From Marianne.Colgrove at directory.reed.edu Thu Dec 7 08:42:44 2000 From: Marianne.Colgrove at directory.reed.edu (Marianne Colgrove) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey Message-ID: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Hello all, We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with dial up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy servers. Thanks! Marianne mcolgrove@reed.edu 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events calendar, etc.) from off-campus? 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what product do you use? How do you use it?: - explicit proxy - automatic configuration file (PAC) - reverse proxy configuration 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support problems with VPNs? 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? From abrock at georgefox.edu Thu Dec 7 10:30:32 2000 From: abrock at georgefox.edu (Anthony Brock) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: >1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed >databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events >calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes, we provide services to a variety of databases such as Academic Search Elite, Education Abstracts Full Text, and ERIC. > >2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, >what >product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration We are using a Squid proxy server which requires authentication against an LDAP database. We then have individuals configure their machines for automatic proxy. > >3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are >they >flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If >password >exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system >or is >it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? The passwords are currently in the clear. The database they authenticate against is currently only used for web related access. I am VERY interested in changing this, but it might be a bit pointless most current interaction with our authenticated web pages is also in the clear. > >4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? >If so, >is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more >limited >ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support >problems with VPNs? No. > >5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing >web proxy >service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? We started with apache as the proxy server, but encountered several strange errors with some database vendors. Since shifting to the Squid proxy http://www.squid-cache.org we have not encountered further problems. Also, we have experienced a significate increase in performance and reliability. Let me know if you find/develop a good, stable, and cheap solution :) We would be very interested in improving the security of what we currently offer. Tony From krupicka at pacificu.edu Thu Dec 7 12:06:09 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB667D@everest.pacificu.edu> Here is the response from my systems administrator: On Thu, 07 Dec 2000, "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site > licensed databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public > directories, internal events calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes. > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If > so, what product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration We were already using Squid (http://www.squid-cache.org), for web-caching in the computer labs, and it has built-in authentication methods. Since Pacific uses a home-grown user database, I wrote a quick module to authenticate against that. Took maybe 10 minutes. Linfield was nice enough to provide a .pac file that we adapted for our use. Off-campus users can now point their automatic proxy URL to our .pac and any IP-restricted web services are told to proxy through our Squid server. The Squid server will ask for a valid username/ password (via the default browser authentication popup dialog) for any non-Pacific IP address, which it then verifies against our database. Once verified, proxying is transparent until the user quits the browser. Only IP-restricted servers are proxied; the user is free to surf other sites without going through our proxy. > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or > are they flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product > do you use? If password exchanges are not encrypted, is the > password specific to the proxy system or is it a password that > enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? They're in whatever the HTTP protocol specifies -- I can't remember if it's cleartext or if it's obfuscated. My guess is that it's in the clear. :( > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your > campus? Not at this time. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about > providing web proxy service that uses encrypted user names and > passwords? I wish I could, but I have no experience with this at this time. (Ted's comment - We have had some problems with different browser versions. We are currently telling students to use Netscape for best results.) -- Brandon M. Browning, Systems Administrator http://www.pacificu.edu/ Pacific University -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From geracim at pacificu.edu Thu Dec 7 15:41:38 2000 From: geracim at pacificu.edu (Michael Geraci) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: SNAP server In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB667D@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Ted, Per your suggestion, I have looked into buying a snap server for my lab. The reviews are fairly positive, but I thought I'd see if you've