ARIN just subdivided their last /17, /18, /19, /20, /21 and /22. Down to only /23s and /24s now. : ipv6

Rob Seastrom rs at seastrom.com
Mon Jun 29 23:38:53 UTC 2015


Guarantee there's no BLISS-32 on Johnny's machine.  The source to the
LAT software he's talking to *may* be in BLISS-36.  It's more likely in
MACRO-10.

-r (does this gray hair make me look old?)

George Michaelson <ggm at algebras.org> writes:

> Dec gave you the source on Microfiche. If you want to change LAT just read,
> and find your Bliss32 compiler.
>
> On Mon, Jun 29, 2015 at 9:04 PM, Scott Whyte <swhyte at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 6/29/15 20:17, Johnny Eriksson wrote:
>>
>>> Javier Henderson <javier at kjsl.org> wrote:
>>>
>>>  Or XNS.  On the other hand, people did have a nice career with
>>>>>
>>>> SNA...but they weren't trying to push packets over the
>>>>
>>>> LAT
>>>>
>>>
>>> .daytime
>>> Monday 29-Jun-2015 20:10:46
>>>
>>> .pjob
>>> Job 3 at ODEN   User BYGG   [10,335]   TTY4
>>>
>>> .where tty4
>>> LAT     PC78(LATD for FreeBSD) TTY4
>>>
>>> Is there anyting wrong with LAT?
>>>
>>
>> err, its been awhile.  Doesn't LAT have a 1 sec timeout that's not
>> configurable?
>>
>>
>>>  -jav
>>>>
>>>
>>> --Johnny
>>>
>>>



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