This just appeared in my BGP ASN Number Name Handle Location Organization 40543 1-800-GOT-JUNK [ABI19-ARIN] {Vancouver, BC, CA} 1-800-GOT-JUNK I guess somebody thinks that whois has advertising potential. Regards Marshall
This just appeared in my BGP
ASN Number Name Handle Location Organization 40543 1-800-GOT-JUNK [ABI19-ARIN] {Vancouver, BC, CA} 1-800-GOT-JUNK
I guess somebody thinks that whois has advertising potential.
Regards Marshall
Thats actually the company name. They seem to do VERY well here in NY. I see their trucks constantly. Tuc/TBOH
ASN Number Name Handle Location Organization 40543 1-800-GOT-JUNK [ABI19-ARIN] {Vancouver, BC, CA} 1-800-GOT-JUNK
I guess somebody thinks that whois has advertising potential.
Thats actually the company name. They seem to do VERY well here in NY. I see their trucks constantly.
www.1800gotjunk.com. They're all over Canada and the US (at the very least). It's a very successful franchise operation. I don't know why they need an AS, but I can say they did a bang-up job of hauling the detritus out of a condo I used to own after the renter abandoned it. --lyndon
www.1800gotjunk.com. They're all over Canada and the US (at the very least). It's a very successful franchise operation.
I don't know why they need an AS, but I can say they did a bang-up job of hauling the detritus out of a condo I used to own after the renter abandoned it.
Maybe they'll take away all your unwanted SPAM and DDOS attack traffic. :) Or maybe they are getting large enough that they'll be moving out of their colo centers and into one of their own, multi homed. I just multihomed my house and might apply for an ASN for it... :) (When is ASNV6 coming?) Tuc/TBOH
On Wed, 25 Jul 2007, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET wrote:
www.1800gotjunk.com. They're all over Canada and the US (at the very least). It's a very successful franchise operation.
I don't know why they need an AS, but I can say they did a bang-up job of hauling the detritus out of a condo I used to own after the renter abandoned it.
Maybe they'll take away all your unwanted SPAM and DDOS attack traffic. :)
Or maybe they are getting large enough that they'll be moving out of their colo centers and into one of their own, multi homed. I just multihomed my house and might apply for an ASN for it... :) (When is ASNV6 coming?)
Tuc/TBOH
Hi, ASNV6, no clue... but 32-bit ASN are already prepared, at least in the registry world. http://www.arin.net/registration/templates/asn-request.txt --------------------------------- Template: ARIN-ASN-REQUEST-4.0 ** As of July 2006 ** Detailed instructions are located below the template. 01. Org ID: 02. Org Name: 03. AS Name: ** Do you want to specifically request a 4-byte AS number ** instead of a traditional 2-byte AS number? Indicate ** YES or NO. If you are unsure, see detailed instructions ** for an explanation of 2-byte vs. 4-byte AS numbers. 04. 4-byte AS number: (...) Cheers, ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Carlos Friac,as See: Wide Area Network Working Group (WAN) www.gigapix.pt FCCN - Fundacao para a Computacao Cientifica Nacional www.ipv6.eu Av. do Brasil, n.101 www.6diss.org 1700-066 Lisboa, Portugal, Europe www.geant2.net Tel: +351 218440100 Fax: +351 218472167 www.fccn.pt ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The end is near........ see http://ipv4.potaroo.net "Internet is just routes (217118/774), naming (billions) and... people!" Aviso de Confidencialidade Esta mensagem e' exclusivamente destinada ao seu destinatario, podendo conter informacao CONFIDENCIAL, cuja divulgacao esta' expressamente vedada nos termos da lei. Caso tenha recepcionado indevidamente esta mensagem, solicitamos-lhe que nos comunique esse mesmo facto por esta via ou para o telefone +351 218440100 devendo apagar o seu conteudo de imediato. Warning This message is intended exclusively for its addressee. It may contain CONFIDENTIAL information protected by law. If this message has been received by error, please notify us via e-mail or by telephone +351 218440100 and delete it immediately.
Hi,
ASNV6, no clue... but 32-bit ASN are already prepared, at least in the registry world.
It was just a joke, since the AS is getting high up there in the 2 byte range (2/3's of the available ones down I think) and was implying that moving to 4 byte would be as fast/efficient/complete as going to IPV6 (Not...)
The end is near........ see http://ipv4.potaroo.net "Internet is just routes (217118/774), naming (billions) and... people!"
Sorta in line with your "The end is near"... :)
On Wed, 25 Jul 2007, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET wrote:
Hi,
ASNV6, no clue... but 32-bit ASN are already prepared, at least in the registry world.
It was just a joke, since the AS is getting high up there in the 2 byte range (2/3's of the available ones down I think) and was implying that moving to 4 byte would be as fast/efficient/complete as going to IPV6 (Not...)
That's actually something funny...... We'll probably run out of v4 addresses sooner than 2 byte ASN, however, globally it seems more pieces of the puzzle are in place for the latter "revolution". But then again... IPv6 is a long run thing. Most people still don't understand how IPv4 works... :-) Cheers, ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Carlos Friac,as See: Wide Area Network Working Group (WAN) www.gigapix.pt FCCN - Fundacao para a Computacao Cientifica Nacional www.ipv6.eu Av. do Brasil, n.101 www.6diss.org 1700-066 Lisboa, Portugal, Europe www.geant2.net Tel: +351 218440100 Fax: +351 218472167 www.fccn.pt ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The end is near........ see http://ipv4.potaroo.net "Internet is just routes (217118/774), naming (billions) and... people!" Aviso de Confidencialidade Esta mensagem e' exclusivamente destinada ao seu destinatario, podendo conter informacao CONFIDENCIAL, cuja divulgacao esta' expressamente vedada nos termos da lei. Caso tenha recepcionado indevidamente esta mensagem, solicitamos-lhe que nos comunique esse mesmo facto por esta via ou para o telefone +351 218440100 devendo apagar o seu conteudo de imediato. Warning This message is intended exclusively for its addressee. It may contain CONFIDENTIAL information protected by law. If this message has been received by error, please notify us via e-mail or by telephone +351 218440100 and delete it immediately.
On Wed, Jul 25, 2007 at 04:20:25PM +0100, Carlos Friacas wrote:
On Wed, 25 Jul 2007, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET wrote:
Hi,
ASNV6, no clue... but 32-bit ASN are already prepared, at least in the registry world.
It was just a joke, since the AS is getting high up there in the 2 byte range (2/3's of the available ones down I think) and was implying that moving to 4 byte would be as fast/efficient/complete as going to IPV6 (Not...)
That's actually something funny...... We'll probably run out of v4 addresses sooner than 2 byte ASN, however, globally it seems more pieces of the puzzle are in place for the latter "revolution".
I doubt most routers are 4 byte ASN aware, but the difference is no 'revolution' is required as 4 byte is designed to cross silently across any 2 byte only routers without needing any upgrade by nature of BGPv4s flexibility Steve
On Wed, 25 Jul 2007, Carlos Friacas wrote:
We'll probably run out of v4 addresses sooner than 2 byte ASN,
No.
however, globally it seems more pieces of the puzzle are in place for the latter "revolution".
Depends on what you define as "in place" but I would disagree that world is ready to move to ipv6 right away, where as moving to 32-bit ASNs is relatively easy even if some are not ready. -- William Leibzon Elan Networks william@elan.net
participants (7)
-
Carlos Friacas
-
Lyndon Nerenberg
-
Marshall Eubanks
-
Rob Evans
-
Stephen Wilcox
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Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET
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william(at)elan.net