Good luck -- last time we did a public service complaint (admittedly it's been
a while) due to porting / voice issues we were told that they're severity
under-staffed and most days don't have enough staff to follow normal business
procedures. I have no idea if things are the same on the non-vo
7; and how they're
deploying X for 400g now, etc.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Mike Hammett"
Sent: Tuesday, December 24, 2024 2:38pm
To: "Saku Ytti"
Cc: "NANOG"
Subject: Re: Distributed Router Fabrics
"what benefits is OP seeing here
That seems about right -- $70k per mile for main-line in a relatively rural
area is what we're looking at right now. Depends on a lot of things
(directional boring vs direct plow, etc).
-Original Message-
From: "Justin Streiner"
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2024 4:45pm
To:
Cc: nanog@
+1 to contacting your local public service commission. _No_ provider wants
them to pass along a complaint. When that happens, things get fixed quickly.
-Original Message-
From: "Josh Luthman"
Sent: Thursday, December 12, 2024 10:36am
To: "John Neiberger"
Cc: "NANOG list"
Subject: R
I believe RAD makes a device similar to the Accedian. There's also the Metro
Nid line from Accedian, but while they do a lot, they're pretty spendy.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Tim Burke"
Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2023 12:38am
To: "Ross Tajvar"
.56.244, input
interface=TenGigabitEthernet0/0/5
The destination address is always one of our customer's ip addresses. The
source seems to be all over the place, mostly Russia, Korea, China or south
east asia. It's not really impacting anything at the moment, just rather
annoying.
Thanks
Shawn
I personally own a .us domain name -- while it's a personal domain and doesn't
do a lot of traffic, it's still a legitimate domain.
-Original Message-
From: "goemon--- via NANOG"
Sent: Thursday, November 2, 2023 4:30pm
To: "NANOG list"
Subject: .US Harbors Prolific Malicious Link Shor
We know the feeling well. Try porting from them…..
> On May 2, 2023, at 4:41 PM, Daniel Marks via NANOG wrote:
>
> My issue was just trying to convince Spectrum to look into the problem in
> the first place, I brought the Atlas probe receipts because it’s such a
> helpful tool, but wasn’t ab
You should be able to setup a VPLS between 3 (or more) devices. Something like
this --
Example: VFI on a PE Device
The following example shows a virtual forwarding instance (VFI) configuration:
Device(config)# l2 vfi vfi110 manual
Device(config-vfi)# vpn id 110
Device(config-vfi)# neighbor 172
All i can say is good luck. We see the 'trash-bag mod' on a lot of AT&T aerial
boots and PEDs, as well as Charter/Spectrum/TWC gear. A lot of times, they
don't even get that. Unless you know how to get in contact with a local tech,
they will most likely not respond until the customer complai
Those are Twin Gig Converter Modules. They went in the 3560 series (and
probably others). You could either insert a 10 gig module, or the converter
module and get 2 1-gig sfp slots.
-Original Message-
From: "Matt Erculiani"
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2022 11:26am
To: "Mel Beckman"
I think they call me around once a week right now. Even after I've told them
we're not interested. Every once in a while they switch the numbers they're
calling from, just to keep things interesting.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Dennis Burgess"
Sent:
With the current shortages and lead times, I almost feel like I did back in the
beginning of my career ---
Then it was "what can we do with what we can afford" now it's more like "What
can we do with what we have (or can actually get)"?
Shawn
-Original
Aloha NANOG,
What is the best practice (or peoples preferred methods) to
update/correct/maintain geolocation data?
Do most people start with description field info in route/route6 objects?
Also, thoughts and considerations on using IPv4 space from one RIR in
countries belonging to another RIR?
I'd still go with telect-style blocks. Wire-wrap on the front and amphenol on
the back/bottom depending you application. Way less space than 66 or 110.
-Original Message-
From: "Dave Phelps"
Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2022 4:27pm
To: "Mike Hammett"
Cc: "NANOG"
Subject: Re: Copper T
Thanks for all who've responded. I was able to reach a very helpful engineer @
HE.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Owen DeLong"
Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2022 2:15pm
To: "Shawn L"
Subject: Re: Any engineers from HE on the list?
FWIW, [ supp...@he.net ]( m
Wondering if there are any engineers from HE (Hurricane Electric) on the list
that could help with a strange traffic issue through your network
If so, please contact me off-list
Thanks
Shawn
(AT&T I'm looking at you).
