Hey!
New message, please read <http://arpitshah.co.in/stop.php?7s63>
Eugen Leitl
On Wed, Mar 12, 2014 at 04:16:13PM +, Warren Bailey wrote:
I heard cheese works really well for catching crackers.
That's racist.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/12/bgp-hijacking-belarus-iceland/
Someone’s Been Siphoning Data Through a Huge Security Hole in the Internet
BY KIM ZETTER12.05.136:30 AM
Hijacked traffic went all the way to Iceland, where it may have been copied
before being released to its intended
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2013/112113-sc13-gpus-would-make-terrific-276246.html
Super Computer 13: GPUs would make terrific network monitors
An off-the-shelf Nvidia GPU is able to easily capture all the traffic of a
10Gbps network, Fermilab research finds
By Joab Jackson, IDG News
archives are searchable on Google. Violations of
list guidelines will get you moderated:
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe,
change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at
compa...@stanford.edu.
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen
___
cryptography mailing list
cryptogra...@randombit.net
http://lists.randombit.net/mailman/listinfo/cryptography
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
/cryptography
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://ativel.com http://postbiota.org
AC894EC5: 38A5 5F46 A4FF 59B8 336B 47EE F46E 3489 AC89 4EC5
-END PGP SIGNATURE-
___
The cryptography mailing list
cryptogra...@metzdowd.com
http://www.metzdowd.com/mailman/listinfo/cryptography
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/05/government-betrayed-internet-nsa-spying
The US government has betrayed the Internet. We need to take it back
The NSA has undermined a fundamental social contract. We engineers built the
Internet – and now we have to fix it
Bruce Schneier
On Fri, Sep 06, 2013 at 12:03:56PM -0700, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 09/06/2013 11:19 AM, Nicolai wrote:
That's true -- it is far easier to subvert email than most other
services, and in the case of email we probably need a wholly new
protocol.
Uh, a first step might be to just turn on
On Fri, Sep 06, 2013 at 01:04:48PM -0700, Michael Thomas wrote:
I'd say we already have those things too in the form of PGP/SMIME.
Who knows what the NSA can break, but it's just not right to say that
we need new protocols. The means has been there for many years to
secure email (fsvo
moderator at
compa...@stanford.edu.
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://ativel.com http://postbiota.org
AC894EC5: 38A5 5F46 A4FF 59B8 336B 47EE
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/09/nsa-router-hacking/
NSA Laughs at PCs, Prefers Hacking Routers and Switches
BY KIM ZETTER09.04.136:30 AM
Photo: Santiago Cabezas/Flickr
The NSA runs a massive, full-time hacking operation targeting foreign
systems, the latest leaks from Edward Snowden
On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 12:30:24PM -0400, Scott Howard wrote:
How about this - the size of the Internet is just short of 3 billion.
That's the number of people that have access to it. To me, that's a far
more telling number than anything around IP address or Exabytes of data.
Sure enough --
/07/13 12:37 PM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
- Forwarded message from Saku Ytti s...@ytti.fi -
Date: Tue, 2 Jul 2013 21:35:58 +0300
From: Saku Ytti s...@ytti.fi
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Google's QUIC
User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)
On (2013-06-29 23:36 +0100), Tony Finch wrote
(This may be Wacky Friday, but this one is not tongue in cheek -- the name
Keith Lofstrom should ring a bell).
http://server-sky.com/
Server Sky - internet and computation in orbit
It is easier to move terabits than kilograms or megawatts. Space solar power
will solve the energy crisis. Sooner
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 07:51:22PM -0400, Scott Helms wrote:
Really? In a completely controlled network then yes, but not in a
production system. There is far too much random noise and actual latency
for that to be feasible.
The coding used for the stegano side channel can be made quite
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 08:34:49PM -0400, Scott Helms wrote:
Is it possible? Yes, but it's not feasible because the data rate would be
too low. That's what I'm trying to get across. There are lots things that
can be done but many of those are not useful.
