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25 new of 176 responses total.
jared
response 9 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 00:03 UTC 2001

(on a similar note, rumor is that rythms [another dsl provider]
will be going under soon.  this combined with the low stock price
of covad does continue my concern).
krj
response 10 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 01:22 UTC 2001

I get the impression that no one is going to think about this until 
it is too late and Grex is off the net for an extended period of time.
(like, a month or so.)

From looking at the business and tech pages, it looks to me like       
the entire group of independent DSL providers is crashing.
Possibly we need to think about either moving to Ameritech as 
our DSL provider -- if Ameritech goes bust, Grex will be the least 
of our worries -- or abandoning the DSL technology.
 
Joel in resp:8 :: yes, if Grex has to drop back to ISDN, we will have to 
find an ISP in a hurry, and we'll probably never get a donated connection
like we had before.  But having an ISDN line at the pumpkin would have 
given us the technical flexibility to connect to any local ISP.
keesan
response 11 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 02:36 UTC 2001

I will make a phone call to ask if an ISP I know (I am not supposed to mention
the name, I was told by other grexers) would be willing to donate a DSL line.
Maybe they could get some business out of it, from grexers.  Any objections?
They donated a user account once.
jared
response 12 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 03:12 UTC 2001

There are some local providers that sell dsl that is provisioned through
ameritech.  (instead of covad, northpoint, etc....)

Ameritech has gotten more data savvy in the past year from my
experience and sees that there is value in this space.  Especially
in the days of the collapsing clecs :)
scg
response 13 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 05:51 UTC 2001

re 11:
        The concern is not DSL cost, but rather the continued availability of
wholesale DSL services to ISPs.  Given that concern, switching to a different
Covad based provider woudln't give us any reliability advantage, and since
Rhythms appears far more unstable than Covad (why, oh why, is my employer
having a Rhythms circuit installed into my apartment next week?), switching
to a Rhythms based provider won't be very helpful either.  Is Ameritech
offering the service Northpoint, Covad and Rhythms were offering to ISPs yet?

This is probably a good time to once again consider colocation.  Grex isn't
really doing anything at this point that requires its own private office, and
colocation providers aren't suffering quite as badly as the DSL CLECs are at
this point.
carson
response 14 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 06:04 UTC 2001

(I seem to remember the argument against colocation was ease of access,
as in "lack thereof."  is that argument no longer valid?)
i
response 15 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 12:17 UTC 2001

My impression is that co-location usually involves a very high rental 
rate per U of rack space - we'd have to find a sweetheart deal on that
(and perhaps connectivity too) to afford it.

On access - ICNet's got a new co-lo facility downtown (A^2) with 24/7
access available.  
scg
response 16 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 23:29 UTC 2001

Colo space is one of those things where pricing, reliability, ease of access,
and so forth, vary considerably.  It's a matter of shopping for the right
deal.
krj
response 17 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 8 01:16 UTC 2001

A column about the DSL collapse:
  http://www.upside.com/Rex_Crum/3ac9e9aa30d.html
The writer says Covad stock is down to $1.03/share, down 98%
from its 52-week peak.
jared
response 18 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 15 18:30 UTC 2001

Yes, Ameritech is offering basically what Covad, Northpoint, Rythmns, etc..
are offering to isps.  (This is my understanding after talking to someone
who is doing this with their company, etc...)
dpc
response 19 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 20:41 UTC 2001

Co-location has worked out fine for M-Net.  WWNet, in Livonia,
has provided us great service, and so far access has not been
a problem.  Plus, the *total* cost of running M-Net has shrunk
to less than $200/mo.
i
response 20 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 18 03:42 UTC 2001

Is your WWNet co-lo a special 501(c)3 or M-Net deal rate?  How many U's
of rack space are included?  What kind of bandwidth?  (Etc.?)
jep
response 21 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 19 20:28 UTC 2001

M-Net arranged a special deal with WWNet.  I believe the bandwidth is 
384K/sec, and that they allow M-Net one computer connected at their 
office.  Grex could find out more, if there's interest, by e-mailing 
Rex Roof: trex@arbornet.org.
mdw
response 22 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 02:32 UTC 2001

I ought to point out that m-net's needs are easily demonstrated to be
different.  Firstly, m-net has no dial-in lines.  Secondly, m-net has
had a history of "tolerating" fairly long outages.  Thirdly, m-net's
financial picture is quite different from grex.
jp2
response 23 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 03:35 UTC 2001

This response has been erased.

carson
response 24 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 04:00 UTC 2001

(you mean "rents.")  :P

(you really ought to spend more time thinking your responses 
through.)  ;)
scg
response 25 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 07:09 UTC 2001

It's worth noting that colocation in many cases improves reliability, due to
more stable network connectivity and (in good colo facilities) electrical
power.
jp2
response 26 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 13:41 UTC 2001

This response has been erased.

jep
response 27 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 15:14 UTC 2001

M-Net had 4 available inbound lines at first when they set up with 
WWNet, but reduced them recently.

re #22: M-Net's needs are different primarily *because* it's financial 
situation is different.  There was a time when M-Net had a lot of cash, 
but that changed through unnecessarily spending some of it, and losing 
contributions (partly as a result of bad spending), and for a lot of 
other reasons.  Fortunately for Grex, none of these things can ever 
happen *here* and so Grex doesn't need to look at the possibility of 
cutting it's expenses by 50-75% while dramatically improving it's 
Internet connectivity.

By the way, log into M-Net and Grex in two separate windows, using their 
GUI interfaces, and do a conference listing sometime to compare speeds. 
You can do quite a lot of conferencing on M-Net while you're waiting for 
Grex to just list the items in a conference.  Try entering an item or 
response on Grex, and see how many responses or items you can get 
entered on M-Net while you're waiting for Grex to save one.

Grex's Backtalk interface is much nicer than WebYAPP.  It'd probably be 
really nice if it ran as quickly.
carson
response 28 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 15:43 UTC 2001

(John's technically right.  I can whip right through conferences on
M-Net because there's almost nothing worth reading.)

(that's not to say expenses wouldn't be cut by co-location.  Grex
currently spends how much on the Pumpkin?  $25/month?  $35?)
scg
response 29 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 15:49 UTC 2001

Grex's Pumpkin rent is more than that.  I forget how much more.  It's also
important to consider power costs, which are sometimes included in colocation
arrangemenets.
carson
response 30 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 15:56 UTC 2001

(it *would* be a good idea to know what expenses might be saved by a 
co-location agreement.  phone lines might be the first expense to go.)
jp2
response 31 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 16:03 UTC 2001

This response has been erased.

aruba
response 32 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 16:44 UTC 2001

Re #28-29: Grex pays $69.46 per month to rent the Pumpkin, and $54.34 per
month for electricity.
gull
response 33 of 176: Mark Unseen   Apr 21 03:39 UTC 2001

Re #31: Newer doesn't always equal better, though.  How does MNet's user 
load compare to Grex's?  In my admittedly limited experience, newer 
Intel PC-class hardware doesn't quite measure up to older Sun 
server-class hardware when it comes to handling lots of users.  The 
Intel boxes just don't seem to handle multiple processes nearly as 
well, and the hardware seems to be flimsier and more prone to 
deterioration as well.  There's more to system speed than how fast the 
clock runs.
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