On Fri, 13 Oct 2017, Jared Mauch wrote:
I’m quite surprised they didn’t send out a local emergency alert. I’ve
gotten these for Tornadoes and amber alerts. Wildfires would be
comparable to a Tornado IMO.
Like most news stories, its a little more complicated.
Napa, Sonoma sent an evacuation al
I know with Alexa products they just ask you for a postal code for weather
updates. Probably covers 99 percent of cases.
On Oct 13, 2017 4:26 PM, "Andreas Ott" wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 13, 2017 at 04:59:17PM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
> > Has anyone heard if the smart speaker companies (Amazon Echo
On Fri, Oct 13, 2017 at 04:59:17PM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
> Has anyone heard if the smart speaker companies (Amazon Echo, Google Home)
> plan to include emergency alert capability? An estimate 10% of households
> own a smart speaker, and Gartner (well-known for its forecasting
> accuracy) p
Note: Google Maps shows various alerts applicable to the region you are
looking at in maps.
So, assuming its Speaker is geolocated, Google would know if an alert is
applicable to its location and be able to send it to the unit.
On Oct 13, 2017, at 11:26 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> a moment of silence on this 16th anniversary of her tragic death
One of the smartest geeks I have known, and she always lit up the room she was
in with her smile and attitude.
-b
I’m quite surprised they didn’t send out a local emergency alert. I’ve gotten
these for Tornadoes and amber alerts. Wildfires would be comparable to a
Tornado IMO.
Jared Mauch
> On Oct 13, 2017, at 6:33 PM, Aaron C. de Bruyn via NANOG
> wrote:
>
> I messaged the Nest guys a few weeks ago ab
I messaged the Nest guys a few weeks ago about that very issue. I
think it would be somewhat simple for them to put an RF module in
their Protect devices (smoke alarms) and a speaker to alert about the
issue. Since they are wifi-enabled, they could probably also arrange
a clearer audio feed over
On 2017-10-13 17:20, Clinton Work wrote:
>
> My understanding is that nobody has a 2nd diverse fiber route north of
> the great lakes from Winnipeg to Toronto. Every provider makes use of
> a fiber route south of the great lakes thru the US in order to provide
> diversity.
But if provider 1 has
My understanding is that nobody has a 2nd diverse fiber route north of
the great lakes from Winnipeg to Toronto. Every provider makes use of
a fiber route south of the great lakes thru the US in order to provide
diversity.
The following map shows that the CN rail and CP Rail lines across ove
Has anyone tried calling them?
Kind regards,
Job
On Fri, 13 Oct 2017 at 23:03, Ken Chase wrote:
> It is happening AGAIN.
>
> And of course it started on a friday aft 15 min before quittin' time in
> EDT:
>
> Last time it was 186.177.184.0/23 0 174 262206 262206 262197 262197
>
> *> 186.176.
It is happening AGAIN.
And of course it started on a friday aft 15 min before quittin' time in EDT:
Last time it was 186.177.184.0/23 0 174 262206 262206 262197 262197
*> 186.176.186.0/23 38.x.x.x 45050 0 174 262206 262206
262197 262197 262197 262197 262197 262197 262197
Has anyone heard if the smart speaker companies (Amazon Echo, Google Home)
plan to include emergency alert capability? An estimate 10% of households
own a smart speaker, and Gartner (well-known for its forecasting
accuracy) predicts 75% of US households will have a smart speaker by 2020.
Al
On 10/13/2017 2:42 PM, Naslund, Steve wrote:
Funny how NANOG posts seem to precede actual attention from vendors isn't it.
Squeaky wheel, grease. Same reason why it takes me berating companies
on Twitter publicly before things actually get done.
*Stares directly at Verizon for a previous i
Funny how NANOG posts seem to precede actual attention from vendors isn't it.
Steven Naslund
Chicago IL
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of David Hubbard
Sent: Friday, October 13, 2017 3:38 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Temp at Level 3 data c
Thanks for all the opinions and experiences with this on this on and off list.
The facility in question is not one that has a cold/hot row or containment
concept so ambient temp plays a greater role than in other facilities. Some
folks from Level 3 reached out and are working to help me with t
On 2017-10-13 14:10, Roy wrote:
The IBM 308x and 309x series mainframes were water cooled.
The bank I worked for had just installed one. A big change were noise
levels, the thing was really quiet. But servicing now required a plumber
too. (there was a separate cabinet for the water pumps as
Hi David,
80F seems ~reasonable to me. What is the inlet temp, the temperature air is
going in at? What kind of gear are operating? Routers and switches?
