Ethernet Sets To Bridge The Last Mile 177
sacremon writes: "An article in EETimes reports on a recent meeting to finally bring Ethernet to the home user directly, rather than using broadband technology like DSL or Cable. At this point, they're only in the planning stages, and they don't expect to see implementation till sometime in 2003. Nonetheless, I would love to have a 100Mbps/full duplex line direct to the house. I can see the self help manual now -- 'OSPF and BGP for Dummies.'" Ethernet could bring good rates (for both data and dollars, if this article is correct), but I'm still looking forward to fiber running straight into the basement.
Dorm room? (Score:1)
basement? (Score:2)
Athentication? (Score:1)
Fight censors!
It's been done (Score:5)
fiber to the basement? (Score:3)
The Local Hack (Score:1)
This technology might also take file sharing to a whole new level...
And one more good thing - now my friends and I could share the cost of 1 net connection between all of our computers if we live in the same local area. I love it.
Damn. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
OSPF and BGP (Score:4)
SO.. do you research on your routing protocols.. you'd more likely need PPPoverEthernet for dummies, or maybe Routing for Dummies.
//Phizzy
Would you get 100mb? (Score:2)
So just because the possibilty exsists don't expect to get it for dirt cheap right away. It's real easy to cap bandwith on a switch. And they will do it.
--
Ethernet runs over fiber, too. (Score:2)
Ethernet over copper maxes out at 1 Gigabit. Ethernet over fiber is available at 1 and 10 gigabits today, 40 gigabits this year and 160 gigabits really soon now.
Some people may just get fiber for distance reasons.
Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:3)
My understanding was that if the phone lines in your neighborhood have been replaced by fiber, then you must use IFITL instead of DSL. And of course the phone company are the people who will provide IFITL.
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Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:2)
Useless.
Gimme!! (Score:1)
Dive Gear [divingdeals.com]
Re:basement? (Score:1)
Please explain. (Score:2)
Re:The Local Hack (Score:1)
You do run a firewall, right? If not, try Tiny [cnet.com]. It's just one step up from ZoneAlarm, and so much smaller. You should probably ignore the CNet luzer votes though. You might also find this [grc.com] interesting.
That's assuming you are satisfied with software.
Re:Ethernet runs over fiber, too. (Score:1)
Solves nothing. (Score:3)
This is a complete waste. The cabling itself is not causing the logistical nightmare of the last mile, digging up that concrete ($$) is what's bringing us down. (IIRC, CAT-5's nominal length doesn't even come close to a mile anyway
That solution that is evolving with competition is the most obvious, and most profitable; utilizing existing infrastructure to get down the last 'mile.' -- be it over telephone, cable, or powerlines -- or a combination of the three.
Digging isn't an option, and unfortunately neither is wireless. I would dig it (no pun intended) if the power companies in the US began to put whatever connectivity into their substations and fed us 2mbs+ power-line networking.
This would also push JINI, etc. into my household devices - if your TV can get online through the same socket it gets its power, it may actually begin to have useful networking features (ie. program channel 82 to browse to so-and-so URL. Maybe the URL for my baby monitor, whatever.)
Think about it. If you want to talk in private about the commercial aspects of anything mentioned, let me know.
Jason (jfisher AT feroxtech.com)
Pooh!! (Score:1)
Re:OSPF and BGP (Score:1)
"I'm a little confused about configuring my 'modem', am I supposed to set it up as an ABR or an ASBR? And what is an LSA, anyway?"
OSPF For Dummies, I love it!
Umm.. Ethernet at home is quite common in sweden.. (Score:4)
All neighbourhoods are also interconnected in a fiber MAN... Nice for them dvdrips
This is Borlänge, in Sweden...
Hope you get your ethernet in the states soon so we can bring that transatlantic bandwidth to it's knees
Good! (Score:1)
Why stop at the computer or basement? (Score:2)
Repost non-anon: Solves nothing. (Score:1)
Great. So now they're going to dig up concrete and run antiquated CAT-5 to my house.
This is a complete waste. The cabling itself is not causing the logistical nightmare of the last mile, digging up that concrete ($$) is what's bringing us down. (IIRC, CAT-5's nominal length doesn't even come close to a mile anyway
That solution that is evolving with competition is the most obvious, and most profitable; utilizing existing infrastructure to get down the last 'mile.' -- be it over telephone, cable, or powerlines -- or a combination of the three.
