Re: Fire in bakery fries fiber optic cable
On Sat, 25 Mar 2006 18:16:34 -0500 Aaron Gagnier <agagnier@fsck.ca> wrote:
This one?
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,2471255~root=cable,opt~mode=flat
Could be. Keith Woodworth sent me this version of it off list : http://please.rutgers.edu/show/broadband/fibercable.jpg I seem to remember it being on some sort of fault report, maybe that is a copy of the original photo. Thanks, Mark. -- "Sheep are slow and tasty, and therefore must remain constantly alert." - Bruce Schneier, "Beyond Fear"
The fiber cable hit by bullet was in New Jersey if I'm recalling correctly ... this was maybe four or five years ago. If memory serves (and forty *is* uncomfortably close) this was part of a cable modem plant. Mark Smith wrote:
On Sat, 25 Mar 2006 18:16:34 -0500 Aaron Gagnier <agagnier@fsck.ca> wrote:
This one?
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,2471255~root=cable,opt~mode=flat
Could be. Keith Woodworth sent me this version of it off list :
http://please.rutgers.edu/show/broadband/fibercable.jpg
I seem to remember it being on some sort of fault report, maybe that is a copy of the original photo.
Thanks, Mark.
-- mailto:Neal@Layer3Arts.com // IM:layer3arts voice: 402 408 5951 cell : 402 301 9555 fax : 402 408 6902
On Sun, 26 Mar 2006 06:05:49 -0600 neal rauhauser <neal@lists.rauhauser.net> wrote:
The fiber cable hit by bullet was in New Jersey if I'm recalling correctly ... this was maybe four or five years ago. If memory serves (and forty *is* uncomfortably close) this was part of a cable modem plant.
Maybe this one is it. I think it was around 1999, possibly 98, when I saw it. Thanks, Mark. -- "Sheep are slow and tasty, and therefore must remain constantly alert." - Bruce Schneier, "Beyond Fear"
http://www.flickr.com/photos/avyakata/67337020/ This is Manion's Auction House in Kansas City, Kansas. The photo was taken the day after an F3 tornado went over the top of the site. The smooth, gray rectangle just below the trailer is not parking ... that is the floor of what used to be a ranch home on property which had been hastily tarpapered to protect the basement. The tornado took the top floor of the house, which contained about twenty PCs, four servers, all of their comm gear, and spread it in a thousand yard long debris field. Employees turned out and walked the debris field finger tip to finger tip, looking for customer consigned property and the contents of their office. They found every PC, every server, and every bit of communcations equipment. No one thought to take a picture of their Cisco 3640, which was found under a Catepillar D-7 bulldozer which had been rolled two hundred yards by the storm. The business owner's house is just to the left of the area covered by the photo and it suffered minor damage. Their systems were brought there to a room in the basement and the IT guys set to work. Monitors were destroyed but every single PC was located and found to be operational. They lost one drive in one raid array on their servers but everything else was functional. We plugged their 3640, Local Director, and firewall back in and had them running again five hours after the storm, and that included my three hour drive time from Omaha. They had no off site backup of any of their data and there was no configuration information on their network beyond my recall of what I'd help install two years before the tornado. This is certainly a testament to the value of clean livin', but I sure wouldn't recommend that as a DR strategy. -- mailto:Neal@Layer3Arts.com // IM:layer3arts voice: 402 408 5951 cell : 402 301 9555 fax : 402 408 6902
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Mar 26, 2006, at 6:21 AM, neal rauhauser wrote:
They had no off site backup of any of their data and there was no configuration information on their network beyond my recall of what I'd help install two years before the tornado. This is certainly a testament to the value of clean livin', but I sure wouldn't recommend that as a DR strategy.
This is still my favorite tornado/network related item: http://home.hubris.net/owenc/tornado/ Back in the early days I was out of the town for I think one of the first times ever after starting the business (at ISPC maybe?). I logged on to see a huge drop in the number of people dailed up at a time when it should have been going up. I was a bit freaked out when I noticed at the same time the temperature had fallen 40 degrees in about 20 minutes. A quick call home let me connect the dots. Chris - -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chris Owen ~ Garden City (620) 275-1900 ~ Lottery (noun): President ~ Wichita (316) 858-3000 ~ A stupidity tax Hubris Communications ~ www.hubris.net ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2.2 (Darwin) iD8DBQFEJubTElUlCLUT2d0RAsFFAJ0QhF/Qt+q/5chaiNWwVI8TWcjkWwCeM3gV MDdprIKLFjM8FIGykOrMwfc= =rSZ1 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
participants (4)
-
Chris Owen
-
Mark Smith
-
Mark Smith
-
neal rauhauser