heard anything that might preclude it from working in my current environment. Thanks for the tip. Michael Geraci Assistant Professor Dept. of Media Arts Pacific University, Oregon From jdriskell at ups.edu Thu Dec 7 16:31:26 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: SNAP server References: Message-ID: <3A302BDE.6C528C1C@ups.edu> We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. Let me know if anyone has any more questions. Jim Driskell University of Puget Sound Michael Geraci wrote: > Ted, > > Per your suggestion, I have looked into buying a snap server for my lab. > The reviews are fairly positive, but I thought I'd see if you've heard > anything that might preclude it from working in my current environment. > > Thanks for the tip. > > Michael Geraci > Assistant Professor > Dept. of Media Arts > Pacific University, Oregon From cfeskens at willamette.edu Thu Dec 7 17:02:20 2000 From: cfeskens at willamette.edu (Casey Feskens) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: SNAP server In-Reply-To: <3A302BDE.6C528C1C@ups.edu> Message-ID: On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise it has been great for us. --------------------------------------------- Casey Feskens System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant Willamette Integrated Technology Services Willamette University, Salem, OR Phone: (503) 370-6950 Fax: (503) 375-5456 --------------------------------------------- From jdriskell at ups.edu Fri Dec 8 08:48:21 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: SNAP server References: Message-ID: <3A3110D5.F955DCE0@ups.edu> We haven't tried to connect any Apple equipment to the snap server, so thanks for the information on spanning-tree. We've de-emphasized Appletalk to the extent that we have one large Appletalk zone across our entire network with a seed router running on a NT server, so we'll see how the snap works in this environment. Jim Driskell Casey Feskens wrote: > On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > > > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > > > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had > some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and > if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play > around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise > it has been great for us. > > --------------------------------------------- > Casey Feskens > System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant > Willamette Integrated Technology Services > Willamette University, Salem, OR > Phone: (503) 370-6950 > Fax: (503) 375-5456 > --------------------------------------------- From alinn at willamette.edu Fri Dec 8 07:29:34 2000 From: alinn at willamette.edu (Andrew Linn) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: SNAP server References: <3A3110D5.F955DCE0@ups.edu> Message-ID: <3A30FE5E.9FEF2CF4@willamette.edu> I just want to back up Casey's statement. My group uses the Snap server as storage for all our work, and we are 1/2 Mac and 1/2 PC. Until Casey got the appletalk issues straightened out, the Snap Server was nearly unusable by the Macs. 5 minute downloads for a 5Mb file and such. After the tweaks, while still slightly slower than the PCs, it has become usable by the Macs. Andrew Linn Instructional Design Consultant Willamette University "James M. Driskell" wrote: > We haven't tried to connect any Apple equipment to the snap server, so thanks for > the information on spanning-tree. We've de-emphasized Appletalk to the extent > that we have one large Appletalk zone across our entire network with a seed > router running on a NT server, so we'll see how the snap works in this > environment. > > Jim Driskell > > Casey Feskens wrote: > > > On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > > > > > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > > > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > > > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > > > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > > > > > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had > > some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and > > if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play > > around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise > > it has been great for us. > > > > --------------------------------------------- > > Casey Feskens > > System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant > > Willamette Integrated Technology Services > > Willamette University, Salem, OR > > Phone: (503) 370-6950 > > Fax: (503) 375-5456 > > --------------------------------------------- From jdriskell at ups.edu Fri Dec 8 11:31:42 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <3A31371E.D5F94C8F@ups.edu> Please see our answers below. Let me know if anyone has specific questions. Jim Driskell University of Puget Sound Marianne Colgrove wrote: > Hello all, > > We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with > dial > up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated > proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are > available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear > your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy > servers. > > Thanks! > > Marianne > mcolgrove@reed.edu > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? ==> Yes. We currently have an interim Netscape proxy server using LDAP, running on a dec unix box. We will convert to a Sun box with Netscape proxy using LDAP during Christmas break. > > > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration ==> We use Netscape Proxy as an explicit proxy server. > > > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? ==> Our passwords are currently in the clear and specific to the interim system, but well use SSL when the new system comes on line. We intend to populate the LDAP store with our email passwd file. We're also converting our email system to LDAP. > > > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support > problems with VPNs? ==> Not yet, but we're considering it. > > > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? ==> Use a proxy server authenticated by LDAP encrypted by SSL. From houstobc at whitman.edu Mon Dec 11 15:20:05 2000 From: houstobc at whitman.edu (Ben Cody Houston) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <976576805.3a35612575363@webmail.whitman.edu> I'll be answering for Whitman: Quoting Marianne Colgrove : > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site > licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal > events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? 