So far as public service commission, that will depend on the services that
you offer.
In some states you may have to collect and remit fees and taxes for
non-Internet services (commonly L1-L2 services). You likely don't have to
ask permission to start but if you sell the wrong thing you open a big
This is a matter where you really need a telecom lawyer with knowledge of
your state.
What we found is you really need to avoid hitting that interconnected VoIP
requirement. As for how you do that, check with your lawyers.
Once we crossed that it's been a chain of paperwork that seems to never
end
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 wrote:
> Well, I have several pops but from the same provider. I
We are seeing the same symptoms on FSK with 11.2.
On Apr 10, 2013 3:59 PM, "Sean Heskett" wrote:
> Just and FYI. I already submitted a ticket to cambium but we are seeing
> several 430 APs lock up.
>
> The APs will still pass traffic to the clients and I can ping the AP.
> However, I can't bring
That has been true, but it seems like the cell world has been moving to 48V
lately.
Examples:
Alvarion carrier WiMax (2.5Ghz), macro and micro uses 48V (maybe you can
get it in 24V, the stuff I've seen has all been 48V)
With packet optical, if you put a Cyan box in that uses 24V you
need separate l
Ashburn Equinix to Miami NAP?
Isn't that like every carrier on the planet?
I'd think buying just 10 meg might be a problem but other than that this
should be easy.
On Mar 26, 2013 8:58 AM, "Gino Villarini" wrote:
> Miami NAP
>
> Sent from my Motorola Startac...
>
>
> On Mar 26, 2013, at 9:34 AM
Yes. There's a whole dance around how you have to handle it to not be
liable. Lots of details if you Google/Bing/Yodel "DMCA Safe Harbor"
On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:19 PM, Adam Greene wrote:
> Interesting. I always thought that this was the way to guarantee that the
> ISP would not be liable.
>
FWIW OpenBSD has L3 MPLS working with a LDP implementation and BGP. No VPLS
yet but I think I saw something about starting to work on pseudowires last
year.
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 3:15 PM, Simon Westlake wrote:
> > I don't know who is feature complete, or even what constitutes feature
> > comp
lutions
> http://www.ics-il.com
>
> - Original Message -
> From: "Christian Palecek"
> To: "WISPA General List"
> Sent: Tuesday, January 8, 2013 4:30:22 PM
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Ubiquiti ERLite-3 3-port Router
>
> I wouldn't touch one
Streakwave is supposedly shipping orders placed back when it was announced.
Mine hasn't arrived yet :-(
On Jan 8, 2013 12:57 PM, "Steve Barnes" wrote:
> That’s the new UBNT Edge Router line. I was not aware that they have
> actually shipped to general public yet.
>
> ** **
>
> UBNT is try
Not a Sqlite limit. Might he a problem with their choice of filesystem:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4314493/file-size-limit-for-sqlite-on-32bit-system
On Nov 23, 2012 8:06 AM, "Paul Hendry"
wrote:
> It's not a bug as SQLite is working as per design and only allows a 2GB
> DB size. It's mo
On Oct 13, 2012, at 11:00 PM, Butch Evans wrote:
> On Sat, 2012-10-13 at 23:43 -0400, Faisal Imtiaz wrote:
>> I dunno about that.. While I can understand everyone wanting to have
>> only relevant discussion on the main list...
>
> Question is, what do those who complain consider "relevant"? Eve
You can do tag swapping and other fancy VLAN tricks in AirOS by
creating VLAN subints and mapping them to each other using bridge
interfaces.
The Linux bridge interface behaves more like a switch than a "bridge"
in that you can control mac aging, learning, etc so it doesn't blindly
forward traffic.
As part of the WiFi standard a AP can tell a client to stop talking to it.
Rogue AP containment systems impersonate the targeted AP and send these
messages to observed clients.
This kind of functionality is important in cases where you need to prevent
employees from accidentally creating security
3
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 1337
> Troy, OH 45373
>
>
> On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 5:46 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>
>> What would you like them to add for monitoring and troubleshooting?
>> On Sep 23, 2012 4:22 PM, "Doug Clark" wrote:
>>
>>> +1 on th
What would you like them to add for monitoring and troubleshooting?
On Sep 23, 2012 4:22 PM, "Doug Clark" wrote:
> +1 on the fact that radio's should only be a transparent bridge. I
> do love all the features that some manufacturers give you to trouble shoot
> problems though.
