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Thread: UniNet

  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Port Elizabeth
    Posts
    260

    Default UniNet

    Where does UniNet's bandwidth come from?

  2. #2

    Default

    It seems to me Internet Solutions (IS).

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Port Elizabeth
    Posts
    260

    Default

    Is that for local, international, or both?

  4. #4

    Default

    Both.. whyyyy?
    Telkom go google go!

  5. #5
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Port Elizabeth
    Posts
    260

    Default

    Uncapped looks attractive

  6. #6

    Default

    lol.. they do call you if you abuse the hell out of it and P2P is basically useless from my experience, but that's not a bad thing cos browsing was brilliantly fast and pings to gaming servers were <30ms
    Telkom go google go!

  7. #7
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Port Elizabeth
    Posts
    260

    Default

    im not a big user, maybe 30 - 50 gigs a month. But Telkom and me have different views of whats big.

  8. #8

    Default

    Dont worry Telkom's views about what's big is totally different to everyone else's. They are the minority in that case. 30GB a month is decent its only 1GB a day. Just streaming radio all day and a few driver downloads would reach that.

    Uninet only raises an eyebrow when you saturate the connection 24/7 every day for quite a while.
    Telkom go google go!

  9. #9

    Default

    Uninet run on the UUNET backbone afaik. The ping to mweb.co.za is the same as pinging it from the uunet datacentre in capetown.

  10. #10

    Default

    Clipse seems like Uninet is running on the IS backbone via gin.co.za (Basil Hillier)

    Knysna Municipality is running on 5.8 Ghz 802.11a band on MikroTik version 2.9.6
    with SSID starting with UNI picked up 6 SSID's in Sedgefield



    http://196.211.2.162/cgi-bin/tracero...w.uninet.co.za
    1 196.211.2.161 (196.211.2.161) 1.260 ms 1.702 ms 1.368 ms
    2 196.211.129.13 (196.211.129.13) 59.742 ms 63.180 ms 66.174 ms
    3 196.36.80.209 (196.36.80.209) 68.447 ms 71.106 ms 66.823 ms
    4 196.26.96.203 (196.26.96.203) 64.217 ms 63.154 ms 60.767 ms
    5 core1a-rba-gi2-0-0.rtr.isnet.net (196.26.0.7) 60.770 ms 62.470 ms 60.604 ms
    6 168.209.100.74 (168.209.100.74) 84.397 ms 89.762 ms 86.118 ms
    7 css1-ctn.nmszone.is.co.za (168.209.2.10) 94.292 ms 102.889 ms 88.900 ms
    8 168.209.28.10 (168.209.28.10) 106.531 ms 100.328 ms 99.514 ms
    9 ISFROG (196.28.89.162) 100.901 ms 101.413 ms 100.928 ms <Wireless MikroTik 2.8.26 >
    10 82.89.28.196.gin.co.za (196.28.89.82) 107.543 ms 102.174 ms 100.387 ms <Wireless MikroTik 2.8.26 >
    11 GWG (196.28.89.121) 104.124 ms 104.846 ms 106.555 ms <Wireless MikroTik 2.8.26 >
    12 ROOFCPE (196.28.89.174) 95.339 ms 95.034 ms 101.863 ms <Wireless http://196.28.89.174/ MikroTik > 2.8.12
    13 lucy.wdsl.co.za (196.28.86.2) 99.940 ms 98.243 ms 110.599 ms
    Last edited by kilos; 04-11-2005 at 07:38 PM.

  11. #11

    Default

    Picked up this post while googling and felt obliged to add my 2 cents.

    Most of UniNet's peering is via IS we also are finalising a smaller telkom peering link to address the perennial IS<->Telkom peering issues. International bandwidth is supplied via satellite backhaul. We also onsell backbone and conenctivity services to GIN who use a small capacity on our IS and Satellite link (not the other way round) to provision to their customers.

    As for Knysna, you should be seeing a whole bunch more signals in the 2.4 gig range next week as we turn on all the hotspot interfaces.
    Last edited by ezanolin; 20-01-2006 at 10:38 AM.

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