SEAN@dra.COM (Sean Donelan) writes:
Of course, WCOM wins for having the hottest POPs.
Sorry to followup on my own posting. I should mention that after peaking at 37C (98F) in June, WorldCom has finally gotten their Washington DC co-locate down to a comfortable 19C (66F). So WCOM no longer has the hottest POPs (within my measurement domain). This message has been brought to you by the Absence of Malice Lawyer Avoidance System (AMLAS). -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation
At 07:04 PM 10/14/98 -0500, Sean Donelan wrote:
Sorry to followup on my own posting. I should mention that after peaking at 37C (98F) in June, WorldCom has finally gotten their Washington DC co-locate down to a comfortable 19C (66F). So WCOM no longer has the hottest POPs (within my measurement domain).
i think i probably win for having the hottest environment: bpc_border2_mel#sh env CRITICAL - RSP(2) Inlet measured at 101C/213F CRITICAL - RSP(2) Hotpoint measured at 89C/192F bpc_border2_mel#sh env all Arbiter type 1, backplane type 7507 (id 4) Power supply #1 is removed (id 3), power supply #2 is 700W (id 2) Active fault conditions: none Active trip points: none 15 of 15 soft shutdowns remaining before hard shutdown 0123456 Dbus slots: XXX XXX card inlet hotpoint exhaust RSP(2) 101C/213F 89C/192F 92C/197F RSP(3) -39C/-38F -39C/-38F -39C/-38F Shutdown temperature source is 'hotpoint' on RSP(2), requested RSP(2) (of course, the environment isn't this hot at all - the environmental monitoring on a RSP has gone way faulty. :-) ). cheers, lincoln.
participants (2)
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lincoln dale
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Sean Donelan