Non-Profit Colocation?
dew asks: "I've just
put together what might be the world's first non-profit focused on
providing colocated Internet access for individuals, non-profits, and
Open Source groups. We're called the
California Community Colocation
Project and we're part of a 501c3. We do not host any for-profit
endeavors, personal or commercial. We've just opened our Palo Alto
facilities and have multiple fiber drops to
PAIX, where our
upstream provider is heavily
peered. I started this project to be as useful as possible to the
non-profit and Open Source worlds: how would you best recommend I do
that? Compile farms? A SourceForge mirror in case they go down?"
Perhaps SETI@Home can use some help?
They seem to have been heavily overtaxed recently...
Paranoid
Bwaahahahahaa.
Take some load off kernel.org by mirroring them. Considering the problems they have had lately, this will be very useful
Compile farms are another good idea, I love the Sourceforge implementation
Host as many open source projects as you can. Beware, very few will turn out to be useful & important projects for us
Design and advertise a site that explains the open-source phenomenon and shows success stories of open source implementations. :)
... well, that's all I could think of. Also, please keep in mind that the security risks are very high. Keep your software up-to date and read bugtraq daily
They call themselves CCCP ... a pun intended
or an early April fools joke?
And their web site: Red background with Yellow letters. If not a visual pun, it shows poor color choice in terms of readability. If their web site is poorly designed, what else is in questionable shape?
chongo (was here)
It's still a neat idea, and short of hosting outside of the USA, breaking away from commercial providers like this is the only way to get real freedom, as in Freedom of Speech, from an ISP.
You should exchange notes with other non-profit ISPs. Were a network of non-profit ISPs - free from commercial interests - to spread across the globe, you could change the world.
... could use some help the last I heard.
--
Benjamin Coates
No, I've got Collapse Sections on, I don't exclude sections / authors yet I routinely only see stories on the old stuff bar on the right (which seems more forgiving) or in the daily headline mailler, which goes to my work address and so runs off a different account.
Curious.
Greg
(Inside a nuclear plant)
Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!
I have had nothing but trouble trying to download ISO images due to several problems that higher server bandwidth would have certainly fixed.
eg. Some servers require HTTP downloads, including www.linuxiso.org (??). Downloading a huge file for days at a time in Windows is just asking for an error. Also, the RedHat server always "resets" my FTP connections in the middle of the night. And, most FTP servers have bandwidth restrictions, even during off-peak times, that are not dependent upon the server load.
I would guess that load on these types of servers would be greatly reduced if people could download what they need quickly, without having to abort downloads and restart from scratch.
"I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
I know, but I've always been led to believe that the headline mailler and the recent stories bar on the right reflect the front page. I get stories I only see through them (or the occasional accidental AC login), despite not having turned authors or topics off.
Curious.
Greg
(Inside a nuclear plant)
Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!
I've worked for several colo-providers, and all of them were apparently non-profit enterprises. At least they didn't make enough money to keep up with loan payments and such.
Most are bankrupt now. When I first saw the headline I thought perhaps someone had written something about one of them . . .
Oh well. Back to lurking.
There are lots of things you can do to benefit open source. Mirroring some of the world's highest volume websites might be one of them. But if you do that, you're going to saturate your network pipe, and make the rest of your site less accessible. If big bandwidth isn't your main strength (MBA translation: core competency) then don't get drawn into providing it. If projects need free DNS, mail hosting, compile farms, etc, you can do all of that better with nice, low latency.