It might be nice if Sean could post a small after-action report.
What did he do in advance? Lessons learned? How big a bump WAS it? etc...
...after he catches up on his sleep, of course...
Sleep? What's that? The post-mortum will be submitted to the customer. I'd like to see the reports MCI submits to the House and GTEI submits to GPO, or even PSI submits to the White house. But I guess that will be up to those customers what is done with the reports. On the other hand, several of my other users (DRA has several hundred other libraries on net besides LOC) reported it was a wonderful day to use the network. They were able to reach non-news sites with ease all day. I can't do the typical backbone thing and say we had zero packet loss, but it was remarkably low (< 1%). As you moved away from 'ground-zero' the effects dropped off very quickly. Essentially people one or two hops away didn't notice a thing, except when trying to get the Starr report. I would like to thank everyone who either offered, or provided assistance. For those that offered, and didn't receive a response, your offers were seen. The Rules those involved were operating under and time pressure meant some offers couldn't be accepted at the time. Government webmasters can't do some things a commercial company could do. It was amazing though, the Internet providers I was paying money gave the least amount of assistance. They didn't even respond to mail messages sent to their NOCs. One severly clueless salesperson paged in the middle of this to offer me Rams football tickets. Not even the reporters calling were stupid enough to have me paged yesterday. Hint, if you are giving away tickets in St. Louis, try Cardinals baseball tickets, left field. WorldCom and AOL receive special thanks for assistance above and beyond. -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation