Day,
> does anyone see any issues with this?
Please, I strongly urge you to consider the ergonomics in question.
That name is REALLY hard to read, spell, pronounce, type, recognize,
etc.
Agreed that there are no technical roadblocks, but again, please use
common sense and choose something that d
Hello all,
We have had a number of DPI boxes (SCE8080) sitting in the access network
for a while now, so far they served mainly for congestion management and
such, and are wondering if there are some real use case in the fine-grained
service control land (as the vendors keep whispering in out ears
Hello,
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 8:00 PM, Martin Millnert wrote:
> I've seen tyrannical governments use Bluecoat's to crack down on their
> own population(*).
> Was this the sort of use-case you were looking for? :)
>
Ummm, not really... :)
Actually, we've been faced with proposals to build servic
Hello people,
Does anyone knows someone at Inmarsat? I need to get in contact with a tech
over there.
thanks in advance,
cl.
Hello all,
At our ISP operation, we are seeing increasing levels of traffic in our
outgoing MTA's, presumably due to spammers abusing some of our subscribers'
accounts. In fact, we are seeing connections from IPs outside of our network
as many as ten times of that from inside IPs. Probably all of
Hello all,
On Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:30 PM, Ricky Beam wrote:
>
> If I block port 25 on my network, no spam will originate from it.
> (probablly) The spammers will move on to a network that doesn't block their
> crap. As long as there are such open networks, spam will be rampant. If,
> overnigh
Hello all,
We are a mid-sized carrier (1.2M broadband subscribers) and we are looking
for an upgrade in our public DNS resolver infrastructure, so we are
interested in getting to know what are you guys using in your networks.
Mainly what kind/brand of software and which architecture did you use to
Not in Oracle, but PostgreSQL has a very robust implementation for CIDR,
including not only datatypes but also a host of operators to deal with them.
Being opensource, it always seemed plausible to me to port the functionality
into Oracle, learning from their implementation. Never got to actual
dev
Hello,
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 4:02 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> In the US, I believe that CALEA requires you to have those records for 7
> years.
>
FWIW, in Argentina there is a requirement to hold all records for a full ten
years. A sweet bite for the storage folks here...
regards,
cl.
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