nanog mailing list archives

RE: History of 4.2.2.2. What's the story?


From: "Tomas L. Byrnes" <tomb () byrneit net>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2010 13:49:15 -0800

One main POP does not mean single homed.

We had multiple upstreams, entrance facilities, and peers. We just had
one facility where it all was, and our remote users were often dialing
into third party banks based on reciprocity agreements when they were
out of area.

It was 12 years ago. Consolidation has rendered a lot of the
collaboration from those days moot.


-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick W. Gilmore [mailto:patrick () ianai net]
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 1:11 PM
To: NANOG list
Subject: Re: History of 4.2.2.2. What's the story?

On Feb 17, 2010, at 3:51 PM, Tomas L. Byrnes wrote:

In summary, could someone educate me on the benefits of having
RNSes
outside your network?

[Tomas L. Byrnes] We were a small regional ISP with only one main
POP
at
the time.

If you are single homed, you -are- your upstream's network, er, AS.  I
was careful to use "AS" and not "network" or "ISP" in my post - except
the last line. :)

--
TTFN,
patrick




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