> UBNT is not
Doesn't really affect me because the bandwidth crunch is at the last
mile link to the customer.
That said, we do ~30Mbps of Akamai traffic over peering and every meg
we don't have to pay for is nice.
The trick to getting CDN stuff when you have low traffic volumes is
wait for someone big (huge univ
Is that https://ipaccess.fbi.gov/ ?
If so, capitalize the first letter of the username and password that
they gave you.
On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 12:47 PM, Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)
wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> We just got our FBI letter on the screwed up DNS system.
>
> I can't get into the web sit
On some online forums I have been seeing people claiming to be hams
saying that they can use 3.65 Ghz as it is a ham band.
Now, I thought it was for something else and now is license lite. Is
this a band we share with hams?
-
We have been looking at MultiTech's SMS servers but haven't bought one yet.
http://www.multitech.com/en_US/PRODUCTS/Families/MultiModemiSMS/
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 9:47 AM, Patrick D. Nix, Jr
wrote:
> Does anyone use or know of an application or service for sending bulk text
> messages. We would
I've seen them use the Motorola WAP650.
On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 3:34 PM, Fred Goldstein wrote:
>
> Anybody know what Clearwire uses?
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
---
vRAM entitlement will raise prices a bit.
On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Adam Kennedy wrote:
> vSphere 5 will only be limited by physical processors, not RAM or number of
> cores. Not sure where you got the 16GB limitation from. vSphere (What they
> call ESX/ESXi now) information is available
Not trying to be trollish, but I would trust Vyatta's support way more than
Mikrotik.
The fact is Mikrotik, Imagestream, and Vyatta are all built largely on open
source components.
Out of the three Mikrotik appears to not participate and takes advantage of
open source developments put forth by
Generally you use SNMP to make bulk config changes.
You can use CNUT to set a initial RW community string.
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 11:29 AM, Cameron Crum wrote:
> I'm just curious if anyone has "hacked" the cgi scripts on the Canopy SM's
> and written a script to make changes to the SM by posting
If all else fails, yank the power supply and use a different 24VDC PSU.
See http://tapodi.net/~jda/an50dc/ for some ghetto hacking that I did
a few years ago that might be relevant.
Not that I'd recommended doing what I did. There should be a voltage
regulator in there so you don't overvolt it if s
I have a Nomadix AG5500 that seems to have corrupted firmware.
Do any of you use / support Nomadix? I haven't been able to get ahold
of their support.
Right now I'm looking for a new firmware image that I can flash to
resurrect this box.
If not I guess I'll just have a pretty looking monowall box
And would turn off more people than simply doubling the membership fee
from $250 to $500...
On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 2:49 PM, Josh Luthman
wrote:
>
> That does add overhead...
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 937-552-2340
> Direct: 937-552-2343
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 1337
> Troy, OH 45373
>
>
> On Wed,
I was 20.
On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 11:55 AM, Mike Bushard Jr wrote:
> I was 21.
>
> On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 11:48 AM, Blake Covarrubias
> wrote:
>>
>> On Jan 26, 2011, at 8:15 AM, Josh Luthman wrote:
>>
>> > Hey we're the same age! I was 17 in 2005!
>>
>> I was 19 in 2005.
>>
>> Neat to see othe
or. I hear
> nothing but good things from customers and frontline support.
>
> Ryan
>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org]
>> On Behalf Of Jon Auer
>> Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 10:31 AM
>>
For those of you that host email for a number of domains, what do you
do for spam filtering?
Right now we have a cluster of Barracuda SF-600s that are up for
renewal in the next couple of months and they are raising their
update/subscription prices.
Between the price increase and other issues I'm e
There are a bunch of billing systems targeted at web hosts. Belsta:
http://www.blesta.com/ is also out there for a similar price point.
Last time I looked at them you'd need to do a bunch of coding work to
get it to automatically turn your network users on and off.
On Fri, Jan 21, 2011 at 11:19 AM
It is a protocol wonk holy war :-)
IPv6 is "worse"
OSI is "better"
Using the definition from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worse_is_better
Does not matter to me because I have customers that need end-to-end
connectivity to China and mobile data in the US (that is going native
v6 with v4 NAT) so I'm
I believe the license database is now available in the more friendly CSV format.
See: http://data.fcc.gov/download/license-view/
and
http://data.fcc.gov/download/license-view/fcc-license-view-data-csv-format.zip
I'd make a page that shows what percentage is owned by who but I
already have a weeken
from time to time. No online backup or SCP transfers.
