Hi there,
I need to get in contact with someone from (eur.)army.mil network
operations staff, since they seem to block our whole AS. Any hints how
to reach them?
TIA && rgds,
Malte
--
Malte von dem Hagen
Teamleitung Network Engineering & Operation
Abteilung Technik
Normally you need to contact the entity you cannot reach, and they will open
a ticket backwards through MilNet. This is the only process I have been able
to get to work.
Robert D. Scott rob...@ufl.edu
Senior Network Engineer 352-273-0113 Phone
CNS - Network Services
On May 19, 2010, at 6:37 AM, Robert D. Scott wrote:
> Normally you need to contact the entity you cannot reach, and they will open
> a ticket backwards through MilNet. This is the only process I have been able
> to get to work.
This has been my experience as well when we discovered many .mil ins
On May 19, 2010, at 6:37 AM, Robert D. Scott wrote:
> Normally you need to contact the entity you cannot reach, and they will open
> a ticket backwards through MilNet. This is the only process I have been able
> to get to work.
Well, some of our customers try to send mails to them without success,
On 19/05/2010 13:18, Malte von dem Hagen wrote:
> On May 19, 2010, at 6:37 AM, Robert D. Scott wrote:
>
>> Normally you need to contact the entity you cannot reach, and they will open
>> a ticket backwards through MilNet. This is the only process I have been able
>> to get to work.
>>
> Wel
On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 5:48 PM, Malte von dem Hagen wrote:
> We cannot reach www.army.mil, we cannot reach their nameservers, we
> cannot reach their MXes. Any further hints?
In plainer english -
Your customer contacts his contact (friend / relative / customer etc)
in the US army
The army guy c
Am 19.05.10 14:24, schrieb William Hamilton:
>> Any further hints?
>
> Raise the issue from outside your network?
That's difficult, without any contact information.
Am 19.05.10 14:28, schrieb Suresh Ramasubramanian:
> Your customer contacts his contact (friend / relative / customer etc)
> in the
There's this old joke - spread across multiple countries around the
world - about there being three ways to do something ..
1. The right way
2. The wrong way
3. The army way
viel glück
On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 6:06 PM, Malte von dem Hagen wrote:
> Am 19.05.10 14:28, schrieb Suresh Ramasubramania
> I am aware of this way, sure. I just hoped, there would be a more...
> efficient way.
There is not. The various branches we worked with wouldn't touch it unless the
ticket originated internally. Once that happened, we found them to be very
cooperative and helpful.
Another note - each branch
On 2010-05-19 14:36, Malte von dem Hagen wrote:
[..]
I am aware of this way, sure. I just hoped, there would be a more...
efficient way.
State publically that you know the location of a known terrorist
somewhere in the top X of the wanted list. Tell them that they can reach
you at email addre
There is not. The various branches we worked with wouldn't touch it unless the
ticket originated internally. Once that happened, we found them to be very
cooperative and helpful.
Another note - each branch is separate for the most part. If you're having
problems reaching the Army, Navy, Nati
The SAMBA modems are USB powered and can respond to normal AT commands for
things like signal strength and so forth. Using the sms-tools kit, you can also
send/receive SMS messages. The SAMBA modem I have supports EDGE.
--
Adam Kennedy
Network Engineer
Omnicity, Inc.
-Original Message-
Some additional information on the SAMBA modems can be found at the
manufacturer site:
http://www.falcomusa.com/
--
Adam Kennedy
Network Engineer
Omnicity, Inc.
-Original Message-
From: Adam Kennedy [mailto:adamkenn...@omnicity.net]
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 10:18 AM
To: frnk...@ina
Got the below message back from Hotmail when emailing a friend I email
every week. I have never experienced this particular error before, is
this just an indication of high traffic between Google Mail and
Hotmail?
-- Forwarded message --
From: Mail Delivery Subsystem
Date: 18 May
High and bad, the message says it all!
http://mail.live.com/mail/troubleshooting.aspx
This is bad luck for you as you don't choose which IP address googlemail
will use to contact Hotmail UK's servers.
