Yes, and I'd be interested to find out where in my email you read the word
Standard.
I didn't but if this is going to be widely used and the rest of the ISP
community gets sucked into supporting it, it might be useful to consider
the process.
Regards,
Neil.
--
Neil J. McRae - Alive and
Hi all,
Some of you may recall that I moderated an IX Panel at the Winter 2002
NANOG in Miami.
The programme committee have asked me to prepare and moderate a panel to
be held in the general session at the upcoming NANOG in Phoenix, AZ. In
addition, especially for all you peering people, Bill
We've had reports of a fiber cut between Washington, DC and Richmond
that's affecting traffic as far south as South Carolina - anybody know
anything about this?
thanks,
Jim
--
See what ISP-Planet is saying about us!
http://isp-planet.com/services/wholesalers/flexpop.html
Its 2003 and everyone is making their predictions. What trends are
network operators seeing for Internet security?
Old favorites
Buffer overflows
Distributed Denial of Service
Poor passwords (cisco/sanfran)
Poorly coded systems
Blame the user for not protecting poorly coded
Hi All,
I am new to this list. Our company is interested in starting to colocate
in Tokyo, Japan.
We are looking for the following:
1/4 Rack (10U)
20Amps Equiv US Power
1 MEG CIR Pipe over 10BaseT or 100BaseT
/28 IP Network Space
I am getting prices of approx $1500 - $2000 USD. Has anyone done
On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 04:18:41PM -0500, Tom Daly wrote:
Hi All,
I am new to this list. Our company is interested in starting to colocate
in Tokyo, Japan.
Take it to isp-bandwidth (http://www.isp-bandwidth.com). This is a list
for network operators, not getting quotes. :)
--
Richard A
I'd suggest the isp-bandwidth list for this
www.isp-lists.com.
On Wed, 8 Jan 2003, Tom Daly wrote:
Hi All,
I am new to this list. Our company is interested in starting to colocate
in Tokyo, Japan.
We are looking for the following:
1/4 Rack (10U)
20Amps Equiv US Power
1 MEG CIR Pipe
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This may be of interst:
AP: Bush Expected to Sign Scaled Back Internet Security Plan
One of the criticisms of the change relative to this group
is that the previous stronger wording for the network
operator industry was watered down. Instead of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Pete Kruckenberg) writes:
Is there anything happening with collaborative security policy and
remediation in the industry? Has any effort showed progress towards an
effective ISAC or similar? Can networks realistically collaborate on
security, or do the political and