Digging isn't an option, and unfortunately neither is wireless. I would dig it (no pun intended) if the power companies in the US began to put whatever connectivity into their substations and fed us 2mbs+ power-line networking.
This would also push JINI, etc. into my household devices - if your TV can get online through the same socket it gets its power, it may actually begin to have useful networking features (ie. program channel 82 to browse to so-and-so URL. Maybe the URL for my baby monitor, whatever.)
Think about it. If you want to talk in private about the commercial aspects of anything mentioned, let me know.
Jason (jfisher AT feroxtech.com)
Re:It's been done (Score:3)
WTF? (Score:5)
I'm still looking forward to fiber running straight into the basement
So you're telling us that Fast Ethernet is too slow for you? Good lord man, how much pr0n do you need?
G.H
Re:Would you get 100mb? (Score:3)
http://www.cabledatacomnews.com/cmic/cmic3b.htm
Please, not on Copper! (Score:2)
Please don't do this with copper. You're going to have to run new cable anyway. Cat 5 cable is very expensive too, and with the distance limitations involved you're going to have to spend more on repeaters than on wire if you go copper anywhere near 100Mb. Please consider fiber instead. You won't be locked into an obsolete standard, it'll be cheaper in the long run [no pun intended] and you'll be able to sell alot more services over it in the future.
Thank you,
the world
Already being done (Score:4)
Re:The Local Hack (Score:1)
Lars
__
Re:Would you get 100mb? (Score:1)
Fight censors!
IPv6 (Score:2)
Should we expect an IEEE move to IPv6, and when?
Re:Please explain. (Score:2)
//Phizzy
Re:Would you get 100mb? (Score:1)
I also used to work for a cable company and many employees were in the exception list for capping, and ended up with uncapped modems. I was not one of the lucky few :-(
As with anything, there are ways around it, some of them are based on bugs in the code, others are hardware hacks, but like any cable company owned equipment it's stupid to mess with. And such hacks are beond this slashdot story.
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Etherial Vaporware (Score:1)
Earthlink said that they would have Covad install DSL, but Covad said that Verizon had to rejigger the phone line. So Verizon says that I am at the outer range of the phone box. So Covad said that, well, they could go ahead and do the install and see if it works. So I said 'cancel my DSL order, let me know when this technology is ready.'
Ethernet to the hacienda would be swell. Please infrom me when actually available for install, and nary a moment sooner.
Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:2)
I can't be karma whoring - I've already hit 50!
I want more (Score:5)
Cable vendors can easily scale this approach to take away from 'broadcast' and move to 'download TV' where you could open up a guide and see what's on for the day and then pull a TIVO to download the show only if it's requested. in theory, this would allow them to dedicate more of that 750Mhz into Data-like connections and to provide that 38Mbps to anyone who wants it using the equipment currently installed in your home(if you already have a cable modem). think about 750Mhz divided into 6Mhz slots gives you 125 slots at a potential of 38Mbps per slot you come up with some 4,750Mbps downloading potential. Of course this approach would change the way people watch TV and fly in the face of traditional broadcast networks, but technology wise, the Cable providers are already there.
apllications? well I already stream my music in from the net at 128kbps, and downloading the latest Mozilla only takes a few minutes. Getting a copy of a new Linux distibution as ISO images (650Mb) still takes awhile.
still, I want More
currently I'd like more upstream to be able to do DV quality Video conferencing. I'd like more speed to be able to watch DVD quality video from the net like I stream my music today. DVD quality video can not yet be had with 100Mbps ethernet connection. I'd like to see them shoot for Gigabit ethernet to my house, I really need it.
Re:OSPF and BGP (Score:1)
It's obvious this guy does not play Quake!
Re:Please explain. (Score:2)
I'm fairly sure that the poster of the article didn't *actually* mean we would actually all have to run OSPF or BGP to have ethernet to our homes but it was an attempt at a bit of a joke.
japan (Score:2)
Between this and all of the other tech toys that never seem to make it to the rest of the planet, it sort of makes one jealous
Re:Athentication? (Score:1)
Really, what controls will there be so that we do not start seeing DoS attacks from the deepest most firey (sp?) corners of hell? I personally would LOVE to be able to get a 100 Mbp/s connection to my house, but the potential threat to the servers I run at work makes me very uneasy..