Le 19/05/2010 17:15, James Bensley a écrit :
Got the below message back from Hotmail when em
On May 19, 2010, at 2:26 PM, Jeff Harper wrote:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Deric Kwok [mailto:deric.kwok2...@gmail.com]
>> Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 6:15 PM
>> To: nanog@nanog.org
>> Subject: useful bgp example
>>
>> Hi
>>
>> My company will get 2 upstream provider. We will plan 2
> -Original Message-
> From: Jared Mauch [mailto:ja...@puck.nether.net]
> Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 1:29 PM
> To: Jeff Harper
> Cc: Deric Kwok; nanog@nanog.org
> Subject: Re: useful bgp example
>
> Nice, but you don't show it as-path filtering your transits out. I
> frequently see pe
On 19/05/10 13:37 -0500, Jeff Harper wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Jared Mauch [mailto:ja...@puck.nether.net]
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 1:29 PM
To: Jeff Harper
Cc: Deric Kwok; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: useful bgp example
Nice, but you don't show it as-path filtering your transit
On Wed, 2010-05-19 at 13:37 -0500, Jeff Harper wrote:
> > From: Jared Mauch [mailto:ja...@puck.nether.net]
> > Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 1:29 PM
> > To: Jeff Harper
> > Cc: Deric Kwok; nanog@nanog.org
> > Subject: Re: useful bgp example
> >
> > Nice, but you don't show it as-path filtering y
On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 06:11:34PM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
> There's this old joke - spread across multiple countries around the
> world - about there being three ways to do something ..
>
> 1. The right way
> 2. The wrong way
> 3. The army way
I know it as "3. The railway", and boy
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 5/19/2010 11:58, Dan White wrote:
> You should be using 192.168.2.0 for documented examples,or at least
> private
> space. Configs like this tend to get cut and pasted into routers and
> get
> changed only when they don't work.
Should that be 192.0
Thanks for your response and three I received off-list.
Multi-tech confirmed that none of their models can do SMS and EDGE at the
same time. They have to be out of PPP mode to send and receive SMS.
Frank
-Original Message-
From: Adam Kennedy [mailto:adamkenn...@omnicity.net]
Sent: Wedn
http://xkcd.com/742/ is a bit funny, especially if you read the "alt"
text of the image. Especially in the light of ongoing discussions about
IPv6 :-)
--
http://goldmark.org/jeff/stupid-disclaimers/
Probably because MO/MT (mobile originated/mobile terminated) SMS takes place on
the cellular "control" channel (somewhat like the "D" channel on a PRI span)
and is not seen as "data" by the carrier.
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone with Nextel Direct Connect
-Original Message-
From:
Hi all,
Apologies for the spam, but can someone at AT&T Wireless with DNS clue contact
me off-list? Our iPhones are receiving intermittent SERVFAILs when querying
your DNS servers over 3G. We're trying to go through the support chain but
it's getting us nowhere fast.
Thanks,
Adam Henson
Net
iPhones (at the time of 2G) used to have a major issue, they would not fallback
to the secondary DNS if the first failed.
- Original Message -
From: "Adam J. Henson (ARC-IO)[PEROT SYSTEMS]"
To: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Wednesday, 19 May, 2010 11:28:32 PM
Subject: AT&T Wireless DNS contact
On 2010-05-19 14:18, Aaron D. Osgood wrote:
Probably because MO/MT (mobile originated/mobile terminated) SMS takes place on the cellular
"control" channel (somewhat like the "D" channel on a PRI span) and is not seen as
"data" by the carrier.
A GPRS station class A device can do this... they
On 05/12/2010 02:41 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
>
>
> --- da...@tcb.net wrote: From: Danny McPherson On May
> 12, 2010, at 9:40 AM, Jay Nakamura wrote:
>
>> I just tested this and, yes, with Cisco to Cisco, changing the
>> setting won't reset the connection but you have to reset the
>> connection
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