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Keith Stokes"
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2022 1:11pm
To: "William Herrin"
Cc: "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: Re: VPN recommendations?
Pfsense on Netgate appliances?
I’ve used sever
o preserve battery for the
phone portion. Though that behavior can be changed in software.
-Original Message-
From: "Michael Thomas"
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 2:48pm
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: home router battery backup
On 1/12/22 10:54 AM, Shawn L via NANOG
In $dayjob I work for a telco that deploys fiber to the home. If we are
providing voice services over fiber a battery backup is installed (we maintain)
that powers the customer's phone in the event of a power outage. It does not
power their router, etc. 99% of the customers do not install a
Curious if any IRR databases are mirroring/importing ROA data - creating
route|6 objects from ROA?
LACNIC requires a route object to be created when creating a ROA.
APNIC you create a route object, then may generate a ROA during that
process.
Other RIR's, curious if anything tries to bring the two
we received it as well
-Original Message-
From: "Matt Hoppes"
Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2021 8:21am
To: "North American Network Operators' Group"
Subject: Anyone else getting the 'spam' bomb threat?
I've now heard from several operators - our selves included - about
getting an e-ma
Why about thinks like the Cisco 4500 switch series that are almost as long as a
1u server. But yet only has mounts for a relay type rack.
As far as boot times, try a Asr920. Wait 15 minutes and decide if it’s time to
power cycle again or wait 5 more minutes
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 25,
lling to provide a little power to be able to say
"apartments in my building all have fiber Internet". And potentially charge a
little more in the rent.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Grant Taylor via NANOG"
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 2021 1:01pm
To: nanog@n
Is there anyone on the list that's from an ISP that's participating in the ACAM
or ACAM II programs? If so, I'd like to ask a couple of questions (off-list)
specifically about the speed testing requirements.
Thanks
Shawn
There's also Rackspace. They have e-mail and web hosting, etc.
-Original Message-
From: "Ryan Finnesey via NANOG"
Sent: Thursday, July 8, 2021 10:56pm
To: "Steve Saner" , "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: RE: Email and Web Hosting
If the client base wants to stick with basic IMAP/POP3 em
2.4 gbps down, 1.2 up. So yes, you could
-Original Message-
From: aar...@gvtc.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 1, 2021 12:18pm
To: "'Mark Tinka'" , nanog@nanog.org
Subject: RE: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
Yeah I thought gpon was 2.4 ghz down and 1.2 ghz up... so you could o
From the ISP side, I can tell you that when a customer signs up for service and
you offer them a couple of choices of wireless routers, they almost always pick
the cheapest one.
If you give them a reasonable / good router when you hook-up their service,
some will still put their old 15-year
The Accedian boxes are nice, as long as you remember they're not switches or
routers. We've used them for specific use cases, but have to remember that
there's things you just can't do on them. Though things may have changed on
them since we used them.
-Original Message-
From: a
Agreed. Don't fix what isn't broken.
-Original Message-
From: "Mark Tinka"
Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2021 4:33pm
To: "Randy Bush" , "Rod Beck"
Cc: "North American Network Operators' Group"
Subject: Re: Perhaps it's time to think about enhancements to the NANOG list...?
On 3/20/21
That brings back memoriesI had a similar experience. First month on the
job, large Sun raid array storing ~ 5k of mailboxes dies in the middle of the
afternoon. So, I start troubleshooting and determine it's most likely a bad
disk. The CEO walked into the server room right about the time
When I last spoke to them, it sounded like they were using a bunch of LAG
groups based on ip address because they _really_ wanted to know how many ip
addresses we had and what kind of traffic we would be expecting (eyeball
networks, big data transport, etc).
-Original Message-
From: "
We once moved a 3u server 30 miles between data centers this way. Plug
redundant psu into a ups and 2 people carried it out and put them in a vehicle.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 1, 2020, at 11:58 PM, Christopher Morrow
> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 11:53 PM Alain Hebert wrote:
I completely agree. One of the people I used to do interviews with would look
through the resume, etc. and then say something like "this all looks good. Tell
me about something you've done". And we'd move on to talk about projects and
how they tackled it, etc.
We didn't give tests, just qu
We _always_ have at least one spare, or something that could be (relatively)
easily pressed into service as one.
Even in the Midwest, we've had times where 'guaranteed next day replacement' is
more like 2nd or third day due to weather conditions, the carrier routing it
weird, or just plain t
Innomedia is decent as well, but again it all depends on loop lengths.