I could encode communications in
On Thu, Jun 13, 2013 at 10:34:28AM -0600, Phil Fagan wrote:
Yeah, I can't imagine there is any real magic there...mystical protocol not
seen over transport.
Compromised NICs can leak info through side channels (timing) but
it's too low bandwidth. For end user devices with backdoors
(remote
On Wed, Jun 12, 2013 at 06:35:35PM -0700, Jonathan Lassoff wrote:
In the PRISM context, I highly doubt their using Splunk for any kind
of analysis beyond systems and network management. It's not good at
indexing non-texty-things.
What if you need to search for events that were geographically
On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 11:10:57AM +0300, Kauto Huopio wrote:
I would add opportunistic STARTTLS to all SMTP processing devices.
What we actually need is working opportunistic encryption
in IPv6, something like
http://www.inrialpes.fr/planete/people/chneuman/OE.html
On Thu, Jun 06, 2013 at 08:07:57PM -0400, Alex Rubenstein wrote:
Has fingers directly in servers of top Internet content companies,
dates to 2007. Happily, none of the companies listed are transport
networks:
I've always just assumed that if it's in electronic form, someone else is
On Fri, Jun 07, 2013 at 12:25:35AM -0500, jamie rishaw wrote:
tinfoilhat
Just wait until we find out dark and lit private fiber is getting vampired.
/tinfoilhat
Approaches like http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2006/04/70619
obviously don't scale to small time operators. But if you
Fraunhofer:
http://www.iaf.fraunhofer.de/de/news-medien/pressemitteilungen/presse-2013-05-16.html
Google Translate:
New world record in data transmission by radio
Press Release 16/05/2013
With a Langstreckendemonstrator between two skyscrapers in Karlsruhe, a
distance of over a kilometer
On Tue, Apr 23, 2013 at 06:10:30PM -0400, Andrew Latham wrote:
tl;dr: ARIN predicted to run out of IP space to allocate in August this
year.
Are you ready?
I have sadly witnessed a growing number of businesses with /24s moving
to colocation/aws networks and not giving up their unused
http://www.gizmag.com/cudos-fiber-optic-network-capacity/26969/
Closing the gap to improve the capacity of existing fiber optic networks
By Darren Quick
April 7, 2013
Researchers claim to have increased the data capacity of optical networks to
the point that all of the world’s internet
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23309-information-superhighway-approaches-light-speed.html
Information superhighway approaches light speed
18:00 24 March 2013 by Jacob Aron Nothing moves faster than light in a
vacuum, but large volumes of data can now travel at 99.7 per cent of this
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-21442348
Fast fibre: A community shows the way
COMMENTS (198)
Lancashire leads way on fast fibre connection
How fast is your home broadband? Seventy to 80 Mbps if you're one of the few
with the very fastest fibre broadband services? Perhaps 10Mbps if
On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 04:43:56PM -0800, Leo Bicknell wrote:
The only place PON made any sense to me was extreme rural areas.
If you could go 20km to a splitter and then hit 32 homes ~1km away
(52km fiber pair length total), that was a win. If the homes are
2km from the CO, 32 pair (64km
On Thu, Dec 20, 2012 at 01:13:15PM -0800, George Herbert wrote:
I don't know that the discussion is a NANOG-centric one from here on
in, but it's good to have raised the idea.
Something optical, like a 10 GBit/s SR version of TOSLINK
would be nice.
On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 11:36:08AM -0500, Christopher Morrow wrote:
Seconded. I was a hold-out for a long time on personal stuff - I trust me,
I'm not paying someone else to trust me - but StartSSL makes a lot of the
pain go away with minimal effort.
because paying for random
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/12/12/05/0115214/itu-approves-deep-packet-inspection
ITU Approves Deep Packet Inspection
Posted by Soulskill on Tuesday December 04, @08:19PM
from the inspect-my-encryption-all-you'd-like dept.