Re:basement? (Score:2)
Why? For the purposes you want ot use it for, copper cables are just as adequate. Where you really win out with fiber is either long-distance, or extreme-bandwidth per strand, neither of which you will be using in your house.
Two words: "Copper Conducts." or "Lightning Strike." or "A Car-hits-pole-and-powerline-crosses-data-lines."
IP v6 better get here soon then. (Score:3)
So, I think it's going to be imperative for IP v6 to become more utilised soon.
Re:Already being done (Score:1)
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
I'm all for ethernet right into the home, but just getting the lines out there isn't gonna solve the problem, we have to make sure that theres enough competent people running the whole thing to make sure that it actually serves a god purpose.
-C
Re:Please explain. (Score:3)
BGP *is* a path vector routing protocol as it provides a vector to a path and does NOT use distance. RIP uses a distance in hop count, BGP uses the path in as_path. Path vector, period not "some might say".
Every time a route changed you would need to run the SPF algorithm? Nonsense. Its LSA not LSD, I think LSD is what you must be taking. Re-read the CCNA book again.
You need a large router to run BGP eh? I've had full dual views running on a 2611 (lowend router).
Phizzy, go back to the books and study harder, you are getting some things very mixed up, you are comparing BGP with OSPF directly. This is like comparing apples and oranges, OSPF or another IGP is generally required for running BGP. Running BGP when you are single homed is a waste? What happens when you are single homed with your own AS, how do you advertise routes to your up stream providor? This is very very common situation especially with companies that want flexability in moving ISPs.
Ganja the CCIE.
Re:It's getting to be fairly common in California. (Score:1)
Re:Please explain. (Score:1)
at least use the 3600 w/ a RPS, so you have some power redundancy!
Re:Already being done (Score:2)
Your home ethernet probably WILL travel on fibre.. (Score:1)
Re:Please explain. (Score:1)
BGP is an exterior gateway protocol (EGP), and is meant to be used as a routing protocol between internetworks (AS's, autonomous systems for OSPF networks, as well as BGP networks for that matter.)
it's kind of like the difference between astroturf and carpeting; each is meant for a different area of your house- the astroturf is outside, the carpet inside.
Hope that helps!
Fibre to the Basement is no cure-all! (Score:1)
Internal competition? (Score:2)
You think this is bad? Here in Luxembourg, the P&T (national telecom operator) doesn't roll out DSL in certain places for fear of competing with its (much more expensive) leased line offering. Kirchberg, which already has fiber-to-the-curb, never will get DSL, for fear that all the banks located there will drop their leased-line subscription and get DSL instead.
Re:basement? (Score:1)
because shielding your house from EMI and Van Eck phreaking is that important... I read in one of winn schwartau's books that it's actually illegal for citizens to shield their houses or dwellings in such a fashion, does anyone know more on that?
Re:No, it hasn't been done (Score:1)
Request Denied. (Score:1)
You see, if we put in a middle medium, which has a hig overhead, then we can charge you significantly more to pay for the installation, use and what have you. Now, when we switch the second time, we can sell off our de-valued equipment to smaller 3rd party telecommunications companies for complete proffit, plus we can pay for all the state of the art fiber for next to nothing... We can still increase the usage fee (becuase we're upgrading the service), and we roll in an even bigger proffit.
Re:Please, not on Copper! (Score:2)
and cat5(6/7/etc) are standard specs, so calling it obsolete is kind of silly, when you think about it.
that being said, running some fibre strands to neighbourhoods and then running cat5e or cat6 to a house is not unreasonable by any means- making customers buy fibre nics is quite pointless, as well as non-backwards/forwards compatible. fibre standards aren't as nicely categorized as copper, for ethernet anyway.
Re:IPv6 (Score:1)
that, and most network engineers would agree that using public IP addressing for your business systems isn't always a good idea! think about it!
that being said, several large providers have started rolling out IPv6, like Telstra in australia. I think MCI/WorldCom has moved to using it or at least testing it for their backbone, but it will be several years before we really see it rolled out on any kind of large scale.
