Most training areas that I've seen would be semi-trailers, but the problem with them is width: the instructor ends up teaching in a long hallway. (Unless they haul around one of those houses cut in half, each part sitting on a semi. hmm... classy. wait, impossible to assemble in the city...)
For interior hardware, I would want a distributed system -- since the trailer is in a rural area, it has to be able to switch configurations quickly and easily.
are they going to want to have 6 trailers? one for NetBSD, one for linux, one for microsoft, one for apple, one for cisco, one for sun? heck no. that gets expensive, and you need to cut a costs somewhere; there's less money to be made in a rural area (with less people) than a urban area (with lots of people).
The statistic is grossly wrong, but you can find factual statistics along this line from the honeynet project.
Harumph. An article about DOS/DDOS that doesn't mention Dave Dittrich.
There oughta be a law.
Most training areas that I've seen would be semi-trailers, but the problem with them is width: the instructor ends up teaching in a long hallway. (Unless they haul around one of those houses cut in half, each part sitting on a semi. hmm... classy. wait, impossible to assemble in the city...)
For interior hardware, I would want a distributed system -- since the trailer is in a rural area, it has to be able to switch configurations quickly and easily.
are they going to want to have 6 trailers? one for NetBSD, one for linux, one for microsoft, one for apple, one for cisco, one for sun? heck no. that gets expensive, and you need to cut a costs somewhere; there's less money to be made in a rural area (with less people) than a urban area (with lots of people).
mook