dsinc sends this quote from Techdirt about the International
, or change password at:
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http
-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A
. - Sir William Clayton
--
~Em
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
2012 19:22, Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org wrote:
- Forwarded message from Emily Ozols win...@team-metro.net -
From: Emily Ozols win...@team-metro.net
Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2012 01:14:08 +1100
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: William was raided for running a Tor exit node. Please help
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/28/technology/dark-warnings-about-future-of-internet-access.html?pagewanted=print
November 27, 2012
Integrity of Internet Is Crux of Global Conference
By ERIC PFANNER
PARIS — A commercial and ideological clash is set for next week, when
representatives of more
(GPSDO for local data center as stratum 1)
http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2012/11/google-spanner-time/all/
Exclusive: Inside Google Spanner, the Largest Single Database on Earth
By Cade Metz 11.26.12 6:30 AM
Each morning, when Andrew Fikes sat down at his desk inside Google
headquarters
On Sun, Nov 25, 2012 at 02:19:48PM -0800, John Adams wrote:
Your proposal doesn't even give people a way to encrypt their location
data; By moving geodata to a portion of the protocol which is not covered
It's not possible to hide location. Anonymity and efficient transport
don't mix. This
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 06:25:47AM -0800, Damian Menscher wrote:
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 5:53 AM, Dobbins, Roland rdobb...@arbor.net wrote:
Again, where're the compelling IPv6-only content/apps/services?
To answer your rhetorical question, http://www.kame.net/ has a dancing
kame. To my
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 12:56:52PM -0200, Carlos M. Martinez wrote:
Just for redundancy's sake: No, L3 is **not** the place for this kind of
information. L3 is supposed to be simple, easy to implement, fast to
I agree. You need to put it into L2, and the core usage would
be for wireless meshes.
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 05:46:33PM -0500, Harald Koch wrote:
This also naively assumes that wireless network topology correlates with
geographic location. Any radio engineer (or cell phone user) can explain
why that doesn't work.
Serval has about 200 m line of sight range. In general
LoS
and resolving
current network locations.
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 9:40 AM, Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org wrote:
- Forwarded message from George Herbert george.herb...@gmail.com -
From: George Herbert george.herb...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2012 14:51:57 -0800
To: William Herrin b
On Sun, Nov 25, 2012 at 12:08:15PM -0500, William Herrin wrote:
On Sun, Nov 25, 2012 at 7:30 AM, Ammar Salih ammar.sa...@auis.edu.iq wrote:
2- Layer 7 will not be detected by layer 3 devices (routers) .. so
location-based service on layer-3 will not be possible.
Geographic-based layer 3
http://anewdomain.net/2012/11/10/nasa-dtn-protocol-bp-protocol-vint-cerf-interplanetary-internet-how-it-works-what-legos-have-to-to-with-it/#
NASA DTN Protocol: Interplanetary Internet, How It Works, What LEGOS Have to
To With It
Author: Gina Smith
NASA is calling it the interplanetary
, long range links must be improvised
on a case by case basis.
Ben the Pyrate
On Nov 11, 2012 7:47 AM, Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org wrote:
- Forwarded message from chris tknch...@gmail.com -
From: chris tknch...@gmail.com
Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2012 07:07:27 -0500
To: jamie rishaw j
http://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2012/11/uk-scientists-claim-to-develop-2000-times-faster-broadband-via-fibre-optic.html
UK Scientists Claim to Develop 2000 Times Faster Broadband via Fibre Optic
Posted Tuesday, November 6th, 2012 (11:08 am) by Mark Jackson (Score 746)
A team of scientists
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2012/10/one-big-cluster-how-cloudflare-launched-10-data-centers-in-30-days/
One big cluster: How CloudFlare launched 10 data centers in 30 days
With high-performance computing, pixie-booting servers a half-world away.
by Sean Gallagher - Oct 19
On Wed, Oct 03, 2012 at 06:59:20PM -0400, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
Where's Noel Chiappa when you need him?
(2) The new protocol will use variable-length address for the Host
portion, such as used in the addresses of CLNP,
This also was considered during the IPv6 design phase,
On Thu, Oct 04, 2012 at 05:10:00PM +0900, Masataka Ohta wrote:
Above describes your setting for the next protocol. There is not
a lot of leeway in design space, I'm afraid.