As for me, IPv6 is kind of scary, since the last 48 bits of the 128bit address are your MAC, and I'm not particularly interested in people being able to track me down that specifically. somehow it just seems like a situation waiting to be exploited- perhaps it's time to start using the more expensive intel nic's that allow you to define your own MAC on them, for purposes of being sneaky
Re:IP v6 better get here soon then. (Score:1)
if we have true always on networks running into houses, why not just use a well defined DHCP implementation? there's a lot of nifty tricks one can do with that, and I'm sure that several appliances that might be "net enabled" would be needing bootp/dhcp/tftp type services anyway for one reason or another.
air switch (Score:1)
So to late!!
Re:Athentication? (Score:1)
especially that cheapo low end cisco stuff. like a knife through butter.
would you like your neighbours having complete logs of your IRC/AIM/ICQ/etc sessions? how about capturing all your email? complete histories of all your web surfing, as well as any information entered into those websites?
Creepy, creepy stuff. I personally prefer having my connection hit equipment farther upstream, even with having to live with lower connection speeds. with a nationwide network, script kiddies who can type "ethereal" or "tcpdump" etc will have way too much power for their own good
Don't forget the WAREZ! (Score:1)
I'd like to see their AUP, thought. Why do companies hide the AUP until you're ready to actually install? I want to know if they issue static IPs, allow you to run servers (http, ftp, smtp, games[quake, etc.], identd[necessary for even 'ordinary' stuff]).
G1\/3 M3 W4R3Z d00d!|||
Re:I want more (Score:3)
It's the kind of thing where "if you build it, they will come"... someone develops an app like napster for movie trading on a large scale, (that actually works well!) with all these kiddies sitting on huge fat pipes and the whole internet turns to shit instantly. napster was bad enough. just deal with having connections NOW that most of the world can only dream of
Asymmetrical (Score:2)
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
Done it in Finland also... (Score:1)
Our local telco (2nd largest in Finland) has this "kotiportti" (=homegate) service where the telco brings a 1Gbps fiber directly to the cellar switch and from thereon it is distributed as switched 10/100Mbps ethernet to flats.
It costs $45/month, which is cheap by our standards.
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
Re:Asymmetrical (Score:2)
Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:3)
In fact, no utility does any work past their meter or switch box - not the water company, the phone company, the electrical company, or the cable company - at least not without you paying extra for it.
At least in my area, the demarcation is at a small box mounted in the back of the house. They are responsable for everything up to the modular jack. The house wiring just plugs in to that. In the case of fiber, they are typically running it either to the head of the subdivision, or to smaller boxes at the curb. The run from curb to demarcation point is copper.
I suspect that a good part of this involves not wanting to undercut their $1000/month T1 business. That would go right out the window if they provided static IP and reliable DSL (without no server restrictions) at about the same cost to them, but $40 a month to customers. Currently, it looks like they are spending more money on DSL provision to make sure it doesn't become as good as a T1.
IPV6 could wait if this was all done RIGHT! (Score:3)
I have a friend who lives in what I can only call a bachelor pad, who runs a cable modem with now firewalling at all, and each guy in the pad pays for their own IP. I keep trying to tell them how it would be cheaper (and better, since they run winders like mad) for them to NAT the place, but they won't do it - too hard to set up, I dunno.
The cable companies and DSL companies both have a marketing campaign to get the most bucks out of people by exploiting their lack of knowledge of networking. If they could get away with it (and I bet a lot of people are dumb enough to do it, if the telcos/cablecos could technically do it - actually, the cablecos can, they've been doing it with TVs all along) they would charge for a new line to each machine.
I hate fucking companies who prey on other's ignorance - then try to ram it down the throats of individuals who KNOW better.
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:I want more (Score:2)
I wouldn't dream of giving end users 38Mbit connections a piece- that would just pound on whatever connection I had, be it an OC-48 or OC-192, even.
Use fair queueing on the upstream, and allow the full 38Mbit across town (within your own network). Offer an OPTIONAL squid proxy. Customers who use it will have a really nice web surfing experiance. The more paranoid will still do OK.
