Sean Donelan wrote:
Given that providers can't supply power to mobile phones,
that sending power over fiber is extremely eye unsafe
and that most CPEs are routers which themselves are
useless without end systems, it is reasonable that
providers are not required to supply power to home.
But,
Th
On Mon, 14 Oct 2019, Michael Thomas wrote:
deal with the CPE, that the cable plant was the actual problem. The cable
companies should, imo, be held to the same standard as the telcos. Maybe even
moreso these days since IP has taken over everything. The need for reliable
e911 hasn't gone away ju
On 10/14/19 8:26 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
So when we were working on this 20 years ago at Cisco, there was a
tremendous amount of effort to deal with the issue of e911 and generally
battery backup. I'm really surprised to hear that though we went through
a lot of effort to deal with the CPE, t
On 10/14/19 4:39 PM, Brandon Martin wrote:
All the conventional telcos are far more focused on keeping voice
service alive since they get raked over the coals by the FCC if it
drops due to lack of 911. That includes wireless if they are both a
wireline and wireless operator. Interestingl
All true telco equipment is powered by batteries. Commerical power or
generators just recharge the batteries. No switch over when commerical
power is lost. Except when the generators(where equiped) switch over to
recharge the batteries.
Comcast and telcos do not put batteries in all remote
On 10/14/19 6:38 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
So it turns out that our local telco/isp does keep dsl running via the
same mechanism as they keep pots power backed up (i'm guessing it's a
diesel generator at the co, but am not sure). It seems that a lot of the
pedestals terminating the local loop
On 10/14/19 4:16 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2019, Michael Thomas wrote:
Of course this is a lot of conjecture on my part... be glad to be
clued in by folks in know.
An old news story, but telco's usually have backup batteries in their
outside plant, cell towers, etc. During pow
On Mon, 14 Oct 2019, Michael Thomas wrote:
Of course this is a lot of conjecture on my part... be glad to be clued in by
folks in know.
An old news story, but telco's usually have backup batteries in their
outside plant, cell towers, etc. During power outages, they shuttle small
generators b
On 10/14/19 3:06 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
That is not why people are surprised. When the house doesn't have
power, and doesn't have home generator or UPS, (most) people are less
surprised their DSL or Cable modem and VOIP doesn't work anymore.
The reasons I saw people angry on twitter was
On Fri, 11 Oct 2019, Ted Hatfield wrote:
First of all DSL is not pots.
[]
DSL is a data service that runs on the subscriber loop at the same time as
the voice service. This service is not required to be battery backed and
will invariably stop working when power is cut at the customer e
Hi everyone,
The APRICOT 2020 Programme Committee is responsible for the solicitation
and selection of suitable presentation and tutorial content for the
APRICOT 2020 conference (https://2020.apricot.net/).
The APRICOT PC Chairs are now seeking nominations from the community to
join the APRICOT 2
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
All,
Verisign is in the process of increasing the size and strength of
the DNSSEC Zone Signing Keys (ZSKs) for the top-level domains that
it operates. As part of this process, the ZSK for the .COM zone will
be increased in size from 1024 to 1280 bi
Is this an indication of a prefix that was highjacked?
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 14, 2019, at 9:19 AM, Ben Cannon wrote:
>
I am a researcher working on developing a new switch-based on-the-fly
telemetry system that takes a flow chart as input to describe a
particular detection task (rather than just features or information
elements as in IPFIX). For an example of what I mean by "flow chart" see
the figure here:
ht
Agreed, I’ve seen this before across wider boundaries. Even /22s.
-Ben
> On Oct 14, 2019, at 8:38 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
>
>
>
>> On Oct 14, 2019, at 9:14 AM, Travis Garrison wrote:
>>
>> Anyone else have issues where their IP block gets randomly set to China? We
>> have been trying to tr
http://thebrotherswisp.com/index.php/geo-and-vpn/
Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Mon, Oct 14, 2019 at 11:38 AM Jared Mauch wrote:
>
>
> > On Oct 14, 2019, at 9:14 AM, Travis Garrison
> wrote:
> >
> > Anyone else have issues wh
> On Oct 14, 2019, at 9:14 AM, Travis Garrison wrote:
>
> Anyone else have issues where their IP block gets randomly set to China? We
> have been trying to track down this issue for months and our customers are
> starting to get upset. We get a /29 from our upstream provider that we CGNAT
>
On Fri, 11 Oct 2019, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 10/11/19 4:31 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
The FCC asked a half-dozen carriers about their network resilience plans
last month. Comcast was not one of the
service providers askedd about their plans.
The FCC should have looked clo
Anyone else have issues where their IP block gets randomly set to China? We
have been trying to track down this issue for months and our customers are
starting to get upset. We get a /29 from our upstream provider that we CGNAT
(yeah I know, working on implementing IPV6) to all of our customers
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