Might want to look at more of a carrier system. Something like a Calix E7, E5
or C7 line. You could probably pick up a C7 chassis on the used market and
fill it up with ADSL or VDSL cards that will push dial-tone at least
This brings up an interesting question -- what is "good DDoS protection" on an
ISP scale? Apart from having enough bandwidth to weather the attack and having
upstream providers attempt to filter it for you/
-Original Message-
From: "Bottiger"
Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2020 5:30pm
T
Thank you, good to hear a Chicago-specific impression of their routing and
support.
--
Shawn
On Tue, Mar 31, 2020, at 10:16 PM, Josh Hoppes wrote:
> Employer has been using them for transit in Chicago for a while now.
> There was a case where they had a weird detour path through a route
Pricing looks good, considering them for cheap backhaul as a tertiary path.
Anybody have experience with them for just IP transit?
--
Shawn
That's a tough one. In the telco space, the common sizes are 19" and 23". 19"
for gear, 23" for fiber patch panels, etc. There are also some 25" floating
around (Nortel, I'm looking at you).
Unfortunately, 19" gear fits in 19" racks. It fits in 23" sometimes -- if the
manufacture makes b
And here I actually went to their website (not Cogent -- they still call me all
the time as well) to see what they sell.
-Original Message-
From: "Kaiser, Erich"
Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2020 5:50pm
To: "NANOG list"
Subject: Re: [EXT] Shining a light on ambulance chasers - Nocti
Yes, the 510 has LTE options for both North American and Asian frequencies
(separate boxes).
They can hold 2 SIMs but only one can be active at a time.
--
Shawn
On Wed, Jan 29, 2020, at 8:44 PM, Colton Conor wrote:
> Does Velcloud make an actual LTE box?
>
> On Wed, Jan 29, 202
I do this with Accelerated devices tied to Juniper SRXes as well as Velocloud
VCEs depending on the customer's other needs. Increasingly common application.
--
Shawn
On Wed, Jan 29, 2020, at 8:08 AM, Alain Hebert wrote:
> Juniper SRX and any reliable consumer LTE router =D.
>
&g
That's a tough one. 48 port dslams with internal splitters are easy. When
you're looking for more density you're almost always looking at external
splitter shelves. Could also look at the calix c7 platform -- tons around on
the used market -- but then again, no splitters.
-Original Me
Same -- we had an Akamai cache for 15+ years. Then we were notified that it
was done and were sent boxes to pack our stuff up and send it back.
-Original Message-
From: "Jared Mauch"
Sent: Saturday, December 7, 2019 2:05pm
To: "Seth Mattinen"
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Elepha
I have one who calls me bi-weekly even though we have declined to purchase
service from them at this time. I'd be happy to provide contact details
off-line.
-Original Message-
From: "Jon Sands"
Sent: Monday, September 16, 2019 9:30am
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Cogent sales re
work over your particular solution, etc... help them figure out what
else can be dropped in an emergency.
Other thing to consider is that almost all US cell plans have a pretty small
data cap, even “unlimited”, and our testing shows that just backend Cradlepoint
or SD-WAN chatter can add up to a GB or 2 a billing cycle; need to make sure
your configs explicitly block any cellular usage unless the primary connection
has gone completely down.
—
Shawn
hat use of "triggered" is a good way
to figure out that a person should just be ignored overall. Childish and
lacking in empathy. "Ha ha, you CARE about something!" Christ. Grow up.
--
Shawn
s and DSL modems could be maintained by a
local admin through the pfSense web interface with no need to touch the DSLAMs
or anything CLI.
--Blake
Shawn L via NANOG wrote on 1/4/2019 8:59 AM:
Might want to look for old Zhone ip bitstorm dslams. There should be a bunch
on the used market
Might want to look for old Zhone ip bitstorm dslams. There should be a bunch
on the used market. They do all of the ATM conversions internally so you just
need to feed them with ethernet.
-Original Message-
From: "Nick Edwards"
Sent: Friday, January 4, 2019 9:36am
To: "Brandon Mart
>>> I have been looking at Cyrus One-7thStreet in Cincinnati & Databank in
>>> Cleveland.
>>
>> Expedient has two facilities in Cleveland that might be worth looking at.
>>
>> Thank you
>> jms
I’m in Expedient’s Cleveland DC and will second that they’re decent.