If the federal government here in the U.S. really wants to get the boom economy back, it might do well to pressure phone and cable companies to quit stalling technology in their endless effort to wring out the last penny, and just enjoy the substantial profits that are there for the taking now.
Re:Dorm room? (Score:5)
No, not like having a dorm room in college.
College dorm rooms are connected to large LANs which get their bandwidth the old-fashioned way (via routers connected to T1s and T3s which speak frame-relay or ATM).
What's being proposed here is using Ethernet signalling to carry your traffic from the phone company's CO to your house over plain old CAT3 copper, instead of using one of the DSL variants.
The concept of using Ethernet to carry signal down the last mile is not exactly new. Nortel Networks came up with a technology called Etherloop [internet.com] three years ago. Bob Metcalfe wrote about it [infoworld.com] extensively in his InfoWorld column back then. Nortel wound up spinning off a startup called Elastic Networks to develop and market the product.
Etherloop's biggest feature is that it automatically compensates for crosstalk in binder groups by treating them as Ethernet collision domains, although it doesn't actually incur collisions as normal half-duplex Ethernet does.
Re:I want more (Score:2)
I constantly try to use as much bandwidth as possible on my connection, yes I am a web hog, because if there isn't demand, why scale. I want it to scale so I make all the demand I can generate. The internet as a whole will continue to expand and will grow to meet these needs as more broadband services become available like mp3.com and pixelon.com.
Re:Athentication? (Score:3)
Doesn't cable have the same basic issue though... You're still sitting on the same network loop as everyone else in the neighborhood. Actually, a good possible solution to this (considering the amount of bandwidth that would be avavilable) would be to have the subscriber's router and the local exchange router encrypt traffic between them. It would require a bit more power out of the local exchange router, but not so much as to be a huge issue. If each subscriber had their own encryption key, there could be no neighbor snooping. Anyone else see a problem with this scheme?
My issue with the article was this:
The flexibility of such an architecture is enormous. Over one connection, a user could conceivably run an Internet hookup at 6 Mbits/s, four concurrent telephone calls at 0.064 Mbit/s each and four concurrent videophone conversations at up to 768 kbits/s each
I personally have never gotten anything close to 10 Mbits a sec on a 10 Mbit/sec ethernet connection. At best they could reasonably hope for 5, and that would assume nearly ideal conditions.... While we are still talking about a vast improvement, I think they are being a little optimistic.
Re:IP v6 better get here soon then. (Score:3)
Now, don't get me wrong, I'd love a
My $0.02
Brad
Surely the inhibitor is further upstream (Score:2)
Example: One of my ISP's is UUNET.
Across the Atlantic they have 5 x OC3c lines and 2 x OC48c lines which comes to... about 5.7 Gb/s
Where it might help I suppose issituations like you have now with cable companies, when you are accessing sites in the same ISP; or for sites that have been cached at the ISP level.
This is one reason why broadband companies are so keen on stuff like "watch movies from our media servers" because that's not choking their upstream feed.
Yeah. (Score:2)
The original post said 'cannot be used on the internet' not 'cannot be used to run the whole internet'.
Re:IPV6 could wait if this was all done RIGHT! (Score:3)
If you ever want to be able to call in to a system at home (e.g. to tell your TiVo to record something), it will need a non-NATed configuration. IPv6 is the only way to do this without quickly running out of IP addresses - RSIP (Realm-Specific IP, a combination of tunnelling and IP address management) doesn't solve the 'call ing in' problem as far as I can see.
Before too long you'll want laptops to be able to roam between 3G networks when away from home, and then roam back to your Wi-Fi (802.11) wireless LAN at home. IPv6 enables much simpler IP mobility, i.e. your laptop keeps the same IP address (at least as far as TCP's concerned) no matter where you are. None of this is possible with NAT getting in the way - in fact, getting rid of NAT is one of the main reasons for IPv6.
For more information, see www.ipv6forum.com.
*yawn* Playing catchup again, kids? (Score:2)
Check out Novus High-Speed Internet. [novustelecom.com]
Note that the prices are C$ arctic pesos and not real dollars to boot...
Re:basement? (Score:2)
I'm not saying that fiber doesn't have advantages.. just that, for today's purposes of the home user, it's not 'leaps and bounds' above other methods of broadband digital. THe media itself has great potential.. but will not be beneficial now.
