At 03:14 PM 3/20/2001, Phil Karn wrote:
> >What's really ironic in your mentioning this (in a deju vu thread) is
> >that the Dow first hit and closed above 10,000 when we were here in
> >1999. I remember watching for it on (probably) the same sign.
>
>Gee, you noticed this too, huh?
>
>As for the
[ From: Joel Jaeggli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
[ Date: 12:54 (-0800), Mar 20, 2001 ]
> This discussion seems to get rehashed in one form or
> another everytime we have a meeting it seems...
>
> due consideration when hosting the meeting in the US
> (or anywhere else) invol
Guys,
I've lived in Lule a substantial part of my life.
Moved to Tucson, AZ after a winter with -43 C (about -47 F).
I fear we would lose a large fraction of the IETF crowd if we
did Lule in January. Seems like the wrong kind of darwinian
selection to apply!
Micke D
At 11:11 PM 3/20/01 +00
>What's really ironic in your mentioning this (in a deju vu thread) is
>that the Dow first hit and closed above 10,000 when we were here in
>1999. I remember watching for it on (probably) the same sign.
Gee, you noticed this too, huh?
As for the "US-centric" accusations, I have no problem with
"huangjianbo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So many replies, I am reading them.
>
> Some idea now, but still not very clear. I want the most distinctive
ones.
"router" is the technical term for any device which forwards data based
on Layer 3 information.
"bridge" is the technical term for any d
At 12.50 -0800 01-03-20, Bill Manning wrote:
>%
>% At 11.14 -0500 01-03-20, John Day wrote:
>% >Even with Spring in MN, this is probably still a good idea. Or New
>% >Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
>%
>% Centrally of what?
>%
>%Patrik -- Stockholm
>%
>
>Lule' in January a
And I thought the last social was rough!
-- Frank
Bill Manning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lule' in January anyone?
Jukkasjärvi. The Ice Hotel. I guess that we can have hotel rooms made
on order...
> --bill
--Johnny
This discussion seems to get rehashed in one form or another everytime we
have a meeting it seems...
due consideration when hosting the meeting in the US (or anywhere else)
involves placing it in a location with major international air-routes to
the pacific rim and europe (and the US if outside).
%
% At 11.14 -0500 01-03-20, John Day wrote:
% >Even with Spring in MN, this is probably still a good idea. Or New
% >Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
%
% Centrally of what?
%
%Patrik -- Stockholm
%
Lule' in January anyone?
--
--bill
kinda dark... but they already have multicast.
joelja
On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Bill Manning wrote:
>
> Lule' in January anyone?
>
>
--
--
Joel Jaeggli [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Academic User Services
This article from NYTimes.com
has been sent to you by [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I wonder if it will be open in time for the social
/ advertisement ---\
Let NYTimes.com Come to You
Sign up for one of our weekly e-mails
and the news will come directly to yo
It's considered impolite to port-scan hosts on the IETF net.
Mar 20 14:48:25 01/03/20 14:48:25 !i 00 pcp001053pcs.wireless.meeting.ietf.org ->
135.222.64.0 TCP 33061 -> kshell S
Mar 20 14:48:25 01/03/20 14:48:25 !i 00 pcp001053pcs.wireless.meeting.ietf.org ->
135.222.64.0
You are absolutely right, and that's why we should continue this
discussion! I'm somewhat bored that I mostly only get to make trips
to the US. Most cities look pretty much the same, etc. I'd rather
have meetings in a changing continent principle, like I've never
been Africa or Asia or Southern Am
Rodney,
I'm on the 19th floor of the hilton and get < 5% packet loss from inside
my room. Its the first time I've had wireless access in my hotel room. I
don't know why I'm blessed with it, but is sure is nice.
-rick
On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Rodney Thayer wrote:
> how far does the 802.11 signal r
Maui, Hawaii is always nice and even lets the Far East get there fairly
easily. It is one of the primary reasons the IEEE does Maui ever years or
so to allow far east access instead of incurring the cost of Japan.
/jsb
-Original Message-
From: Christopher Ambler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED
At 11.14 -0500 01-03-20, John Day wrote:
>Even with Spring in MN, this is probably still a good idea. Or New
>Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
Centrally of what?
Patrik -- Stockholm
Lloyd Wood wrote:
> Don't call it that. It's officially the area known as 'sub-polar'.
> Lots of drafts if you leave the door open just a fraction too - they
> get everywhere.
Certainly observed to be a feature of MPLS.
(122 of them in the current draft repository...)
Leslie.
--
-
>sorry, but this is a US centric comment. IETF is international, so
>centrally located is an interesting question: center of the earth
>(probably enough hot...;-))).
I'm not so sure. From what I hear from the EU and Pacific Rim
countries, the Internet is a US plot intended at further imposing
From: "Grenville Armitage" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Or for equally painful travel for almost everyone, yet
> still well IP connected, can't beat Australia :)
Please, no, not again. The ICANN meeting in Melbourne was
more than enough.
I second the Las Vegas idea :-)
Christopher
There's a yagi on the third floor pointing at the english pub next to the
coffee house...
On the 16th floor I actually get reflections off the building across the
street from the same yagi... enough to see traffic but not enough to be
real usable.
joelja
On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Rodney Thayer wrote
> "Phil" == Phil Karn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Phil> Having to stay at the Marquette hotel 3+ blocks away because,
Phil> living on the west coast, I'm at least 50 milli-light-seconds
I'm one of the lucky...
One thing that people might consider is going more than one to a room.
At 10:10 AM -0500 3/20/01, Phil Karn wrote:
>The stockbroker's electronic sign showing the Dow trying to break
>10,000.