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 12:16 PM, Greg Ihnen wrote:
> Does that tunnel add overhead (cut down throughput)? I'm guessing it would
> have to.
>
> Greg
>
> On Jan 13, 2011, at 12:43 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>
>> I
I'm currently using a RB-750 with a IPv6 tunnel/delegation from he.net
at home. Works fine.
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 9:00 AM, Greg Ihnen wrote:
> I've got a small network with a MT RB-750 and UBNT (PS2's, NSL2's, NSLM5's,
> NSM5's and a BulletM2) and I'm wondering how we're going to fair if/when
bgp.he.net
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 3:08 PM, Matt wrote:
> Are there any other sites similiar to fixedorbit.com to determine how
> well a host is peered?
>
>
>
> WISPA Wants You! Join today!
> http://signup.wispa.org/
Inline
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Charles N Wyble
wrote:
> It's not about access networks peering. That's usually not worth the
> effort for the reasons you outlined below. It's about peering with the
> content provider networks.
>
All peering is good peering (until egos get involved).
Pee
RHEL/CentOS/Fedora switched from Xen to KVM
On Wed, Dec 15, 2010 at 1:42 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> Historically, RHEL\CentOS have used Xen. I'm not sure if any other
> methods are working their way into current releases.
>
> OpenVZ (managed through ProxMox) is a great way to host many
> resource
Oh wow. They quoted my filing of the WISPA letter. :-)
On Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 11:54 AM, Rick Harnish wrote:
> 2M signatures, tons of comments at FCC ahead of net neutrality vote
>
> December 14 2010 - 12:28 pm ET | Tracy Ford | RCR Wireless News
>
> The Federal Communications Commission is getti
These days a cluefully run Windows system is no better or worse than a
cluefully run *nix system...
On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 9:47 AM, Shane MacDonald wrote:
> I get scared when I hear "Windows" and "Software" in the same sentence.
> Then when you add "Server" I usually run.
>
> Shane MacDonald
> KP
I can, if you are in a AT&T area of the 356 LATA (Southeastern Wisconsin)
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 11:41 AM, Matt wrote:
> Does anyone know of a DSL provider that supports BGP on DSL? Looking
> simply for a redundancy circuit.
>
>
>
eing?
>
> this is the caclulator results for the 12 mile link:
>
> - Jerry
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
> Behalf Of Jon Auer
> Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2010 11:27 AM
> To: WISPA Gene
We have one at 6.5 miles. Very happy with it.
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 1:11 PM, Jerry Richardson
wrote:
> Anyone have a similar link running? Happy with it?
>
>
>
> - Jerry
>
>
>
>
>
> WISPA Wants You! Join today!
> h
ind out who is on the tower but 3
> different Radios
> is more like a CC conflict or someone trying to steal service
>
> On 11/8/2010 4:20 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>> You might be able to figure it out with a map and a yardstick based on
>> air delay...
>>
>> I drive arou
You might be able to figure it out with a map and a yardstick based on
air delay...
I drive around with SMs connecting up to whoever and seeing what's up
but I haven't been to Indiana in a year. ;-)
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 4:15 PM, support wrote:
> OK Who's trying to Link to my AP? owner of these
IMO you only go with the M line if you need OC cards.
MX80 would be a better fit if you are all ethernet.
On Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 5:21 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> I am looking at comments or recommendations for a Juniper M20. I was
> looking at a PowerRouter 2200 (or equivalent), but someone I'm wo
Here is a paper that looks into how Akamai directs traffic:
http://www.aqualab.cs.northwestern.edu/publications/Ajsu06DBA.pdf
When selecting providers, you could look at
http://www.akamai.com/peering/ and http://bgp.he.net/AS20940#_peers to
try to select someone that is close to Akamai.
Beyond tha
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 9:25 PM, Blake Covarrubias wrote:
> On Oct 29, 2010, at 5:50 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>
>> We prefer the RB1100 because we don't need a inverter for the switch at DC
>> powered sites.
>
> Are you using -48VDC at these sites? What are you using to
WRT your suggestion, +1.
At the moment we are rolling cisco switches (3500XL or 2950 if we need RSTP)
with one or two RB450G depending on seperation of roles. (If multiple
backhauls, site gets a router for handling MPLS)
We prefer the RB1100 because we don't need a inverter for the switch at DC
p
Any idea if this batch will last with dealers until they get the
following shipment?