Just keep using IPv4.
Masataka Ohta
PS
See
Sounds just like CGN.
- Forwarded message from Collin Anderson col...@averysmallbird.com -
From: Collin Anderson col...@averysmallbird.com
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2012 15:06:34 -0400
To: liberationt...@lists.stanford.edu
Subject: [liberationtech] The Hidden Internet of Iran: Private Address
that is clear, simple, and
wrong.--H.L. Mencken
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3
I'm trying to figure out whether CERNET http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CERNET
is part of the official Internet, or is behind the Great Firewall where
access to invididual networks on the public Internet must be explicitly
granted. Anyone in the know?
http://slashdot.org/topic/datacenter/terabit-ethernet-is-dead-for-now/
Terabit Ethernet is Dead, for Now
by Mark Hachman | September 26, 2012
A straw poll of the IEEE's high-speed Ethernet group finds that 400-Gbits/s
is almost unanimously preferred.
Sorry, everybody: terabit Ethernet looks
http://paritynews.com/network/item/325-department-of-work-and-pensions-uk-in-possession-of-169-million-unused-ipv4-addresses
Department of Work and Pensions UK in Possession of 16.9 Million Unused IPv4
Addresses
Written by Ravi Mandalia
Department of Work and Pensions UK in Possession of 16.9
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 03:32:47PM +0100, Nick Hilliard wrote:
On 18/09/2012 15:07, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Department of Work and Pensions UK in Possession of 16.9 Million Unused IPv4
Addresses
unused? sez who? Oh, it said it on the internet so it must be true.
Other than that, I'm
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 11:57:34AM -0500, Jason Baugher wrote:
Considering the rather extensive discussion on this list of using
quantum entanglement as a possible future communications medium that
would nearly eliminate latency, I don't see how my comment is moot or a
waste.
You need
On Mon, Sep 17, 2012 at 11:27:04AM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
What technology are you planning to deploy that will consume more than 2
addresses per square cm?
Easy. Think volume (as in: orbit), and think um^3 for a functional computers ;)
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2012/09/europe-officially-runs-out-of-ipv4-addresses/
Europe officially runs out of IPv4 addresses
RIPE NCC now allocating IPv4 address space from the last /8 netblock
by Iljitsch van Beijnum - Sep 14, 2012 3:20 pm UTC
Earlier today, the RIPE
On Tue, Aug 07, 2012 at 05:15:51PM -1000, Michael Painter wrote:
Eugen Leitl wrote:
http://www.wired.com/business/2012/08/ff_wallstreet_trading/all/
Some interesting, network-relevant content there (but for the
neutrino and drone rubbish).
'Rubbish' might be a pretty strong word when you're
http://www.wired.com/business/2012/08/ff_wallstreet_trading/all/
Some interesting, network-relevant content there (but for the
neutrino and drone rubbish).
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 06:53:48PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
This ignores the many many studies of the idea of geo-based
addressing which have proven its unfeasibility as well as the
I disagree that the studies have looked at the problem
space from the right angle.
fact that not everyone
On Sun, Aug 05, 2012 at 04:00:18PM -, John Levine wrote:
Do you see problems with this scheme? There's considerable
interest and momentum in end user owned routing infrastructure,
including wireless ad hoc meshes across urban areas.
I've seen remarkably little overlap between the people
On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 11:52:53AM -1000, William Herrin wrote:
On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 11:26 AM, Frank Bulk frnk...@iname.com wrote:
A good portable generator is more than $500, and if it's a wide-spread
outage there's not enough portable generators to go around, and if there
were, not
On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
You MIGHT have paid some other organization for the privilege of transferring
part or all of their registration rights to you.
But in no case did you pay for the addresses themselves unless you are silly
enough to think that a
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 10:59:09AM -0500, Jimmy Hess wrote:
On 8/4/12, Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org wrote:
On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
a decent-resolution WGS84
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 10:31:02AM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
IPv6 missed a great chance of doing away with all the
central waterfall trickle-down space distribution.
