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Date:      Mon, 19 Feb 2001 21:46:41 -0500
From:      "Jonathan Slivko" <js43064n@pace.edu>
To:        <bv@wjv.com>, <freebsd-isp@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Redundancy...
Message-ID:  <003901c09ae7$5bd236c0$6a06fea9@jmsws>
References:  <B1A7D9973EBED3119ADD009027DC8649180CBF@mailman.thenap.com> <20010219184709.A68789@wjv.com>

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Guys,

Another ISP that is worth looking into is CyberXpress. They have 3 T1's, all
multihomed as well as all the backup, both data and power that you'll ever
need. It'll run you about $250 for half a rack of space, enough to fit 5
machines or $500 for a full rack, which is enough to fit 10 machines of a
standard workstation configuration. You can go and get more information
about this company from their website: http://www.cxp.com. If you would like
further information, please e-mail me privately and not send it to the list.
Thanks. -- Jonathan M. Slivko

--
Jonathan M. Slivko <js43064n@pace.edu>
Systems Administrator, APPL Technologies
Global IRC Operator, AsylumNet IRC Network
website: http://webpage.pace.edu/js43064n/

"Microsoft, is that some kind of toilet paper?"
--
----- Original Message -----
From: Bill Vermillion <bill@bilver.wjv.com>
To: <freebsd-isp@freebsd.org>
Sent: Monday, February 19, 2001 6:47 PM
Subject: Re: Redundancy...


> On Mon, Feb 19, 2001 at 06:03:04PM -0500, Drew J. Weaver thus spoke:
>
> > On a side note, make sure that the ISP that you co-locate has gas
> > powered generators as well as backups protecting your servers,
> > or it wont really do you much good to have it hosted out of some
> > guy's basement =)
>
> Gas powered generators are typically on the small side.  Serious
> generators are typically diesel. To me the best way is to find an
> ISP who is co-located inside a carrier [we've done that with our
> ISP], and rely on humoungous UPS and the 1MW+ Cat generators.  Not
> the cheapest but IMO the best.  Prices aren't the cheapest - but
> not that bad either.  eg a 1 RU server with 1.5Mbit guaranteed
> bandwith on our 100MB uplink to the OC192 - is $850 month.
>
> It all depends on what you are trying to accomplish and how
> critical the servers are.
>
> > This may or may not be an option, but segregate the resources that
> > much be live 24x7 (probably not your office client server
> > applications) and co-locate those.  Don't bother having a local copy
> > of them since it is probably just as easy to update the content at
> > your co-located site.
> >
> > Then the only thing you keep local is your interoffice lcient server
> > stuff shich if the building goes down, nobody is live to use anyway.
>
> > We would want to co-locate 4-5 boxes (all FreeBSD & 1 NT). One
> > box is a DB server (MySQL) and the others are web servers. We
> > currently are no co-locating. All of our boxes are currently under
> > our roof along with the bandwidth (2 T-1's). As we found out, the
> > biggest point of failure that we have is if there is an extended
> > power outage at our location.
> >
>
>
> --
> Bill Vermillion -   bv @ wjv . com
>
>
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