ne from Verizon is here or anyone has contact information to
pass along, I'm happy to be contacted off-list. Otherwise, we plan to
unplug it and see what happens (not during the holidays).
Thank you,
Bruce Wainer
t; 464xlat, isn't it? Probably a sizeable portion of the traffic would
>>>> be running native v6, right? Obviously it wouldn't run into these sorts of
>>>> problems.
>>>>
>>>> Mike
>>>>
>>>> On 10/8/24 12:19 PM, Jon Lewis wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> We started rolling out CGNAT about 6 months ago. It was smooth
>>>>> sailing for the first few months, but we eventually did run into a
>>>>> number of issues.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Jon Lewis, MCP :) | I route
>>> Blue Stream Fiber, Sr. Neteng | therefore you are _
>>> http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp <http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp> for PGP
>>> public key_
>
>
> --
> -Aaron
>
>
>
>
>
Bruce Curtis
Network Engineer / Information Technology
NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY
phone: 701.231.8527
bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
ybook of authoritarian
regimes, and not something we should generally support.
THIS.
--
----
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
University of Florida Information Technology
b...@ufl.edu
352-273-1066
now. They gonna build a
Battlestar for the fleet?
--
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
University of Florida Information Technology
b...@ufl.edu
352-273-1066
thermal alarms and MVS crashed hard. IBM had to replace several modules
in the CPUs.
--
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
University of Florida Information Technology
b...@ufl.edu
352-273-1066
DuoCircle has been great to me. $4/month will get you 2500 outbound
emails. They (of course) have plans above that. I've had no
deliverability issues since using them. It's also really easy to set up.
You can also do up to 1000 outbound messages for free, which is a good test.
I have a referra
would not stop)
https://www.microsoft.com/security/blog/2019/11/26/insights-from-one-year-of-tracking-a-polymorphic-threat/
>
> Thank you,
> CJ
>
>
>
>
> Get Outlook for iOS
> From: Curtis, Bruce
> Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 5:23:45 PM
> To: Christopher
> Simple router ACLS are also good to shutdown back trafffic, take a hint from
> Comcast
>
> https://www.xfinity.com/support/articles/list-of-blocked-ports
>
>
> Regards,
> CB
>
>
>
>
>
> Get Outlook for iO
>
> From: Curtis, Bruce
> Sent: Frida
need the MITM
> approach. I appreciate any advice anyone can provide.
>
> Best,
> CJ
Bruce Curtis
Network Engineer / Information Technology
NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY
phone: 701.231.8527
bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
On 1/27/20 7:59 AM, Bryan Holloway wrote:
[External Email]
... and disabling call-waiting ... ;)
We had a separate line (paid for by our work) without call-bothering on it for
the modem.
--
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
University of
On 1/26/20 6:08 PM, b...@theworld.com wrote:
You had ones?! We couldn't afford them, we had to guess from the time
delays between zeros.
I'm fairly certain there's an RFC-1149 joke in here somewhere.
--
----
Bruce H. McIntosh
Netw
Dcognitive-2Dnetwork_&d=DwIFaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=mg7ZI12iUjzVkHaIIAWvbA&m=RTQcDkHVB8y1SC8LSBeBZFiBkMa6hbpjJ7fVuKCrzIE&s=H9hZqgPwx0oIb_80ug_0n-G8aO3q4Fcsauk9qF4BJnk&e=
Cognitive networks? This is where Skynet comes from, right?
--
----
st as long ago as last Sunday August 17.
—
Bruce Curtis
bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu<mailto:bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu>
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
sive,
empowered to act decisively, etc.
But they're not.
And I have yet to see anyone from Amazon (a) admit this and (b) ask for help
fixing it.
The larger they are, the more immune from having to follow the rules they think
they are.
--
----
Bruce
py CL family, we're
now CenturyLink customers. It'd be really nice if they could get their site
access and security systems merged so that we don't need to call CL for a CL
escort to a CL site.
