If anyone from Facebook is here, Please contact me.
Thanks
--
Walter Keen
Network Engineer
Rainier Connect
(P) 360-832-4024
(C) 253-302-0194
My apologies all, I meant to say myspace contact
Connected by DROID on Verizon Wireless
-Original message-
From: Walter Keen
To: NANOG list
Sent: Tue, Jul 12, 2011 00:29:19 GMT+00:00
Subject: Facebook contact?
If anyone from Facebook is here, Please contact me.
Thanks
-- Walter
Sorry about the lack of details.
I'm looking for a Myspace contact, We're an ISP (AS20394) and all of our users
are getting a 302 redirect to google after contacting a myspace server. If
there is an appropriate contact on this list, or someone who can forward this
to such a contact, it would
before blocking, or assume a /16
Walter Keen
Network Engineer
Rainier Connect
(P) 360-832-4024
(C) 253-302-0194
On 07/12/2011 08:50 AM, TProphet wrote:
I use a VPN from Beijing, where I reside. It's pretty common for
myspace to blacklist any IP addresses that they believe belong to
cra
environment, it might be safe to consider a ramdisk for leases.
Obvoiusly breaks RFC2131, but...
Walter Keen
Network Engineer
Rainier Connect
(P) 360-832-4024
(C) 253-302-0194
On 07/20/2011 03:28 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 9:31 AM, Nick Colton wrote:
>> We were se
, I'm impressed, also the operating temperature range being
so wide lets us put them in places we couldn't (supportably) put a cisco
or juniper low-end (or high end) box, since we have some remotes where
we need to go down to -10C or so.
Walter Keen
Network Engineer
Rainier Connect
(P) 360-8
I've used Adtran ethernet switches. I wouldn't call them feature-rich,
but they do seem to work. If possible test thouroughly before putting
in production. I've seen some layer 3 issues with them that they
quickly fixed in subsequent firmware releases. I was not stress testing
them with tra
We've been using ipplan, although it seems the racktables demo site does
support ipv6. It looks interesting because it could help us in other ways.
Still kind of stuck on ipplan until I find a better solution that understands
multiple routing tables since I have many mpls vpn's with overlapping
If I had to guess, I would guess that renumbering is likely required to get it
into a more portable address assignment from a multi-homing perspective. Look
at the whois information below
If I were hosting a root server or something similar, I would certainly want it
segregated enough that I
Many of the colocation datacenters or carrier hotel datacenters we are in only
have copper facilities for tdm based circuits such as DS1 and DS3. The
distance in many of these are simply too great for a copper ethernet
connection. ( > 100m )
Some smaller ones prefer copper, where distance is
I work for a rural Telecom in northwest US.
Typically when I hear statements like that, it's that the tech built (strung
aerially, trenched through ground, or through buried conduit) from a pedestal
or other copper splice point to the customer premise.
I would only expect this to go to the
e in compliance with having
(battery/generator) there to sustain 8 hours of operation, and I doubt they
would tell you details of their power systems.
- Original Message -
From: "Jay Ashworth"
To: "Walter Keen" , "William Herrin"
Cc: "NANOG&quo
entry, nexthop, etc) is
available via snmp on the ip-route mib I believe, and needs to stay fairly
generic, or equipment-agnostic.
Does anyone know of an existing project to do this before I start trying to
make one?
Walter Keen
Does anyone happen to know of an optical network simulator?
I'm trying to examine the behaviour of a 3-8 node sonet ADM ring using 2-fiber
UPSR when one interface has intermittent severely errored seconds.
ll do this.
-Original Message-----
From: Walter Keen [mailto:walter.k...@rainierconnect.net]
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 1:38 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Optical network simulator
Does anyone happen to know of an optical network simulator?
I'm trying to examine the behaviou
I'm fairly sure that Mikrotik software is based on linux, and supports MPLS.
Not too sure which package they use, or if they rolled their own MPLS
support...
- Original Message -
From: "Seth Mattinen"
To: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2012 4:42:14 PM
Subject: Re: Bi
Assuming the MPLS provider is a single company, and uses BGP at all sites to
talk to your routers, I would simply set the MED (in cisco terms) to reflect
what you desire.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk365/technologies_tech_note09186a0080094934.shtml
This assumes however that the failover
Where I work for a local telecommunications provider, we will not run any fiber
smaller than 24 strand, and these days that is a drop into a building.
When talking about single mode fiber, the cost per foot difference in 2, 8, or
even 24 strand is typically a matter of less than $1 per foot.
S
Where I work we maintain a mix of Telecom, Data, and CATV networking.
APC is REQUIRED per many manufacturers for video. It reduces reflections of the
signal which in the video world can cause quite a few headaches and has the
potential to have severe impact on video quality.
Also, if you're l
e Internet circuitry is exactly the opposite of
correct. Where instead of preserving access to emergency responders,
it is intentionally designed to cut that access.
Regards,
Bill Herrin
--
Walter Keen
Network Technician
Rainier Connect
(o) 360-832-4024
(c) 253-302-0194
References
1.
al life, textbook age, and, in some cases, lack of mathematical
preparation and inclination on the part of students.
Scarier: I was teaching graduate students.
- Dan
--
Walter Keen
Network Technician
Rainier Connect
(o) 360-832-4024
(c) 253-302-0194
support, most likely. In many cases, DHCP can lead to
plug-and-play simplicity, which means they don't have to call you, and you
don't have to answer their calls. Everyone wins. :)
David Smith
MVN.net
--
Walter Keen
Network Technician
Rainier Connect
(o) 360-832-4024
(c) 253-302-0194
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