Also, telecom lines have lightning arrestors all over.
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
You can get away with less than 64+ MB of RAM (Score:2)
If you don't have an upstream provider you won't need to worry about any of these things
Otherwise nobody with a wimpy Cisco (eg. cheaper than a 7000 series) would be able to multihome.
The comment about OSPF is fair, though. What a fucking nightmare... I hate to admit it but the behavior of OSPF nudged me into running EIGRP. (the shame!)
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
It's basically a hacked version of Ethernet with whole town (most of it anyway) set up as giant switched LAN. Small pods connected to the backbone are located in each neighborhood. Each home using the service has a weatherproof CAT 5 Ethernet running from the pods to the house (usually underground). It's brought into the house just like a phone line and they install a wall jack inside your house. You get a static IP address and you're good to go. With the basic service you're limited to 500 MB per day, averaged over a seven period (ShoutCast streams will quickly get close to your quota if you're not careful). It was a pain to get them out install the whole thing, but dang it's fast!
RJ45 drops in my bedroom? Like it, but... (Score:2)
In 1995 I worked on an early broadband networking project at Boston College as a tester (Continental Cablevision, now AT&T Broadband). The main difference between the BC system as it was when it went online and the usual broadband thing was that there was no cable modem per se; the network/CATV signal came into the dorms over a fiber backbone and was split. The cable signal went to a series of coax taps, while the network signal fed to a large IBM box (essentially the "cable modem" and from there into a series of hubs.
This is a great system for a college or an apartment building; you just steal a closet in a hallway here and there, and then wire up the rooms as the opportunity arises. There are basically two problems once you get out of this setting, though...
The first is that Ethernet, like DSL, has a limited range. As I said, the BC network was (and is, I'm sure) built on a fiber-optic backbone. The Enet only comes into play when you enter a building; that's fine. However, there was an interesting layout problem; anybody here who's been to BC will know exactly where I'm talking about...
The Mods are a large patch of creaky, thirty-some-year-old prefab rowhouses that dominate about a quarter of BC's lower campus. Despite the running joke that "the Mods will be torn down by the time you're a senior", they are the most visible institution of campus life. Wiring them was... interesting. As I understood during my time on the testing crew, the Mods were split into two sections, each with its own feed from the backbone. In order to supply each block (with either two or four units per block), the cheapest way to do it was to steal one closet (referred to by students as "the keg closet"; obviously we're talking Party Zone here) per block as a network closet and lock it permanently.
This becomes a problem like so -- if you go into a residential neighborhood, where are you going to put the central network hub? Obviously you can't just rent out space in someone's basement. Building a "network shed" on each corner or telephone pole isn't especially practical either; for a dense neighborhood, can you imagine the thick bundle of Cat5 cable that you'd have to hang off the telephone poles or bury?
Now one could assume perhaps that these problems have certainly been worked on since 1995. But my thought on Enet@home is that you'd probably still be better off with a fiber or DSL drop coming in the front door and building your own network off of a router. I'm not saying it won't work, but I don't see it as being terribly practical...
/Brian
oh, and one more thing... (Score:2)
/Brian
I want my fiber! (Score:2)
For your megapixel VR version of Quake, I assume?
__
Re:IPV6 could wait if this was all done RIGHT! (Score:2)
I also agree that a regular rule based firewall would protect just as well, provided that you had the IP's - such firewalls are available cheaply or freely for both Windows and Linux (and I suspect Macs and others as well), so that isn't an issue. However, the issue (or at least it should be an issue) with "consumers" (god I hate that term) is that the providers want to charge "per-PC" connected. $5.00 per IP may not sound like much, but 10 devices later it is a chunk of change (not possible? Let's see: Your two machines, your SO's machine, your kid's machine, the fridge, the two cars - audio, etc - the three TV's - BAM! There ya go!). Even if it was only $1.00 per IP, that would still be $10.00 extra dollars a month.
Calling in from outside? That is possible under NAT, just give the access to route a specific port to an internal address. I know it is possible, because I am planning on setting up a personal bookmark server behind my NAT firewall, that I want to admin. I looked into what the LRP could do, and what various distros based on it could do, and all of them allowed this. So, in theory, it should be easily possible to route to an internal box with a properly NAT'ed system.
