Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2002 13:15:43 -0400 (EDT) From: alex
The company that "hosted" CNN demonstrated that for all the claims of their connectivity, it was not really there. If I recall correctly, CNN came up when a certain company from MA company-ized CNN.
Which brings us back to discussions of SPOF and distributed sources. The MA company in question helps demonstrate the latter. The former has been discussed recently. As network engineers/operators, we want to make things better and more reliable. However, there are sayings to the effect of "the trouble about doing things right the first time is people do not appreciate how difficult it was" and "people would rather brag about a good towing contract than to stay out of the mud". * How many times have you heard: - "I don't care if I get hacked; I don't have anything important on my computer" - "Nobody would be interested in breaking in to us" - "I'm happy with my current provider because they don't go down that often" * Ever submit a proposal for doing a job the right way, then lost the bid because someone else was cheaper in the short run (and more expensive in the long run)? * Ever had to argue that maintaining RFC compliance really was the correct thing to do? When a problem occurs, people get angry; only then does change become important. Until then, it's a question of "how much does it _cost_", *not* "what are we _investing_". Money talks, and a pound of cure is worth an ounce of prevention, plus carries the bragging rights of "I was a victim". How often does a huge news even occur? The bombings a year ago? The release of the Starr report? Do people get mad at the news source, or just chalk it up to "the Internet is having troubles"? Good, fast, cheap -- pick two (and make sure at least one is "cheap"). Bottom line: When something is expected, and the lack thereof rarely bites in a painful place, proper implementation is not considered a valuable feature. The market for perfection is a very small one. Eddy -- Brotsman & Dreger, Inc. - EverQuick Internet Division Bandwidth, consulting, e-commerce, hosting, and network building Phone: +1 (785) 865-5885 Lawrence and [inter]national Phone: +1 (316) 794-8922 Wichita ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 11:23:58 +0000 (GMT) From: A Trap <blacklist@brics.com> To: blacklist@brics.com Subject: Please ignore this portion of my mail signature. These last few lines are a trap for address-harvesting spambots. Do NOT send mail to <blacklist@brics.com>, or you are likely to be blocked.