AT&T Disaster Recovery Team is probably the best in the business. The resources
they can bring to the table are unmatched. This would have been 100x worse if
it hit a carrier neutral datacenter. They don’t have nearly the same resources
to restore something like this. They usually do a road show
The massive 911 failure in WA state a few years ago was ultimately caused
by a failure in CenturyLink/legacy qwest transport equipment, where the
PSAP register was physically located in Colorado and inaccessible from the
point of view of network equipment in WA.
On Tue, Dec 29, 2020, 1:19 PM Matt
>From a few days ago. Obviously centralizing lots of ss7/pstn stuff all in
one place has a long recovery time when it's physically damaged. Something
to think about for entities that own and operate traditional telco COs and
their plans for disaster recovery.
Nv1
Here is the latest update: 6:46
--- Original message ---
Subject: Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail
From: Matt Erculiani
To: Sean Donelan
Cc: nanog@nanog.org list
Date: Tuesday, 12/29/2020 15:19:00
This isn't the place where state governments are looking for feedback,
so surely this will fall on deaf
This isn't the place where state governments are looking for feedback, so
surely this will fall on deaf ears, but...
Who runs 911 services on top of a single carrier solution? I wouldn't run a
10 seat mom and pop outfit without at least a cellular backup on a
different carrier.
911 services are c
The FCC published its annual report on state 911 fees
https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-issues-annual-report-state-911-fees-1
The report finds that in 2019, states and territories collected more than
$3 billion in 911 fees, and more than $200 million of that funding was
diverted for uses other
> On Dec 25, 2020, at 09:45 , Bryan Fields wrote:
>
> On 12/25/20 4:52 AM, Mark Tinka wrote:
>> For the home, if you're looking at shipping 10Gbps-based CPE's for under
>> US$200, I can't think of anything other than the Tik:
>>
>> https://mikrotik.com/product/rb4011igs_rm
>
> That has
On Mon, Dec 28, 2020 at 4:26 PM Niels Bakker wrote:
> * mpet...@netflight.com (Matthew Petach) [Tue 29 Dec 2020, 01:08 CET]:
> >But as far as the physics goes, the conversion of biomatter into
> >petrochemicals in the ground is more "renewable" than the conversion
> >of hydrogen into helium in th
On Dec 29, 2020, at 11:53 AM, Michael Thomas wrote:
>
> On 12/29/20 8:42 AM, Aaron Wendel wrote:
>> Oh, we still get calls about speed issues. It's always wonderful when
>> someone puts their own 10 year old Linksys WRT54G and double NATs behind our
>> CPE then sends in a speed test wondering w
On 12/29/20 10:36 AM, Aaron Wendel wrote:
It does have wireless. That doesn't prevent people from trying to use
their old equipment in addition. ("My dad's uncle's cousin's former
roommate works in IT and told me I just needed to plug my old router
into your new router.")
Yes, but does y
It does have wireless. That doesn't prevent people from trying to use
their old equipment in addition. ("My dad's uncle's cousin's former
roommate works in IT and told me I just needed to plug my old router
into your new router.")
On 12/29/2020 10:53 AM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 12/29/20 8:
From: Ben Cannon
To: Darin Steffl
[...]
Again, it seems nice to be able to do this but most companies don't
have idle resources sitting around to give away things for free. We
have zero extra time to work for free.
We’re a tiny company and I already have a department dedicated to
givi
Hoping someone from Draftkings.com is on this list. If so, please message me
directly so I can get a subnet block cleared up.
Thanks
-Matt
On 12/29/20 9:00 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
People love throwing their own router behind whatever Internet
connection they have. It almost never fails to cause a problem.
Well *some* of us know what we're doing. And in my case, it's both
because it doesn't deal with buffer bloat, but more impor
People love throwing their own router behind whatever Internet connection they
have. It almost never fails to cause a problem.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
Midwest Internet Exchange
The Brothers WISP
- Original Message -
From: "Michael Thomas"
To: nano
On 12/29/20 8:42 AM, Aaron Wendel wrote:
Oh, we still get calls about speed issues. It's always wonderful when
someone puts their own 10 year old Linksys WRT54G and double NATs
behind our CPE then sends in a speed test wondering why they're only
getting 10Mbits on their Gbit line. We get tho
The majority of our customers are still on Brocade MLXs. We're in the
process of upgrading all our equipment to Arista switches to accommodate
the increased demand for 40G and 100G ports as well as implement 400G ports.
Aaron
On 12/29/2020 3:33 AM, Jonathon Exley wrote:
Hi Aaron,
Just out
Oh, we still get calls about speed issues. It's always wonderful when
someone puts their own 10 year old Linksys WRT54G and double NATs behind
our CPE then sends in a speed test wondering why they're only getting
10Mbits on their Gbit line. We get those ALL the time. :)
On 12/29/2020 1:28 AM,
> Again, it seems nice to be able to do this but most companies don't have idle
> resources sitting around to give away things for free. We have zero extra
> time to work for free.
We’re a tiny company and I already have a department dedicated to giving -
really we do have some often highly s
Oh they'll get plenty of support calls still, almost all about wifi issues.
They'll be connected to 2.4ghz on an old device, run a speedtest and only
get 30 mbps and complain they're not getting 950 mbps on their free
connection.
WiFi issues will always cause support calls no matter what isp. The
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