—
Shawn
Speaking of GPS-enabled NTP appliances, etc. wondering what hardware people are
using for this.
thanks
-Original Message-
From: "Raymond Burkholder"
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2018 12:01pm
To: "Matthew Huff" , "l...@satchell.net" ,
"nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: Re: CenturyLink
O
Actellis also makes some ethernet over dry pair gear. The only issue is that
they require repeaters like a T1 (different spacing though). I'm guessing if
you're doing T1 at that distance you already have repeater housings in the
field at least.
-Original Message-
From: "Alfie Pa
ntended only for the use of the
> addressee and may contain information that is privileged and confidential.
> If the reader of the message is not the intended recipient or an authorized
> representative of the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any
> dissemination of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have
> received this communication in error, notify the sender immediately by
> return email and delete the message and any attachments from your system.
>
--
Shawn
t; >> Cisco's original 100G SFP costs us an arm and a leg, so we want to try
> to
> >> use 3rd party 100g SFP.
> >> But we are not sure which manufacturer's SFP is reliable or has good
> >> performance.
> >>
> >
> >
> > FlexOptix (.net) are an excellent third-party provider for your first
> > foray into non-vendor optics.
> >
> > Tom
> >
>
--
Shawn
Honestly, most carriers I've talked to are fed up as well, and just want to
find a way to make it stop. As some one said, it's exactly like BCP38 --- the
carriers that care keep their clients from spoofing caller id, etc. The ones
that don't make everyone else look bad.
-Original Messag
for the best speeds / quality on long loops order was like this
Zhone Bitstorm -> Zyxel 660HN
Zhone Bitstorm -> Comtrend AR5381u
Calix ADSL 2+ -> Zyxel 660HN
Calix ADSL 2+ -> Comtrend AR5381u
-Original Message-
From: "Mike Hammett"
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 20
changes over from us that has deployed the caix giga
family and really likes it. We haven't deployed them yet because they only
work on the Calix E7 series (E7-2 and E7-20) and we still have a lot of C7
series dslams in the network.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "Mike Hamm
Besides Netflix, does anyone else offer CDN boxes for their services?
I'm also guessing that most content won't benefit from multicast to homes
too much?
I can see where multicast benefits sports and news (and probably catching
commercials for people). But in a world where I'm more than happy to
JDSU make some nice ones that we use to qualify cell tower back haul. Not
cheap though
-Original Message-
From: "Jeremy Austin"
Sent: Tuesday, May 30, 2017 11:29am
To: "James Breeden" , "n...@flhsi.com" ,
"nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: Re: RFC2544 Testing Equipment
JW, have you mov
Depending on the area and conditions (rock, etc). We're seeing
$4 /foot Aerial
$5-$7 /foot direct bury
$10 - $14 /foot directional bore
These are not including the fiber cable itself.
-Original Message-
From: "Luke Guillory"
Sent: Wednesday, January 4, 2017 8:50am
To: "Jared Mauc
Cpan? Cpan minus? Or just download [1] and there's probably a Make::Maker
or similar Build.PL to build a makefile or just install it for you -
there's a #perl channel on freenode if you need more and Google doesn't get
you set.
1.
http://search.cpan.org/~chromatic/Modern-Perl-1.20161005/lib/Modern
Looks like they're announcing quite a bit
-Original Message-
From: "Adam Greene"
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2016 8:52am
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: AS4233852001 advertising 192.0.0.0/2?
We were alerted to this by https://radar.qrator.net.
This seems wrong from a number of angl
What are people using to manage / send their outage notifications? We're
currently using a mostly manual process to identify customers that need to be
aware of an outage and send out e-mail at $dayjob. Looking for a way to
automate it more. I'd prefer something open source, but that's not a
I believe they fixed this -- when I've spoken to tech support recently, I had
to give them a tech support key so that they could access the devices I had
questions about.
-Original Message-
From: "Paul Nash"
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2016 8:55am
To: "Untitled 3"
Subject: Re: automa
a couple of Z1s
the cost isn't too bad.
Shawn
-Original Message-
From: "c b"
Sent: Monday, June 27, 2016 4:08pm
To: "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: automated site to site vpn recommendations
Situation: We have salespeople/engineers holding temporary
semin
The OP is also asking someone to register a throwaway email, subscribe, and
respond "yes" so that the owner can't be tracked to their employer. That's
kind of a steep ask for something that's almost moot.
