I'm no expert in this. I'm just asking experienced people to give me an
opinion and check it...
As for the disaster, well our networks may be overloaded due to the rush for
information, or something else... It happened to Fiji a few month back when
there was the coup... So I guess any major event would put a strain on the
network. Anyhow, the IETF has to analyse the situation in terms of does it
have any impact on the internet, if yes, what can IETF do?
It seems there is a problem (which I'm sure is unrelated) as Daniel Senie
states:
www.is.com.fj Above site trace shows packet loss of 15% to 30% between the
following two
addresses in the path:
202.139.190.23 and 202.139.137.30
Franck Martin
Network and Database Development Officer
SOPAC South Pacific Applied Geoscience Commission
Fiji
E-mail: franck(_at_)sopac(_dot_)org <mailto:franck(_at_)sopac(_dot_)org>
Web site: http://www.sopac.org/
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-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Hoffman / IMC [mailto:phoffman(_at_)imc(_dot_)org]
Sent: Wednesday, 12 September 2001 1:38
To: Franck Martin
Subject: RE: ietf/istf role in US Disaster?
Could you traceroute to or run traffic tools to check the following links
to
these sites:
www.is.com.fj
www.nauru.nr
Both work fine for me coming from San Jose, CA.
So, why do you think this has anything to do with either the IETF or
US disaster?
--Paul Hoffman, Director
--Internet Mail Consortium