Re: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
I'd love to see 100/100, but I don't see it happening anytime soon ... especially for $50. I pay $150/month for 300/8 at home and that's the best upload I can get where I live ... in a major city. On Thu, May 27, 2021 at 8:41 PM Eric Dugas via NANOG wrote: > I'm not in the US but in Canada it's been 50/10 since 2016 and we're just > "almost" there yet. IMO the target should have been more like 100/30 or > even 50 of upload. > > 100/100 might be a bit short sighted considering it'll take years to > accomplish the necessary last-mile/distribution upgrades in rural areas. > > On Thu, May 27, 2021 at 8:31 PM Sean Donelan wrote: > >> >> What should be the new minimum speed for "broadband" in the U.S.? >> >> >> This is the list of past minimum broadband speed definitions by year >> >> year speed >> >> 1999 200 kbps in both directions (this was chosen as faster than >> dialup/ISDN speeds) >> >> 2000 200 kbps in at least one direction (changed because too many >> service >> providers had 128 kbps upload) >> >> 2010 4 mbps down / 1 mbps up >> >> 2015 25 Mbps down / 3 Mbps up (wired) >> 5 Mbps down / 1 Mbps up (wireless) >> >> 2021 ??? / ??? (some Senators propose 100/100 mbps) >> >> Not only in major cities, but also rural areas >> >> Note, the official broadband definition only means service providers >> can't >> advertise it as "broadband" or qualify for subsidies; not that they must >> deliver better service. >> >>
Re: Nashville
During their press conference, the Nashville Metro PD put the RV at 166 2nd Ave N, which is across the street from the 185 2nd Ave N location. It's halfway up the block from 2nd & Commerce. On Fri, Dec 25, 2020 at 2:36 PM Andy Ringsmuth wrote: > Definitely was not at that intersection. > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nygTJeu9fU > > That’s security camera footage from about 154 2nd Ave. The AT building > is across the street to the right. > > Commerce Street is a block to the left. > > > Andy Ringsmuth > 5609 Harding Drive > Lincoln, NE 68521-5831 > (402) 304-0083 > a...@andyring.com > > “Better even die free, than to live slaves.” - Frederick Douglas, 1863 > > > On Dec 25, 2020, at 1:26 PM, cosmo wrote: > > > > The internet is buzzing with speculation about this. According to CNN > the RV was at 2nd and Commerce st, which puts it 1-block away from the ATT > building. If it were the target, I'd imagine they would have parked it > closer. > > > > > https://www.google.com/maps/search/2nd+and+congress+nashville/@36.1631367,-86.776487,18.42z > > > > On Fri, Dec 25, 2020 at 11:20 AM Andy Ringsmuth > wrote: > > Certainly thankful no serious injuries or fatalities in this > clusterblank. > > > > It seems the AT building at 185 2nd Ave N may have been a target, > which would explain the timing (holiday morning when no one is out, as > opposed to a holiday evening when there would be mass casualties). A little > curious what that building has. Is it just a big co-lo place? Regional > CLEC/ILEC? > > > > No earth-shattering revelations here. Admittedly just bored on a slow > Christmas Day when my wife is at work (nurse) and kid is playing with a new > tablet and I’m just watching the news trying to understand/figure out a > little what and why. > > > > > > Andy Ringsmuth > > 5609 Harding Drive > > Lincoln, NE 68521-5831 > > (402) 304-0083 > > a...@andyring.com > > > > “Better even die free, than to live slaves.” - Frederick Douglas, 1863 > > > >
Re: IPv4 Mismanagement
A service I disconnected more than 2 years ago still has a /24 of their space SWIPED to me. Their NOC closed the ticket I opened to remove. Unknown if it's actually in use for another customer. I also had a conversation last week with another ISP (we were renegotiating our contract) about this. The order form they sent me had multiple /28's we had "given back" years ago still listed. Turns out they're still being routed to us as well. I would bet it happens all over the place. -Matt On Fri, Oct 2, 2020 at 2:00 PM Matt Hoppes < mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> wrote: > I'm sitting here in the office on a Friday performing some IP > maintenance and I see that one of our upstreams is still filtering an IP > range we haven't used in years. I dig into it a bit more and it turns > out a major carrier still has them SWIPed to us. > > This got me curious and I dug more into IPs from back in our early days > and discovered there are two Tier-1 carriers we no longer do business > with that still have large blocks of their own IPs SWIPED and allocated > to us. > > This is really confusing and concerning. I know it's not the > end-all-be-all, but I wonder how much IPv4 exhaustion is being caused by > this type of IPv4 mis-management, where IPs are still shown as > "allocated" to a customer who hasn't used them in years. > > I've seen this behavior from Frontier and CenturyLink to name just a few. > > Any thoughts on this? >
Re: 44/8
In addition to my day job I also run IT for a 501(c)(3) ham "club" that does amateur radio based public service and emergency communications. Our annual cash donations are about $100. We could never afford an IPv6 allocation or an AS number. I wish we could because I'd love to use some of the AMPRNET space for some of our operations. Our ISP doesn't support IPv6 yet, so I won't even get into that discussion. While we don't have cash, we frequently get donations in the form of [used] equipment. Our entire network backbone is Cisco. Our radio systems are almost exclusively Motorola public safety grade hardware. Our Internet connection is paid for by a served agency. People are happy to donate their time, services, and hardware to us; just not cash. Saying that not having cash on hand means you don't have the resources to do packet radio is not necessarily true. -Matt, NM1B On Tue, Jul 23, 2019 at 12:44 PM Naslund, Steve wrote: > So, if ARIN allocates a v6 assignment to ARDC how do you plan to use it > without a router or BGP. Whether it's v4 or v6 you need to route it > somewhere. If you have a PC, you can have a router and if you don't have a > PC you probably don't need to worry about any of this. If your club can't > afford the address allocation then you are probably in too expensive a > hobby. That is one of the cheaper things you need to get to do radio data. > > Steven Naslund > Chicago IL > > >Yeah because v6 only is the answer plus tour assuming all of these clubs > have routers and BGP and the money to get an allocation and ASN > > > >