[olug] Community Colo Project
Charles.Bird
charles.bird at powerdnn.com
Thu Mar 26 19:39:17 UTC 2009
its not in the actual CO, this place is across the hallway :)
2009/3/26 Dave Weis <djweis at internetsolver.com>
>
> Do you mean collocating in a Qwest CO? They are extremely picky about what
> you have in the rack. First problem would be lack of AC power, second would
> be 15" depth restriction.
>
> It does cut down on the loop costs substantially though :-)
>
>
> On Thu, 26 Mar 2009, Dan Clough wrote:
>
> Which providers are jacked in at the CB office? If Cogent or PinPoint
>> has lit fiber out there I could get in touch with my Cogent rep and
>> see how well they can limbo on a 20Mbps commit.
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 26, 2009 at 1:27 PM, <charles.bird at powerdnn.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I like the idea, I've always wanted to do something like that. I thought
>>> about registering the name "ghettodatacenter.com" or something and
>>> leasing a small office at the kanesville CO in CB, no loopback charges and
>>> plenty of bandwidth for a couple racks. Just basic airconditioning and a few
>>> 20-30A circuits.
>>>
>>> 24/7 access too :)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Dan Clough <dclough at gmail.com>
>>>
>>> Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2009 13:11:13
>>> To: Omaha Linux User Group<olug at olug.org>
>>> Subject: [olug] Community Colo Project
>>>
>>>
>>> Over the last week ideas have been bounced around regarding the
>>> possibility of a community colocation project. This sounds like a
>>> wonderful idea to me considering Omaha's lack of small-fish colo
>>> places and the general abundance of bandwidth, and I'd like to know
>>> what OLUG thinks about contributing to such an operation.
>>>
>>> Ever since Jay closed up shop I've been looking for a good place to
>>> put my servers, with my main concerns being static IP addressing and
>>> no port restrictions (I'm looking at you, Cox). A community colo
>>> would free up some room in our basements and maybe even prove the
>>> viability of colocating in Omaha.
>>>
>>> Finances are of course the most limiting factor, so keeping it cheap
>>> and simple is the key to success. I think one rack, 10 or 20Mbps and
>>> a /26 or /27 block of IPv4 addresses would be more than enough to
>>> start out with. What do you guys think about such a venture?
>>>
>>> Dan
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>>
> --
> Dave Weis
> djweis at internetsolver.com
> http://www.internetsolver.com/
>
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>
>
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