There was no need to fix what wasn't broken.
Let's say I want to plunk down a zero-administration
node somewhere, as an
On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 03:48:47AM +1000, Skeeve Stevens wrote:
I think the effort to moderate this particular list would be far to much
effort.
Most mailing lists allow moderation of new list members by default.
Typically, the moderation is removed after the first non-spam post.
This causes
reminders. You may ask for a reminder here:
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
Should you need immediate assistance, please contact the list moderator.
Please don't forget to follow us on http://twitter.com/#!/Liberationtech
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen
On Wed, Jul 04, 2012 at 06:10:45PM -0400, William Herrin wrote:
IMO, leap seconds are a really bad idea. Let the vanishingly few
people who care about a precision match against the solar day keep
track of the deviation from clock time and let everybody else have a
*simple* clock year after
On Thu, Jul 05, 2012 at 10:26:22AM -0700, Roy wrote:
Remember OpenTime is only for people who want their system clocks to
ignore leap seconds. I don't include myself among the possible users of
OpenTime.
Obviously you need a machine time, which is monotonous, high-resolution
(you don't
On Tue, Jul 03, 2012 at 09:49:40PM +0200, Peter Lothberg wrote:
I leave the computer kernels out of this for a second..:-)
We have a timescale that runs at constant speed forward it's named
TAI, it is based on the definition on the atomic second.
Notice that in inertial frame dragging
- Forwarded message from Andrew Lewis and...@pdqvpn.com -
From: Andrew Lewis and...@pdqvpn.com
Date: Thu, 31 May 2012 14:29:05 -0400
To: Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org, liberationt...@lists.stanford.edu
Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Syria blackout?
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel
PM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
- Forwarded message from Rafael Cresci raf...@cresci.org
-
From: Rafael Cresci raf...@cresci.org Date: Thu, 31 May 2012
14:41:09 -0300 To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Syria blackout?
X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.1278)
Customers (from UAE) who have servers with us
yesterday. I am going to do some more
digging. Tor, and some specific types of VPNs still seem to be working
fine.
-Andrew
On 5/31/2012 2:26 PM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
- Forwarded message from Rafael Cresci raf...@cresci.org
-
From: Rafael Cresci raf...@cresci.org Date: Thu, 31 May 2012
14
http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2012/04/going-with-the-flow-google/all/1
Going With The Flow: Google’s Secret Switch To The Next Wave Of Networking
By Steven Levy April 17, 2012 | 11:45 am |
Categories: Data Centers, Networking
In early 1999, an associate computer science professor
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 11:22:20AM -0700, Henk Hesselink wrote:
Have you looked at the HP ProLiant MicroServer?
Notice it takes up to 8 GByte ECC memory and supports zfs
via napp-it/Illumos. A hacked BIOS was required to use
the 5th internal SATA port in AHCI mode, maybe that's
no longer
Claim: 1.4 GBit/s over up to 13 km, 24 GHZ, @3 kUSD/link price point.
http://www.ubnt.com/airfiber
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 01:18:04PM +0900, Masataka Ohta wrote:
As long as we keep using IPv4, we are mostly stopping at /24 and
must stop at /32.
But, see the subject. It's well above moore.
For high speed (fixed time) routed look up with 1M entries, SRAM is
cheap at /24 and is fine at
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 09:57:10PM +0900, Masataka Ohta wrote:
That's one reason why we should stay away from IPv6.
What prevents you from using
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v1/n6/full/ncomms1063.html
with IPv6?
Though I didn't paid $32 to read the full paper, it's like
a
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 10:25:46AM -0400, William Herrin wrote:
Geographic routing strategies have been all but proven to irredeemably
violate the recursive commercial payment relationships which create
the Internet's topology. In other words, they always end up stealing
bandwidth on links
or Unsubscribe: http://MarsHome.org/mailman/options/NSG-d
Hosted by CyberTeams.com and Mars Foundation(tm), http://MarsHome.org
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM
On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 10:33:12AM -0500, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Ridwan Sami rms2...@columbia.edu
There is no legitimate reason for a user to use BitTorrent (someone
will probably disagree with this).
