nanog mailing list archives
Re: ISP in NYC
From: "Paul S." <contact () winterei se>
Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2015 16:20:31 +0900
Rather than a peer, it might be an okay idea to try out peering at NYIIX (and if the funds permit to get transport, AMS-IX/DE-CIX).
You'll quickly find that peering is *very* useful in Europe, if you have any EU bound traffic at all.
On 7/17/2015 午後 04:06, Colin Johnston wrote:
good isp's / peers are in no particular order bt telstra ex psinet uk/eu colin Sent from my iPhoneOn 17 Jul 2015, at 07:52, Jared Geiger <jared () compuwizz net> wrote: HE uses Telia for Transit. So you won't gain much redundancy there. I would go with Cogent if you have lots of European customers and North American business customers. One not on your list is Level3. They would be strong in that blend too. You might also try joining a peering point. You'll gain a lot by just peering with the route servers.On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 6:34 AM, Dovid Bender <dovid () telecurve com> wrote: Hi, We are looking to peer with another ISP in NY. My options are: Telia Tata Cogent We currently have (and will keep): HE NTT TELX (They use NTT and HE and we are looking to replace them). We need an ISP that has a good peering/connectivity in Europe and Asia (Israel specific). Any advice on who to go with?
Current thread:
- ISP in NYC Dovid Bender (Jul 16)
- Re: ISP in NYC Jared Geiger (Jul 16)
- Re: ISP in NYC Colin Johnston (Jul 17)
- Re: ISP in NYC Paul S. (Jul 17)
- Re: ISP in NYC Alistair Mackenzie (Jul 17)
- Re: ISP in NYC Colin Johnston (Jul 17)
- Re: ISP in NYC Jared Geiger (Jul 16)