[olug] (Relatively) Nearby Colocation Centers
Eric Lusk
wyrmzr72 at yahoo.com
Fri Aug 17 18:23:21 UTC 2007
The only issues I've had recently on home routers is that the newer Linksys WRT54G just doesn't DMZ or port forward. The -L (aka older) models never gave me any problems, but I ended up going to the warranty-voiding dd-wrt firmware instead. This seemed to fix DMZ, but didn't totally fix port forwarding, so right now that router is sitting idle as the updates come out.
http://www.ericshaus.com
I ran the Harry Potter books through a spell checker; none of those spells should work.
----- Original Message ----
From: Dan Clough <dclough at gmail.com>
To: Omaha Linux User Group <olug at olug.org>
Sent: Friday, August 17, 2007 12:49:24 PM
Subject: Re: [olug] (Relatively) Nearby Colocation Centers
I've fired off a quote request to Internet Nebraska - I'll post it here
once I receive a response.
IIRC, Cox only provides one *dynamic* IP for home cable connections.
Yeah, Cox's Omaha cable speeds are nice, but it's a PITA getting my
basement datacenter working through NAT. I was going to setup DMZ
through my shiny new Linksys Draft-N router but I'm hesitant to. Why?
Last time I tried DMZ on my home network, external access was about five
times slower than simple port forwarding, plus I haven't determined the
effects it has on my multiplayer games. Has anyone had any trouble like
that when it comes to DMZ as opposed to port forwarding?
Dan
Obi-Wan wrote:
> Internet Nebraska's NOC in Lincoln doesn't really promote the
> service, but they will co-locate for prices similar to those that
> were originally posted. You can find the appropriate contact info
> at http://www.INebraska.com
>
> I go back & forth about what to do about this. I also have a DL380 to
> which I'd like to provide faster public access, since I host lots of
> images from there. Alas, I also upload all of these images myself from
> home, so relocating the server upstream only solves half my problem.
> It sucks that Lincoln doesn't have any home Internet offerings anywhere
> near as fast/cheap as Cox provides in Omaha. 1 Mbps uplink for just
> $100/mo? I'm drooling. For now, I'm still living with my fleet of
> HP/Compaq servers in my 42U rack in my basement, all served up over my
> dinky 384 Kbps uplink. I'm about to run a second 20A circuit over to
> that corner to handle the power needs. I'm tired of my UPSes blowing
> the breaker every time a machine powers up.
>
>
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