Yeah, no.
You've clearly never tried to download a
In future photonic networks (which will do relativistic cut-through
directly in a photonic crossbar without converting photons to electrons
and back) the fiber is not just a transport channel but also a photonic
buffer (e.g. at 10 GBit/s Ethernet a short reach fiber already buffers
a standard
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 10:47:22AM -0800, Scott Weeks wrote:
In our industry, especially with all the tools we have today, it would seem
that telecommuting would be more accepted, but it's not and I don't
understand
why.
People are social primates, alphas like access to nonverbal cues for
On Fri, Dec 02, 2011 at 12:25:41PM +, Thorsten Dahm wrote:
Yes, I know, they can call you, or send an Email, but nothing beats the
good old Let's go for a coffee, I'd like to ask you a question.
Some people just put up a dedicated netbook with a permanent
video/audio link (can be a
# Filtered
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
this.
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 05:17:55PM -0700, George Herbert wrote:
Micron has some large-cap SLC drives in the chain for
September/October/ish timeframes.
Ramdisk with rsync or rdiffbackup to spinning storage will do just fine.
Or hybrid zfs pools.
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org
(or 8.2 for our production
systems).
I have tried the freebsd net mailinglist, but im hoping you lot can help me!
Cheers in advance
Will
- End forwarded message -
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
On Sat, Jun 11, 2011 at 02:34:10AM -0700, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
Though it's nice to have why would one *need* 100 Mbps at home? I
Residential broadband is asymmetric, so it's typically more like
6/100 MBit/s, though VDSL and FTTH are also making (slow) progress.
Even with that slow upstream
these people? Thanks!
Regards,
Eugen Leitl
http://searchtelecom.techtarget.com/news/2240035722/Backbone-operators-see-IPv6-connectivity-demand-up-but-little-traffic
Backbone operators see IPv6 connectivity demand up, but little traffic
Internet backbone and wholesale carriers are anecdotally reporting a rapid
rise in demand from their
Hi,
sorry for the noise, but my contact at Syngenta says
they have 147.0.0.0/8 168.0.0.0/8 and 172.0.0.0/8,
which is obviously bogus. They do have a 168.246.0.0/16
however.
Any tool to look the other two up quickly, without having to
iterate through the entire second octet? Thanks!
--
Eugen
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/_archives/2011/3/23/4778509.html
Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
by Milton Mueller on Wed 23 Mar 2011 10:30 PM EDT | Permanent Link |
ShareThis
Wake up call for our friends in the Regional Internet Registries. Nortel,
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 08:52:44AM -0500, Eric Gauthier wrote:
I wonder if Skynet upgraded to v6...
http://www.skynet.be/jack-nl/high-tech/dossier_belgacom-bereidt-zich-voor-ipv6?articleId=835562
.be afraid.
Eric :)
Authority.
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http://leitl.org
__
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
On Thu, Feb 03, 2011 at 08:17:11PM -0300, Fernando Gont wrote:
I'm mildly surprised if you think we're going to be done with *this*
mess in a few decades.
I fully agree. But planning/expecting to go through this mess *again* is
insane. -- I hope the lesson has been learned, and we won't
/membership/billing/procedure-enduser.html
(other than because they can, I mean).
Owen
And, even if you are an ISP, you only pay the larger of the two fees if you
have both v4 and v6. I'm not sure if that is permanent or not, though.
--
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a http
On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 01:33:05AM +, Nathan Eisenberg wrote:
Even if every RIR gets to 3 /12s in 50 years, that's still only 15/512ths
of the
initial /3 delegated to unicast space by IETF. There are 6+ more /3s
remaining
in the IETF pool.
That's good news - we need to make sure
1 - 100 of 113 matches
Mail list logo