Jump to content

nicholaspham98

Member
  • Posts

    5
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling

nicholaspham98's Achievements

  1. Vessel: nicholaspham https://www.vessel.com/videos/LCoY5zfFf https://www.vessel.com/videos/JemZ8O7Hy
  2. I use Google Music and I have some high bitrate lossless files on there around 80 megs in size. They play instantaneously. But I do somewhat agree with you it could be capped. Up to what who knows.
  3. T-Mobile has their Un-carrier scheme which should revolutionize the mobile network and plans. We're specifically looking at their Un-carrier 6.0 aka "Music Freedom." Essentially, specific music streaming services are allowed through T-Mobile's network uncapped and as long what you are streaming follows their ports, ips, and services then it shouldn't affect your data cap, nor speeds. Let's say one of the music streaming services had a VPN that also followed the same ports, ips, and of course service. If they were to connect to that VPN while on a given T-Mobile Un-carrier 6.0 Music Freedom plan, my theory would be that they'll be able to surf the web with truly unlimited data at full 4G LTE speeds. What do you guys think?
  4. This is my family's network. With my aunt and uncle on my dad's side being neighbors and having a family with networking and computer background comes a pretty spectacular network. Colors: Purple: PoE Red: Main Internet Connections from ISP Grey: Got too lazy to continue, but basically consists of: vlans cable connections fiber/ethernet connections I'm not sure of the specific model numbers, but I do know the switches are Juniper and Cisco. There maybe a few errors in the diagram, because I didn't setup the entire network so I'm not entirely sure about it all just an overview from my dad and uncle. Under all three roofs there's a combined 19 people and almost all of us use the internet on a daily basis so you could imagine how much data we pull through a month heck even annually. Having fiber runs to each house was necessary, because of the cable runs and latency. Also, we have Remote Site VPNs in-place that connect to a datacenter in Dallas that hosts a couple of our site-to-site VPN servers. This is, because the datacenter has "optimized routing" or BGPs coupled with multiple fiber lines to many tier 1 and 2 carriers. Basically what happens here is our network traffic goes through the VPN servers located at the datacenter and from there they take the most optimal route to it's destination. I'm very lucky to have a family and network like this. I just wish my dad would let me in the networking room, but hey at least I get to mess with the ESXi servers and host various services. EDIT #1: We do have a load balancer for both the GigaPower connections.
×