Otherwise I'm looking at having to order a half-year's supply right
away just in case. (nice thing about MT is one can afford to overbuy
to absorb their supply chain issues...)
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 5:02 PM, But
We've been using Axis cameras with Axis camera station.
It has a nice feature where the cameras only stream when they detect
movement so you save a considerable amount of bandwidth.
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 11:41 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> Most camera vendors have a DVR solution as well.
>
> -
I asked about the cable exemption and they said it was "only for cable
operators" and not for anyone that assigns IPs to a geographic area
(tower).
We were able to get more space by showing over 80% of our existing
space was assigned to other entities (customers) and of that space 50%
of the major
Sounds like a SIP DOS or possibly brute-force attack.
We get them from time to time.
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 3:22 PM, Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
> I never have had this happen for 6 years until I got my new fiber line
> installed form Time Warner. Apparently a few times a day somone starts a
> relay o
The new web admin in 5.0 looks like a web clone of winbox.
On Oct 2, 2010 11:57 AM, "Josh Luthman" wrote:
It doesn't answer anything. You can't configure anything. It screws up
what you have set. Hate it. I would like to see an html copy of winbox,
but that's a dream.
On Oct 2, 2010 12:33
I have a box that has been running off a PNY usb drive for two years.
Basic logging and interface graphing is enabled.
On Oct 2, 2010 10:33 AM, "Gustavo Santos" wrote:
Hi,
We just bought a couple HP ML 350 Servers, but Mikrotik RouterOS doesnt have
the Smart Array Controller Driver. As its a ne
Two options you may want to consider:
a) automatic blacklist scripts:
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Bruteforce_login_prevention
b) firewalling off external access to your network management services
On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 4:57 PM, Robert West wrote:
>
> Just had to deal with a brute force attack
Vyatta has a much better reputation for stability for things like internet
border routing among the "usual internet-scale suspects" on nanog list etc.
Mikrotik has a pretty bad rap out there for 'causing' a couple global BGP
issues a year or so ago.
MT isn't helping by being largely incompetent a
I have, for basic bandwidth and authentication control.
Works if you can work with a perl library: http://code.google.com/p/jungleauth/
On Thursday, September 16, 2010, Marco Coelho wrote:
> Has anyone reversed engineered the BAM SM authentication?
> We would like to add this as a feature to our
e
> offered. What I haven't yet worked out is whether two routers can
> establish a BGP peering session over a VPLS VC.
>
>
> On 09/11/2010 01:25 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>> Beware of the TCAM size on that box.
>> IIRC it hasn't been able to take full internet routes sin
-8S appears to do it all.
>
> On 09/08/2010 04:16 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>> Needing full BGP routes takes you out of the realm of cheap Layer 3
>> switches...
>> You need to worry about TCAM (hardware route memory) in addition to
>> RAM on Layer 3 switches and apart from
Oh duh. That's line rate at 100M.
The chopped packets must have been a negotiation side effect from
going between 100M and Gig interfaces.
I feel much better about it now, and quite stilly to have missed that.
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 11:54 PM, Rubens Kuhl wrote:
>> Half duplex eth6 to eth7. Eth6
;>>> Only the Cisco 7301 and Mikrotik are small and consume little power...
>>>>> Everything else is big and consumes power.
>>>>>
>>>>> Most common, cost efficient network design would be to use GigE Switches
>>>>> in a ring or
gine ... (7206vxr or small 7301) range $5k to 10K on the
>> >>>>> used
>> >>>>> market place.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> In Juniper Land... M10i or an M20 (if you like redundancy...) cost
>> >>>>> on
>> >&g
What kind of PPS are you seeing on that setup?
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 9:48 PM, Glenn Kelley wrote:
> Is this going on a stick on in a building.
> We have an opensource Vyatta running circles around the old Vax 7200 stuff
> GigE even is not an issue - but used a Dell R300 with 8GB ram to do it.
>
I'll second this.
Manifold has been amazing for us for everything from looking for
geographic patterns in customers with rf problems to crunching data
for our FCC477 filing.
One of these days I'll learn the viewshed function and have it suggest
new tower sites...
On Wednesday, September 8, 2010, C
ogy, with one or two Routers
> located at DataCenters or NOC...
>
>
> If you find some other solution, that can do what you are looking for,
> please share it with us, cause we have been looking too... what I am
> sharing above with you is what we have found so far.
>
> Regards.
Needing full BGP routes takes you out of the realm of cheap Layer 3 switches...
