Reference headers still being butchered.
Your message id was:
Message-ID:
<014aac80139f-0a0965b9-fad8-4aef-bedb-b381a6bcf84f-000...@email.amazonses.com>
But Chuck's reply had:
References:
<014aac801767-9a0a20cc-a742-4e06-b342-7a54b23c22f4-000...@email.amazonses.com>
In-Reply-To:
<
On 1/2/15 13:35, Paul McCall wrote:
Seth, is it /possible/ that that is an issue with his client that would
cause that result?
How does the rest of the thread look?
I don't think it's him, threading is still broken since the Message-ID,
References, and In-Reply-To headers are still coming a
On 1/6/15 8:13, Ty Featherling wrote:
We started getting calls of slow speeds on this tower and found multiple
customers that had a constant ~1.5Mbps download occuring. When I logged
into the router I saw that traffic on some ports that should be idle
(SiteMonitor for example). When I torch the t
On 1/6/15 19:58, Adam Moffett wrote:
What's wrong? You don't like prying the batteries out of the APC with a
tire iron?
man up dude :)
The latest gen of SmartUPS finally added t-comp charging.
~Seth
On 1/8/15 15:29, Tyler Treat wrote:
I guess I've never seen a tamper resistant outlet? What's different?
There's a plastic shutter inside that's supposed to make it harder to
lick it.
~Seth
On 1/13/15 13:49, Daniel White wrote:
I have a Unifi AC AP at my house. Have not been overly impressed.
I have two at the office. They don't do much more than basic office
wireless stuff though and seem to be fine so far. What have you found
lacking?
~Seth
On 1/14/15 6:18 AM, Daniel White wrote:
SAF has a good whitepaper on LAG and how it applies to each platform
(currently being updated for Integra) – and certainly for instance our
Lumina platform could only look at MAC addresses. Integra looks at the
packet – just like better switches do.
I
On 1/14/15 15:39, Ken Hohhof wrote:
Didn't you have a chart? Was it on coffee mugs or t shirts or
something, or were those requests from the peanut gallery?
Somehow "there's a chart for that" doesn't have the same zing as
"there's an app for that".
I remember seeing a chart, but I didn't sa
On 1/14/15 16:16, Bill Prince wrote:
OK. I think I get it!
But I would still call it (2x2) + (2x2).
I call MIMO and 4x4 crap when referring to licensed gear.
For licensed stuff just say how many channels need to be licensed.
Channel size and modulation gives me capacity. No smoke or mirror
On 1/14/15 8:46 PM, Erich Kaiser wrote:
From my experience the price has not changed very much. Someone needs
to take the reigns on the market. Even with certain companies throwing
you a promo price, if you really look at it fully loaded, the price is
still high for what you get.
The prices
On 1/15/15 7:25 AM, That One Guy wrote:
Excluding license fees, high quality unlicensed radios are at or higher
than the cost of licensed radios. Granted this is my limited experience
with one link and five vendors vetted. The trade off in path profile
validity with no interference has an immeasu
On 1/15/15 9:12, Josh Reynolds wrote:
This email has more angst than my 15 year old at 8am on a Saturday.
On January 15, 2015 8:09:07 AM AKST, Seth Mattinen
I can give you the contact of a licensee that's having the problem I
described on a smaller scale if you think you can hep them.
On 1/15/15 9:36, Seth Mattinen wrote:
On 1/15/15 9:12, Josh Reynolds wrote:
This email has more angst than my 15 year old at 8am on a Saturday.
On January 15, 2015 8:09:07 AM AKST, Seth Mattinen
I can give you the contact of a licensee that's having the problem I
described on a sm
On 1/15/15 9:52, Mike Hammett wrote:
Without shooting the offending equipment, there's not much you can do
other than call the FCC.
One of them was Towerstream. I would have thought they'd know better but
I was incorrect. I'd noticed someone hanging a 2' antenna few weeks
before they called
On 1/15/15 11:02, Josh Reynolds wrote:
I don't understand how an 18GHz path has anything to do with Ubiquiti
here, since the closest product they make to that band is on 24GHz.
Ifyour problem is with ignorant operators, or just plain stupid
operators, say so.
