On 2017-06-02 05:42, Ben McGinnes wrote:
On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 07:15:12PM -0700, Joe Hamelin wrote:
The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors
above the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.
They use to come ask us (an ISP) for IT help back in '96
On 30 May 2017 at 16:41, James Harrison wrote:
> On 30/05/17 16:22, Nick Olsen wrote:
>> Looking to test up to 1Gb/s at various packet sizes, Measure Packet loss,
>> Jitter..etc. Primarily Copper, But if it had some form of optical port, I
>> wouldn't complain. Outputting a report that we can pro
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 10:28:38AM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:
>
> American diplomats are doing also all sort of nasty stuff in
> Russia(and not only),
Yes they have and for a very long time.
> but that's a concern of the equivalent of FBI/NSA/etc, not operators
> public discussion places,
Christopher asks: 'nro tap room' ... what's the expansion of NRO here?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Reconnaissance_Office
--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474
On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 10:15 PM, Joe Hamelin wrote:
>
> The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors above
> the fiber meet-me-room ...
The only real Russian Embassy in the US is in Washington where their
Ambassador is stationed, although arguably their UN Office in NYC has
It will if the Ocean level change drastically.
Which with this week news cycle... might not be that far fetched =D>
-
Alain Hebertaheb...@pubnix.net
PubNIX Inc.
50 boul. St-Charles
P.O. Box 26770 Beaconsfield, Quebec H9W 6G7
Tel: 514-990-5911
On 2017-06-02 12:19, Ben McGinnes wrote:
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 10:28:38AM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:
American diplomats are doing also all sort of nasty stuff in
Russia(and not only),
Yes they have and for a very long time.
but that's a concern of the equivalent of FBI/NSA/etc, no
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 10:14:12 -0400, Alain Hebert said:
> It will if the Ocean level change drastically.
Raising the question - how well protected against sea level rise *is* the
average cable landing/termination station, given that most landing stations in
particular are probably fairly near
Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I don't
think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a good
example.
From: NANOG on behalf of valdis.kletni...@vt.edu
Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 5:04 PM
To: aheb...@pu
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 15:11:36 -, Rod Beck said:
> Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I don't
> think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a good
> example.
So 100% of those beach manholes are watertight and safe from flooding, and
don'
On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 12:49 AM, Joe Hamelin wrote:
> Christopher asks: 'nro tap room' ... what's the expansion of NRO here?
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Reconnaissance_Office
>
>
I'm unsure why the NRO would have a room doing tap things in anyone's
network.
that is not their remit.
On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 12:46 PM, wrote:
> On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 15:11:36 -, Rod Beck said:
>
> > Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I
> don't
> > think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a
> good
> > example.
>
> So 100% of those beac
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 05:52:43PM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:
>
> https://www.nanog.org/list
> 6. Postings of political, philosophical, and legal nature are prohibited.
> It is quite clear.
That's a fair point.
The crypto dev world does have a tendency to veer into two of those
three (pol
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It is no longer in the Westin, or if they've kept an office space it is not
the public facing consulate. The security desk at the lobby frequently has
to deal with confused Russian consular-service seeking people who don't
want to take "no" for an answer when they're told that the consulate has
mov
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 13:23:26 -0400, Christopher Morrow said:
> is this a case of 'wherer the cable gets dry' vs 'where the electronics
> doing cable things lives' ?
> aren't (normally) the dry equipment locations a bit inland and then have
> last-mile services from the consortium members headed inl
Just a small thing, but as one of the folks who used to work on the core
network gear of AS11404, the network diagram has something in it that might
confuse attendees as to who is really sponsoring the upstream:
https://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog70/diagram
AS11404 was formerly known as Spectrum
The plan is to decommission TAT-14 in 2024. That is long before the next
Biblical Flood due the ice caps melting. The Trans-Atlantic systems have a life
span at best of 30 years. When the next set of systems is built rising waters
will be taken into account.
Fro
Btw
Wow, a ~2 million dollar boundary (dual PTX1000's) for the NANOG 70
conference geez
-aaron
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Eric Kuhnke
Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 1:43 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org list
Subject: NANOG 70 network diagram
And the 4x100G. That's four times the capacity of the network I work for.
~100k subs.
On Jun 2, 2017 16:54, "Aaron Gould" wrote:
> Btw
>
> Wow, a ~2 million dollar boundary (dual PTX1000's) for the NANOG 70
> conference geez
>
> -aaron
>
> -Original Message-
> From: NANOG [mailto
> On Jun 2, 2017, at 5:34 PM, Eric Dugas wrote:
>
> And the 4x100G. That's four times the capacity of the network I work for.
> ~100k subs.
Disclaimer: Not an employee of NTT, but I was last Bellevue NANOG.
Last time in Bellevue with the Comcast (dark) and Wave (dim) fiber we had 220G
with di
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