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On Sun, 2005-03-20 at 01:40 +0200, Shaul Karl wrote: > Many of Actcom ADSL IPs are not entirely of the dial-up sort. They are > fixed. How does one know whether an IP does or does not being used for > dial up customers? I noticed in the past that some software (it was an IRC server in that case) looks up common strings in the hostname to find dial-ups. Like *slip*, *ppp*, *dsl*, *cable*, etc. etc. They might be doing the same... -- shimi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --=-uUFHJXWF/greaCRPKSUB Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 TRANSITIONAL//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; CHARSET=UTF-8"> <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="GtkHTML/3.2.5"> </HEAD> <BODY> On Sun, 2005-03-20 at 01:40 +0200, Shaul Karl wrote: <BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE> <PRE> <FONT COLOR="#000000"> Many of Actcom ADSL IPs are not entirely of the dial-up sort. They are</FONT> <FONT COLOR="#000000">fixed. How does one know whether an IP does or does not being used for </FONT> <FONT COLOR="#000000">dial up customers?</FONT> </PRE> </BLOCKQUOTE> <BR> I noticed in the past that some software (it was an IRC server in that case) looks up common strings in the hostname to find dial-ups. Like *slip*, *ppp*, *dsl*, *cable*, etc. etc. They might be doing the same...<BR> <TABLE CELLSPACING="0" CELLPADDING="0" WIDTH="100%"> <TR> <TD> -- <BR> shimi <<A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>> </TD> </TR> </TABLE> </BODY> </HTML> --=-uUFHJXWF/greaCRPKSUB-- ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