You need to worry about TCAM (hardware route memory) in addition to
RAM on Layer 3 switches and apart from decked out Cisco 6500s or
greater you aren't going to find that.
The Juniper MX80 should work. It is 2U and can
FCC announced APIs for programatic access to:
a) FCC Speedtest results
b) Lat/Lon to Census block lookup (must have listened to everyone
griping about preparing Form 477 :-) )
c) FRN lookup
d) License lookup (cool!)
See: http://reboot.fcc.gov/developer
---
Direct?
What kind of commit did they require?
>
> On Sep 3, 2010 8:21 PM, "Scott Carullo" wrote:
>
> If any of you ar...
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
There are AT&T sales reps that aren't lazy?
Where?
I'll take contact info :-)
On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Justin Wilson wrote:
> Most normal providers are more than willing to work with you as the
> contract nears its end. They should have said let’s talk in a couple of
> months or somet
On Aug 30, 2010 2:53 PM, "Blake Covarrubias" wrote:
I contacted Akamai a while back about this program, and yes I believe they
also told me 75mbps was the magic number.
--
Blake Covarrubias
On Aug 30, 2010, at 12:43, "Nick Olsen" wrote:
> No clue, Just going f...
Unfortunately that's a fact of life of enterprise software.
Any sufficiently powerfully piece of software will require a lot of
customization to do exactly what you want.
Witness all the Oracle/PeopleSoft/SAP consultants. :-/
On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 9:16 AM, Dennis Burgess wrote:
> This is where
That's pretty cool.
What are you using for shared storage?
On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 8:41 AM, Brad Belton wrote:
> Agreed. We’ve run HP and Dell servers for years and have been happy, but we
> had no idea what we were missing once we virtualized everything.
>
>
>
> We purchased a Dell blade chassi
We do that as well.
Essentially you end up with Platypus as the billing/data core with a
lot of value add off to the side.
If you keep everything loosely coupled upgrades etc aren't a problem.
So far we've always had at least one network and one customer service
person that can program so when a e
You don't get the port count unless you go with a industrial appliance and
those can get costly.
So far I'm happy with my RB1100s apart from some issues with combinations of
ports on the switch chips.
On Aug 10, 2010 1:20 PM, "Josh Luthman" wrote:
You are aware the RB1100 is a 1U case, right?
n order to manage the delivery of business and
> personal communications. To exercise your rights of access, rectification,
> cancellation and opposition, send your request to:
> Free Technologies Excom, s.l. - Avda. de la Industria, nº 37, 39, Of. 3 - 4
> - 28108, Alcobendas (Madrid
;
> Steve Barnes
> RC-WiFi Wireless Internet Service
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
> Behalf Of Jon Auer
> Sent: Tuesday, August 10, 2010 8:04 AM
> To: WISPA General List
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] CP
Results: http://bit.ly/9wUy4G
My apologies on the delay on getting these back to everyone.
Thank you to everyone that participated!
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 3:52 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
> I was thinking about CPE monitoring today and wondering if/how everyone is
> doing it.
>
> I'
We had the flip of that.
We purchase IP transit (bandwidth) on GigE from the local operating
company of a national cable operator.
They were supposed to give us IP space with the circuit but IP
allocations are handled by the national group and they refused on the
grounds that they don't sell to ISP
NOAA's Space Weather page has info on this and lets you subscribe to
email alerts on it: http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/
On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 4:50 PM, Mike wrote:
> Your three mile link is probably not being affected by CME. The Canadians
> have disaster recovery plans for such events. Some of the
I see a lot of replies about what to do if *you* are the target of a
DOS attack but not many about how to tell if your upstream is getting
slammed.
Really a DOS attack on a upstream should have symptoms of any other
upstream capacity issue that you want to know about, just it will
probably have a
I was thinking about CPE monitoring today and wondering if/how everyone is
doing it.
I've got a brief (8 easy questions) survey at http://bit.ly/cpesurvey
If you can spare a minute or two to fill it out I'd be very grateful.
Of course, the results will be shared in aggregate.
Thanks!
--
You can also get a data card with a telemetry plan from a cell carrier
and plug it into a Mikrotik.
The setup fee can be pretty steep but once its set up the cost isn't
super high so long as you aren't pushing a lot of data.
Gets you out of band access to the tower network including any network
con
Platypus
Any custom perl stuff that uses that Business::OnlinePayment framework
(our hotspot billing system)
On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 12:53 PM, Josh Luthman
wrote:
> I would like to see a list of things that are ready to use IPPay out of the
> box.