Servers? Disk? Is the cabinet top fan working? Most modern equipment should
be able to handle those temps. As another poster noted, are these tr
On 2017-10-13 14:10, Roy wrote:
>
>
> The IBM 308x and 309x series mainframes were water cooled.
The bank I worked for had just installed one. A big change were noise
levels, the thing was really quiet. But servicing now required a plumber
too. (there was a separate cabinet for the water pumps
On a somewhat related note, if anyone has KMZs of the railway-based ROWs
from Calgary-Vancouver (Fraser Valley area) and is able to share them,
please contact me off list. I'm hoping to avoid re-inventing the wheel and
time/labor of manually creating vector lines along the known railway
corridors,
We have noticed there's been an increase in latency from Hong Kong to SHANGHAI.
Usually running about 70-80ms, up over 300ms now. Per a traceroute I can see
NTT is jumping over to LA before going over to Sha(China Unicom) via Level 3.
Anyone else on this thread seen this behavior and or have any
> > a moment of silence on this 16th anniversary of her tragic death
>
> and another for an idiot who can not use ical. sorry.
>
Friday the 13th.
Answer from Allstream (aka Zayo)
A combination: Tor-Ott-Mtl N route is CP & S route is CN. From Tor-Wpg
its mostly CN on the N route and the S goes thru various US routes.
So Allstream would get you out west via the more northern CN line from
Toronto.
So you would need to find someone who has
> a moment of silence on this 16th anniversary of her tragic death
and another for an idiot who can not use ical. sorry.
a moment of silence on this 16th anniversary of her tragic death
The IBM 308x and 309x series mainframes were water cooled. They did
have Thermal Conduction Modules which had a helium-filled metal cap,
which contains one piston per chip; the piston presses against the back
of each chip to provide a heat conduction path from the chip to the
cap. The cap
Once upon a time, b...@theworld.com said:
> Also, the IBM 3090 at least, was cooled via helium-filled pipes kind
> of like today's liquid cooled systems. It was full of plumbing. If you
> opened it up some chips were right on copper junction boxes (maybe
> they were just sensors but it looked cool
On October 12, 2017 at 19:56 jfmezei_na...@vaxination.ca (Jean-Francois Mezei)
wrote:
> back in the arly 1990s, Tandem had a computer called "Cyclone". (these
> were mission critical, fault tolerant machines).
ok old fart stories...tho maybe current.
IBM's big mainframes would repeat calculat
Hello,
Does anyone have a technical contact in Rogers (AS 812) they could refer me
to to fix up some issues?
Cheers
/Ruairi
In a message written on Thu, Oct 12, 2017 at 05:01:13AM +, James Breeden
wrote:
> I have a client interested in picking up a new AS number but they really want
> it to be 3 or 4 digits in length.
As other's have said, that's difficult.
What about going the other way? Ask for 2^32-1. "We h
Check: https://web.archive.org/web/20030619092539/http://bgp.
potaroo.net:80/cgi-bin/as-report?as=AS2906&view=(null)
Appears in 2003 it was:
OrgName:NCR Corporation
-c
On Thu, Oct 12, 2017 at 10:28 PM, Brett Watson
wrote:
>
> > On Oct 12, 2017, at 15:53, Richard Hicks
> wrote:
> >
> > An
Hi,
in the case I mentioned, the datacenter provider (=Level3) removed hand
geometry scanners from its facility and switched all users to card +
pin. Also the provider is going to run this policy Germany- or even
Europe-wide, as being told by Level3 account rep.
The mentioned facility does n
I appreciate your tenacity!
SSI = Streaming Services Inc., always wholly owned by Netflix.
We had three ASNs at one point. We needed a fourth to do a migration and the
ASN gods smiled down on us and gave us 2906 out of a newly released pool of
unallocated ASNs, back in 2011.
That ASN birthed o
Hi nanog,
Choopa/reliablesite is announcing our IP space, and despite repeated
requests from us, they are refusing to withdraw the announcements.
Can someone with clue from this contact me? Does anyone know someone at
Choopa neteng?
Their abuse desk has so far proved useless.
> On Oct 12, 2017, at 1:01 AM, James Breeden wrote:
>
> Hello NANOG...
>
> I have a client interested in picking up a new AS number but they really want
> it to be 3 or 4 digits in length.
>
> Is there a process to request this from ARIN, or doss anyone know of unused
> ASns fitting this th
Odd,
1. captcha(?)
In my millennia of experience I never saw a captcha used as a mean
for DC access control. Just as a programmatic way to reduce brute force
for some website functions.
On my network janitor keychain I have (in order of hackability from
easiest to hardest)
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