Hi John,
Thanks for the slides, Is there a video of the presentation available anywhere I think it'd make some good viewing.
Rebooting the AMPRnet is whats needed, new products like the UDR56k are a great idea and I'd expect to see some poor mans clones of its functionality following in time. Thanks to the internet the general level of data comms knowledge has improved in the last 20 years, and a resurgence in interest seems to be occurring. Me personally, I've got internet burnout. :)
As regards to tunnelling, I thought it was policy that to tunnel to /44 you need a static IP I read somewhere. Technically of course it's possible to tunnel to any accessable IP, I subscribe to a dynamic DNS service to track my VPN end points for example.
-Cheers Max. G7UOZ.
On Thu, 2012-05-31 at 12:00 -0700, 44net-request@hamradio.ucsd.edu wrote:
Message: 2 Date: Wed, 30 May 2012 14:41:22 -0700 From: K7VE - John k7ve@k7ve.org To: AMPRNet working group 44net@hamradio.ucsd.edu Subject: Re: [44net] Some newbie guidance. Message-ID: CAN77r3xdL9DQv3XFH331PQ+YdBa2MaTu6PBnWq1ehCrvYcdYuA@mail.gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Slides from a presentation I gave a couple of months ago http://www.microhams.com/digitalconf2012/K7VE_N7IPB_RebootNET44.pdf
Some of the tunneling protocols don't require a fixed IP -- I tunnel a /24 network from a data center to my home (and also a portable subnet) using L2TP.
John D. Hays K7VE PO Box 1223, Edmonds, WA 98020-1223 http://k7ve.org/blog http://twitter.com/#!/john_hays http://www.facebook.com/john.d.hays