On 6/11/22 22:20, Karsten Thomann via NANOG wrote:
Does anyone know the Asian market where they are using E-PON?
After my very short search it seems they provide best effort up to 1G without
any real plans...
When I was in Malaysia years back, we did use ZTE for some EPON
services. But we
Looks like FIOS customers may be getting ipv6 deployed toward them, finally:
ifconfig snippet from local machine:
inet6 2600:4040:2001:2200:73d2:6bcc:1e6b:43a1 prefixlen 64
scopeid 0x0
inet6 2600:4040:2001:2200:e87:bf36:b6cb:6ce1 prefixlen 64 scopeid
0x0
ping attempt:
64 byt
T-Mobile data services in general seem to have recently gone downhill in
the northwest.
Here in Portland, OR, I'm seeing it all backhauled to California randomly,
usually with high latency and high packet loss. Something tells me their
Tmobile/Sprint merger is not going well at all.
On Fri, Jun 1
It's not always something the service provider has the ability to change.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
Midwest Internet Exchange
The Brothers WISP
- Original Message -
From: "Michael Thomas"
To: "Mike Hammett"
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Saturday, June
On Sat, Jun 11, 2022 at 1:22 PM Karsten Thomann via NANOG
wrote:
>
> On Friday, 10 June 2022 10:15:15 CEST Chris Hills wrote:
> > On 10/06/2022 00:31, Mel Beckman wrote:
> > > Your point on asymmetrical technologies is excellent. But you may not be
> > > aware that residential optical fiber is als
Right. But MOST is, which is what matters for the trend. Existing asymmetric
PONs is unlikely to be replaced for the next 20 years.
-mel via cell
> On Jun 11, 2022, at 11:11 AM, Chris Hills wrote:
>
> On 10/06/2022 00:31, Mel Beckman wrote:
>> Your point on asymmetrical technologies is ex
On Friday, 10 June 2022 10:15:15 CEST Chris Hills wrote:
> On 10/06/2022 00:31, Mel Beckman wrote:
> > Your point on asymmetrical technologies is excellent. But you may not be
> > aware that residential optical fiber is also asymmetrical. For example,
> > GPON, the latest ITU specified PON standard
On 6/10/22 6:52 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
Due to the demand being predominately in the downward direction,
half-duplex (or effectively half-duplex) systems either allocate more
TDMA slots or more channels to downstream, at the expense of upstream.
Well, my dsl provider has like a 25/5 50/10 so
Dear Colleagues:
0) Appreciate very much for the discussion on this platform (and
others), we learned a lot about Internet topics and considerations.
1) Two Appendixes, G & H have been added to the latest IETF draft
revision (URL below). They summarize our digest of the feedback and
co
On 10/06/2022 00:31, Mel Beckman wrote:
Your point on asymmetrical technologies is excellent. But you may not be aware
that residential optical fiber is also asymmetrical. For example, GPON, the
latest ITU specified PON standard, and the most widely deployed, calls for a
2.4 Gbps downstream an
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