They do use more decks and keep half aside. You will see more 6 deck games then double or single deck games. When they shuffle they use a flat shuffle that looks something like you would use for dominos. Once they get the deck in order the single and double deck games will be cut by a player inserting a plastic card. Then the dealer will insert a plastic card in the midst of the shuffled deck and deal away until they deal out the plastic card. This signals a new deal the next hand. A 6 deck show will usually have about 10-12 hands for a table of 4 players and the dealer. A single deck game will usually shuffle every hand with 4 players.
Also the fewer number of decks used will increase the odds of blackjacks being dealt.
Use the right click to select and you won't hilight. You can also elect to use the middle mouse button. I think this will also allow you to not hilight.
In a true Internet backbone there are no static routes. It is all BGP4. Static routes are used only for customer connections (Leaf nodes). Dynamic routes really are not all that dynamic. They only change when a human adjusts the metrics the routers use to determine the path and or when a circuit goes down. With the current size of the routing table approaching 100,000 routes it take 5 minutes for route convergance when a whole router loses it's mind. A single route is rerouted within a couple seconds.
What the original poster saw was a major anomoly. Someone upstream typo'd a route entry and blackholed the traffic or somewhere upstream a Cisco CEF table got whacked and wouldn't rebuild.
Junipers run Mobile PII as their main processor. The JunOS is actually FreeBSD based and is quite happy on that processor since it just runs the chassis and coordinates the efforts of all the Interface cards. The interface cards all have a highly specialized ASIC in control that actually handles the routing. That's why Junipers are so much faster then Ciscos. Ciscos also use ASICs but just for packetpushing. The main processor also handles the main part of the work.
A good analogy is that Junipers are more like Beowolf clusters and Ciscos are Xterms connected to a Cray.
With a major provider, your hardware is going to be big enough (BFR, GRF, etc) to handle 60,000+ routes AND do adequate security filtering. Don't accept the RFC'd routes in, and don't propogate them. Period. Don't accept internal routes from external sources. These are simple rules any major provider *can* handle if they can handle a full routing table. We're talking edge routers.
First, there are 82,000+ routes in the table currently. Circuits bounce, route are withdrawn, routers have to keep up with the changes. There are very few routers that will handle an ACL and high use (75% of BackPlane capacity). The major ISP I work for will not put more then a standard ACL (martian filters mostly) on the backbone as many of the Cisco GSRs will promptly crash, and Cisco doesn't make them any bigger. Juniper has no filtering ability at all, atleast with JUNos 4.0. Filtering is promised RSN. Second, if you do not accept internal routes from external sources then any of your customers that are multihomed will be unreachable from your network if their link to is goes down.
They do use more decks and keep half aside. You will see more 6 deck games then double or single deck games. When they shuffle they use a flat shuffle that looks something like you would use for dominos. Once they get the deck in order the single and double deck games will be cut by a player inserting a plastic card. Then the dealer will insert a plastic card in the midst of the shuffled deck and deal away until they deal out the plastic card. This signals a new deal the next hand. A 6 deck show will usually have about 10-12 hands for a table of 4 players and the dealer. A single deck game will usually shuffle every hand with 4 players.
Also the fewer number of decks used will increase the odds of blackjacks being dealt.
Oddly enough something similar occurred in Rapid City on June 9m 1972. Stories from the NWS and MPR.
Use the right click to select and you won't hilight. You can also elect to use the middle mouse button. I think this will also allow you to not hilight.
Ummm...no.
In a true Internet backbone there are no static routes. It is all BGP4. Static routes are used only for customer connections (Leaf nodes). Dynamic routes really are not all that dynamic. They only change when a human adjusts the metrics the routers use to determine the path and or when a circuit goes down. With the current size of the routing table approaching 100,000 routes it take 5 minutes for route convergance when a whole router loses it's mind. A single route is rerouted within a couple seconds.
What the original poster saw was a major anomoly. Someone upstream typo'd a route entry and blackholed the traffic or somewhere upstream a Cisco CEF table got whacked and wouldn't rebuild.
Junipers run Mobile PII as their main processor. The JunOS is actually FreeBSD based and is quite happy on that processor since it just runs the chassis and coordinates the efforts of all the Interface cards. The interface cards all have a highly specialized ASIC in control that actually handles the routing. That's why Junipers are so much faster then Ciscos. Ciscos also use ASICs but just for packetpushing. The main processor also handles the main part of the work.
A good analogy is that Junipers are more like Beowolf clusters and Ciscos are Xterms connected to a Cray.