Someone suggested I rephrase my question...
Does anyone have a contact at Cox for *paid* peering? I realize I am
not going to get settlement free peering with Cox, but I have a need to
reduce the number of hops between my network and theirs to shorten the
distance between some of my customers
On 03/03/2015 08:07 AM, Scott Helms wrote:
For consumers to care about symmetrical upload speeds as much as you're
saying why have they been choosing to use technologies that don't deliver
that in WiFi and LTE?
For consumers to have choice, there must be an available alternative
that is affordab
Generic advice... I'd be more inclined to find someone who already peers
with them, who can sell you partial transit; especially if they can hand
this to you at a location where this peering happens.
Aled
On 4 March 2015 at 14:51, Conley Bone wrote:
> Someone suggested I rephrase my question..
On Mon, Mar 2, 2015 at 8:06 PM, Chuck Church wrote:
> Since this has turned into a discussion on upload vs download speed,
> figured I'd throw in a point I haven't really brought up. For the most part,
> uploading isn't really a time-sensitive activity to the general (as in 99% of
> th
On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 5:07 AM, Scott Helms wrote:
>>
>> I don't know many schools that are open at midnight to accept thumb
>> drives.
>
> I think he was trying to point out that most school libraries, and their
> computer labs, open before classes start. Ice never heard of a school
> deadline t
On 04/03/2015 16:26, Dave Taht wrote:
> A geeky household with dad doing skype, mom uploading to facebook, a
> kid doing a game, and another kid doing netflix, however, is common.
> And, it is truly amazing how many households have more than one device
> per person nowadays.
and $kid running a bit
On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 8:39 AM, Nick Hilliard wrote:
> On 04/03/2015 16:26, Dave Taht wrote:
>> A geeky household with dad doing skype, mom uploading to facebook, a
>> kid doing a game, and another kid doing netflix, however, is common.
>> And, it is truly amazing how many households have more tha
Hi,
As in subject because I'm bashing my head against first line of support
and they said I'm wrong good bye. So would somebody be so kind and write
me privately (It's about GLUE record and where they came from)
Many Thanks,
--
Greg
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 20:52:44 -0500, Martin Hannigan
wrote:
Remember the Ascend MAX TNT and the sideways left-right airflow?
...
Indeed I do. I see you've heard the story of PSINet melting components as
well.
We used USR(3Com) TotalControl hardware: vertical venting. The chimney
effect w
On 3/4/15 13:04, Ricky Beam wrote:
> On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 20:52:44 -0500, Martin Hannigan
> wrote:
>> Remember the Ascend MAX TNT and the sideways left-right airflow?
> ...
>
> Indeed I do. I see you've heard the story of PSINet melting components
> as well.
>
> We used USR(3Com) TotalControl har
I remember that there was an Ascend DSLAM built on the same chassis and it was
collocated by someone into Ameritech central offices. Ameritech shut them all
down saying that there was no way, no how that the device could be NEBS
compliant. I don't know how that fight ever turned out, they were
>> On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 20:52:44 -0500, Martin Hannigan
>>
>> wrote:
>>> Remember the Ascend MAX TNT and the sideways left-right airflow?
>> ...
>>
>> Indeed I do. I see you've heard the story of PSINet melting components
>> as well.
>>
>> We used USR(3Com) TotalControl hardware: vertical venti
On 04/03/2015 21:33, Jay Hennigan wrote:
> We used Livingston Portmaster 3 back in the day. Front to back
> ventilation, ran cool as a cucumber, plug it in and it just worked.
> Awesome gear until Lucent bought the company to kill the product in
> favor of their Ascend TNT space heaters.
Ascend ki
energis pop the cab doors would not open due to heat warping after loaded with
two tnt max
colin
Sent from my iPhone
> On 4 Mar 2015, at 21:04, "Ricky Beam" wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 20:52:44 -0500, Martin Hannigan
>> wrote:
>> Remember the Ascend MAX TNT and the sideways left-right a
>
> On Mar 4, 2015, at 4:54 PM, Nick Hilliard wrote:
>
> On 04/03/2015 21:33, Jay Hennigan wrote:
>> We used Livingston Portmaster 3 back in the day. Front to back
>> ventilation, ran cool as a cucumber, plug it in and it just worked.
>> Awesome gear until Lucent bought the company to kill the p
On 27/02/15 11:03, Chris Marget wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 25, 2015 at 4:09 PM, Graham Johnston
> wrote:
>
>> > We are planning a migration from Rapid PVST+ to Multiple Spanning Tree to
>> > better support a mixed vendor environment. My question today is about MST
>> > Instance 0. In practice do you
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