Is anybody familiar with the current Qwest outage in the Tampa area?
Dylan
redirect to outages@
On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 9:18 AM, Dylan Bouterse wrote:
> Is anybody familiar with the current Qwest outage in the Tampa area?
>
> Dylan
>
>
- Original Message -
> From: "Patrick W. Gilmore"
> Except, of course, it has been called the Communications Committee for
> a while now. (The change was made because the committee took
> responsibility for more than just the mailing list.)
My turn for "silly me".
> But 1 change in 7 ye
It just stopped loading for me and when it did come up, and I got a "terms of
agreement" new pop up which circles in an endless loop no matter what you
click. Anyone else seeing this today at yahoo.com?
Kain, Rebecca (.) wrote:
It just stopped loading for me and when it did come up, and I got a "terms of
agreement" new pop up which circles in an endless loop no matter what you click.
Anyone else seeing this today at yahoo.com?
Yeah, I'm getting username/password incorrect errors on my andr
Hi,
We are a small ISP and have a setup in place with the local cable
company for terminating their users via L2TP for Internet access.
However they have just announced to us that they are moving to a DOCSIS
3.0 compliant setup, and this standard no longer supports PPPoE via
L2TP, and can now
Who offeres Internet Bandwidth in Fiji Islands (Lautoka and Yaqara)?
On Mon, 30 Jul 2012 08:33:51 -0400, iptech wrote:
3.0 compliant setup, and this standard no longer supports PPPoE via
L2TP, and can now only offer PPTP for terminating with us.
As I recall from my reading of "the standard", there's nothing in there to
prevent any tunneling on top of the DOC
On Mon, 30 Jul 2012 09:33:51 -0300, iptech said:
> 3.0 compliant setup, and this standard no longer supports PPPoE via
> L2TP, and can now only offer PPTP for terminating with us.
"Hi ISP, meet Moxie Marlinspike. Moxie, meet ISP. I think you two
have something to discuss..."
pgpKWNX0Eea1l.pgp
Hell... who needs help doing any sort of work over there??? I'd love
to find a way to bind work and vacation spots together! :)
Scott
Twitter: @ScottMorrisCCIE
E-mail: s...@emanon.com
Knowledge is power.
Power corrupts.
Study hard and be Eeeevl..
On 7/31/12 4:14 PM, Philip Lavine
I've actually run into this specific problem and the issue your running
into is that at no time was PPPoE part of the DOCSIS specification. It
was supported on several CMTSs because the Cisco UBR shares much of its
OS with more mainline Cisco routers wh
Connect is your best bet http://www.connect.com.fj/
Unwired is also a local competitor but I am not sure if they have coverage in
Yaqara. Lautoka is a business district so you can get connectivity there from
Connect and Unwired but Yaqara you might be quite limited since its a rural
area.
Se
On 07/31/12 16:04, Network IPdog wrote:
Mates.
WiringIssues.jpg
Ephesians 4:32 & Cheers!!!
A password is like a... toothbrush ;^)
Choose a good one, change it regularly and don't share it.
good one! One question, what are those big cables with the big boot on
th
For the opposite check - http://www.reddit.com/r/cableporn (completely
SFW of course ;))
On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 5:04 PM, Network IPdog wrote:
> Mates.
>
>
>
> WiringIssues.jpg
>
>
>
>
>
> Ephesians 4:32 & Cheers!!!
>
>
>
> A password is like a... toothbrush ;^)
>
> Choose a good one, change i
They are HD Video Cables with baluns for hum suppression.
Ephesians 4:32 & Cheers!!!
A password is like a... toothbrush ;^)
Choose a good one, change it regularly and don't share it.
-Original Message-
From: Lyle Giese [mailto:l...@lcrcomputer.net]
Sent: Tuesday, July 31, 2012 2:07
- Original Message -
> From: "Network IPdog"
[ sloppy-cable-porn pic attached ]
No! N!
