Part of the BrandMeister network is using some of the 44 range. The main bm webpage is using it. I also use a /24 from the East Coast of the USA for digital voice dmr services. That is also broken out to smaller dinners so that different users and developers who only wanted to be in the 44 range for testing.
Corey n3fe
On Sat, Oct 3, 2020 at 12:48 PM Dave Gingrich via 44Net < 44net@mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
For the IRLP network, in the last roughly 18 months, we have issued VPN connections for over 230 repeaters, plus roughly 60% of our backend infrastructure is using BGP routed 44-net addresses. Basically from service providers in Chicago, Sydney and Indianapolis.
Those cities were chosen because the lion's share of the IRLP network is in North America and Australia. There are a number of IRLP nodes in .UK, but we found that performance through Chicago is more than adequate. We could light up service from additional locations in the future, but we try to use our existing infrastructure locations, to keep the costs down.
We started using 44-net for IRLP back in 2015. A few folks have been using 44 for far longer.
-k9dc
On Oct 3, 2020, at 04:05, Toussaint OTTAVI via 44Net <
44net@mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
Hi all,
Le 29/09/2020 à 22:30, pete M via 44Net a écrit :
Allstarlink are using 44 net space and are giving a great service to
link repeaters. I already give to them from time to time.
The Brandmeister server team could also be supported. (As an admin of
the canadian server I do have some personal interest. )
But in fact, very few of us have their digital voice systems connected
through AMPRNet / HamNet addressing.
- Only one VPN server in the East coast of the US does not have much
sense in terms of latency for world-wide users, mostly for VoIP applications. Pings are far too long. To be efficient, VPN servers must be closer from people (by country, or at least, by continent)
73 de TK1BI
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