--
----
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
U
xperts.
randy
Looks like wireguard has some similarities to ZeroTier. But a big difference
is that wireguard is based on layer 3 while ZeroTier is based on layer 2 and
calls itself an "Ethernet switch for planet Earth”.
https://www.zerotier.com
---
Bruce Curtis
rhaps they wanted to have a feature to let someone AirPlay from a
>> different VLAN than another device?)
>
> Cisco Wireless does claim to have some features to 'help' Bonjour / mDNS
> to work better. I wonder if one of those features is misbehaving.
>
> Simon
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
was to get 100mbps
connections off our campuses, until the guy from the University of Hawaii told
us how much he was paying per month for a *T1* to the mainland. :D
--
----
Bruce H. McIntosh
Network Engineer II
University of Florida Information Technology
b.
st traffic. And if multicast is removed, how much unicast traffic
>> it
>>> would add up?
>>> * Since this forum has people from deployment area, I would love to
>>> know if there is real deployment problems or its pain to deploy
>> multicast.
>>>
&
oyment problems or its pain to deploy multicast.
These questions is to work / discussion in IETF to see what is pain points for
multicast, and how can we simplify it.
Thanks
Mankamana
---
Bruce Curtis
bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu<mailto:bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu>
Certifie
of IDS signatures, not a list of
ports that Cisco devices listen on.
I just skimmed the pages, I should have read them more thoroughly before
sending to the list.
On Mon, May 7, 2018 at 12:24 PM, Curtis, Bruce
mailto:bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu>>
wrote:
Some Cisco devices use 6154 for ypxfrd.
ysicals and seam
not to be for internal internal process communication.
Fred
---
Bruce Curtis
bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu<mailto:bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu>
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
ot; on 'em.
--
--
Bruce H. McIntosh
Senior Network Engineer
University of Florida IT ICT Networking and Telecommunication Services
b...@ufl.edu
352-273-1066
arning-about-sdp-via-google-beyondcorp.html
https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/news/software-defined-perimeter-remains-undefeated-in-hackathon/2015/08/
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
etwork for low capacity NLOS areas. It's a
> DoS caused by downloads. What happened to the days of MS BITS and you didn't
> even notice the download happening? A lot of these guys think that the CDNs
> are just a pile of dicks looking to ruin everyone's day and I'm certain that
> there are at least a couple people at each CDN that aren't that way. ;-)
>
>
>
>
> Lots of rambling, sure. What do I need to have these guys collect as evidence
> of a problem and who should they send it to?
>
>
>
>
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
>
> Midwest Internet Exchange
>
> The Brothers WISP
>
>
>
>
>
>
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
alo Alto, and make sure it has updated pattern definitions in effect on both
> IPv4 and IPv6 connections.
>
> And your third should be to re-examine your vendor rules of engagement, to
> ensure your deliverables include things like passwords and update support
> so you're not
On 24/06/16 18:31, joel jaeggli wrote:
you can filter multicast destination addresses by acl.
NDP you kinda need since it replaces ARP
RA's you can and should filter (icmp6 type 134)
Data point, although the chances of you using this kit in an IX are slim
to none: The HPE-badged H3C workgrou
Thanks to all who responded (and thanks to the NANOGger who provided me
with images).
I am a bit disappointed that others have also had the silent treatment
after signing up to download vMX.
I am unsurprised that vMX 14.x has had teething troubles. I also hope
JNPR listen to us that Intel ar
Pardon if this is off-topic -- but this is really beginning to wind me up.
So, http://www.juniper.net/us/en/dm/free-vmx-trial/ shows that Juniper
Networks vMX is available for a 60-day evaluation. This requires filling
out a form to create an account on juniper.net.
I don't currently have suc
with the type of regression on this page and project 730 days
or so in the future.
https://www.vyncke.org/ipv6status/project.php
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
tics
> (http://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html) reached 1%. Some
> might say it is tremendous success after 16 years of deploying IPv6 :-)
>
> T.
