Excellent talk! I'am an univarsity student from Bangladesh. For my final year thesis course I'm working with HCF. This video helped me a lot to understand HCF, thank you Mr Geoff Bennett.
SLAAC can provide predictable addresses. It provides one consistent address, which can be based on the MAC address or a random number. It also provides up to 7 random privacy addresses.
Hi I'm Ariful Islam leeton im software engineer and website development and investors and members of the international organizationAnd members of the international telecommunications
Interesting. I could see this being problematic for use in certain applications such as undersea cables. Imagine having a break in the cable and then high pressure sea water getting into the hollow core. That would be a nightmare. Also, might want to consider pumping a different gas in for below-freezing environments to mitigate ice crystals forming. Edit: he covers the undersea application.
I have been waiting for over 20 years for a connection with competitive latency and things have gone down hill fast. I'm so gutted g.fast has been taken off the road map. I have the same if not worse than early 2000's. I'm struggling to not have bitter taste in mouth, I mean I really couldnt care less about the current success bt brag about. I currently play games on a 4g connection to put it into reality. just a real let down, really nothing to be proud of. Sorry but thats the truth and bt have lost a contract to cityfiber and I wish it had happend a lot sooner. Lets not even talk about peering link problems europe.
What reason do we have to believe either "inform" or "consult" in article 2 of the proposed articles of association, will not be abused in the same way as article 3.12 of the memorandum of association has been abused, to make donations not in the spirit of "improve technology, law and governance" (eg. the donations to DEC for which Andy Green was conflicted as chairman of Nominet and trustee of DEC)? Article 2 is a chocolate handcuff and is not robust enough to address my concern.
This is a very good talk! Great for explaining the exciting aspects of HCF. A good contender for sending to new students at undergrad level if they prefer to watch youtube videos.
Long term, I imagine that IPv4 costs will fall once v6 becomes the norm and v4 usage drops away, but for the moment, hoarding of v4 addresses by older ISPs will give them a commercial advantage against new entrants to the market.
Applied BGP Cull ACL recently as we had to cease LINX Peering port in Telehouse East and migrate off the client services to Telehouse North. Used similar steps as we had applied previously with LONAP Peering during maintenance.
This presenter must be really nervous, he cant stop scratching or touching his nose, once I noticed it I couldn't un-notice it, and his presentation (which is good) went out the window because my concerntration was interrupted each time he touched his snorer
A great phrase I heard once was "mean time to innocence". It means having lots of good high quality logging and monitoring in place, with minimal false positives or negatives. This ensures that if someone reports a fault, but you are fairly sure it's the customer's problem, you can prove yourself innocent quickly and be confident it's with an external body. But also, when a fault does occur, you know first, rather than looking like an idiot when the customer tells you there's a problem and catches you by surprise.
Orderanary citizens don't need IPv6, it does not benifit them in anyway. It only brings negatives and infringers on their privacy with ISP being able to see individual devices in their homes and everyone being able to see mac addresses for all their devices as the use the internet
Very good talk, really enjoyed it. It made total sense and the key message of early comms to reassure clients is definitely the takeaway from this session :)
Great idea someone focusing on rural areas is always needed. No this won't be nation wide. Technically it's 6th MNO (Mobile Network Operator) as Three was the 5th. But after t-mobile & orange merging there became 4.