--- opperm...@networx.ch wrote:
From: Andre Oppermann
This special USB IPv6 number keypad doesn't seem to be a joke:
http://www.ipv6buddy.com
Even includes dedicated ":" and "::" buttons.
Somebody should buy a 10-pack and sell them at next Swinog meeting. ;-)
---
On 3/30/12 7:35 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
> --- opperm...@networx.ch wrote:
> From: Andre Oppermann
>
> This special USB IPv6 number keypad doesn't seem to be a joke:
>http://www.ipv6buddy.com
>
> Even includes dedicated ":" and "::" buttons.
>
--- jer...@massar.ch wrote:
From: Jeroen Massar
http://m.sfgate.com/business/article/40-years-on-the-Internet-transmits-every-aspect-9187484.php
For the people who like 'our history' ;)
---
Hmmm, not so sure about sfgate.com's historical data.
Th
--- rai...@ultra-secure.de wrote:
From: Rainer Duffner
> Am 18.09.2016 um 08:11 schrieb Fredy Kuenzler :
> Friday night we observed several Brocade MLXe linecards rebooting
> (several locations, i.e. Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Geneva), which
> caused network instability due to flapping iBGP etc.
--- g...@space.net wrote:
From: Gert Doering
Yeah, it's quite unfortunate that IPv4 ran out so suddenly,
barely 15 years after people were told to move towards IPv6.
---
Especially after IETF made it backwards compatible and made
it so easy to switch from
--- g...@space.net wrote:
From: Gert Doering
On Sun, Oct 29, 2017 at 12:57:54PM -0700, Scott Weeks wrote:
> Yeah, it's quite unfortunate that IPv4 ran out so suddenly,
> barely 15 years after people were told to move towards IPv6.
> ---
>
--- g...@space.net wrote:
From: Gert Doering
To: Scott Weeks
On Sun, Oct 29, 2017 at 02:53:41PM -0700, Scott Weeks wrote:
> I was not around for those discussions (and not being a computer
> science person, nor wanting to go on this for too long as has been
> endlessly done on ot
: But I am concerned some people may build filters using
: only exact matches, so it seems safer to have route
: objects for more specifics.
:: I´d suggest to create each route object for each
:: announced prefix...IMHO you are very right - there are
:: for sure networks out there, which will
--- m.hert...@mhs.ch wrote:
From: Matthias Hertzog
Not really network related, but provisioning-related, which
is somehow network related as well... :-)
What kind of OSS/BSS systems are you using in your companies?
Self-developed? Purchased?
---
What
--- onit...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Gregor Riepl
Some good ol' fun with BGP:
https://blog.benjojo.co.uk/post/bgp-battleships
Please (don't?) try this at home!
-
How about at work? ;-)
Mind if I share this with other tech mailing lists?
scott
The term "class C" is historical. It is a /24 now days.
The first octet of a "class C" IP address has to start with
110, but a /24 does not have this restriction... :-)
scott
- Original Message Follows -
From: "Umberto Annino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: swinog@swinog.ch
Subject: [swin
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:--
From: Pascal Gloor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
- Senior Network Engineer.
ahem... that's a long list...
I'm just wondering what the community thinks, how much should one earn
in such a position with all those skills and requirements? Or, if you
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Stanislav Sinyagin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--- Scott Weeks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Do you guys have a hard time finding folks at this level there?
The market of average-level network engineers is quite large, as in 1999-2000
many CCIEs and
-From: Jeroen Massar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>-
: To avoid problems there, make a simple policy: if found
: spreading a virus/spamming and having disabled the blockage:
: no Internet for a week. Or a similar measure that can of
: course be lifted after paying a fine.
Wouldn't
: You'd be amazed how many companies operate their own
: mail servers, even behind dynamic addresses
I'm speaking with guys in my company on an issue and part of the discussion has
to do with me saying no one runs a mail server from behind a dynamic IP
addresses. Other than just your experi
D] wrote:
From: Peter Bickel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [swinog] Re: blocking ports?
Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 12:03:28 +0200
Scott Weeks schrieb:
>
>
> : You'd be amazed how many companies operate their own
> : mail servers,
: if(windows) then block else allow? :)
This would be my preference. >;-) I doubt my pointy-clickey co-workers would
like that. I'm seen as weird here since I despise Micro$loth and love *nix.
scott
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Daniel Lorch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED
ot;stop spam" campaign
how to believe anything ?
confused but still voting to block mail from dialup and adsl ranges ;-)
-- Original Message --
From: "Scott Weeks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTEC
: /me also wonders when "ISP's" start to drop those
: silly ICMP filters which are really far from helpful
: when trying to debug issues.
Use tcptraceroute instead.
scott
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: AW: AW: [swinog] Route o
Help! I've received ~10 of these so far!
scott
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Nik Hug <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [swinog] remember swinog 14 - project DNS Blockade
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2007 01:17:28 +0200
Good Morning
For me it was always just a question of time u
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
here's the cisco advisory:
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/707/cisco-sr-20070912-regexp.shtml
--
Sounds like the same thing as the late 1990s. "sho ip bgp regexp "
caused a reboot.
scott
Lynx says it all:
** Bad HTML!! <...snipped stuff here...>
:-)
scott
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: "Christian Kuster (chkuster)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: [swinog] Windows-Pizza
Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 23:17:02 +0100
Depends if you are one or not...
;-
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ---
From: Marc Eggenberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
A friend of mine is looking for colocation and internet services in Zürich,
London and Manama Bahrain. Do you know any providers especially Bahrain? Are
there any that have the possibilities to provide mana
There're a lot of players in that space. I used to work for a company called
Digital Island that bought Sandpiper to get their Footprint CDN. This was then
sold to C&W who then sold it to blah, blah and it finally ended up at Savvis.
There were several lawsuits with Akamai (a Hawaiian word
I can't resist.
"...if it collects any marketing stats, so what, everyone is doing that..."
Only from the unknowledgeable that don't control Javascript (NoScript), flash
(etc.), cookies or 'stuff'. Therefore, you have skewed stats.
"...There's nothing bad about companies knowing better what
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
at least it prooved the ML is still alive, and not so slow as some mentioned ;-)
we got 3 days nanog feeling, who cares ?
if someone like an idling list.. we maybe could create [EMAIL PROTECTED], and
to make shure there is no accidentaly traffic setting this list
On Tue, 17 Mar 2009 12:18:28 +0100, Andreas Fink wrote:
> Now what does that mean? It is basically what the germans have done
> under the "Hackerparagraph". It disallows software which could
> potentially be used for hacking to be distributed. The result of
> this was for example that in germa
Message d'origine
De: swinog-boun...@lists.swinog.ch de la part de Reza Kordi
I got a 2 pair copper and I am looking for a product to offer Ethernet
connectivity at speed of 4mbps or higher. Distance is about 1km and the copper
is in the same local loop.
--
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