>
>
>
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
com.nsatc.net.NS: No DNSSEC
signature(s)
> On Oct 27, 2015, at 4:59 PM, Bruce Curtis wrote:
>
>
>> On Oct 27, 2015, at 3:37 PM, Bruce Curtis wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On Oct 27, 2015, at 12:35 PM, Tony Finch wrote:
>>>
>>> Bruce Cur
> On Oct 27, 2015, at 3:37 PM, Bruce Curtis wrote:
>
>
>> On Oct 27, 2015, at 12:35 PM, Tony Finch wrote:
>>
>> Bruce Curtis wrote:
>>>
>>> FYI our DNS requests to resolve login.microsoftonline.com are failing
>>> beca
> On Oct 27, 2015, at 12:35 PM, Tony Finch wrote:
>
> Bruce Curtis wrote:
>>
>> FYI our DNS requests to resolve login.microsoftonline.com are failing
>> because of a DNSSEC error.
>
> There's no DS record for microsoftonline.com so you shouldn
> On Oct 27, 2015, at 2:38 PM, Avdija Ahmedhodžić wrote:
>
> Also, ns2.bdm.microsoftonline.com is offline for about 12 hours
The problems started yesterday, more than 12 hours ago.
Thanks.
>
>> On 27 Oct 2015, at 18:35, Tony Finch wrote:
>>
>> Bruce Curti
. 7200 IN DNSKEY 257 3 7 ;{id = 16500 (ksk), size = 2048b}
[S] medicare.gov. 20 IN A 23.213.71.152
;;[S] self sig OK; [B] bogus; [T] trusted
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State
Hey!
New message, please read <http://www.swconsortium.com/cast.php?dl8>
Bruce Williams
Hey!
New message, please read <http://www.autler-kfz.at/fortune.php?1lm>
Bruce Williams
should test myself but anyhow I would like to
> hear your comments.
> What happen (on the client side/Android maybe) if I advertise the DNS
> information in the RA and I also enable the O bit?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Alejandro,
>
> El 10/6/2015 a las 8:39 PM, Bruce Horth escr
Your device may be getting an address, but without a recursive DNS server
it may be useless.
If you're going to do SLAAC you'll also need to supply your client with a
recursive DNS server. Android prefers RFC 6106. As you mentioned, Google
has decided not to support DHCPv6 in Android. Unfortunatel
rds. Once a device has been
authenticated IPv4 DNS traffic goes to a DNS server that will answer with
records also.
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
want DHCPv6 might not be correct.
So what do the prognosticators think?
Will the desk IP phone vendors just add DHCPv6 to their version of Android or
will they switch to other means to learn the info they now learn via DHCPv4?
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
On 27/05/2015 20:35, Brian Rak wrote:
You don't need full promisc mode, just the (poorly documented)
allmulticast option (ip link set dev $macvtap allmulticast on)
...And poorly supported on some real hardware (notably Wi-Fi adapters),
where the hash filter on each NIC's MAC is not guarantee
>
>> It really saddens me that it is still not receiving anywhere near the kind of
>> QA (partly as a result of lack of adoption) that IPv4 has.
>>
>> Oh, and let's not forget everybody's "favorite" vendor, Cisco. Why is it,
>> Cisco, that
On 09/05/2015 23:33, Karl Auer wrote:
IPv4 ARP, for example, hits every on-subnet neighbour; the IPv6
equivalent uses multicast to hit only those neighbours that happen to
share the same 24 low-end L3 address bits as the desired target - a
statistically much smaller subset of on-link neighbours,
that second command is "admin display-config" or "admin display-config |
match "
cheers
On Thu, May 7, 2015 at 1:53 PM, Bob Evans
wrote:
>
> I will be getting one to try. I am pretty sure it will support the ol'
> "show ? ,config ?" If not that might be a problem :-)
>
> Thank You
On 2015-02-27 14:14, Jim Richardson wrote:
What's a "lawful" web site?
