavily on production services. But Ansible doesn't *stop* somebody from downloading modules, especially if it's a laptop used for diagnosis/testing. pgpCUNzXhlEPO.pgp Description: P