What's really ironic in your mentioning this (in a deju vu thread) is that
the Dow first hit and closed above 10,000 when we were here in 1999. I
remember watching for it on (p
>Even with Spring in MN, this is probably still a good idea. Or New
>Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
How about San Antonio? We're a pretty serious convention city, and
I'd actually be able to attend a meeting for once. Plus, we have no
winter to speak of (although summer
how far does the 802.11 signal reach? It doesn't go to the upper floors,
but it goes a block down the street to Caribou Coffee.
John Day wrote:
[..]
> Or New
> Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
Or for equally painful travel for almost everyone, yet
still well IP connected, can't beat Australia :)
cheers,
gja
-Original Message-
From: John Stracke [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>>(The difference, of course, is that there's no Hearing Aid VII, with a
wireless
>>connection to let you listen to Web pages or something...yet. The flight
>.attendants can't keep up with the tech; and better for them to
I hope the following lines can help to clarify the point:
Layer-2 switching is hardware based,wich means it uses the MAC address from the
host´s NIC cards to filter the network. Switches use Application-Specific
intergrated Circuits( ASIC´s) to build and maintain filter tables instead of
that r
Phil Karn writes:
> The countless eateries in said skyway that (even when the skyway is
> open) always seem to be closed whenever you're looking for food.
I think the best place to eat in Mpls is at Kypros Restaurant, 14th
and Nicollet...right by the convention center. It is Greek/Cypriot
fo
Dave Crocker wrote:
> On the way here, the flight attendant insisted that I turn off my Palm Pilot.
>
> Do they make people turn off hearing aids?
And, if they do, how do they tell them it's OK to turn them back on? :-)
(The difference, of course, is that there's no Hearing Aid VII, with a wire
Can we please agree that there is no perfect place to hold the IETF and
stop this discussion?
Henk
On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Marc Blanchet wrote:
> At/À 11:14 2001-03-20 -0500, John Day you wrote/vous écriviez:
>
>
> >>The electronic outdoor temperature sign in the skyway reading
> >>"39". The u
At/À 11:14 2001-03-20 -0500, John Day you wrote/vous écriviez:
>>The electronic outdoor temperature sign in the skyway reading
>>"39". The units aren't mentioned. Kelvins?
>
>Wow!!! It must be Spring in Minneapolis. I hadn't realized it would be so
>warm. Nice that it worked out that way.
>
>
> > Is the file (which is indicated with Name, Site parameters) present in the
> > mail ? Who executed ftp command, is man who send the mail or man who received it
> > ?
> It is a set of parameters created by the *sender* of the mail, that tell the
> *recipient* "here - run FTP like *THIS* t
..and an example of the tension between the "necessity of getting it out in
the market" and "getting it 'fully baked'".
Bluetooth Devices Unable to Communicate with Each Other:
Solution Unlikely to Appear Within 2001
http://www.nikkeibp.asiabiztech.com/wcs/frm/leaf?CID=onair/asabt/fw/125958
J
> Even with Spring in MN, this is probably still a good idea. Or New
> Orleans, at least it is warm and centrally located.
Central to population is probably somewhere in Asia. Do I need to
write an informational RFC documenting how the USA is not the
centre of the universe, let alone the Intern
>
>
>The electronic outdoor temperature sign in the skyway reading
>"39". The units aren't mentioned. Kelvins?
Wow!!! It must be Spring in Minneapolis. I hadn't realized it would
be so warm. Nice that it worked out that way.
>
>The stockbroker's electronic sign showing the Dow trying to break
On Tue, 20 Mar 2001 15:58:48 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Is the file (which is indicated with Name, Site parameters) present in the
> mail ? Who executed ftp command, is man who send the mail or man who received it
> ?
It is a set of parameters created by the *sender* of the mail, that
Sir,
I am working on a new prg to analyze mails that were "encoded" in Mime format
and have two questions about this one.
Well ... the first :
In the case of Message Media Type, External-Body Subtype I don't understand very
well ftp, tftp and anon-ftp access types.
Is the file (which i
Well, here I am at the Minneapolis IETF. And I'm overwhelmed by a sense
of deja vu.
Having to stay at the Marquette hotel 3+ blocks away because, living
on the west coast, I'm at least 50 milli-light-seconds farther away
than most of the people contending for the token number of on-site
hotel roo
I feared it was some sort of omen on Sunday evening when I arrived at the
Minneapolis airport and found one of the departure gate monitors
superimposed with a Windows error pop-up saying "Windows has detected an IP
addressing conflict". It didn't seem clear who'd be in a position to click
"OK"...
Fred Baker wrote:
> There has been some concern over the scope of the IETF sub-IP effort. This
> is an attempt to help clarify the view of the IESG on a number of issues.
>
Suggestion:
I believe that this (type of) message should be copied to the
ietf-announce list.
regards,
--
Rahmat M
hi everyone,
i am a beginner for this ietf. i am now interested in router hardware design, but
i need help.
For better performance, i have to use ASICs in the router as more as possible.
How can i design a router which will be both best performance and scalable for the
future?? is the
help
_
ÍøÉ϶©»¨È«¹úËÍ http://shopping.263.net/category12.htm
ÊýÂë²úÆ·£¬ÜöÝÍÕ¹Âô http://shopping.263.net/category21.htm
Dear Mr. Yao,
So many replies, I am reading them.
Some idea now, but still not very clear. I want the most distinctive ones.
Concluded from these mail, one most attractive is the router decrease TTL,
while switch not. And some are talking about progagation of the broadcast.
I need further thi
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