If your problem is with Ubiquiti, sa
On 1/16/15 11:12, Josh Luthman wrote:
It's just a factor. What other options can do 80 MHz? Can they do 1024
QAM? I'd bet 60 MHz * 1024qam is pretty close to 80 MHz * 256qam.
Yeah, probably only a 30 meg raw capacity difference.
~Seth
On 1/18/15 5:41 AM, Craig Schmaderer wrote:
http://www.controlbyweb.com/webswitch/ maybe these guys. I use a lot of
there power switches but not sure if they have everything you're looking
for.
If you just want dry contact inputs with email alerting I would go with:
http://www.controlbyweb
On 1/21/15 9:53, Tyler Treat wrote:
haha you took your business rant to facebook?
LIKE OMG GESS WAAT??!?!?!?!
Internet argument!
On 1/21/15 12:12, Mike Hammett wrote:
Yes, run the UniFi Controller at the colo. From there you can control
every UniFi you place everywhere.
It pulls statistics, handles upgrades, well, everything a controller is
supposed to do.
It doesn't have to be in a VPN, but that's what I do.
Don't th
On 1/21/15 18:07, Rory Conaway wrote:
I think we need to tell every single customer why the rates went up.
There is another election in 2 years.
Your rates aren't going up. The explanation to the customer is simple:
"the total bill is higher because the government added a new tax. The
pre-t
On 1/22/15 8:46, Gino Villarini wrote:
The guy is cooking his �.
From article:
http://www.siklu.com/isps/one-urban-isp-chose-siklu-mmw-connectivity/
At least the Freemile is low power.
~Seth
On 1/22/15 13:27, Dan Petermann wrote:
Does anyone know what radios clearwire uses(d)?
All the stuff at a site I'm on that also has Clearwire on it is Redline
and Dragonwave.
~Seth
On 1/22/15 15:28, Bill Prince wrote:
Yep. Note the Transamerica tower in the background (tall pyramid
building). Only building like that on the planet.
And Alcatraz and the Golden Gate Bridge.
~Seth
On 1/28/15 9:32, Nate Burke wrote:
Customer: I can't send email, the server keeps sending me back errors,
it's been happening now for a few days.
Me: So you're getting an error message back?
Customer: Yes, it's telling me that the domain is not found.
Me: Did you spell the domain name right?
Cus
On 1/28/15 8:25 PM, Sean Heskett wrote:
Have the merchant tell their processor that they will take their
business elsewhere if they are charged for a IP capable terminal. It's
a pretty competitive market that they are usually willing to send a new
terminal in order to keep collecting revenue. I
On 1/29/15 5:37 PM, Paul McCall wrote:
I emailed Sterling off-list with details. The concise answer here
(cough, cough) is that it does take a lot to get things setup on
Amazon. Their ecosphere is complex and requires an investment of time
and commitment to see it through and get past the conce
On 3/8/16 14:18, Joe Novak wrote:
is this a bad time to mention the PC Master Race?
Send this to the customer the next time they complain.
On 3/8/16 5:28 PM, Chuck Hogg wrote:
Get away from ethernet, all the carriers are.
And go to... token ring? ATM?
~Seth
On 3/10/16 16:59, Lewis Bergman wrote:
You have to watch Tessco. They are in Maryland so if you aren't on the
east coast shipping gets high. There said they are opening a San Antonio
warehouse but o don't know if they are open. Talley and Hutton have more
locations.
Tessco has two distribution
On 3/16/16 17:58, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
Uhhh... you can't put a SIP server (or a small cluster of them) on a CDN
cache like you can with http/https content.
DDoS mitigation services are different from CDN services, although some
may offer both.
~Seth
On 3/17/16 6:58 AM, Bill Prince wrote:
I can see the future problems with people "saving" a couple bucks on N
connectors.
I don't understand why they wouldn't do a simple circular Remec or DW
type of interface.
It's disruptive.
~Seth
On 3/17/16 8:14 AM, Brian Sullivan wrote:
Can't they force some sort of compliance with license keys you get after
you prove your FCC application/coordination?
