Also, what are reliability and redundancy requirements. 10 gigs of bare naked fiber is one thing, but if you need extra paths redundancy, figure that out now and specify. Is this latency, bandwidth, both? Mission critical, business critical, less priority? 24x7x365, or subset of that, or intermittent only? On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 6:48 PM, Carlos Alcantar <carlos@race.com> wrote:
It's typically that the last mile portion of the circuit is going to cost you the most, so it's important to know those details.
Carlos Alcantar Race Communications / Race Team Member 1325 Howard Ave. #604, Burlingame, CA. 94010 Phone: +1 415 376 3314 / carlos@race.com / http://www.race.com
-----Original Message----- From: eric clark <cabenth@gmail.com> Date: Monday, June 17, 2013 3:22 PM To: "Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu" <Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu> Cc: "nanog@nanog.org" <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: 10gig coast to coast
Fair enough
Seattle to Boston is the general route, real close.
On Monday, June 17, 2013, wrote:
On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 12:51:28 -0700, eric clark said:
I may be needing 10 gig from the West Coast to the East Coast
Might want to be more specific. Catalina Island, CA to Buxton, NC (home of Cape Hatteras High School) will probably be way different than downtown LA to downtown Boston.
-- -george william herbert george.herbert@gmail.com