I've had no problems with it. Seems to be much better than the residential service. The /29 was only $10? I must be getting jipped, I'm paying $20.
Tim Burke 630.617.1300 Cell t...@tburke.us Email Sent from my iPhone On May 4, 2010, at 12:52 PM, "Owen DeLong" <o...@delong.com> wrote: > LoL... I'm using that same service (without the /29 for $10/month) > as transport for my > tunneled setup. > > Owen > > On May 4, 2010, at 9:40 AM, Tim Burke wrote: > >> I'm using Comcast's business-class service. ~$110 per month for >> 22mbit down, 5mbit up and a /29. >> >> This would definitely be your best bet as opposed to trying to rig >> up a tunneled setup. You can also get their 12mbit down, 2mbit up >> service with a /29 for $79, iirc. >> >> ________________________________________ >> From: Chris Grundemann [cgrundem...@gmail.com] >> Sent: Monday, May 03, 2010 2:01 PM >> To: Bill Bogstad >> Cc: NANOG list >> Subject: Re: any "bring your own bandwidth" IPv4 over IPv4 tunnel >> merchants? >> >> On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 12:12, Bill Bogstad <bogs...@pobox.com> wrote: >>> Like many people, I can't justify the expense of "commercial" IP >>> connectivity for my residence. As a result, I deal with dynamic IP >>> addresses; dns issues; and limitations on the services that I can >>> host >>> at my residence. >> <snip> >> >> Not sure where you live / what service is available to you but many >> "business" DSL, cable and fixed-wireless offerings are quite >> reasonably priced these days. I pay about $100/mo for 16m x 2m and a >> /28 from my local cable operator - which is likely less than >> residential service plus a vpn/tunnel service. It sure isn't a fiber >> metro-E connection but it does let me run my various servers out of >> the house. Perhaps something to look into. >> >> $0.02 >> ~Chris >> >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Bill Bogstad >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> @ChrisGrundemann >> weblog.chrisgrundemann.com >> www.burningwiththebush.com >> www.coisoc.org >