That would be nice: locked out RF config before you send a copy of your
official license to generate an unlock key to only set what t
On 3/17/16 8:28 AM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
When we bought our SAF stuff a few years back, we had to show our
distributor our coordination docs before they would ship gear.
Not strictly necessary, but they do need to know what subband the
coordinator put you in to order the right equipment.
~S
On 3/17/16 7:20 AM, That One Guy /sarcasm wrote:
at least they can alter the licensing fees. There goes the neighborhood
Get a license? Surely you jest. Every unlicensed and unregistered 3.65
I've come across is a UBNT user. Not that the NN license meant much, but
still. Costs mostly kept th
On 3/23/16 6:53 PM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
There's not a lot of technical information available about them, don't
they have an integrated sinewave DC-to-AC inverter?
No; it's just a smart battery pack with thermal control and CAN bus or
modbus for comms.
~Seth
On 3/23/16 8:48 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote:
On 3/23/16 6:53 PM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
There's not a lot of technical information available about them, don't
they have an integrated sinewave DC-to-AC inverter?
No; it's just a smart battery pack with thermal control and CAN bus or
m
On 3/23/16 8:57 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
One of the drawings show it as just a battery, no inverter.
It also says 100% depth of discharge.
Yeah, just a battery with a brain, basically. I would expect something
like to the battery controller in their cars.
~Seth
On 3/29/16 7:05 AM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
That's just too acquire the space. You still get to pay ARIN every year
for their "cut" based on the amount of address space you have.
You're paying for registration services, not a "cut". You don't have to
pay ARIN, but it won't be registered to you i
On 3/29/16 7:34 AM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
Okay ;)
That's the way IP leasing outfits work. Now, how leasing compares
economically or other advantages/disadvantages vs. the ARIN transfer
route is an exercise left to the reader.
~Seth
On 3/30/16 12:37, Adam Moffett wrote:
Can anybody suggest a device that can monitor battery state of charge
and kick on a propane generator when the charge drops below a given level?
Packetflux generator controller?
~Seth
On 3/31/16 9:17 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
Time it. You will be surprised. 5 minutes. Gotta drive in, park, get
out, gas cap off, swipe card, wait for authentication, select fuel, wait
for beep, put hose in, pull trigger. Wait a couple of minutes, reverse
all of the above, stand in rain, snow g
On 4/1/16 11:08, CBB - Jay Fuller wrote:
i have fleeting memories of my cellphone batteryi have an htc one
remix. i've had it maybe a year. of course it gets drained every day.
now it just dies when the battery is at 44%. i know it will - but thats
not right. it didn't used to do it.
how
On 4/6/16 09:36, Josh Luthman wrote:
That looks like so much fun...I miss those days...
Eh, I preferred LAN parties on a much smaller scale where everyone
present was playing in the same game. 16 was ideal with 8v8 teams. We
knew everyone's strengths and weaknesses to seat teams together. We
On 4/6/16 12:10, Sterling Jacobson wrote:
Ah, ok, so 700A was for the entire venue.
Not sure most buildings have enough independent plugs on 15/20A circuits
to do this.
Were they using some generators or other exterior configuration?
I haven’t ever done this kind of large scale event planning,
On 4/6/16 14:12, David wrote:
BF1942 and counter strike were the most popular
I spent a lot of time learning to fly in the desert combat mod. At first
they laughed at me, later they feared me.
~Seth
On 4/6/16 9:46 PM, Craig Schmaderer wrote:
Finding a good venue is easy when you are small but when you get past 50
computers you start to have issues. We finally found a home that can
handle are size. It is a 48 lane bowling center with 3 basketball
courts. They have a 75k transformer that is
On 4/11/16 10:13, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
If you've physically laid eyes on an HE POP in a non major city, another
issue is they frequently deploy with 1 router, not a redundant core pair.
Not really an "issue" as much as what it's worth to do or what you get
at a certain price point.
~Seth
On 4/12/16 10:37, Sterling Jacobson wrote:
Oh, and no more NAT. Just go ahead and assign public IPv6 to everything
and firewall, like we all should have done a decade ago.
Uh oh, you're going to anger all of the people that think NAT=security
with talk like that.
~Seth
On 4/15/16 8:15 AM, Andreas Wiatowski wrote:
So what are people doing to do CGN and get around DDOS to a single IP?