It's only Tuesday; you can't start the Whacky Weekend thread this early!
Cheers,
-- jra
--
Jay R. Ashworth Baylink j...@baylink.com
Designer
On 31 July 2012 22:07, Lyle Giese wrote:
> good one! One question, what are those big cables with the big boot on
> them?
Its the back of an outside broadcast truck, the cables are triax -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triaxial_cable
Boots are just used to protect the triax connector from damp w
Hey Ricky,
Yes that is the exact setup, the cableco bring the customer to us via
L2TP, and now want to do PPTP only.
I will keep digging on the ARRIS, which I have been told is a C4 system.
Although their website doesnt show much tech specs.
They are pushing for the L3 option since their CM
to elaborate on Valdis' reply, stick a fork in pptp, it is done.
https://www.cloudcracker.com/blog/2012/07/29/cracking-ms-chap-v2/
On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 3:13 PM, iptech wrote:
> Hey Ricky,
>
> Yes that is the exact setup, the cableco bring the customer to us via L2TP,
> and now want to do PPTP
In no particular order
Connect.com.fj aka tfl.com.fj
Fintel.com.fj
Vodafone.com.fj (via a 3G stick)
Digicel.com.fj (via a 2G stick, but also via a wireless backbone network)
If you want to do BGP or IPv6, good luck!
Is that for Fiji Water? ;)
These people have very good operational Internet exp
Hi iptech
As others have said, early Cisco CMTS could do full bridging and/or PPPoE
termination, but newer gear is typically L3 style only.
For wholesale, the cableco could do one of these :
* L2 solution : Change your customers to configured as DOCSIS BSoD L2VPN,
and deliver you one dot1q VLAN
It looks like Fintel and TFL are both providers for Southern Cross
cable. That would be your best bet if they can get lines out to you.
Otherwise, there's always VSAT, but that brings a set of other issues with it.
Ping me offlist if you want more detail on the VSAT stuff.
On Tue, Jul 31, 2012
Fintel and TFL sleep in the same bed essentially. Fintel is the gatekeeper of
the southern cross cable protected heavily by the local government, your
typical monopoly setup. Connect is a business unit of TFL. I think you can do
the math there.
Fintel does not do BGP out of the country (or did
VSAT *isn't* a waste of time if you're willing to spend the money.
But that, of course, is the key point. Quality VSAT service costs a
LOT of money (3k-5k per asymetrical megabit). Plus, a quality
provider will have no problem providing you with BGP.
On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 5:58 PM, Zaid Ali w
And you need a license to operate VSAT in Fiji (as well as to operate an
ISP), which is near impossible to get on the mainland, as TFL can provide
you the service you require.
For SCC, FINTEL and TFL have direct access to SCC. Tho last time I looked,
TFL peering is not very good.
FINTEL: http://b
VSAT is resold by Telecom Fiji so you are not going to get anything different
than the Telecom Fiji experience with the added bonus of very few folks using
VSAT in the country and Telecom FIji doing a poor job of operational support of
VSAT. I considered VSAT 12 years ago for connecting the univ
Zaid, Franck: Thanks for the clarification. I forgot to take into
account politics.
I suppose it's impossible to obtain a VSAT license if you're
transmitting to an out-of-country teleport?
The technical support side isn't that difficult if you've got
reasonable intelligent people onsite along
NANOG Colleagues,
NANOG 55 Attendees,
We hope you are having a great Summer.
We are already hard at work preparing for NANOG 56/ARIN XXX in Dallas.
Take a moment now to register for the conference and book your hotel room
at http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog56/nanog56_registration.html
It is not impossible but you have to prove the current providers cannot provide
you the service. Some resorts in remote islands use VSAT.
To be noted O3B could be a solution too.
Toute connaissance est une réponse à une question.
On Jul 31, 2012, at 6:58 PM, "Mike Hale" wrote:
> Zaid, Franck:
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