>
> We use it with Powercode.
>
> Josh Luthman
>
Works great.
On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 12:38 PM, RickG wrote:
> I need feedback on IPPay. -RickG
>
>
>
> WISPA Wants You! Join today!
> http://signup.wispa.org/
> ---
We used Charter fiber for PTP and Internet Access for a few years, a
few years ago.
It was OK. Way more outages than the SBC DS3 that we had at the time.
(a few hours of planned or unplanned downtime in the middle of the
night every month)
Pricing was far better than SBC.
We dropped them once we bu
We use Hitachi...
I've played with NexentaStor with good results.
NexentaStor: http://www.nexenta.com/
NexentaStor integrated with hardware: http://www.pogolinux.com/nexenta/
Note that I haven't tried either of these in a CCTV application, just
normal ISP data storage.
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 11:
Pretty much all the lists here: https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/
That includes outages, lists for users of cisco, juniper, etc in a
service provider environment.
Also lists for voip and iptv operators.
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 11:10 AM, Steven McGehee wrote:
> If you guys know of any othe
> MicroTik says they have a meshing protocol, HWMPplus, that provides
> Layer 2 (this is critical; we're not building a Layer 3 network, and
> with this many hops, latency and loss are critical) dynamic meshing,
> essentially applying a routing protocol (smarter than bridge STPs)
> among nodes.
Ha
th it, i have yet
to venture down that path.
On 5/28/2010 8:59 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
> So, speaking of cache tuning,
> Who is ready for DNSSEC?
>
...
>
> WISPA Wants You...
Chris Gotstein
Sr Network En
So, speaking of cache tuning,
Who is ready for DNSSEC?
On May 28, 2010 11:44 AM, "Justin Wilson" wrote:
DNS tuning is pretty straightforward. One of my guy¹s is awesome at it.
If you are running BIND there are quite a bit of things you can do. We are
running bind in some VM¹s and they are s
For what its worth, Google namebench (
http://code.google.com/p/namebench/ ) showed that our caching DNS
servers were faster than Google's public ones or OpenDNS. Guess our
users keep the cache warm.
I'd encourage everyone to run namebench and tune up their DNS servers
or select the fastest ones.
Another unbound user! high five!
But... I can beat that :)
Querying Unbound on Solaris 10/Sparc, across cisco sup720 router.
(0.700ms pings to DNS server)
;; Query time: 1 msec
;; SERVER: 209.242.224.245#53(209.242.224.245)
;; WHEN: Wed May 26 13:50:31 2010
;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 95
On Wed, May 26,
Thought the WISPA General list has its own rules...
On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 12:18 PM, Josh Luthman
wrote:
> No problem, no one is upset I'm sure. It's just courteous to follow the
> rules of the Moto Folk.
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 937-552-2340
> Direct: 937-552-2343
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 133
Just a shout out saying we use Plat and have it automatically turning
people on/off as well.
Right now our customer service side uses Wombat and Network Operations
uses Jira for tickets but we are looking at merging both of them onto
RT.
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Chuck Hogg wrote:
> Wombat
I've used Canopy 900Mhz while mobile before.
It hopped between towers quickly enough that I'd only loose a few pings
From what I've heard of Butch's Mikrotik setup, it sounds really
nifty. IIRC he used two wifi cards. One would be the data connection
and the other would look for a better conne
Right, and that's pretty easy since there aren't really 3rd party
Cisco cards (counterfeit doesn't count).
You can add intel NICs to older PIXs but that involves breaking
warranty stickers.
Gotta say Imagestream's stance on this is normal.
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Scott Reed wrote:
> I
So, I have a friend that tried that once.
It can be pretty hard to get decent speed with bittorrent on a stock system.
Lots of different clients, all requesting different data. Plays havoc
on drives. Need plenty of cache. RAID0 disk array, etc.
On top of that the linux distributions didn't seem t
On that note, I have a few questions.
On those 40-50 802.11 subs, what kind of bandwidth are the users
seeing/are you selling them?
Do you count a polling MAC on a 802.11 chipset, say Ubiquiti AirMax,
in with 802.11?
My assumption would be that with a polling MAC on 802.11 chips you
should see ne
lure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue
> that counts.”
> --- Winston Churchill
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 7, 2010 at 11:53 PM, Jon Auer wrote:
>
>> Just saw Travis's mention of this board on the Mikrotik list.
>> Man. lots of action on this general topic all over th
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