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 Musical Education, seriously revisited.

May 3, 2010

One of of my first educational posts. Now, revisted.

Get some Fad Gadget.



 

 The Moon

April 20, 2010

Some more musical education.

Tristesse De La Lune, Queen of the Damned. Google it, get the mp3, buy it from wherever.

Then, get out your vampire outfit, dress up  and go and watch ALL of the Underworld movies (again).

If you haven’t, then in which bat cave have you been living?



 

 News24 gets it wrong.

March 24, 2010


I don’t generally refer to news articles on commercial news sites, even though the good old “biting the hand that feeds IT” is one of my favorite daily reads, and has been for more than 10 years.

This article, however was just a priceless win. The subtleties obviously escaped whichever news24 monger was at the helm that day, and simply googled “london 2012 logo”. That, or he/she was actually enough of a subtle bastard to use TheRegister’s version in the hope that nobody would notice…

Either way, it has absolutely made my day.



 

 I guess that about sums it up

February 26, 2010



 

 Thanks to JINX peers!

February 23, 2010

I would like to personally thank the staff of all our brand-new peers at JINX, and the commitment shown by you. Neology thanks you for your efforts at JINX over the last 72 hours — for your support, quality technical skills, and willingness to make JINX a better place. It has been a pleasure working with you all. So far 12 peers means a 66% peering rate at JINX, and the final ones (bar the umentionable two) are simply a matter of logistics.

1. 198.32.142.27 AS 8674 NETNOD
2. 2001:478:142::22 AS 6083 POSIX-V6
3. 198.32.142.135 AS 36889 DotCoZa
4. 198.32.142.29 AS 6968 Uniforum
5. 198.32.142.33 AS 2018 TENET
6. 198.32.142.14/12 AS 27322 ISC-F Root
7. 198.32.142.26 AS 33762 iBurst
8. 198.32.142.21 AS 11845 Vox Telecom
9. 198.32.142.16 AS 42 Packet Clearing House
10.  198.32.142.17 AS 3856 Packet Clearing House
11. 198.32.142.25 AS 10474 MWeb
12. 198.32.142.22 AS 6083 POSIX

In total — 12 Peers  — less than 72 hours. That’s about a peer per 6 hours. In fact, the first 12 hours turned up the most of the local ones.

It was all as simple as finding a contact in the organisation and exchanging peering details and netblocks. Of course, has been settlement free as well, and Neology will continue to do so as long as it has capacity. And if we don’t have capacity we will endeavor to provide more capacity.

Thanks to all the new peers,  you are part of the drive that is going to make INX’es in South Africa a success in the current and future tense.

It makes sense to peer settlement free at JINX. It’s good for the local internet. Except if BGP and route-filters are rocket science, as is generally the excuse toted by the “unmetionables”.

Sanity check:

It’s actually cheaper for me to get transit to the “unpeerables” via Telkom, rather than attempt to negotiate their prohibitive local peering requirements and pricing. Thanks Telkom, you are my friend. True value for money! Oh wait. Doesn’t that defeat the entire point of JINX ?

Here’s the thing — I’m paying for the SAIX local transit, and the “umnetionables” are paying for it too. So, in the end — we all paid for SAIX transit. If we don’t peer via SAIX or JINX then it would have to go SAIX, or international. So — wouldn’t it just make sense to peer at JINX? Yeah. I thought so.

Finally, many thanks to Graham, and Regardt for “making it so”. And thanks for all the V6 work as well. Neology is probably one of the better connected V6 providers at the moment, simply due to our willingness to do V6. We are hoping to establish peering with all the remaining JINX participants at this point. Basic logistics and time-zone issues appear to be the most common issue. Not “peering” agreements.

To the “umentionables” (you know who you are) … Thanks for your “cooperation” and entirely ridiculous peering policies. o_O