On Thu, Jan 31, 2008 at 02:41:22AM +0000, Todd Underwood wrote:
On Thu, Jan 31, 2008 at 01:56:42AM +0000, Paul Ferguson wrote:
For what its worth, Todd Underwood has a very good overview of the countries affected by this outage over on the Renesys Blog here:
http://www.renesys.com/blog/2008/01/mediterranean_cable_break.shtml
there are some interesting findings here about who (what carriers, what countries) were critically dependant on these cable systems. we'll probably put some more effort into analyzing this situation as it develops and compare it to the taiwan outages that hit late 2006.
an FYI for anyone looking to do hosting/connectivity to Dubai or the UAE: there are only two providers in the UAE, etisalat and du. while du is either completely offline, or pushing all its traffic across what appeared to be single dial-up ISDN link 8^), etisalat seems largely uneffected. (connectivity from my du connected office was barely useable, while my du connected residence was completely offline, connectivity from my etisalat connected co-lo and etisalat connected office are operating pretty much at norm, which is to say, not quite what i'd expect for north america, but quite acceptable for the region) the downside is that du is the "progressive" provider, while etisalat continues to filter and block various and sundry sites and facilities based on complaints from its more conservative customers (porn, dating sites, and social networking sites like facebook/etc) and techno-political bents (ie. many sites relative to VoIP and web proxies are blocked) -- Jim Mercer jim@reptiles.org +971 55 410-5633 "I'm Prime Minister of Canada, I live here and I'm going to take a leak." - Lester Pearson in 1967, during a meeting between himself and President Lyndon Johnson, whose Secret Service detail had taken over Pearson's cottage retreat. At one point, a Johnson guard asked Pearson, "Who are you and where are you going?"