I work at the University of Kansas and we have several different forms of logs for MAC address and IP address. All of the MAC's are recorded on each port (like if there was a hub) and we can also detect when people have routers (which we don't allow).
I have a lazy eye. I mean my eyeball moves around and follows what I am looking at, but it's vision is terrible. All my brain sees is what's coming out of my good eye. Am I going to be able to see the 3D? I've never had any success with the 3D glasses for obvious reasons and I've always hated those posters that you are supposed to stare at until you see the picture. If you ask me it's a hoax, cause I've never seen one.
I highly doubt they are talking about sending 10TB to the desktop. I mean, we have 10gig connections all over the place now too, but how many of them do you see going to somebody's workstation?
Re:The problem is the charging model
on
Is 3G Irrelevant?
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· Score: 2, Insightful
I work in network design at the University of Kansas and our programming group here has been working on a usage-based charging model for some time now. This is the charging model of the future, not just for cellular, but for in home solutions as well.
We were prompted to move to this model of charging after realizing that the percentage of traffic from P2P and other entertainment applications was much higher than that of academic applications.
They are still going to get extremely inexpensive access to the network, but the people who use a majority of the traffic will be the ones funding the additional bandwidth necessary.
Can you put music in CD format on these? I mean it said it can only be read by DVD-ROM or CDROM, but even if that is the case could you make a music CD out of it? What's preventing it from playing in your car stereo?
I could understand the first one not playing because of how much compression there is, but the second one that is only putting 1 GB on the disk isn't quite as bad.
I agree that some of the other equipment may be less expensive, but there aren't tools powerful enough for an enterprise network. As I said before, we use CiscoWorks and Solarwinds, the ladder of which monitors just about any platform, but also pulls MIB variables from SNMP.
I used a lot of different equipment, but I keep going back to Cisco. Perhaps we are just too deep in propietary equipment, but when you are dealing with a network of about a thousand devices it is necessary to have some semblance of unity.
I'm not sure what kind of contract prices you are getting, but I think the prices we pay are pretty justifiable. They have great service and support and if you use CiscoWorks, it really makes the task of monitoring an enterprise-network pretty easy.
Here at the University of Kansas, we are working on a usage-based charging model for campus residents, as well as buildings on campus. It should be in place next fall. We will no longer be doing rate-limiting either, be it as they will be paying for what they use.
5 Mb per song? Ha! Ya right. At most these songs will be 128kbps because in reality, the artists still want you to purchase the CD. If you are giving them song quality of 192kbps then they would have no reason to purchase any more CD's. I say @ most 128kbps and less than 4 Gb.
Are you serious? Tell me you have something better to do w/ your time. Why would you even take time to get a user name on this site if you feel this way.
Farm Club http://www.getmusic.com/farmclub/ does a great job at pushing local music. They post all kinds of local bands music on their site and user vote on what they like best.
We had a band from my old high school that was on the top 10 list for awhile and if they could maintain the number one position for so long, they would get to appear on the "Farm Club" television show on the USA Network.
I work at the University of Kansas and we have several different forms of logs for MAC address and IP address. All of the MAC's are recorded on each port (like if there was a hub) and we can also detect when people have routers (which we don't allow).
Unless of course you're the guy in the back of the theatre with a camcorder.
I have a lazy eye. I mean my eyeball moves around and follows what I am looking at, but it's vision is terrible. All my brain sees is what's coming out of my good eye. Am I going to be able to see the 3D? I've never had any success with the 3D glasses for obvious reasons and I've always hated those posters that you are supposed to stare at until you see the picture. If you ask me it's a hoax, cause I've never seen one.
I highly doubt they are talking about sending 10TB to the desktop. I mean, we have 10gig connections all over the place now too, but how many of them do you see going to somebody's workstation?
I think you don't know how to spell grammar.
I work in network design at the University of Kansas and our programming group here has been working on a usage-based charging model for some time now. This is the charging model of the future, not just for cellular, but for in home solutions as well. We were prompted to move to this model of charging after realizing that the percentage of traffic from P2P and other entertainment applications was much higher than that of academic applications. They are still going to get extremely inexpensive access to the network, but the people who use a majority of the traffic will be the ones funding the additional bandwidth necessary.
Can you put music in CD format on these? I mean it said it can only be read by DVD-ROM or CDROM, but even if that is the case could you make a music CD out of it? What's preventing it from playing in your car stereo? I could understand the first one not playing because of how much compression there is, but the second one that is only putting 1 GB on the disk isn't quite as bad.
I agree that some of the other equipment may be less expensive, but there aren't tools powerful enough for an enterprise network. As I said before, we use CiscoWorks and Solarwinds, the ladder of which monitors just about any platform, but also pulls MIB variables from SNMP. I used a lot of different equipment, but I keep going back to Cisco. Perhaps we are just too deep in propietary equipment, but when you are dealing with a network of about a thousand devices it is necessary to have some semblance of unity.
I'm not sure what kind of contract prices you are getting, but I think the prices we pay are pretty justifiable. They have great service and support and if you use CiscoWorks, it really makes the task of monitoring an enterprise-network pretty easy.
It's Patriot Act Part 3.
Here at the University of Kansas, we are working on a usage-based charging model for campus residents, as well as buildings on campus. It should be in place next fall. We will no longer be doing rate-limiting either, be it as they will be paying for what they use.
5 Mb per song? Ha! Ya right. At most these songs will be 128kbps because in reality, the artists still want you to purchase the CD. If you are giving them song quality of 192kbps then they would have no reason to purchase any more CD's. I say @ most 128kbps and less than 4 Gb.
Are you serious? Tell me you have something better to do w/ your time. Why would you even take time to get a user name on this site if you feel this way.
Farm Club http://www.getmusic.com/farmclub/ does a great job at pushing local music. They post all kinds of local bands music on their site and user vote on what they like best. We had a band from my old high school that was on the top 10 list for awhile and if they could maintain the number one position for so long, they would get to appear on the "Farm Club" television show on the USA Network.