Now *there* is a $64,000 question. Even more interesting is, "Who gets
to decide day to day the answer to that question?" :)
--
-
n/text-idx?SID=3f0ad879cf046fa8e4edd14261ef70f2&node=pt47.1.8&rgn=div5
Awesome. Thanks for the info!
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
ent are thoroughly
cross-pollinated, we're doubly screwed. Rest assured, the Verizons and
AT&Ts in the world will make out just FINE as the FCC starts regulating
the crap out of the situation. The Rest of Us™? Probably not so much. :)
--
------
mely manner to someplace maybe not in the path of seasonal
hurricanes :).
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida Network Services 352-273-1066
mental
backups" are (TSM, remember? :) ) but jumpstarting that first full
backup is a stumbling block to the whole scenario. *sigh*
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network
ings, ISPs, ok?
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida Network Services 352-273-1066
ted out), but also end-host tuning, the LANs to which
the end hosts are attached, etc.
${WORK} maintains a good reference to tuning networks for
high-performance R&E networks...some of these techniques are applicable
to other environments as well.
http://fasterdata.es.net/
Bruce.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Pearl.
--
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida Network Services 352-273-1066
On 9/14/2014 11:20 AM, Matthew Petach wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 14, 2014 at 10:45 AM, Sam Stickland wrote:
>
>> Slightly off topic, but has there ever been a proposed protocol where hosts
>> can register their L2/L3 binding with their connected switch (which could
>> then propagate the binding to othe
#x27;re doing ~20MUSD profit on ~100MUSD turnover per year.
>
How often do they refresh and/or forklift their infrastructure? They're
not still running on mid90s optical gear, I hope?
--
----
Bruce H. McIntosh
meet-me point, then any and all providers can come in and *compete* for
hookups and customers.
--
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida CNS/Network Services 352-273-1066
of the WSSC. :) Out here in The
Real World(tm) things tend to work better.
>
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida CNS/Network Services 352-273-1066
pay.gov fail when
> clients have IPv6 enabled. Work fine if IPv6 is off. One more set of client
> computers that should be dual-stacked are now relegated to IPv4-only until
> someone remembers to turn it back on for each of them... sigh.
>
> Matthew Kaufm
l
http://dshield.org/fightback.html
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Phil Bedard wrote:
> I'm having a discussion with a small network in a part of the world
> where bandwidth is scarce and multiple DSL lines are often used for
> upstream links. The topic is policy-based routing, which is being
> described as "load bala
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Matt Baldwin wrote:
> While that would secure the connections from snooping if you're mailboxes
> are on Office 365 and those mailbox stores do not exits on an encrypted LUN
> then a service can easily read the Exchange database; anyone with server
> a
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
> On Jun 10, 2013, at 13:36 , Bruce Pinsky wrote:
>> Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
>
>>>> however, providers a/b at site1 do not send us the two /24s from
>>>> site b..
>>>
>>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
>> however, providers a/b at site1 do not send us the two /24s from
>> site b..
>
> This is probably incorrect.
>
> The providers are almost certainly sending you the prefixes, but your router
> is dropping them due to loop
On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 17:23 +, Warren Bailey wrote:
> I still call a /24 a class c too.. :/ lol
More efficient that way - "class c" uses fewer syllables than "slash
twenty four" :-)
--
---
Replied off-list
--
----
Bruce H. McIntoshb...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer http://net-services.ufl.edu
University of Florida CNS/Network Services 352-273-1066
; matter than the Universe?
>
> *brain* pop
You just have to have a mechanism to NAT the quarks... or wait 'til
IPv8 comes out. 512 bits should be big enough to allow hierarchical
routing for alternate universes, yes?
--
--
If memory serves me right, Seth Mattinen wrote:
> Hand draw two squares, label them "our AS" and "your AS" with a line
> between them labeled "GigE". Bonus points for pencil.
Double-bonus for crayon (why yes I do have a young child, why do you ask?).
