[77875] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: The Cidr Report
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Philip Smith)
Sat Feb 12 23:52:02 2005
Date: Sun, 13 Feb 2005 14:51:25 +1000
From: Philip Smith <pfs@cisco.com>
To: Hank Nussbacher <hank@mail.iucc.ac.il>
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.58.0502122010580.8647@efes.iucc.ac.il>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
I split my Routing Analysis based on registry region so that the
constituents of each region know what is going on in their area.
As you know registries offer training if their membership ask for it.
APNIC and RIPE NCC membership seem to ask for training other than just
how to be an LIR.
But how to be an LIR doesn't cover every single ASN who is announcing
address space. For example, APNIC has an extensive region wide
programme, but there is still large deaggregation here in the AP region...
So I really don't see what RIR training has to do with this. It helps,
but it isn't the complete solution. If the industry is worried, the
industry has to do something about it.
philip
--
Hank Nussbacher said the following on 13/02/2005 04:16:
>
> Duh! No suprise there. ARIN just gives IP space and only offers some
> measly online training:
> http://www.arin.net/library/training/index.html
>
> RIPE on the other hand, has 3-6 course a month, throughout Europe:
> http://www.ripe.net/training/lir/index.html
> http://www.ripe.net/cgi-bin/courselist.pl.cgi
>
> APNIC also has a number of courses and goes out to where it is needed:
> http://www.apnic.net/training/schedule.html
>
> As long as ARIN just doles out IP space with no education, the routing
> table will continue to grow.
>
> -Hank
>
>
>>Most seem to come from AS4323. Today they are announcing 2606 prefixes,
>>a week ago they were announcing 844 prefixes.
>>
>>philip
>
>
>