Wow they still alive?
Gino A. Villarini
g...@aeronetpr.commailto:g...@aeronetpr.com
Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp.
787.273.4143
From: announcements-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:announcements-boun...@wispa.org]
On Behalf Of Rick Harnish
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2013 11:18 AM
To:
Kind of late in the game for this question, but has anyone been able to
successfully acquire IP space from ARIN? I have read that they have 1 full/8
3/4 of another /8. We have always received our IPs from our upstream provider,
and where I live there are not a lot of other choices for
ARIN has little to nothing to do with the US Government. Maybe only historical,
if it exists.
You should multi-home anyway.
How many IPs do you have?
How many IPs are you using?
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
- Original Message -
Dealing with ARIN is fairly easy and they have some very helpful
people. You have to follow the rules and meet all the criteria, but
they will help you with that.
On 10/3/2013 12:37 PM, heith petersen wrote:
Kind of late in the game for this question, but has anyone been able
to successfully
Well, I have several pops but from the same provider. I have a /20. All are
allocated to routers, likely using close to 70%. I would need to dig in a
little deeper. Some of our space we allocated to others that we resell
bandwidth to, kind of gets a little messy
heith
From: Mike Hammett
Pretty much the only hard and fast rule is you need to be multihomed.
If you are not multihomed you don't need ARIN and should be getting the IP
space from your upstream provider.
On Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 12:21 PM, heith petersen wi...@mncomm.com wrote:
Well, I have several pops but from the
Wednesday, Oct. 16th at WISPAPALOOZA
9:00 AM - 10:00 AM
3c - Getting Address Space from ARIN
Are you interested in getting address space directly from ARIN, but not sure
where to begin? Qualification to obtain resources is based on policies
developed by the Internet community. John
I might have read that wrong on their site, but I thought there were some
exclusions from being multi-homed. More or less I want my own space incase I
want to make a move down the road to different provider. Maybe it will raise a
flag with our current provider that these guys are looking. I
Original Message
Subject: Re: [WISPA] ARIN numbers
Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2013 10:48:28 -0700
From: Robert Andrews i...@avantwireless.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Unfortunately the days of having IP address space In case are long
gone... ARIN will probably
I literally just finished doing this (within the past month). It was a
very easy process. I filed for a /22 multi-homed. They needed copies
of my upstream agreements from two different AS#, two /24's SWIP'ed to
me, and spreadsheet with utilization of the two /24s. Took 4 days to
get an AS#
Hi Wisps,
I have a client event on 11/1 in Durham, NC. I am looking for a referral to
a local WISP who can provide a 100x100 Mbps wireless shot. Please contact
me directly.
Thanks have a great day,
Ian Framson
Co-founder
[image: Trade Show Internet logo] http://www.tradeshowinternet.com
Sam,
I have always wondered where your upstream came from. I might be close to one
of your providers. If multihomed truly needed to be required, you think I would
need to be at all of our POPs with our current provider?
thanks
heith
From: Sam Tetherow
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2013 1:48 PM
Only have one POP in Valentine, just two separate fiber feeds. Haven't
had much luck with Golden West on getting reasonable transport or DIA
quotes.
Not sure what you are asking on the multihomed part. You can advertise
a subset of your IP space out different POPs if they are not
Got ya. We used to do SDN, and could still be an option in some parts, I would
rather not though
From: Sam Tetherow
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2013 3:04 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] ARIN numbers
Only have one POP in Valentine, just two separate fiber feeds. Haven't had
14 matches
Mail list logo