Your last point is simply a matter of convenience. I can see having the transparency of a single IP no matter where you are - that would be a nice thing. Not that I will ever have a laptop with wireless capability (kinda outside of my price range, and I really don't have a use for it yet), but if I did, with a NAT'ed solution I could do a couple of things - I could manually change the IP (a slight pain), or I could set up some kind of system to detect what I was attempting to use, and have it automatically change the IP for me on the fly. Unless I am running some form of server on the laptop where others would need to know my IP, there shouldn't be any real problem.
I am not saying we shouldn't use IPv6, we should. But you better bet that when it is rolled out for all the plebes and their dogs to use, the providers will charge as much as the market can stand for each and every IP address, which is one good reason why NAT should be embraced.
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:What does ELF stand for? (Score:2)
Re:Athentication? (Score:3)
Yes and no. Yes, cable modem is a shared pipe. However, with a DOCSYS cable modem (virtually all, now), all the traffic between your modem and the head-end router are encrypted with DES (with DH key exchange IIRC). Also, there is also authentication done via the MAC address of the device(s) connected to the cable modem. The cable modem is actually a router, and is not supposed to pass any packets to the LAN other than ones directed to the ip(s) it serves. In some of the early rollouts, misconfigurations were common, allowing MS networking to see everyone on thier local loop in the Windows 'network neighborhood'. Most cable modem ISPs now filter the SMB ports Of course you have. A large percentage of your total bandwidth is taken up by protocol overheads - frame headers, packet headers, control messages, which is why your maximum effective data transfer rate is going to be around 8 Mb/s on a 10 Mb/sec connection if you are using TCP/IP; probably a little higher if you were using UDP.
The only way to get transfer speeds approaching the maximum bandwith would be to write a minimalistic UDP-like data-transfer protocol which could read & write raw ethernet frames. The speed gain from such a protocol would be offset by the unreliability that would be introduced by stripping out all the error-checking and reliability elements present in TCP. It's impossible to use the full 10Mb/sec for your data, because the ethernet frames themselves have some overhead.
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
Re:It's been done (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft should love this (Score:2)
Someone before posted 768Kbps for a video, voice is 64kbps so that gives us 768 + 64 + 64 = 896Kbps, or We'll round up to 1Mbps. If you had a 10Mbps, it seems that connection would/could easily satisfy your needs, provided that the ISP could handle the traffic.
It also depends on the type of traffic that a web brousing session would sustain. It wouldn't be a constant or even exponential distribution, it probably would be more like a pareto distribution, must more bursty.
Who knows the bandwidth requirements of the future? I can only speculate. I'd say 10Mbps is a major improvement for all of us. Heck, a 768K DSL connection would be a major improvement for most everyone, saying cable modems have 5% of the online market, DSL has 2+%, and I guess a small amount is LANs and direct connections, but most people (80%? just a guess) still dial up the old fassion way.
BTW- I hate it when a analog modem dials up. Too much freakin sound. I'll be much happier in a quiet world.
Re:What does ELF stand for? (Score:2)
Re:Please explain. (Score:2)
OSPF on very large networks? Well, 2,000 routers is something I consider to be a large network and it runs fine. The key is a good addressing scheme, summarisation and correct use of stub areas, OSPF is very scalable.
2 full tables on a 2600 is really no problem, I'm not suggesting it's best practice but the router certainly doesn't melt. How processor intensive do you think bgp is? Try sh proc cpu on one of your other routers to get an idea. A 2600 with 64meg can handle two full views and this was last year, not 1994.
There is NO reason to have your own AS, unless you are multi-homed. PERIOD. I've taught the BCSN and that does indeed teach that, it's a good rule for that level of course but doesn't apply to the real world.
I think you are really showing how much you know here "You should have your ISP set up a static route and inject that into their BGP w/ a network statement": Where does that route orginate from? The ISPs AS in this case and a lot of customers don't want this, one, as they will no doubt be multihomed in the future and two, as I stated earlier it ties them in to an single ISP a great deal more than with their own AS.
