Matthew Moyle-Croft wrote:
The only ADSL one listed "Billion 7402R2" doesn't _actually_ do IPv6
yet, but it might if they release software for it!
Which would be nice as we sell them to customers and would love to
magically turn on IPv6 to them one day.
Hi MMC,
You might want to contribute
William Allen Simpson wrote:
Marshall Eubanks wrote:
I used to count the proportion of Mac laptops in the room (or, at
least, my row) to pass the time when I was bored.
I remember at the 1999 Washington IETF I saw exactly one, and I
could hear people whisper about it around me.
I used
On 14/10/2005, at 3:35 AM, Peter Lothberg wrote:
Here's a challange, have NTP server attached directly to
a good clock and a IPv6 network.
Is there anyone who can talk to it using IPv6 on the Nanog list?
(Time20.Stupi.SE, 2001:0440:1880:1000::0020)
yoyo$ ntpdate -q 2001:0440:1880:1000::002
Jerry Pasker wrote:
Until there's deep shame, or real financial incentive to not being
listed as a member of the dirty 30, nothing is going to happen in terms
of aggregation.
I sometimes wonder if this list is seen as some sort of hit parade of
potential peers and if that is the case then perhap
Leo Bicknell wrote:
I don't think Reuters was impressed:
From http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040525/tc_nm/tech_cisco_router_dc_2
] Routers, which look like pizza boxes piled atop each other, are one of
] the most boring pieces of equipment to look at, but probably the most
] crucial
Why do so many supposedly clueful people have their vacation message
system respond to mailing list email?
Now I'll get to see who also doesn't keep a list of addresses that have
already been sent the out of office message :-)
Mark.
What are people's views on the various co-location options in LA? Unlike
most REN's we provide a commodity Internet service as well as an R&E
service and are currently looking to build a couple of purely commodity
Internet POPs on the west coast (so they don't need connectivity to
Abilene but t
Hank Nussbacher wrote:
The whois server at the .BR registry (also the NIR for Brazil) doesn't
provide country information because it's implicit as it only provide
information for Brazil.
Implicit is fine for humans but for automated scripts, couldn't it be
made to have country=BR for all your i
The Australian regulator is also examining Internet Interconnection.
See http://www.accc.gov.au/telco/int_intercon_280403.doc>.
Mark.
At 10:45 AM +1000 20/8/02, Philip Smith wrote:
>
>Note that the delegation records for some of the ASNs assigned
>before APNIC and the RIPE NCC existed have been moved to the latter
>databases. Telstra is but one example. (I agree it might be more
>helpful if a query on whois.arin.net displaye
At 1:35 PM -0700 20/5/02, Randy Bush wrote:
> > An IRR not mirrored by the RADB (to act as a member) and not
>> mirroring every RR mirrored by the RADB (to hijack the top level)
>> seems pointless.
>
>auto-config tools, such as ratoolset, do not use the mirrored data,
>only the origin data. o
At 1:48 PM -0500 27/3/02, Przemyslaw Karwasiecki wrote:
>Why it is required by some providers to generate explicit,
>exact route objects, in order to allow routes through
>their filters?
>
I worked on the assumption that the customer would think about what
they were doing if they had to register
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