Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Wikipedia Article of the Day: Default Route

Default Route

A default route, also known as the gateway of last resort, is the network route used by a router when no other known route exists for a given IP packet's destination address. All the packets for destinations not known by the router's routing table are sent to the default route. This route generally leads to another router, which treats the packet the same way: If the route is known, the packet will get forwarded to the known route. If not, the packet is forwarded to the default-route of that router which generally leads to another router. And so on. Each router traversal adds a one-hop distance to the route.

Once the router with a known route to a host destination is reached, the router determines which route is valid by finding the "most specific match". The network with the longest subnet mask that matches the destination IP address wins.

The default route in IPv4 (in CIDR notation) is 0.0.0.0/0, often called the quad-zero route. Since the subnet mask given is /0, it effectively specifies no network, and is the "shortest" match possible. A route lookup that doesn't match anything will naturally fall back onto this route. Similarly, in IPv6 the default address is given by ::/0.

Routers in an organization generally point the default route towards the router that has a connection to a network service provider. This way, packets with destinations outside the organization's local area network (LAN)—typically to the Internet, WAN, or VPN—will be forwarded by the router with the connection to that provider.

Host devices in an organization generally refer to the default route as a default gateway which can be, and usually is, a filtration device such as a firewall or Proxy server.

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Default_route

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Tuesday, April 03, 2007

CFA has tentative deal

With the help of an independent fact finding recommendation the California Faculty Association has a tentative deal with an effective 24% increase over 4 years.


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Gamle dager (olden days)


Imagine upgrading someone from their tried-n-true scroll to the hip-n-new book. Oh, the problems you'll have trying to explain it to the users.

This is from a show called Øystein & Meg (Øystein & I) produced by the Norwegian Broadcasting television channel NRK in 2001. It's written by Knut Nærum and performed by Øystein Bache and Rune Gokstad.

Helt fantastisk!

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No more Everything Technology on KSFO

KSFO has discontinued Bob O'Donnell's Everything Technology show on Saturdays. The poor replacement is now on KGO on Sundays hosted by Leo Laporte. Bob is still providing the occasional podcast and here's the one from March 10, 2007.

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Sunday, April 01, 2007

New job

I'm happy to announce that I've just accepted not 1, not 2, but 3 new jobs; one each at Microsoft, Google, and Apple, Inc. While I will continue to fulfill my role as lead seat warmer at San Francisco State "Working Together to be a" University here are my new roles effective immediately:

  • My role at Microsoft is to fill the shoes of Robert Scoble and Michael Gartenberg as lead evangelist and in so doing prove that even if you don't use any Microsoft product you should still find a way to donate as much money as you can to a company that tries so hard. To donate please use the new PayPal competitor: Microsoft Windows Live Express Local Donator and Easy Payment for mobile beta.
  • As Chief Strategist for Apple (with top security clearance) my role will be to promote the new iRan mission and extol the clear benefits of the iRack presence in the marketplace.
  • At Google I'll coordinate all beta signage, helping to find consensus on color and location of all beta tags within logos.
With all this experience I expect that by tomorrow I will become the newly appointed czar of Web 2.0 M&A for the newly combined TechCrunch-Digg-Technorati-Twitter-MySpace. Shortly thereafter I will announce Web 3.0.

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