On May 9, 2016 23:16, "Greg Sowell" wrote:
I haven't had a request in ages...back then all o
It's the Corning Edge8 line [
https://www.corning.com/worldwide/en/products/communication-networks/applications/data-center/edge8.html
]
On Thu, May 5, 2016 at 9:45 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
> There is a nice Corning panel our facilities team is using now. I can find
> the link and send it to the l
We use observium. It has most of what you're looking for. Used to use cacti
but switched a couple of months ago
-Original Message-
From: "Baldur Norddahl"
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2016 6:18pm
To: "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: mrtg alternative
Hi
I am currently using MRTG and RRD
We use the Accedian Metro Nid in places. They work well, but are layer 2 only
-- at least the ones we got.
-Original Message-
From: "Colton Conor"
Sent: Wednesday, February 3, 2016 9:34am
To: "Nick Hilliard"
Cc: "NANOG"
Subject: Re: Low density Juniper (or alternative) Edge
I
We're currently using Vantage Point out of North Dakota. Haven't had to
actually put anything into production as of yet though.
-Original Message-
From: "Crier, Brent"
Sent: Tuesday, January 19, 2016 10:04am
To: "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: Lawful Intercept Trusted 3rd Party
Just
We like Calix's gpon gear, especially the E7 series. Though it's on the higher
side price-wise than others. Manageable through their CMS software, the web,
or command line. We tend to use their CMS software for most things, but the
CLI is decent, and gives you access to anything you'd want.
AFAIK (IDK how either) this hasn't been a big issue in the past few years.
Is it really worth worrying about? I notified the MARC admin and it was
removed there within a few hours too - a dozen easily tracked messages in a
few hours and a few hours after that, it's done (or more like, filteres).
N
Hey!
New message, please read <http://funezy.com/outside.php?rl5>
shawn wilson
---
Този имейл е проверен за вируси от Avast.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
Hey!
New message, please read <http://kovvali.org/matter.php?sj44>
shawn wilson
---
Този имейл е проверен за вируси от Avast.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
I've used Dan's Guardian before. Usually in a K-12 setting
-Original Message-----
From: "shawn wilson"
Sent: Friday, October 16, 2015 11:10am
To: "MKS"
Cc: "North American Network Operators Group"
Subject: Re: inexpensive url-filtering db
On Oct 16, 2015 6:52 AM, "MKS" wrote:
>
> Now I'm looking for an inexpensive url-filtering database, for integration
> into a squid like solution.
> Perhaps there is another mailing-list more relevant for this kind of
issues?
Squid like or squid? I'd ask on the squid list if there's nothing her
this.
Has anyone else run into this and found a way around it?
thanks
Shawn
We ran it for a while, then gave up and just updated the info on Arin.
-Original Message-
From: "Josh Luthman"
Sent: Wednesday, July 8, 2015 3:56pm
To: "Dan White"
Cc: "Josh Moore" , "nanog@nanog.org"
Subject: Re: Debian RWHOIS
I think this is what you're asking for:
http://projec
On Jun 22, 2015 6:14 PM, "William Herrin" wrote:
>
>
> Two-way satellite systems based on SV's in geostationary orbit (like
> the two you're considering) have high latency. 22,000 miles out,
> another 22,000 miles back and do it again for the return packet.
Just a minor nitpick - that's 22,300 m
On Jun 23, 2015 6:26 AM, "Nick Hilliard" wrote:
>
>
> Blocking NTP at the NTP edge will probably work fine for most situations.
> Bear in mind that your NTP edge is not necessarily the same as your
network
> edge. E.g. you might have internal GPS / radio sources which could
> unexpectedly inject
On Mon, Jun 22, 2015, 08:29 Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 22, 2015 at 01:15:41PM +0100,
> Tony Finch wrote
> a message of 15 lines which said:
>
> > The problems are that UTC is unpredictable,
>
> That's because the earth rotation is unpredictable. Any time based on
> this buggy pla
On Sat, Jun 20, 2015, 14:16 Harlan Stenn wrote:
>
> shawn wilson writes:
> > ... I mean letting computers figure out slower earth rotation on the
> > fly would seem more accurate than leap seconds anyway. And then all of
> > us who do earthly things and would like simp
On Jun 19, 2015 2:05 PM, "Saku Ytti" wrote:
>
> On (2015-06-19 13:06 -0400), Jay Ashworth wrote:
>
> Hey,
>
> > The IERS will be adding a second to time again on my birthday;
> >
> > 2015-06-30T23:59:60
>
> Hopefully this is last leap second we'll ever see. Non-monotonic time is
an
> abomination a
On Thu, Jun 18, 2015 at 1:15 PM, Nick B wrote:
> Having worked for several departments like this, I can assure you her
> flustsration was not about her "inability to hire competent people" or "the
> lack of her superiors to prioritize the modernization project". Unless you
> have worked for the F
On Jun 17, 2015 8:56 PM, "Ronald F. Guilmette"
wrote:
>
>
> *) The Director of the Office of Personnel Management, Ms. Katherine
> Archueta was warned, repeatedly, and over several years, by her
> own department's Inspector General (IG) that many of OPM's systems
> we
: [ joh...@google.com ]( mailto:joh...@google.com )
Sincerely,
Omid Kordestani
Chief Business Officer
-Original Message-
From: "Marciano Lopes"
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2015 11:48am
To: "Shawn L"
Subject: Re: Google contact?
