> On Oct 13, 2020, at 7:29 PM, Aaron Gould wrote:
>
> Do y’all like HE for Internet uplink? I’m thinking about using them for
> 100gig in Texas. It would be for my eyeballs ISP. We currently have
> Spectrum, Telia and Cogent.
No. Too many problems with scenic routing due to lack of BGP
On Tue, Oct 13, 2020 at 05:49:42PM -0500, Brian Knight via NANOG wrote:
> Hi Mel,
>
> My understanding of uRPF is:
>
> * Strict mode will permit a packet only if there is a route for the
> source IP in the RIB, and that route points to the interface where the
> packet was received
>
> * Loose
ed to ensure
there's little to no interference.
Do you see the same when hardwired? I keep many of my devices hardwired
to avoid odd jitter issues. I also saw some older versions of the Pulse Secure
VPN add the behavior you describe, including the more uptime the slower i
> On Dec 10, 2020, at 9:39 AM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
>
>
> Simply get rid of the gigabytes of JavaScript and stupidly designed crap
> and hire someone who knows what they are doing and a bandwidth DOWNGRADE
> will be in order. The root cause is incompetence and it can be fixed by
> getting ri
Matthew,
I haven’t seen this problem in a long time where someone else submits data to
cause the out-of-zone glue to appear. It’s possible there’s something
happening at NETSOL that is causing this, but the best way is for you to go
into your registrar and ensure they’re publishing the proper
> On Dec 25, 2020, at 12:48 PM, Bryan Fields wrote:
>
> 10g to the home is a great idea to think about, it's just not terribly
> practical for most customers unless they want to drop 1-2k on routing gear and
> nics. This is always changing, but it's going to be a few years until we
> reach th
> On Dec 25, 2020, at 5:32 PM, John Levine wrote:
>
> I agree it is odd to make 100/100 the top speed. The fiber service I
> have from my local non-Bell telco offers 100/100, 500/500, and
> 1000/1000. FiOS where you can get it goes to 940/880.
>
> The obvious guess is that their upstream band
> On Dec 26, 2020, at 10:35 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG
> wrote:
>
> Here the "truth" is that if you game, you need to have a wired connection to
> your gaming computer. All gamers "know" this.
My sons switch is hard wired, he gets considerable advantage (apparently) due
to using the
I’m curious how many networks have this as part of their default configuration?
If you’re bored on a weekend please click through to this and say yes/no. I’ll
summarize in a week or so. If I configured the form right, it should also show
you the results as well.
https://forms.gle/xxLnA7KgQL48
I’ve closed the form for responses.
There were 102 people who self-selected to participate.
Around 25% of you have this configured as a default in your network.
At 20940 we are asking our networking partners to configure this facing us such
that we can receive the routes from some of the stu
I’m expecting many people to move out to 165 Halsey but as with many things the
future is still hazy. I also wonder if at some point Google will decide that
WFH is viable and they don’t need the office space in 111 8th and things will
swing back..
(Yes, I know that 165 isn’t in NY)
- Jared
>
Almost exactly 4 years ago we were out up here in Michigan for over 120 hours
after a wind storm took out power to 1 million homes. Large scale restoration
takes time. When the load and supply are imbalanced it can make things worse as
well.
I'm hoping things return to normal soon but also am
> On Feb 16, 2021, at 8:25 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
>
> It's cheaper to build 2x, 3x, 4x the aerial plant than to build 1x the
> underground plant.
>
> The actual cost per foot is more like 10x difference, but there are right of
> way, maintenance, etc. costs to factor in as well.
>
Labor
I was thinking about how we need a war stories nanog track. My favorite was
being on call when the router was stolen.
Sent from my TI-99/4a
> On Feb 16, 2021, at 2:40 PM, John Kristoff wrote:
>
> Friends,
>
> I'd like to start a thread about the most famous and widespread Internet
> operati
The he.net side is interesting as you can see who their v4 transits are but
they suppress their routes via v6, but (last I knew) lacked community support
for their customers to do similar route suppression.
I’m not a fan of it, but it makes the commercial discussions much easier each
time those
x27;s getting warm
to overheat and shutdown is short enough you can't really get a tech to
the cage in time to prevent it.
I assume also the latter above, which is people have varying
definitons of clean.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.neth
” IPs and maybe 2k is using some metadata like that to
> block our IPs.
>
> Does anyone have a contact at Prolexic who might be able to help?