We have been doing it on the edge, but the minute a single subscriber
gets attacked we have network impact….. there is no way to suppress, my
understanding is that if we moved the e
On 12/14/15 12:02, Chuck McCown wrote:
You could make sure that all the kids will receive a tinfoil hat with
your name emblazoned on it for extra protection.
Hmmm, perhaps you should put the name of your competitor on the hats...
You're going to need some crystals, too.
On 12/14/15 12:19, Chuck McCown wrote:
Found this: “The solar microwave flux is nominally an/absolute/flux, one
solar flux unit defined as [the/very small/amount of] 10 -22^-22 Watt
per square meter per Hertz.”
So, 10^-22 would be 10^-19 mW times 6 x 10^9 HZ or 6x10-10mW
10 log 6x10^-10 = –92 dB
On 12/14/15 12:51, Adam Moffett wrote:
http://www.snopes.com/north-carolina-town-rejects-solar-panels/
It was mostly a NIMBY thing. Yes, some kook said the panels would suck
up the sun, but that wasn't the prime motivation for not allowing it.
You can't tell me solar panels don't cause cance
On 12/15/15 08:21, Jaime Solorza wrote:
I carry a notebook in my truckI am surprised how many times I have
had to consult it to help clients who forget or lose up passwords. No
plans to change my method.
A friend of mine used to use that method. Then it was stolen.
~Seth
On 12/15/15 9:54 PM, Josh Luthman wrote:
20% drop in throughput.
They need to get Pied Piper on it.
On 12/16/15 08:20, Bill Prince wrote:
Oh yeah. That's a great choice.
Build expensive house. No wiring because everything is wireless, of course.
I once worked at a place that started a major remodel of the gut
everything style to expand office space. The project was managed solely
by crea
There's been 14 Falcon 9 launches with 13 successful and 1 failure.
~Seth
I saw this from spoofed space in apache's log:
151.217.177.200 - - [29/Dec/2015:22:22:40 -0800] "DELETE your logs.
Delete your installations. Wipe everything clean. Walk out into the path
of cherry blossom trees and let your motherboard feel the stones. Let
water run in rivulets down your cas
On 1/10/16 3:19 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
Is relay switching speed quick enough to keep a system alive or do I
need to have a solid state switch I wonder.
Triac would be good for this I think. Hmmm. How many watts?
All of the ones I've ever seen or used are relays.
~Seth
On 1/11/16 13:09, Peter Kranz wrote:
I think anyone not using rubber mats is asking for trouble eventually...
I�ve seen plenty of examples where other company�s non-pen�s have eaten
holes through rooftops.
I saw one that was completely embedded into an asphalt roof. I don't
know how lon
On 1/11/16 9:46 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
From a generator and UPS system perspective, do you have any gear /
vendor you would use to power such a beast in a cost conscious manner?
I would encourage looking brands other than APC like Eaton/Powerware and
Liebert for the 10kW to 20kW range (or
On 1/19/16 10:22 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
IPv4 was still available in 2015. I got some. ;-)
I got the last I'll probably ever see from the free pool in August,
right down to the line.
~Seth
On 1/19/16 10:12 PM, Sterling Jacobson wrote:
Lucky you.
Here is what they told me on Oct 30 2015.
That was unfortunately just too late to get space from the free pool.
The IPv4 free pool hit zero on September 24, 2015 with warning flags out
much before that. Now all you can do with ARIN fo
On 1/21/16 15:01, Adam Moffett wrote:
Very interesting. However, I don't believe the explanation about the
fuses in the plug being due to a copper shortage. If I plugged in one
hundred one amp devices then I would have 100 amps on the circuit, but
the fused cord in individual devices wouldn't b
Around here it's ground down for unswitched outlets and ground up to
differentiate a switched outlet in residential.
~Seth
On 1/22/16 14:40, ch...@wbmfg.com wrote:
Google Merchant Center suspended me and sent me a letter telling me to
piss off and never attempt to get an account again. After spending an
hour on the phone with them, it was discovered that some kind of
automated system determined my products are weapon
On 1/27/16 15:23, Matt wrote:
How does the transfer with Arin work? Do you still have to do all the
justification paper work?
