Hey folks ... I apologize for taking several days to discover and delete the inappropriately posted troll/rant by a Zimbra employee in this room.
For those of you living in North America ... ARIN is now completely out of IPv4 addresses.
[ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/09/24/arin_ipv4_interview_ipv6/ ]
I'm hoping this will finally kick the IPv6 migration into reality.
[#]
Thu Sep 24 2015 17:12:49 EDT
from
vince-q <vince-q@ns1.netk2ne.net>
2015-09-24 10:27 from IGnatius T Foobar @uncnsrd (Uncensored)
For those of you living in North America ... ARIN is now completely
out of IPv4 addresses.
[ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/09/24/arin_ipv4_interview_ipv6/ ]
I'm hoping this will finally kick the IPv6 migration into reality.
I can always get a bunch from the .ampr.org block....
<very evil grin>
.ampr.org owns a full Class A block!!!
<exceptionally evil grin>
--K2NE (k2ne.ampr.org among others...)
hm...
https://www.nginx.com/blog/launching-nginscript-and-looking-ahead/
'We run a separate VM for each request, so there’s no need for garbage collection.'
well...
So the extension language for nginx is now JavaScript. I like that.
It's not clear whether he wrote a JavaScript interpreter or brought one in?
It's not clear whether he wrote a JavaScript interpreter or brought one in?
Not necessarily. Pretty much any existing JavaScript interpreter could be
made that way just by instantiating multiple instances.
Thu Sep 24 2015 05:12:49 PM EDT from vince-q @ Cascade Lodge BBS
I can always get a bunch from the .ampr.org block....
<very evil grin>
.ampr.org owns a full Class A block!!!
<exceptionally evil grin>
--K2NE (k2ne.ampr.org among others...)
Vince, you may pry my IPV4 ampr.org from my cold dead hands. (And from my local address coordinator as well) - as he has the rest of them for this area. Long live mirrorshades!
Hewlett-Packard has at least two /8 blocks. We should go find some network
socialists to "redistribute" them. :)
I see the name 'Fiorina', and I think of the deadly sin of Wrath.
Appropriate? Dunno. I wouldn't let her near my company, though.
I see the name 'Fiorina' and I think of a bland-tasting cereal.
But I'm pretty sure the ProCurve stuff pre-dates Compaq. Compaq knew better than to try to manufacture that stuff.
But I'm pretty sure the ProCurve stuff pre-dates Compaq. Compaq knew better than to try to manufacture that stuff.
well, I guess you fail here:
http://www.idealo.de/preisvergleich/OffersOfProduct/499189_-procurve-switch-4202vl-72-compaq.html
procurve was a compaq product.
Maybe they rebranded it? HP bought Compaq in 2002, and you can find ProCurve
stuff going way before that. For example, here's a ProCure manual dated 1999:
http://whp-hou4.cold.extweb.hp.com/pub/networking/software/59692320.pdf
http://whp-hou4.cold.extweb.hp.com/pub/networking/software/59692320.pdf
So does anyone still believe the myth that the base address of a subnet (such as X.X.X.0 in a /24 network) is "unusable" ?
(Those of us who can see the fnords know that this is actually where the government puts their snoopware server.)
That is what used to be called the "network address", and I think it really was unusable under older TCP/IP stacks.
And I guess its use is deeply ingrained. We all still start numbering with .1, and I hadn't given that a second thought in a long time.