>
> Thanks,
> Tim Nowaczyk
>
> --
> Timothy Nowaczyk | Senior Network Manager
> office 703.554.6622 | mobile 57
> On Apr 1, 2021, at 11:15 AM, Töma Gavrichenkov wrote:
>
> Peace,
>
> On Thu, Apr 1, 2021, 6:09 PM wrote:
> That was a lot of traffic coming out of akamai aanp clusters the last couple
> nights! What was it?
>
> "Call of Duty" update again, obviously.
>
> https://www.eurogamer.net/artic
flow through the day. The end-user induced
demand and stress it places on networks doesn't fit into the historical
95/5 30-day peak planning model. I know some carriers are struggling to
adjust. There's a few of us here on-list, please reach out so we can
help.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
on't upgraded for a day a month of thsi big traffic,
but when one of their customers has issues they immediately escalate to
us to ask us to move (and we try hard to do that).
It's not all throw bandwidth at the problem, but with 100g optics being
so cheap these days, it may be the lower
I've had a similar issue in the past trying to get ready to peer with them. I
wanted portal access to look at things. I may yet post a geofeed file just
because.
(I was also rejected a portal account, didn't escalate to friends at google
because I know my traffic is under a gig for now).
- J
> On Jun 2, 2021, at 12:44 PM, Andy Ringsmuth wrote:
>
>>> On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote:
Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day.
>>> Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband
>>> suck?
>>>
>>> Personally I wouldn't
I know that many operators shift traffic based on network and internet quality
(or don’t use certain networks at all). This is a great chance to share
information about things operators have experienced or do to actively measure
or otherwise to inform those decisions.
- snip -
For complete de
> On Jul 19, 2021, at 9:04 AM, Stephen Satchell wrote:
>
> On 7/19/21 5:41 AM, Feldman, Mark wrote:
>> What you propose is not outlandish; some ISPs have been dual stack
>> and providing some combination of these services for years. They
>> already provide IPv6 ip6.arpa delegations should the
> On Jul 19, 2021, at 1:50 PM, Saku Ytti wrote:
>
> On Mon, 19 Jul 2021 at 20:19, Graham Johnston
> wrote:
>
>> I don't at this point have long term data collection compiled for the issues
>> that we've faced. That said, we have two 100G transport links that have a
>> regular background le
I looked at this before and go far enough in the conversations with one carrier
that had sold this as a product before and had a poor experience with the
customers they were no longer offering it. You are likely better off getting a
volume deal on waves, which can be had for pretty cheap these d
> On Jul 22, 2021, at 12:56 PM, Andy Ringsmuth wrote:
>
> The outage appears to have, ironically, taken out the outages and
> outages-discussion lists too.
>
> Kinda like having a fire at the 911 dispatch center…
Should not have impacted me in my hosting of the list. Obviously if the dom
Work hat is not on, but context is included from prior workplaces etc.
> On Jul 25, 2021, at 2:22 AM, Saku Ytti wrote:
>
> It doesn't seem like a tenable solution, when the solution is 'do
> better', since I'm sure whoever did those checks did their best in the
> first place. So we must assume
Hello,
Akamai has been increasing the routes we are advertising in various locations
as part of ongoing network changes. If you have a max-prefix set for Akamai
can you please increase v4 to 1k and ensure you are accepting our additional
ASNs that may live behind the clusters.
We are going
> On Aug 18, 2021, at 9:38 AM, John Kristoff wrote:
>
> Maybe because there isn't a simple, universal approach to setting it.
> Probably like a lot of people, historically I'd set it to
> some % over the current stable count and then manually adjust when the
> limits were about to be breached,
> On Aug 25, 2021, at 10:04 AM, Mark Tinka wrote:
>
> You need to make these things fool-proof. We haven't traveled in over a year
> but the day we do, it's a recipe for disaster if the person that deals with
> this stuff is on the road when the power goes out back at home.
This is why I pe
I have to +1 this. I've been solicited many times by them myself and it's sad
to see the information used that way.
When I worked at another carrier I helped stop this as well with the sales
people. They were creative, but it does at least violate the social norms of
the industry at minimum an
Arista/Cisco have commands like this:
ipv6 dhcp relay install routes
You place on the interface to make this happen.
- Jared
> On Jan 16, 2020, at 11:27 AM, Chris Gross wrote:
>
> In my environment I’ve been running Kea dhcp6 against Ciscos of varying
> platform (7600, ASR920, etc) and just
> On Jan 23, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Kaiser, Erich wrote:
>
> Yeah we saw that as well. Must be a game release or something.