Yes, you still have to do justification.
~Seth
On 1/28/16 13:05, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
Looks like the remains of pedestal foundations for dishes the same age
and era as the Jamesburg dish, which is becoming increasingly
rotted/rusted as the current owner is determined to sell it, but only
for a very high price:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jam
On 1/28/16 13:46, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
They're still trying to sell it to somebody who wants to use the dish,
but the dish is useless for telecom... Except maybe for radio astronomy.
From a transpacific satellite communications perspective it made total
sense to scrap all of the modem and power
On 2/1/16 9:09 PM, Colin Stanners wrote:
Google is making themselves the curator of access to the world's
information and communications. When you consider the value of those,
it's not just the most valuable company in matters of money. The
founders had incredible foresight in addition to their
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/how-raspberry-pi-computer-can-automatically-tweet-complaints-about-your-slow-internet-1541226
On 2/2/16 11:08, Sam Kirsch wrote:
Sure; I didn't say his contribution was laughable! I said that to think
we wouldn't have tablets today without the likes of Steve Jobs is an
absolutely insane notion.
Jobs did cancel the Newton which had been in development since the late
80's and commercial
On 2/2/16 16:15, Sean Heskett wrote:
i think they are touting that they have a nation wide NN license for the
3.65-3.7Ghz band (like the rest of us lol).
I've seen a few companies that are extremely proud of their NN
nonexclusive "license".
~Seth
On 2/6/16 10:15, Forrest Christian (List Account) wrote:
Until I got the Kindle paperwhite, with the backlight, I was of the same
opinion. Now, I hate reading dead tree books just because of the
external light required. But again I do most of my reading just before
bed so that might affect m
On 2/7/16 7:52 PM, TJ Trout wrote:
anyone every successfully setup blackhole communities with as7018 At&t?
does such exist?
Yes and yes. They use community 7018:86. Ask for "Remote-Triggered
BlackHole (RTBH) Routing".
~Seth
On 2/8/16 07:55, Nate Burke wrote:
I was expecting record traffic levels with people streaming the 'Big
Game' to multiple devices. Cord cutters, and just because they could.
But it actually ended up being lower than most Sunday nights. Not even
a pickup after the game ended.
I don't think a
On 2/11/16 5:40 PM, Jaime Solorza wrote:
I am waiting for what is next...
Xur and the Kodan Armada
On 2/12/16 08:35, ch...@wbmfg.com wrote:
Remember the days of posting about the works through solid rock product
he was pitching. Which product was that and did the testing ever prove out?
Telrad?
On 2/12/16 13:47, TJ Trout wrote:
Also is there such a thing as a "core" switch that offers redundancy
with multiple supervisors ?
Yes, but they're mutually exclusive with "less expensive".
~Seth
On 2/15/16 12:34 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:
My kids watch MLP. I watch it with them. Does that make me a brony?
Or does the fact I think Rainbow Dash is way cooler than Princess
Twilight Sparkle make me a brony?
Why not both?
On 2/18/16 09:43, Joseph Marsh wrote:
So what is the stl boxes. He said he wants to tunnel the radio station
feed to tower by internet and I'm lost on the radio station setup
I typically see Barix. But it could be any IP streaming encoder/decoder
pair.
~Seth
On 2/18/16 12:55, TJ Trout wrote:
What do they do when the STL fails? Do they have a way to get some
generic stuff playing while it's fixed?
TV broadcast decoders can up a static "technical difficulties" image on
loss of stream.
~Seth
On 2/21/16 15:32, Mathew Howard wrote:
The tapeworm sounds like the way to go... somebody should start
marketing that as the new miracle diet :P
Sanitized tapeworms: Your friends for a fair form.
On 2/25/16 07:24, Travis Johnson wrote:
This sounds like a great little small business... however, it's very
difficult to have a business like this actually scale. You are limited
by "time" in a business like this. If you compare to selling internet
service, you have an unlimited amount of "produ
On 2/27/16 12:44, That One Guy /sarcasm wrote:
We've been looking for an offset to take the din back far enough for the
packetflux stuff to be flush with the face of the rack, it's down to
just making some sheet metal and break
Startech makes one, but it's $100.
