Many companies have link planning software available that can help give you an
idea as to speed for your particular scenario.
Ex: https://airlink.ubnt.com/
There is no simple answer to your question
Fixed Wireless technology has come a long way, and there maybe a lot of
different variety of products available, however when you start your product
selection for a particular project, it is not un-common to find one constrained
in terms of resour
On 2016-04-07 08:28, Bryan Fields wrote:
> Microwave has it's place, but the 20 mile, >1gb links are marketing more than
> anything.
So existing long distance links to reach rural communities are not good
candidates to upgrade from old microwave that handles just phone to
something that can serv
On Thu, Mar 31, 2016 at 5:36 AM, Bacon Zombie wrote:
> I would ignore the portscans since there is nothing wrong with portscanning
> the Internet.
You might want to check with your lawyer on that. If you
_intentionally_ port-scan a computer located in Virginia without the
owner's permission (and
They should always just use Shodan.
https://www.shodan.io/explore
On 4 April 2016 at 05:54, Brandon Vincent wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 31, 2016 at 4:41 AM, DV wrote:
>> I have noticed this and especially the strange format of the packets with a
>> SYN/ECE/CWR flag combination: http://pastebin.com/jFC
I just subscribed to NANOG and I already learned something new.
I did not know about WhiteBox switches. I like how the price tag is
plainly visible to all. This "contact a salesperson" requirement gets
old very quickly.
On Wed, 6 Apr 2016 22:12:37 -0400
David Bass wrote:
> Interesting. What SD
There is no simple answer, as the characteristics of each link are unique,
thus the requirements for each potential upgrade are also unique.
Typically an engineering study will be done to determine what exactly is
required, and what the cost will be. It could be as simple and cheap as a
software l
Hi Todd
I found an answer. It's everything public Microsoft. If it's private Office 365
or private Azure, it doesn't come through the peering fabric.
Best regards, Eric
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
Original message
From: Todd Crane
Date: 4/3/2016 1
On Thu, Mar 31, 2016 at 4:41 AM, DV wrote:
> I have noticed this and especially the strange format of the packets with a
> SYN/ECE/CWR flag combination: http://pastebin.com/jFCDAmdr
>
> This may be $whoever trying to establish network performance/congestion via
> ECN or it could be something else
On 4/5/16 11:45 AM, Robert Glover wrote:
> How well does Siklu handle rain at closer to 1mi. range?
This is not dependent on the radio, it's dependent on the frequency and rain
zone. http://www.softwright.com/faq/support/Rain%20Rate%20Estimates589.gif
If you're in E, it's going to be much more se
Dear Mr. Mike,
I would recommend HP A5500-HI. It's a very capable L3 routing switch (12k FIB)
aswell as MPLS forwarder - both P and PE. It has two 10 GbE SFP+ ports and is
expandable to a total of six if you add two modules. The price is about 2000
dollars (new) and you can stack them aswell us
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