SVP Technology at Fiserv; large scale system architecture/infrastructure, tech geek, reading, learning, hiking, GeoCaching, ham radio, married, kids
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Worth Reading: Cisco vPC in VXLAN/EVPN Networks

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Daniel Dib started writing a series of blog posts describing Cisco vPC in VXLAN/EVPN Networks. The first one covers the anycast gateway, the second one the vPC configuration.

Let’s hope he will keep them coming and link them together so it will be easy to find the whole series after stumbling on one of the posts ;)

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JayM
5 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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People with gas and propane stoves breathe more unhealthy nitrogen dioxide

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JayM
5 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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How the Kindness of Sega Saved Nvidia from Going Under

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JayM
5 hours ago
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Wow. Did they get shares? Warrants? Something? Hmmm.
Atlanta, GA
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Public Videos: Network Connectivity and Graph Theory

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When I decided to sunset the ipSpace.net subscription, I asked Rachel Traylor whether I could make the content of her webinars public. She graciously agreed, and the first results are already here: you can download approximately half of the videos from the Network Connectivity and Graph Theory without a valid ipSpace.net account. Enjoy!

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JayM
13 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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BGP Labs: EBGP Sessions over IPv6 LLA Interfaces

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If you insist on building your network with EBGP as a better IGP, make sure your implementation supports running IPv4 and IPv6 address families over EBGP sessions established between IPv6 link-local addresses (the functionality lovingly called unnumbered EBGP sessions).

Want to practice that neat trick? Check out the EBGP Sessions over IPv6 LLA Interfaces lab exercise.

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JayM
13 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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AI Engineers Report Burnout, Rushed Rollouts As 'Rat Race' To Stay Competitive Hits Tech Industry

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: Late last year, an artificial intelligence engineer at Amazon was wrapping up the work week and getting ready to spend time with some friends visiting from out of town. Then, a Slack message popped up. He suddenly had a deadline to deliver a project by 6 a.m. on Monday. There went the weekend. The AI engineer bailed on his friends, who had traveled from the East Coast to the Seattle area. Instead, he worked day and night to finish the job. But it was all for nothing. The project was ultimately "deprioritized," the engineer told CNBC. He said it was a familiar result. AI specialists, he said, commonly sprint to build new features that are often suddenly shelved in favor of a hectic pivot to another AI project. The engineer, who requested anonymity out of fear of retaliation, said he had to write thousands of lines of code for new AI features in an environment with zero testing for mistakes. Since code can break if the required tests are postponed, the Amazon engineer recalled periods when team members would have to call one another in the middle of the night to fix aspects of the AI feature's software. AI workers at other Big Tech companies, including Google and Microsoft, told CNBC about the pressure they are similarly under to roll out tools at breakneck speeds due to the internal fear of falling behind the competition in a technology that, according to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, is having its "iPhone moment."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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JayM
14 hours ago
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Atlanta, GA
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