1. yes we do... > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, > what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration 2. We use the mod_proxy part of Apache, and in most cases use automatic configuration files. If the .pac isn't working, we do suggest using our server as an explicit proxy (and mention to only use it in this fashion as needed). > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are > they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If > password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy > system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus > resources? 3. in the clear! > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? > If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more > limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any > support > problems with VPNs? 4. no. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing > web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? > 5. I don't, sorry :) -ben ------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP: webmail.whitman.edu From rtanner at linfield.edu Thu Dec 14 23:21:10 2000 From: rtanner at linfield.edu (Rob Tanner) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <42840000.976864870@cheshire.onlinemac.com> This message not get distributed when I originally posted it last Thursday. The listproc server was apparently hungry, and it took the folks a while to figure out the problem. -- Rob --On Thursday, December 07, 2000 09:29:00 AM -0800 Marianne Colgrove wrote: > Hello all, > > We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with > dial > up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated > proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are > available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear > your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy > servers. > > Thanks! > > Marianne > mcolgrove@reed.edu > > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration Automatic proxy > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? Plain text, proxy server only. Since all password management services are automated, the system can assure that users aren't requesting the same password as their email passwords, for example. Also, I have successfully experimented in another context with doing digest MD5 (one time passwords) authentication, using javascript at the browser to do the MD5 encryption. This mechanism also requires one to implement cookie management as well. A lot of folks cringe at the idea of cookies, but that's kind of silly since they're used all over the place. And actually, from my point of view, it's a more secure system because using cookies makes implementing an inactivity time-out system much more straight forward. > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support > problems with VPNs? Depends on what you actually mean by VPN -- thanks to media hype, there are only about 39,000 definitions (okay I exaggerate). We are implementing WebAdvisor (a Datatel product) using secure SSL links and PIN numbers. It will be available on and off campus. We also provide WEB tools for computer account requests and password management whether on campus or off. That too is also done with secure SSL links. But we do not implement, in the strict sense of usinmg tunnels etc, a VPN such that off-campus sites (incuding somebody at home) can access services as if they were on campus. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? I'd be glad to share more details for using digest MDT one-time passwords if you'd like. The other thing to think about is the amount of work, etc, to accomplish that level of security, versus your exposure if you don't. When I look at our proxy logs, off-campus is not a high volume service, especially as compared to on-campus. non-proxied access to library subscription services. Security is critically important, but needs to be addressed from a realistic point of view, and spending a lot of time, energy and dollars to prevent occurrences of non-authorized folks from accessing subscription services may well be a case of spending a dollar to save a dime. Thus, when I ask about your level of exposure is with plain text passwords that are exclusive to the proxy server, I'm really asking about risk in terms of dollars and cents versus the cost of reducing that risk -- then take the cheaper of the two. -- Rob _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ /\_\_\_\_\ /\_\ /\_\_\_\_\_\ /\/_/_/_/_/ /\/_/ \/_/_/_/_/_/ QUIDQUID LATINE DICTUM SIT, /\/_/__\/_/ __ /\/_/ /\/_/ PROFUNDUM VIDITUR /\/_/_/_/_/ /\_\ /\/_/ /\/_/ /\/_/ \/_/ /\/_/_/\/_/ /\/_/ (Whatever is said in Latin \/_/ \/_/ \/_/_/_/_/ \/_/ appears profound) Rob Tanner UNIX and Networks Manager Linfield College, McMinnville OR (503) 434-2558 From krupicka at pacificu.edu Tue Dec 19 13:33:40 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From rellis at ups.edu Tue Dec 19 14:13:42 2000 From: rellis at ups.edu (Raney Ellis) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A3FDD96.414FA621@ups.edu> Ted, Do you want to propose this seminar as an NWACC workshop? I chair the Workshop Committee, and am on the lookout for good topics and people to present them. Raney Ellis "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From jdriskell at ups.edu Tue Dec 19 14:49:35 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A3FE5FF.71595F93@ups.edu> We would be very interested in attending and the 26th is a good date. We'll probably have two reps. Subjects that interest us are, QoS, Firewalls and VPN's. I'd also be interested in discussing other techniques to identify and control the high bandwidth applications that the students think up. Jim Driskell Network Services Manager University of Puget Sound 253-879-2642 "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From pitterk at whitman.edu Tue Dec 19 15:07:46 2000 From: pitterk at whitman.edu (Keiko Pitter) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From PietrasP at evergreen.edu Tue Dec 19 15:22:11 2000 From: PietrasP at evergreen.edu (Pietras, Julian) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: Probably 2 or 3 from Evergreen. Topics of interest indicated by Network Manager are 1. QOS for IP networks (Potentially by Cisco) 2. Showcase of Analysis tools-- how to determine who's using bandwitdth for what. 3. Discussion on Bandwidth management of residential networks. 4. IPSEC VPN primer. Julian > ---------- > From: Krupicka, Ted > Reply To: nw-heat@nw-heat.org > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:57 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: Bandwidth Management Training > > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth > management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively > scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in > some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of > Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I > will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the > date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you > might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.nw-heat.org/pipermail/nw-heat/attachments/20001219/707a59a3/attachment.htm From mextine at stmartin.edu Tue Dec 19 16:53:11 2000 From: mextine at stmartin.edu (Extine, Michael W.) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: Probably two of us from Saint Martin's College Mike -----Original Message----- From: Krupicka, Ted [mailto:krupicka@pacificu.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From krupicka at pacificu.edu Tue Dec 19 17:05:19 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel and lodging (if needed). As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be problems for NWACC. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ -----Original Message----- From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From JYoung at cascade.edu Tue Dec 19 18:06:26 2000 From: JYoung at cascade.edu (Young, Jimmy) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <998E425950C6D311A87A00902740AD91256A5F@www.cascade.edu> One from Cascade. The 26th is good. I second Mr. Driskell's motion for topics. I also liked the idea of the showcase of analysis tools, specifically inexpensive tools for the smaller schools and schools with small I.T. budgets (that's all of us isn't it?) Jimmy Young Director of Information Technology Cascade College <>< Portland, OR (503) 257-1252 -----Original Message----- From: James M. Driskell [mailto:jdriskell@ups.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Re: Bandwidth Management Training We would be very interested in attending and the 26th is a good date. We'll probably have two reps. Subjects that interest us are, QoS, Firewalls and VPN's. I'd also be interested in discussing other techniques to identify and control the high bandwidth applications that the students think up. Jim Driskell Network Services Manager University of Puget Sound 253-879-2642 From rellis at ups.edu Wed Dec 20 08:06:57 2000 From: rellis at ups.edu (Raney Ellis) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A40D920.F281BDAE@ups.edu> Ted, We can cut the approval short if we get the proposal fairly soon--we now have the holidays coming up, and I don't know the plans of the committee members. A limit on attendance would not be a problem; we did this with the recent Portals workshop, and it worked out fine. We also have paid travel subsidies for people coming from goodly distances--such as from Idaho, N. Dak, Alaska, Eastern WA and OR. Raney "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for > the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay > for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the > T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel > and lodging (if needed). > > As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer > for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site > states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. > If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the > number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be > problems for NWACC. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ > > -----Original Message----- > From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training > > Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? > > Keiko > > -----Original Message----- > From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of > Krupicka, Ted > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: Bandwidth Management Training > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From barnold at georgefox.edu Wed Dec 20 14:25:16 2000 From: barnold at georgefox.edu (Bruce Arnold) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: nw-heat@nw-heat.org writes: >I'm personally interested in some >training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of >Voice >over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other >bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, >Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? GFU will send two people. They've indicated an interest in all of the above, especially the three from the last sentence. ----- Brother Bruce :) Bruce Arnold Computer Support Specialist George Fox University (503) 554-2578 FAX (503) 554-3589 From jballing at willamette.edu Wed Dec 20 14:50:26 2000 From: jballing at willamette.edu (John D. Balling) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A4137B2.6C7B139F@willamette.edu> Willamette will plan to send 3 people. Others have already mentioned most of the topics of interest to us. My staff specifically put in votes for QoS and VPN. "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ -- -------------------------------------------------------------------- John D. Balling Voice: 503.370.6004 Executive Director Fax: 503.375.5456 Willamette University E-mail: jballing@willamette.edu Integrated Technology Services 900 State Street Salem, OR 97301 -------------------------------------------------------------------- From Gary.Schlickeiser at directory.reed.edu Wed Dec 20 15:05:42 2000 From: Gary.Schlickeiser at directory.reed.edu (Gary Schlickeiser) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <14178276@isis.reed.edu> Reed would like to send two or three people but the 26th will not work for us. My network administrator will be out of town the week of the 22nd and he is the person who could most benefit from the meeting. Of less importance is my aversion to attending meeting on my birthday:) We could attend earlier in the month or the week of the 29th. Gary Schlickeiser Reed College From pitterk at whitman.edu Wed Dec 20 15:14:29 2000 From: pitterk at whitman.edu (Keiko Pitter) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Ted Thank you for doing this. This is wonderful. Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 5:43 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel and lodging (if needed). As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be problems for NWACC. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ -----Original Message----- From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From BKirk at warnerpacific.edu Wed Dec 20 16:23:51 2000 From: BKirk at warnerpacific.edu (Bill Kirk) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <814110E5ACC0D211BACF00105A04432FDB8F52@SHASTA> Warner would send one possibly two (if there's room). We would be interested in the subjects already mentioned. ___________________________________ William A. Kirk Director, Technology & Information Services Warner Pacific College (503) 517-1397 (503) 517-1394 FAX bkirk@warnerpacific.edu -----Original Message----- From: Krupicka, Ted [mailto:krupicka@pacificu.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From barthe at up.edu Wed Dec 20 16:45:16 2000 From: barthe at up.edu (Jason Barthe) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A41529C.3D7B68B6@email.up.edu> Three of us from the University of Portland would be interested in attending on the 26th. The contact person will be Matt Liston (liston@up.edu) or myself as a backup. Bandwidth management topics (and others) we would be interested in are QOS, VPN's, multi homed connections, and traffic analysis tools. ~Jason "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From kelly at whitman.edu Wed Dec 20 16:52:15 2000 From: kelly at whitman.edu (Kevin Kelly) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: We would be most interested in how everyone is controlling online bandwidth hogs like Napster, Gnutella and ScourExch. Kevin Kelly Director, Network and Technical Services Whitman College -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From kelly at whitman.edu Wed Dec 27 11:57:52 2000 From: kelly at whitman.edu (Kevin Kelly) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: RFP for data/voice installation Message-ID: We are just starting the construction of a new student center. I have been charged with getting bids for the installation of the data and voice for the new building. Does anyone have an RFP for installation of data/voice wiring that they would be willing to share? Kevin Kelly Director, Network and Technical Services Whitman College From ANDPPH at ritvax.isc.rit.edu Thu Dec 28 07:16:15 2000 From: ANDPPH at ritvax.isc.rit.edu (ADavidhazy) Date: Fri Jul 16 16:34:40 2004 Subject: Fellowship supported Basic Photo/Imaging workshop for Educators Message-ID: <01JY8FW8GSWMU7JGFX@ritvax.isc.rit.edu> ANNOUNCEMENT Fellowship Supported 2001 Basic Photo/Imaging Workshop for Educators presented by the faculty and staff of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences Rochester Institute of Technology A Fellowship supported workshop for educators teaching photography and imaging primarily at the High School and Community College levels (although open to other educators as well) will again be offered by the faculty of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences at Rochester Institute of Technology located in upstate New York. The workshop will be offered from March 23-25, 2001 and will include technical as well as practical photographic topics such as Intro to Studio photography and lighting, Photomacrography, Intro to Fashion Photography, Effective Use of Electronic Flash, the 4x5 View Camera for Landscape or Studio work, the Polaroid transfer technique, Special Effects photography, etc. A section on Digital Photography and publishing is also included. This unique seminar is designed to be an intensive and challenging