(deleted for ambiguity)
> > Which is the point. These things stay out there...like those winXP
> > boxes. There are 2 choices
> >
> > 1) manufacturers are responsible for the devices. No longer caring for
> >them? Recall them. Compensate the users.
> >
> > 2) stronger obsolescence. eg
>On Thu, 27 Oct 2016, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
>
>> My iPhone 3GS still works just fine,
>
>I still have a "functional" iPhone 3G (no S). I don't think AT will
>activate service on it at this point, and it's been relegated to iPod
>service when I do yard work.
>
>> You can't *force* people to
-Original Message-
>From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Richard Holbo
>Sent: October-23-16 11:23 PM
>To: John Weekes
>Cc: NANOG
>Subject: Re: Death of the Internet, Film at 11
>
>I run/manage the networks for several smallish (in the thousands of
>customers) eyeball
cp sum ok]
1158156467:1158156467(0) win 8192 (DF) (ttl 60, id 18499, len 40)
12:45:46.284617 141.138.128.137.80 > 216.57.182.18.21: S [tcp sum ok]
2595766696:2595766696(0) win 8192 (DF) (ttl 69, id 6478, len 40)
From: Selphie Keller [mailto:selphie.kel...@gmail.com]
Sent: November-01-16 1:13 PM
To:
Ditto. Same sources; 141.138.128.0/21 and 95.131.184.0/21 (give or take).
Out of 1000 packet sample taken at 12:45:46 PDT (19:45:46 UTC) at boundary, 502
unique sources to 10 destination hosts on our AS.
Obligatory data should this be of use to anyone listening in.
-Original Message-
> I am thinking things like OpenBGPd and BIRD could make a good route reflector
> though they are most often discussed in the context of IXPs (ie eBGP
> sessions).
We use openbgpd - well, the native OpenBSD equivalent - for route-reflection in
a couple of places, as well as a full bgp feed for
Ah, but who do you trust? Trump, Putin, or Xi's clock?
That said, we use a Stratum2 clock for our AS, which syncs using GPS at
$dayjob. So... I guess we trust Trump's clock.
Perhaps there's a market for a device that takes GPS, GLONASS, and Beidou, and
references the three for sanity checks in
Perhaps the host OS' to which snapchat caters, don't all have a devent ntp
subststem available?
I have vague recollections of some other software (I'm sure we all know which)
implemented it's own malloc layer for every system it ran on, for less trivial
reasons. ;)
+1 for PHPIPAM.
It's incredibly easy to modify and follow the code, and very lightweight.
The simple import and export options make managing large blocks very easy for
us.
https://phpipam.net/
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Steve Mikulasik
Have been seeing these at $DAYJOB off and on for the past week.
First logged events began for on 2019-08-04, at approx 1500hrs PST.
Impact for us has been negligible, but some older ASA's were having trouble
with the scan volume and their configured log levels which has since been
remedied.
essage-
From: Matt Hoppes [mailto:mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net]
Sent: Thursday, August 22, 2019 2:43 PM
To: Emille Blanc
Cc: Bradley Burch; Sean Donelan; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: FCC Takes Action Against WISPs That Interfered with FCC Weather
Radar
I don’t know where you’re doing your lic
$25k seems like a cheap fine, really. Have you seen the price of spectrum these
days?
And links operating in a licensed spectrum tend to incur $1k per link per year
in usage fees.
> Most gear now will hop frequencies automatically if they receive a DFS
> interference.
> If your gear supports
> Why should there be a license server at all? Why should an X-ray machine have
> an external dependency like that in the first place, even if it’s a local
> server?
In a world where you can license device performance by the megabit/sec/day, or
even have to purchase per-use factory reset keys
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