Hello Shawn!
Google cancelled their ISP program as of the 8th of June.
Feel free to contact me off-list for more info. They cancelled ours as well.
-Original Message-
From: "Christopher Tyler"
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2015 9:28am
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Google contact?
Need some help.. D
On Jun 11, 2015 7:07 AM, "jim deleskie" wrote:
>
> There is a good reason there aren't LOTS of "good" neteng in the 30-35 or
> under 30 range with lots of experience. Its call the hell we went though
> for a while after 2000 working in this industry. Many of us lost jobs and
> couldn't find new
On Jun 8, 2015 10:11 PM, "Shane Ronan" wrote:
>
> Certs have ruined the industry.
Certs have made the industry more interesting. After all, without certs,
we'd have less stupid to point at and laugh (or scream). And HR screeners
would need to know something about the position they're screening.
On Jun 8, 2015 1:42 AM, "shawn wilson" wrote:
>
>
> On Jun 7, 2015 10:59 PM, "Jay Ashworth" wrote:
> >
>
> > I don't
> > RTFM, I google. It's often faster, so many of TFMs are online now.
> >
>
> Until Google supports reg
On Jun 7, 2015 10:59 PM, "Jay Ashworth" wrote:
>
> I don't
> RTFM, I google. It's often faster, so many of TFMs are online now.
>
Until Google supports regex and some of the duckduckgo module features,
I'll be faster getting to reference to you will on Google. Notice I said
reference, not an an
On Jun 7, 2015 4:12 AM, "Joshua Riesenweber"
wrote:
>
> (In my experience it takes more time to study a certification track than
to learn just what you need to get a job done.)
>
Stated different, no job is going to teach you how to pass a cert. And no
cert is going to teach a job. One can help
On Sat, Jun 6, 2015 at 12:27 PM, Dave Taht wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 6, 2015 at 6:53 AM, Brandon Ross wrote:
>> I also concur. There is most certainly a negative correlation between certs
>> and clue in my experience, having met 10s of certificate holders.
>
> Oh good. Maybe my total lack of ever pur
On Sat, Jun 6, 2015 at 8:33 AM, tvest wrote:
> You are such an optimist ;-)
>
> Sometimes those who can remember the past get to repeat it anyway.
>
I remember seeing a slide deck for devs saying all new web apps are
recreating mail, write, wall, and finger (the person posted it on FB,
so of cour
My first thought on reading that was "who the hell cares if a person
knows about internet culture". But than I had to reconsider - it's a
very apt way of telling if someone read the right books :)
I would also add Ritchie, Thompson, and Diffie to that list (since you
ask about Larry, it's only app
On Fri, Jun 5, 2015 at 9:57 PM, James Laszko wrote:
> I asked one of my guys to tracert in windows for something and he executed
> pathping. I have never seen that in 25 years Go figure!
>
Yep, I learned something new (though IDK I'll ever use it - I'm
guessing it's useless trivia, esp sin
Well, I was kinda thinking this would turn out to be a dumb question / have
an obvious answer. Apparently not. But it seems I can't go buy a solution
either. I guess there isn't much of a market (though I am just talking
software - maybe someone could make an update :) ).
Is there a way to stack PDUs? like, with 30A 220, we need more plugs
than power but I'd like them to communicate to make sure we don't over
power the circuit. Do any APC or Triplite systems support this?
On May 28, 2015 10:11 AM, "Christopher Morrow"
wrote:
>
> On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 5:29 AM, Robert Kisteleki wrote:
> >
> >> Bcrypt or PBKDF2 with random salts per password is really what anyone
> >> storing passwords should be using today.
> >
One thing to remember is the hardware determines num
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