Yes, that’s my understanding as well.
- Jared
> On Jan 23, 2020, at 11:52 AM, Valdis Klētnieks
> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 23 Jan 2020 17:13:15 +0100, Bryan Holloway said:
>
>> Game releases are hardly a new thing, but these last two events seem to
>> be almost an order of magnitude higher than what we're used to (at least
>> on our predominan
> On Jan 23, 2020, at 1:25 PM, Warren Kumari wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 12:45 PM Hugo Slabbert wrote:
>>
>>> This just follows the same rules as networks have always seemed to; If you
>>> build it, they will come, and you'll have to build more. :)
>>
>> https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w
> On Jan 23, 2020, at 2:21 PM, Kaiser, Erich wrote:
>
> Except the CDN providing the content did not anticipate this type of influx
> (How come I am not sure probably more concerned about new business revenue
> and not thinking about the backend infrastructure) and has pushed over costly
>
Apple did this with the original iPhone. Turned out even in their ecosystem
they didn't get it right. The full restore images have always been there and
diffs didn't reappear until you could "OTA" the device (WiFi)
I can't imagine how hard a console would be with every random app writing data
w
You will still see backscatter which will let you know your space is being
spoofed as well.
This will show in your telemetry.
Sent from my iCar
> On Jan 27, 2020, at 7:57 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
>
>
> How would they know what to look for?
>
> I'm assuming Sony isn't cooperating.
>
>
>
Looking good from my perspective. Let me know if we are causing you pain and
let's see what can be done to improve.
I'm here in SF if you are at nanog.
Sent from my iCar
> On Feb 11, 2020, at 3:42 PM, Tom Deligiannis
> wrote:
>
> There is a major update that has released today, how's every
Our CEO tweeted out a new platform peak yesterday which when you round it from
the many trailing 9’s is 140T.
https://twitter.com/TomLeightonAKAM/status/1227389107665592320
I want to ensure the bits get through with the least pain as possible.
I’m expecting more of the same in the future, so if
When you see this please raise it to my attention. I can't promise a resolution
but will promise clarity in what is going on.
I know some cities are problematic as we are moving cages or datacenter space
and have the usual related problems.
There is always something.
Sent from my iCar
> On
dit under normal
conditions if the utility fails to restore service
within 16 hours after an outage resulting from
conditions other than catastrophic conditions.
-- snip --
this lines up with the planning strategy of the utilities.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via fin
The members of the QUIC WG at IETF have not thought this was a problem as they
don't observe it across the board.
The cost for payloads with QUIC is much higher on the CPU side vs TCP as well -
this is also not considered an issue either.
The explanation I got (which seems fair) from someone
imits may be useful but I still think the question of
what rate of UDP traffic is acceptable is a practical one for the future.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
ers.
if the question is will the browser vendor (google) or the broadband provider
(att)
move first, i can already predict the answer. my experience (again) with the
quic
wg is they seem to think there's many options and bad providers will be replaced
which seems disconnected fr
> On Feb 20, 2020, at 3:30 PM, Daniel Sterling
> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 2:57 PM Jared Mauch wrote:
>> if the question is will the browser vendor (google) or the broadband
>> provider (att)
>> move first, i can already predict the answer. my experi
> On Feb 20, 2020, at 4:42 PM, Blake Hudson wrote:
>
>
>
> On 2/20/2020 1:10 PM, Jared Mauch wrote:
>> On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 10:57:46AM -0600, Blake Hudson wrote:
>>> On 2/20/2020 10:34 AM, Ca By wrote:
>>>> On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 10:19 AM Blake
> On Feb 20, 2020, at 4:53 PM, Blake Hudson wrote:
>
>
As a network operator my goal was always to ensure customers receive
the traffic they expected, high rates of UDP were often not what they
wanted.
Adusting the limits may be useful but I still think the qu
> On Feb 21, 2020, at 2:22 PM, Dan Wing wrote:
>
> There are choices, such as making connection initiation, connection
> acceptance, and connection termination parsable by network elements on the
> path so state can be established, maintained, and cleared, DoS can be
> identified, and so on
> On Mar 3, 2020, at 1:39 PM, Job Snijders wrote:
>
> On Tue, Mar 03, 2020 at 11:22:35AM -0700, Clinton Work wrote:
>> It looks like the former Allstream RADB account (MAINT-AS15290) and
>> all associated route objects were removed from RADB today. The
>> deletion mainly impacts Canadian rou
> On Mar 4, 2020, at 12:27 PM, Clinton Work wrote:
>
> RADB MAINT-AS15290 was restored this morning along with all the original
> route objects. The proxy route objects I added Tuesday were replaced by the
> original MAINT-AS15290 objects.