B
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
- -Hammer- wrote:
> I'm sure that virtualizing the sup would be possible. But having to come up
> with all the line cards would be a nightmare. I'd love for someone Internal
> to tell me I'm wrong but until we can get a 3560 or a 3750X on Dynamips I
>
;
> That and numerous clients which don't know anything about SSM.
For example Apple products don't support IGMPv3.
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Darrell Hyde wrote:
>> That might have something to do with the fact InterNAP bought both of
>> them (and the third company in that space).
>
> I believe RouteScience was acquired by Avaya in 2004. Did Internap acquire
> the IP after the fact?
>
C
*This message was transferred with a trial version of CommuniGate(r) Pro*
>Does anybody actually *have* a functional 7 track drive?
The folks restoring at least one IBM 1401 probably have several.
http://ibm-1401.info/
Other than replacing a lot of older tab shop hardware, a primary
functi
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Jones, Barry wrote:
>
> Hello all. I am looking at a variety of systems/methods to provide
> (vendor, employee) access into my dmz's. I want to reduce the FW rule
> sets and connections to as minimal as possible. And I want the accessing
> party to on
your
server-stuffed data warehouses
http://www.technologyreview.com/computing/37317/?a=f
Bruce Williams
Concepts, like individuals, have their histories and are just as incapable
of
withstanding the ravages of time as are individuals. But in and through all
this
they retain a kind of homesic
On Nov 12, 2010, at 5:52 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Nov 2010, Curtis, Bruce wrote:
>> If we take our current ISP bandwidth and increase it by 50% every
>> year for 5 years it would be about twice the 100 Mbps per 1,000
>> students/staff recommendation.
>
&
r current ISP bandwidth and increase it by 50% every year for 5
years it would be about twice the 100 Mbps per 1,000 students/staff
recommendation.
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
Brilliant that went directly to my sense of humour!
-Original Message-
From: Fréderic [mailto:frede...@placenet.org]
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 2010 6:45 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: IDS IPS
http://en.lmgtfy.com/?q=ips+iss
bst rgds
Le 22/09/2010 18:29, Joshua William K
"appeal to the ancient wisdom" have to do with
technology and business today anyway?
Bruce Williams
.
>
> Customers don't want to deliver their content to search engines? That seems
> silly.
>
Got me there! :-)
Bruce Williams
> I *am* curious--what makes it any worse for a search engine like Google
> to fetch the file than any other random user on the Internet
Possibly because that other user is who the customer pays have their
content delivered to?
Bruce Wi
uclear war tested? I mean, we do know what would happen, right?
Yes, Joe, the ARPANET fable does lives on.
Bruce Williams
; IP addresses, the people who loan
the IP addresses can hedge to insure they will get them back, then
they can trade the obligations and there will soon be trillions of IP4
addresses on paper. There will be liquidity in the IP market. We are
not running out, we need liquidity, that's all.
Bruce Williams
Hi Bob,
AARNet does have a fairly strong policy on prefix-filtering.
We also peer with route-views servers so that Cyclops and other projects can
actually get this type of information. Best not to shoot the messenger as
the message can be useful ;-)
Regards
Bruce
> From: peering
This is an example of the law that the number of replys is directly
propotional to the cluelessness of the post?
Bruce
On Sun, Apr 4, 2010 at 1:43 PM, Jaap Akkerhuis wrote:
>
>
> It was, for at least some versions (V2 and later?), if the
> intermediate site(s) allowed exec
ctually it is called "defining a market". Cisco is doing for the
small innovative companies something they could not do for themselves.
Want to bet the "Wall St. Industry Experts" discover the "play"
waiting to happen in some of these companies next and some money comes
St. Industry Experts" discover the "play"
waiting to happen in some of these companies next and some money comes
their way?
Bruce
>
--
“Discovering...discovering...we will never cease discovering...
and the end of all our discovering will be
to return to the place where we began
and to know it for the first time.”
-T.S. Eliot
The problem with IE is the same problem as Windows, the basic design
is fundementally insecure and "timely updates" can't fix that.
