nanog mailing list archives

RE: I am about to inherit 26 miles of dark fiber. What do I do with it?


From: "Darden, Patrick" <Patrick.Darden () p66 com>
Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 08:08:43 -0600

Misc thoughts...

Legal
I don't know your background, but I recommend you get with the EFF and/or SANS and get a good idea of possible legal 
ramifications, e.g. if you choose to be an internet provider vs. an internet services provider vs. a private network 
provider or a telecommunications  service or some mixture.  These choices can really change the legal (and business) 
landscape for you.

Security
If you have a CISSP or equivalent, then you probably know what you are doing from a security standpoint.  If not, then 
I recommend you proceed with caution--maybe take an intensive general course: physical security, protecting your 
customers, providing extra security services (IPS, DDOS protection, etc.).

Maintenance
Throw some money in the pot for monthly emergencies.  Road work.  Backhoes.  Fibre splicing.  Bad pink boxen.  
Converters.  FX modules.  Extra switches for fast swap-outs.  A fast car and a fast technician who is fast with duct 
tape and bubble gum.

Network Diagnostics
You'll be doing a lot of proving  "it isn't me."  Get a fast laptop with an outstanding NIC and make sure you are up to 
speed with Wireshark and presentations.  If you aren't a wizard with Wireshark, then take the 4-12 hours it takes to 
become one: memorize the hot keys, figure out the advanced filtering, etc.  NMAP and SOCAT as well--you'll want to be 
able to show that your voodoo works, and perhaps even point the finger towards the real problems.

A Nice Suit
Don't underestimate the power of a nice suit.  It reassures your customers.  And that'll be 50% of your job.  It's all 
about professionalism until they get to know you.

Your Audience
If your audience is 90% gamers, you might consider putting together a gamer's NOC.  Web page showing pings and lag for 
various games... traffic flows, bandwidth, switch utilization, the most popular servers, info.  Maybe host some games 
on local servers.  Put together a small VMWare Cloud just for that.

If your audience is 90% online retail, maybe put in a Secure Zone, a DMZ they can host behind, maybe some Palo Alto 
firewalls that do WAP (web app protection) and SQL Protection and etc.  Or just use an active IPS.

Etc.

Good luck!
--p

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces () nanog org] On Behalf Of Lorell Hathcock
Sent: Sunday, November 09, 2014 8:18 PM
To: nanog () nanog org 
Subject: [EXTERNAL]I am about to inherit 26 miles of dark fiber. What do I do with it?

All:

A job opportunity just came my way to work with 26 miles of dark fiber in and around a city in Texas. 

The intent is for me to deliver internet and private network services to business customers in this area. 

I relish the thought of starting from scratch to build a network right from the start instead of inheriting and fixing 
someone else's mess. 

That being said, what suggestions does the group have for building a new network using existing dark fiber?

MPLS backbone?  Like all businesses these days, I will likely have to build the lit backbone as I add customers. So how 
would you recommend scaling the network?

I have six strands of SMF that connect within municipal facilities. Each new customer will be a new build out from the 
nearest point. Because of having only six strands, I don't anticipate selling dark fiber. I believe I need to conserve 
fibers so that it would be lit services that I offer to customers. 

I would like to offer speeds up to 10 GB. 

Thoughts are appreciated!

Sincerely,

Lorell Hathcock


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