> On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 21:37:57 -0400, Joe Greco wrote:
> > Relatively speaking, at&t's Enterprise Paging (which appears to just be
> > enterprise SMS with a TAP/SNPP gateway) has been a lot more reliable. I
> > have no idea how reliable it'd be in a major telecom crisis, of course.
>
> I'd expec
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 21:21:56 -0400, Jim Richardson
wrote:
That's already a problem for getting alert pages. Any actual *pager*
companies left? They all seem to have gone to SMS systems.
SkyTel is the only one I remember. Sadly, their coverage is about that of
Cricket or Clearwire. (at leas
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 20:37:57 CDT, Joe Greco said:
> Aren't there still some satellite pager providers out there? :-)
Works fine till solar flare season. :)
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> On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 5:38 PM, Joe Greco wrote:
> > As wonderful as the new communications paradigms are, do we also
> > have a situation now developing where it might eventually become
> > very difficult or even impossible to ensure out-of-band lines of
> > communications remain available?
>
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 5:38 PM, Joe Greco wrote:
>
> As wonderful as the new communications paradigms are, do we also
> have a situation now developing where it might eventually become
> very difficult or even impossible to ensure out-of-band lines of
> communications remain available?
>
That's
We've been trying to get a DSL line to our cage at Equinix DC5 in
Ashburn, VA with no luck. It seems there is no DSL service in the
area; that's what we've been told anyway. Anyone know differently?
Alternately, any thoughts on a good provider for a T1?
Replies off-list, please.
Thanks!
--
Chri
> Those of us who lived through the Morris worm fragmenting the Arpa/Milnet in
> 1988 and things like major worm-induced outages remember what a hassle it was
> to *really* restart the net. Calling up your upstream on the phone asking if
> it
> was safe to turn up the link again, or looking for h
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 16:43:21 PDT, "andrew.wallace" said:
> A British computer expert has been entrusted with part of a digital key, to
> help
> restart the internet in the event of a major catastrophe.
You *do* realize this "news" is like two months old, right?
http://www.icann.org/en/announce
Great! So I assume he is an elder of the Internet?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRmxXp62O8g
On 7/27/10 4:43 PM, "andrew.wallace" wrote:
> A British computer expert has been entrusted with part of a digital key, to
> help
> restart the internet in the event of a major catastrophe.
>
>
>
A British computer expert has been entrusted with part of a digital key, to
help
restart the internet in the event of a major catastrophe.
Paul Kane talked to Eddie Mair on Radio 4's PM programme about what he might be
called upon to do in the event of an international online emergency.
ht
On Jul 27, 2010, at 12:05 PM, Akyol, Bora A wrote:
> Please see comments inline.
>
>
> On 7/22/10 10:13 PM, "Owen DeLong" wrote:
>
>> In all reality:
>>
>> 1. NAT has nothing to do with security. Stateful inspection provides
>>security, NAT just mangles addresses.
> Of course, t
Please see comments inline.
On 7/22/10 10:13 PM, "Owen DeLong" wrote:
> In all reality:
>
> 1. NAT has nothing to do with security. Stateful inspection provides
> security, NAT just mangles addresses.
Of course, the problem is that there are millions of customers that believe
that
On 2010-07-27 20:03, Jared Mauch wrote:
[..]
> I'm honestly interested in what the US based DSL (incumbent) providers
> are doing for IPv6 (eg: att/bls/sbc/uverse, qwest, vz dsl).
> Most of the "ethernet" (including PON) equipment is more likely
> to do IPv6 correctly, but I'm not sure that the PPP
On Jul 27, 2010, at 1:42 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote:
> On 7/27/10 10:32 AM, Schiller, Heather A (HeatherSkanks) wrote:
>>
>>
>> We do not charge v4 customers anything to turn up an IPv6 tunnel. If
>> you hear otherwise, please feel free to drop me a line. Native v6 is
>> available in atleast 31
On 7/27/10 10:32 AM, Schiller, Heather A (HeatherSkanks) wrote:
>
>
> We do not charge v4 customers anything to turn up an IPv6 tunnel. If
> you hear otherwise, please feel free to drop me a line. Native v6 is
> available in atleast 31 markets, on over 210 edge devices in 701. There
> is a g
We do not charge v4 customers anything to turn up an IPv6 tunnel. If
you hear otherwise, please feel free to drop me a line. Native v6 is
available in atleast 31 markets, on over 210 edge devices in 701. There
is a good chance that native v6 is available for most, or close enough
to rehome t
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