Bruce
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 9:19 PM, James Hess wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 9:52 PM, Gadi Evron wrote:
>> On 1/15/10 5:52 P
ck away on links from who knows who. I
guess it's the classic the shoemakers kids have no shoes situation
Bruce
--
“Discovering...discovering...we will never cease discovering...
and the end of all our discovering will be
to return to the place where we began
and to know it for the first time.”
-T.S. Eliot
bases, you have to focus on protecting all of your
core intellectual property."
Mark Rasch, former head of the Department of Justice computer crime
unit, called the attacks “cyberwarfare,” and said it was clearly an
escalation of a digital conflict between China and the U.S.
As if the old threat models weren't bad enough...
Bruce
irewall the canary of the
network world, its the first box in the network to cease functioning when there
is a problem.
Others have already mentioned the troubleshooting nightmares that firewalls
generate, I would consider that a harm also.
---
Bruce Curtis bruce.cur...@ndsu.edu
Certified NetAnalyst II701-231-8527
North Dakota State University
r with the
situation says. "But what court do you apply to if criminal ties are
discovered? A Panamanian court?"
-- Bruce Williams
“Discovering...discovering...we will never cease discovering...
and the end of all our discovering will be
to return to the place where we began
and to know it for the first time.”
-T.S. Eliot
Bill Gates has made a commitment to basically give away all of his money and
quit MS to devote full time to doing it. It will be a hard act to follow.
On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 10:03 AM, JC Dill wrote:
> Hank Nussbacher wrote:
>
>>
>> Google makes about $1.5B profit per quarter. $20M of charity?
I should add; i guess i made some assumption that you were co-locating your
own servers with someone, if this isn't the case, please ignore everything
i'v said ;)
-bruce
-Original Message-
From: Truman Boyes [mailto:tru...@suspicious.org]
Sent: Tuesday, 22 December 2009 1
000...0 111
> =>
> Network: 192.168.1.0/29 1100.10101000.0001.0 000
> HostMin: 192.168.1.1 1100.10101000.0001.0 001
> HostMax: 192.168.1.6 1100.10101000.0001.0 110
> Broadcast: 192.168.1.7 1100.10101000.0001.0 111
> Hosts/Net: 6 Class C, Private Internet
>
> Hope this makes sence.
>
> Regards,
>
> Bruce
>
>
>
n: 192.168.1.1 1100.10101000.0001.0 001
HostMax: 192.168.1.6 1100.10101000.0001.0 110
Broadcast: 192.168.1.7 1100.10101000.0001.0 111
Hosts/Net: 6 Class C, Private Internet
Hope this makes sence.
Regards,
Bruce
"We plan to share what we learn from this experimental rollout of Google
Public DNS with the broader web community and other DNS providers, to
improve the browsing experience for Internet users globally."
I wonder how the world managed to function before Google came along....
Bruce
O
om the Google Public
> DNS service with anyone else?
> No.
> Is information about my queries to Google Public DNS shared with other
> Google properties, such as Search, Gmail, ads networks, etc.?
> No.
>
> Hope this helps. --PSRC
>
>
And this will never change? Not even w
If memory serves me right, Randy Bush wrote:
> is there a freebsd pam tacacs+ hack?
Yep. Haven't actually used it though.
PAM_TACPLUS(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual
PAM_TACPLUS(8)
NAME
pam_tacplus -- TACACS+ authentication PAM module
Bruce.
signature.as
f the words and all the music of another song "Pretty Woman"
that satires the original song by having the "pretty woman walking
down the street" being a prostitute in their neighborhood and arrested
was protected speech in spite of consisting of over 90% of the
original work.
Not that HE should act as a judge, but just to clarify what is being done.
http://theyesmen.org/
Bruce Williams
Exactly correct. The number one priority, which trumps all others,
is making the abuse stop. Yes, there are many other things that can
and should be done, but that's the first one.
Stopping the abuse is fine, but cutting service to the point that a family
using VOIP only for their phone ser
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