Why (you muppet) would you want a full table in this case with only one connection? You fail to even understand that you would of course filter BGP routes from the ISP as you don't need them and static to the ISP, just because you have a peer doesn't mean you have to have the full routes. Jeezzz
ISIS, what are you talking about a real IGP? I work extensivly with ISIS currently and I find it very feature limited, how do you handle Multi-point interfaces? or DDR? and it means running an extra protocol besides IP. Good luck with the CCNP, I think you'll do OK but please remember there is a lot more to this stuff than that cert.
Re:IPV6 could wait if this was all done RIGHT! (Score:2)
It shouldn't matter what web server you are running on that machine - but if your are running a NAT firewall system that you can't redirect ports, then that is a problem (I am sure some of the better NAT firewalls allow it - perhaps even TINY (for Windows) allows it - however, I am not certain that some of the "hardware" firewall/routers allow it (like the Linksys) or not).
You answered your own problem, I'm afraid - don't use "crappy" software (or hardware, whatever the case is). When I decided I needed a server for my bookmarks, I knew I wanted it behind the firewall. I knew that my firewall had to be able to forward the requests, so I looked and saw what my options were. I was running ZoneAlarm with a proxy server on a machine to act as my pseudo NAT system (I know it isn't, but what the hell else do you call it, other than a proxy server, I guess), but this wasn't the best solution, and it wouldn't work with what I wanted to do (plus there were a slew of other problems). I couldn't find info on whether the Linksys stuff would do what I wanted (hey, it may), so I decide to just go ahead and build my own router/firewall, run FreeSCO (based off of LRP, which will do what I want), and leave it at that.
Finally, if I didn't want a service visible to the outside world, I wouldn't hook it up to the net to begin with. Your last line is telling, though. NAT works well if you know what you want to do and how to do it. I am sure in many instances it simply doesn't play well, more than likely because the software doesn't want to communicate in a more standard manner (instead opting for something else for speed reasons, like FPSs). Maybe it isn't for you, but for my purposes I think it will work fine (and is cheaper in the long run).
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:RJ45 drops in my bedroom? Like it, but... (Score:2)
We have a big green box on a telephone pole too. But you can only have so many big green boxes, and retrofitting an existing neighborhood would be rather difficult. Also, it's a question of how old your neighborhood is -- in a dense area like Boston's inner suburbs it would be a lot harder to find space for something like that than it would in some three-year-old cul-de-sac community outside Phoenix. I stick by my original point: in apartment buildings and *maybe* new subdivisions it's workable but really wouldn't fly in already-developed areas.
/Brian
Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:2)
Re:fiber to the basement? (Score:2)
In many cases, an actual T1 is not really necessary at all for a business, but allways on access is. In this sort of environment, the web server is typically in a colo though mail may well be a local machine. If they have experianced staff and a low traffic website, they might want the webserver to be local as well. In truth, they would be quite happy with 128Kb dedicated.
What they end up with is a frac T1. What they really need is DSL w/o the many restrictions and stupid PPPOE. They wouldn't mind paying $200/month for the lot (That's presuming $1/dedicated Kbps/month w/ 1 static IP + $72/month for the actual DSL). They end up paying around $1000/month. For a small office, that adds up fast.
Many people have noticed that the same line that "doesn't qualify" for DSL magically qualifies for more expensive ISDN.
Re:IPV6 could wait if this was all done RIGHT! (Score:2)
When IPv6 is deployed, a competitive market will grow up that delivers thousands of IPv6 addresses for a similar price to one IP address today. There is no extra cost to doing this, so any ISP that does not will be undercut by one who does. IPv4 address pricing is a direct result of the scarcity of address space. There are still hundreds to thousands of ISPs in most developed countries, so there is plenty of room for competition.
Your argument on IP mobility is similar to that for applications that don't code around NAT restrictions - there are always workarounds (e.g. reconnect all your TCP sessions) but they will cramp your style when moving between different Layer 2 technologies. If you don't want a wireless laptop, others will, and there are many other internet-connected devices such as PDAs and mobile phones that will also benefit.
The whole drive to P2P applications makes it much more desirable to have a static IP address. Again, not essential, but once you have enough IP addresses, application developers can concentrate on the important parts of their apps, rather than on beating NAT and the lack of static IP addresses.