the buck. Sure
Foundry might be cheaper but I hear more complaining about Foundry than any
other platform.
Chris you want to share what issues you have seen with Force 10.
Keith
- Original Message -
From: "Chris Marlatt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Joe Abley" <
Cabletron != baynetworks, that was Wellfleet and Synoptics that merged
to become Bay, that became Nortel.
I've been around too long.
-Keith
-Original Message-
From: Jay R. Ashworth [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 5:19 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: R
> On Wed, Sep 03, 2008 at 12:58:53PM -0400, Nicholas Suan wrote:
> > On Sep 3, 2008, at 12:49 PM, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
> > >You're forgetting that 587 *is authenticated, always*.
> > I'm not sure how that makes much of a difference since the
> > usual spam vector is malware that has (almost) c
> Correct, you need a validating, security-aware stub resolver, or the
> ISP needs to validate the records for you.
That would defeat the entire purpose of using DNSSEC. In order for DNSSEC to
actually provide any improvement in security whatsoever, the ROOT ZONE (.)
needs to be signed, and ev
> > That would defeat the entire purpose of using DNSSEC. In order for
> >DNSSEC to actually provide any improvement in security whatsoever,
> >the ROOT ZONE (.) needs to be signed, and every delegation up the
> >chain needs to be signed. And EVERY resolver (whether recursive or
> >local on host
> > Just because YOU check the digital signature on an email
> and forward that email to me (either with or without the
> > signature data), if I do not have the capability to verify
> the signature myself, I sure as hell am not going to trust your
> > mere say-so that the signature is valid!
> >
> Autoneg is a required part of the gig E specification so you'd only be
> causing yourself trouble by turning it off. (I don't know if
> it'll also break automatic MDI/MDI-X (crossover) configuration, for
> an example of something that's nice to have.)
At least on 450x series enhanced linecards,
t the costs.
As well as some traffic shaping / blocking some common high bandwidth
usage sites / or times of the day / for the neighbors who live in the
area too.
Maybe some one has done this before? If you have any suggestions, please
feel free to contact me off list.
keith at kouzmanoff dot com
thanks!
> Reportedly started by someone operating under the name "Flyman," RBN is
> known as the mother of cybercrime among online investigators. François
> Paget, senior expert for the McAfee company, says that RBN began as an
> Internet provider and offered "impenetrable" hosting for $600 a month.
> Thi
>>> Reportedly started by someone operating under the name
>>> "Flyman," RBN is known as the mother of cybercrime among
>>> online investigators. François Paget, senior expert for
>>> the McAfee company, says that RBN began as an Internet
>>> provider and offered "impenetrable" hosting for $600 a
>Personally I was amused at people adding cement to USB ports to mitigate
>against the "removable media threat". The issue I see is people forget
>that floppies posed the same threat back in the day.
Do you mean the "AutoRun" threat, since this sort of thing is usually done by
people who (a) ru
can anyone
recommend them or conversely has anyone had any problems with their
hardware?
--
Kyle
I'm very happy with Symmetricom's Time Provider 1100 series- these provide NTP
as well as clocking for SONET and ATM gear. They have been rock solid.
-Keith
t.net [68.85.69.170]
20 123 ms 121 ms 121 ms 68.85.161.226
21 116 ms 118 ms 119 ms
x-x-x-x-newengland.hfc.comcastbusiness.net [75.150.80.x]
-Keith
Sorry, my typo. The Net is 75.150.64.0/18
-Original Message-
From: Wallace Keith
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 12:20 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Comcast BGP issue?
Not quite sure what the issue is, but I suspect Comcast announcements
are not quite right?
Trying to get from
Operator to prove
their allegations of misfeasance. The result will be that the Network
Operators will lose, and lose big time. After all, it is the Network Operators
who are the accusers -- not the media mafia.
> Each member state creates its own law, according to the directive. In
> Portuga
litarian and
> oppressive governments.
I believe the United States was the first with that idea.
--- Keith Medcalf
() ascii ribbon campaign against html e-mail
/\ www.asciiribbon.org
Insufficient oversight from management.
Contact someone in the c-suite and report this "data mining."
On Fri, Oct 11, 2024, 10:40 Tom Beecher wrote:
> I really really really find it disgusting that companies have no problem
>> asking for this kind of information!! Its not only Juniper but also o
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