Doesn't cost a lot to use the regional shelf spares stocked by Juniper for a couple of days... On Jun 4, 2017 4:03 PM, "James Breeden" <James@arenalgroup.co> wrote:
Yeah, I was wondering about that 4x100G. is that a necessity or a "because we can" move?
-----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Eric Dugas Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 4:35 PM To: Aaron Gould <aaron1@gvtc.com> Cc: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: RE: NANOG 70 network diagram and upstream
And the 4x100G. That's four times the capacity of the network I work for. ~100k subs.
On Jun 2, 2017 16:54, "Aaron Gould" <aaron1@gvtc.com> wrote:
Btw....
Wow, a ~2 million dollar boundary (dual PTX1000's) for the NANOG 70 conference.... geez
-aaron
-----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Eric Kuhnke Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 1:43 PM To: nanog@nanog.org list <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: NANOG 70 network diagram and upstream
Just a small thing, but as one of the folks who used to work on the core network gear of AS11404, the network diagram has something in it that might confuse attendees as to who is really sponsoring the upstream:
https://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog70/diagram
AS11404 was formerly known as Spectrum Networks, acquired in 2013 by Wavedivision Holdings LLC (Wave Broadband) and became the backbone of the Wave network. It's a totally different thing than the Charter service which is trademarked as as Spectrum.
https://www.peeringdb.com/asn/11404
The logo in the right side bubble there shouldn't be the Charter/Spectrum trademarked font, but rather should be Wave, who built the dark fiber into the hotel and are providing the upstream. The last mile fiber into the hotel is Wave.
-Eric