I’m curious if there’s a reason that objects
> On Feb 26, 2020, at 12:42 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> since we're at this layer, should i worry about going 3m with dacs at
> low speed, i.e. 10g? may need to do runs to neighbor rack.
No.
We even do this for 100G.
- Jared
I’m wondering what general trends people have seen with the recent reduction in
travel and increased work from home activities.
I’m expecting that a number of networks are seeing increased traffic demand.
Enterprises are likely adding VPN licenses for staff that are now remote, etc..
I would e
> On Mar 10, 2020, at 6:14 PM, Bryan Holloway wrote:
>
> We hit over 40G on one of our PNIs.
>
> Currently, however, I'm trying to figure out why we're still seeing a
> significant amount of traffic over transit when we have PNIs at the same
> locations ...
>
> I've reached out to Akamai,
> On Mar 12, 2020, at 3:00 PM, Troy Martin wrote:
>
> On March 12, 2020 10:22 AM, g...@1337.io wrote:
>> With talk of there being an involuntary statewide (WA) and then national
>> quarantines (house arrest) for multiple weeks, has anyone put thought
>> into the impacts of this on your networ
I do worry if the broadband networks have the capacity. WFH traffic is usually
different from regular consumer traffic. My neighbors were telling me about the
mandatory work from home they had today and how the VPN struggled to work.
To those upgrading those things, keep at it. You will get the
> On Mar 12, 2020, at 6:55 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
> On Thu, 12 Mar 2020, Tom Paseka wrote:
>> I am not worried. Residential ISPs are usually at peak in the late evening.
>> They have loads of capacity during the day.
>
> Do they have capacity to the right places?
>
> The evening traffic p
> On Mar 16, 2020, at 4:24 PM, james jones wrote:
>
> Fuel priority? They expecting shortage and/or power outages?
>
I suspect it’s more to solve issues with truck drivers going to work and their
job is to deliver fuel. Some areas have been instituting curfews and this
would satisfy the l
I’m curious what people are seeing these days on the UDP/123 policers in their
networks.
I know while I was at NTT we rolled some out, and there are a number of
variants that have occurred over the past 6-7 years. I’ve heard from people at
the NTP Pool as well as having observed some issues wi
> On Mar 20, 2020, at 5:50 PM, Job Snijders wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 20, 2020 at 05:33:31PM -0400, Nimrod Levy wrote:
>> With the increase in remote workers and VPN traffic that won't hash across
>> multiple paths, I thought this anecdote might help someone else track down
>> a problem that migh
> On Mar 25, 2020, at 10:05 PM, JASON BOTHE via NANOG wrote:
>
> Excellent work. I’m curious to know how many of the big ASs are participating
> to date. If you or anyone on the list knows if this is published please let
> me know.
Quite a number have done this. I expect we are getting cl
> On Mar 27, 2020, at 2:32 AM, Hank Nussbacher wrote:
>
> On 26/03/2020 20:02, Aaron Gould wrote:
>
> Numerous gov'ts and municipalities, which had planned constructions jobs but
> postponed them to the summer due to heavy traffic volume, have started to
> implement all those construction j
The big announcement is the 6ghz space opening up. This will be big for people
doing p2p links.
Sent from my iCar
> On Apr 1, 2020, at 8:42 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
>
> I missed this announcement last week.
>
>
> https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-grants-wisps-temporary-59-ghz-spectrum-acc
> On Apr 21, 2020, at 8:56 AM, Hank Nussbacher wrote:
>
> Did anyone notice a huge jump in traffic today between 11:30-11:40 (GMT)
> directed at Google and Akamai caches coming from Amazon and Google?
> Gaming updates?
>
I’m not seeing any big spikes in our graphs, but what you are describi
USIC is not marking on Fridays around here.
URG is marking but only 4 hours a day.
- Jared
> On Apr 21, 2020, at 4:44 PM, Jeff Shultz wrote:
>
> Since in our case they are Outside Plant Tech's who are assigned the
> duties as needed, they are essential workers.
>
> On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 11:
> On Apr 29, 2020, at 7:59 PM, Kaiser, Erich wrote:
>
> So it has been 3 weeks of major ICMP packet loss to any google service over
> the Dallas Equinix IX, it is not affecting performance of service but is
> affecting us with customer complaints and service calls due to some software
> usi
> On Apr 30, 2020, at 2:41 PM, Christopher Morrow
> wrote:
>
> It sounds like, to me anyway, you'd like to copy/paste/sed the AS112
> project's goals, no?