~Seth
On 2/29/16 13:53, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
Though you need the whole platform to go with them, a pair of sup2t
routing engines are not cheap. At least the chassis is. The 6500 will
never die.
And now there's the 6807 chassis for even more per-slot capacity.
~Seth
On 3/5/16 11:10 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
People have died in just about every sport I would imagine.
Curling seems pretty safe.
~Seth
On 6/1/15 8:33, Mike Hammett wrote:
I think most people's problems with speedtests are due to the quality of
the network they are providing. A shitty speedtest usually means the
user's experience is shit as well.
No, they will often try to find a shitty speedtest server and use that
to compla
On 6/1/15 8:32, Mike Hammett wrote:
We are up to about 2.3M IPs either advertised today or are in process of
getting hooked up on our Indy IX and looking to branch out soon.
That kind of marketing speak makes me sad as a networking guy.
~Seth
On 6/1/15 8:41, Mike Hammett wrote:
Your responsibility is also to provide quality Internet service, the
whole Internet. Your choices up upstreams, peers, etc. affect the
quality of the product you deliver. It's not just hands-off once the
packet leaves your upstream port.
That's an insulting
On 6/1/15 8:50, Mike Hammett wrote:
Okay, there are over 2.1M on, but more on the way.
How about this?
A total of one /11, one /15, one /16, one /20, one /21, one /23, one
/24, one /27, one /28, one /29 and one /32 are currently represented on
our Indianapolis fabric. That's 2,300,729 IPs.
On 6/1/15 8:50, Mike Hammett wrote:
No, but you are responsible to ensure that you purchase connectivity
from people that don't suck.
I have. How do I ensure other companies don't have connectivity
problems? That their cloud hosted app doesn't have an outage? Oh wait
the cloud never fails, s
On 6/1/15 12:00, Paul Stewart wrote:
Ah ok … yeah thanks … I wasn’t sure myself J
As long as people are realistic when buying things like transit across a
peering fabric then my personal opinion is to go ahead….
I'd expect that's where a Private VLAN would come into play. It's still
pure la
On 6/2/15 14:32, Nate Burke wrote:
I have a customer complaining about barracuda rejecting emails he is
sending because of a 'reputation' problem. But the IP Address they
reference is the end user's IP, not the server IP. Shouldn't the
reputation be based on the Mail server, not where the mails
On 6/2/15 15:41, Ken Hohhof wrote:
Just make sure it isn’t a faux parapet, just for show or to hide the
ugly stuff on the roof.
Attaching part of a 6' antenna to it will surely give you that answer, too.
~Seth
On 6/8/15 14:57, Adam Moffett wrote:
I'm at a site where two towers are about 250' apart. There's a 2"
conduit between the two towers, with nothing in it but a fiber optic
cable. My tower does not have a generator, but the other one does. The
guy at the other tower offered to let me run electri
On 6/11/15 11:23, Lewis Bergman wrote:
I thought 10GHz was an MSA type license that has to be paid for.
No, it's for hams in FCC land.
~Seth
On 6/13/15 10:12, Colin Stanners wrote:
As long as tangible goods and services are still being created/offered,
by humans, in the place they live.
http://www.omgfacts.com/lists/10051/Panasonic-has-a-factory-staffed-with-only-15-people-that-can-make-2-million-plasma-displays-per-month-ab637-1
On 6/13/15 15:49, Sean Heskett wrote:
Why on earth would you use a Cisco anything when they hate WISPs
We have completely removed all Cisco from our network
Because Cisco is not one big company, it only appears that way.
~Seth
On 6/16/15 14:29, Randy Cosby wrote:
We're looking to build a tower that is near an existing Crown Castle
(formerly AT&T) tower. The landlord, a city, has a contract with Crown
Castle that states in part:
"/Landlord agrees not to sell, lease or use any areas of the Property
or immediately Surro
On 6/18/15 9:17, Tim Reichhart wrote:
Hey guys
Frontier as given me an 172.76.3.xx public static IP and I just want to
know if this actually an real IP or just an internal IP? Because the
person I am working with from frontier saying its an public static IP.
Because I though 172.x space is for i
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