I just use this page:
http://hasthelargehadroncolliderdestroyedtheworldyet.com/
- jared
I have had problems with OSP construction ostensibly delayed by closed
permitting agencies.
Sent from my iCar
> On May 27, 2020, at 2:30 AM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
>
>
>
>> On May 27, 2020, at 3:40 AM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>> I have not heard of any problems with access for ISP and communica
And you can also use ripe atlas as well. If you need credits ask on that list
and people offer them up regularly and quickly.
Sent from my iCar
> On Jul 18, 2020, at 5:45 PM, Brendan Halley wrote:
>
>
> Hi Lars,
>
> You should check out https://ring.nlnog.net/ by contributing resources
>
> On Sep 4, 2020, at 6:52 AM, Douglas Fischer wrote:
>
> I'm looking for some tool to work as a Comand and Control of several remote
> nodes.
>
> The idea is to have many-many nodes of Virtual Machines running on every ASN
> voluntarily to deploy some services spread everywhere we can.
>
>
> On Sep 10, 2020, at 8:06 AM, Jared Brown wrote:
>
> I believe this belongs here:
>
> Getting Fiber to My Town by Jared Mauch
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASXJgvy3mEg (YouTube video of NLnog
> presentation)
> https://nlnog.net/static/live/nlnog_live_sep_20
> On Sep 10, 2020, at 4:10 PM, Jared Geiger wrote:
>
> Another Jared with a question. What method did you use to blow the fiber
> through the conduit? You mentioned you had trouble figuring out the process
> relating to lubrication and building a contraption to blow the fiber.
You need the
installation/ideal-regyellow-77-wire-pulling-lubricant-5-gallon/31-355/p-133962344-c-6458.htm
>
>
> Josh Luthman
> 24/7 Help Desk: 937-552-2340
> Direct: 937-552-2343
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 1337
> Troy, OH 45373
>
>
> On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 4:25 PM Jared
> On Sep 22, 2020, at 4:46 AM, Andy Davidson wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Douglas Fisher wrote:
>> B) There is any other alternative to that?
>
> Don't connect to IXPs with very very large and complicated topologies.
> Connect to local IXPs where the design makes a forwarding plane failure that
> ca
I’m still waiting for my ISP to turn on v6 so the consumers of my neighborhood
ISP can get v6 service.
Going to poke them again today actually.
- Jared
> On Sep 28, 2020, at 8:37 AM, Justin Wilson (Lists) wrote:
>
> It is coming back to that, but you still have so much going on that you need
> On Oct 6, 2020, at 11:28 AM, James Breeden wrote:
>
> Still smells Swedish to me. Probably will end up with a different name, but
> other than that I don't see much changing. Sounds more like a spinoff than
> acquisition.
Yeah, I guess my questions are more long-term, usually in the 12 m
Hello,
I’m looking for someone at 9500 that can look into why you started announcing
some IP space starting on August 25th intermittently that is causing an
operational network issue.
Can you please contact me off-list?
Thanks
- jared
> On Sep 9, 2021, at 11:44 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> to control inbound traffic, how do bgp optimizers decide how to tune
> what they announce? slfow? exploration? ouija board?
>
> randy
Generally via sFlow or other traffic detail models.
- Jared
> On Sep 16, 2021, at 9:23 AM, Ca By wrote:
>
>
>
>
> This has nothing to do with IPv6, of course, other than that modern phones use
> VoLTE so within a mobile carrier's network your voice call is probably handled
> using IPv6 transport.
>
> Good point John.
>
> A lot of folks missed tha
I mostly agree with this. Even new hardware like eero doesn't do v6 by default.
It's just off. So many things are like this. It's nice that LTE and other
deployments have v6 by default. Last time I knew providers like t mobile are
great but their MVNOs like Ultra Mobile do not do v6.
All this
> On Oct 4, 2021, at 4:53 PM, Jorge Amodio wrote:
>
> How come such a large operation does not have an out of bound access in case
> of emergencies ???
>
>
I mentioned to someone yesterday that most OOB systems _are_ the internet. It
doesn’t always seem like you need things like modems o
> On Oct 5, 2021, at 10:05 AM, Karl Auer wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2021-10-05 at 08:50 -0400, Jared Mauch wrote:
>> A few reminders for people:
>> [excellent list snipped]
>
> I'd add one "soft" list item:
>
> - in your emergency plan, have one or tw
This is quite common to tie an underlying service announcement to BGP
announcements in an Anycast or similar environment. It doesn’t have to be
externally visible like this event for that to be the case.
I would say more like Application availability caused the BGP routes to be
withdrawn.
I
other CDNs do have IPv6 on the authorities and
should work without issues.
eg:
dig -6 +trace www.akamai.com.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
> On Nov 18, 2021, at 4:31 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> as a measurement kinda person, i wonder if anyone has looked at how much
> progress has been made on getting hard coded dependencies on D, E, 127,
> ... out of the firmware in all networked devices.
At least the E space is largely usable l
but the client
side OS will still be a variable that is difficult to digest. Not sure
how many people are running very old IP stacks. This is another hard to
measure problem.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
> On Dec 5, 2021, at 3:42 AM, Eliot Lear wrote:
>
>
> On 01.12.21 15:17, Tom Beecher wrote:
>> While you are correct that it's just as illegal to intentionally interfere
>> with the unlicensed wifi bands as it is with CBRS, the difference is that
>> the FCC and regulatory bodies are much mo
This is largely a patching exercise for people that use the software. If you
use it, please patch.
Sent via RFC1925 complaint device
> On Dec 10, 2021, at 10:59 PM, Andy Ringsmuth wrote:
>
> The intricacies of Java are over my head, but I’ve been reading about this
> Log4j issue that sounds
> On Dec 13, 2021, at 2:24 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
> The bigger problem seems to be the ever growing list of products you may be
> using which depend on it potentially without your knowledge.
This isn’t a new problem.
This is an great modern example showing how deeply embedded things could
> On Jan 3, 2022, at 2:53 PM, Job Snijders via NANOG wrote:
>
> Hi Allen,
>
> Yes, it can be this quiet. It’s good news, it means the thing is mostly
> working :-)
>
> I wish everyone a happy and calm 2022!
>
I’m surprised nobody talked about the major provider outages that happened over
> On Jan 13, 2022, at 12:28 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
>
> Once upon a time, Brandon Martin said:
>> AT&T and Comcast don't seem to provide battery by default if you buy
>> voice service from them.
>
> The only major power outage I've experienced at my house (I've been here
> over 20 years) was
Yup.. ping me with the details off-list
- Jared
> On Mar 2, 2022, at 7:02 PM, Christopher Munz-Michielin
> wrote:
>
> Hey All,
>
> Hoping someone has a contact at Akamai who can assist.
>
> As part of my day job I run a DNS network and we've been having issues with
> Akamai mis-locating the
If this is ASM, what device is the RP? You may want to configure MSDP between
PE1/PE2 to help if that’s the case, or is this SSM or something else you may
want to just flip the PIM priority to make it pick what you want and see if you
can tie it to your HSRP (Cisco, might I suggest VRRP so you
> manipulate PIM assert winner in Cisco boxes though. Highest IP is the
> winner if IGP costs are the same to the source.
>
> R
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 7, 2022 at 3:02 AM Jared Mauch wrote:
>
> > If this is ASM, what device is the RP? You may want to configure MSDP
&g
where it's hosted, and it was a bit amusing when I left
NTT that he gave me grief about the as2914.net domain registration ...
I would love to see it updated, even if it's not from the 2914
vantage point, i think he left some docs about how it was done.
- jared
--
Jared
> On May 26, 2022, at 9:31 AM, Livingood, Jason via NANOG
> wrote:
>
>> Latency is a limitation for things that are generally relatively low
>> bandwidth (interactive audio, zoom, etc.).
>> Higher bandwidth won’t solve the latency problem
>
> +1
> IMO as we enter the 'post-gigabit era', an
Sadly thus us repeating the same problematic data based on average usage by
older Americans vs usage by younger people or those of us with several
children.
I agree with the average utilization but when it comes to those peaks my
customers can finish their uploads or restores quickly when they
> On May 31, 2022, at 8:41 AM, Livingood, Jason via NANOG
> wrote:
>
> All the large DOCSIS networks of which I am aware are in fact working on
> changing their spectrum plan and physical layer to enable higher US speeds
> and in some cases symmetric multi-gig services.
Yes, I’ve seen Com
ong-haul fiber passing them
but can't get service.
Not everyone is that lucky, but I've seen places with 2-3 fiber
providers that pass them and none offer service.
- Jared
--
Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
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