experience that will provide you with not only basic technical information but also with useful experiences and projects that you should be able to apply directly in your own teaching endeavors. Fellowships for $495, equal to the attendance fee for this seminar, will be awarded to all qualifying individuals. Others may attend at their own expense. Primary selection criteria for Fellowships will include secondary, Community College or University affilitation, courses taught and order of application receipt based on postmark or timestamp. The Announcement, Fellowship Aplication and Tentative Schedule are available at the following website: http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/workshop-2001.html Please note that the major activities will take place on Friday and Saturday. Events scheduled on Thursday evening and Sunday morning are mostly devoted to introductions, sharing educational goals, successes, teaching activities, etc. This is a volunteer initiative of the faculty of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences at RIT and there are participating faculty from every department within the School. The objective we have is to contribute to photographic and imaging education at the grass-roots level and in the true meaning of fellowship. --------- sent to this list by Andrew Davidhazy, andpph@rit.edu ---------- From Marianne.Colgrove at directory.reed.edu Thu Dec 7 08:42:44 2000 From: Marianne.Colgrove at directory.reed.edu (Marianne Colgrove) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:21 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey Message-ID: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Hello all, We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with dial up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy servers. Thanks! Marianne mcolgrove@reed.edu 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events calendar, etc.) from off-campus? 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what product do you use? How do you use it?: - explicit proxy - automatic configuration file (PAC) - reverse proxy configuration 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support problems with VPNs? 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? From abrock at georgefox.edu Thu Dec 7 10:30:32 2000 From: abrock at georgefox.edu (Anthony Brock) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:21 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: >1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed >databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events >calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes, we provide services to a variety of databases such as Academic Search Elite, Education Abstracts Full Text, and ERIC. > >2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, >what >product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration We are using a Squid proxy server which requires authentication against an LDAP database. We then have individuals configure their machines for automatic proxy. > >3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are >they >flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If >password >exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system >or is >it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? The passwords are currently in the clear. The database they authenticate against is currently only used for web related access. I am VERY interested in changing this, but it might be a bit pointless most current interaction with our authenticated web pages is also in the clear. > >4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? >If so, >is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more >limited >ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support >problems with VPNs? No. > >5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing >web proxy >service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? We started with apache as the proxy server, but encountered several strange errors with some database vendors. Since shifting to the Squid proxy http://www.squid-cache.org we have not encountered further problems. Also, we have experienced a significate increase in performance and reliability. Let me know if you find/develop a good, stable, and cheap solution :) We would be very interested in improving the security of what we currently offer. Tony From krupicka at pacificu.edu Thu Dec 7 12:06:09 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:21 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB667D@everest.pacificu.edu> Here is the response from my systems administrator: On Thu, 07 Dec 2000, "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site > licensed databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public > directories, internal events calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes. > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If > so, what product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration We were already using Squid (http://www.squid-cache.org), for web-caching in the computer labs, and it has built-in authentication methods. Since Pacific uses a home-grown user database, I wrote a quick module to authenticate against that. Took maybe 10 minutes. Linfield was nice enough to provide a .pac file that we adapted for our use. Off-campus users can now point their automatic proxy URL to our .pac and any IP-restricted web services are told to proxy through our Squid server. The Squid server will ask for a valid username/ password (via the default browser authentication popup dialog) for any non-Pacific IP address, which it then verifies against our database. Once verified, proxying is transparent until the user quits the browser. Only IP-restricted servers are proxied; the user is free to surf other sites without going through our proxy. > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or > are they flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product > do you use? If password exchanges are not encrypted, is the > password specific to the proxy system or is it a password that > enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? They're in whatever the HTTP protocol specifies -- I can't remember if it's cleartext or if it's obfuscated. My guess is that it's in the clear. :( > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your > campus? Not at this time. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about > providing web proxy service that uses encrypted user names and > passwords? I wish I could, but I have no experience with this at this time. (Ted's comment - We have had some problems with different browser versions. We are currently telling students to use Netscape for best results.) -- Brandon M. Browning, Systems Administrator http://www.pacificu.edu/ Pacific University -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From geracim at pacificu.edu Thu Dec 7 15:41:38 2000 From: geracim at pacificu.edu (Michael Geraci) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: SNAP server In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB667D@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Ted, Per your suggestion, I have looked into buying a snap server for my lab. The reviews are fairly positive, but I thought I'd see if you've heard anything that might preclude it from working in my current environment. Thanks for the tip. Michael Geraci Assistant Professor Dept. of Media Arts Pacific University, Oregon From jdriskell at ups.edu Thu Dec 7 16:31:26 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: SNAP server References: Message-ID: <3A302BDE.6C528C1C@ups.edu> We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. Let me know if anyone has any more questions. Jim Driskell University of Puget Sound Michael Geraci wrote: > Ted, > > Per your suggestion, I have looked into buying a snap server for my lab. > The reviews are fairly positive, but I thought I'd see if you've heard > anything that might preclude it from working in my current environment. > > Thanks for the tip. > > Michael Geraci > Assistant Professor > Dept. of Media Arts > Pacific University, Oregon From cfeskens at willamette.edu Thu Dec 7 17:02:20 2000 From: cfeskens at willamette.edu (Casey Feskens) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: SNAP server In-Reply-To: <3A302BDE.6C528C1C@ups.edu> Message-ID: On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise it has been great for us. --------------------------------------------- Casey Feskens System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant Willamette Integrated Technology Services Willamette University, Salem, OR Phone: (503) 370-6950 Fax: (503) 375-5456 --------------------------------------------- From jdriskell at ups.edu Fri Dec 8 08:48:21 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: SNAP server References: Message-ID: <3A3110D5.F955DCE0@ups.edu> We haven't tried to connect any Apple equipment to the snap server, so thanks for the information on spanning-tree. We've de-emphasized Appletalk to the extent that we have one large Appletalk zone across our entire network with a seed router running on a NT server, so we'll see how the snap works in this environment. Jim Driskell Casey Feskens wrote: > On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > > > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > > > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had > some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and > if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play > around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise > it has been great for us. > > --------------------------------------------- > Casey Feskens > System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant > Willamette Integrated Technology Services > Willamette University, Salem, OR > Phone: (503) 370-6950 > Fax: (503) 375-5456 > --------------------------------------------- From alinn at willamette.edu Fri Dec 8 07:29:34 2000 From: alinn at willamette.edu (Andrew Linn) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: SNAP server References: <3A3110D5.F955DCE0@ups.edu> Message-ID: <3A30FE5E.9FEF2CF4@willamette.edu> I just want to back up Casey's statement. My group uses the Snap server as storage for all our work, and we are 1/2 Mac and 1/2 PC. Until Casey got the appletalk issues straightened out, the Snap Server was nearly unusable by the Macs. 5 minute downloads for a 5Mb file and such. After the tweaks, while still slightly slower than the PCs, it has become usable by the Macs. Andrew Linn Instructional Design Consultant Willamette University "James M. Driskell" wrote: > We haven't tried to connect any Apple equipment to the snap server, so thanks for > the information on spanning-tree. We've de-emphasized Appletalk to the extent > that we have one large Appletalk zone across our entire network with a seed > router running on a NT server, so we'll see how the snap works in this > environment. > > Jim Driskell > > Casey Feskens wrote: > > > On Thu, 7 Dec 2000, James M. Driskell wrote: > > > > > We just bought a Snap 4100 120Gig server ($2500 plus change). Nice box. > > > Connects to everything from Linux/Unix, NT, Apple, and NW. Has a built-in > > > web server, lots of security, supports raid 0-5, etc. Cheap storage, and I > > > just copied 35Mg from my workstation to it in 11 seconds. > > > > > We purchased the same model, and it works great for us also. We've had > > some experiences of slowness when doing file transfers over appletalk, and > > if you want it to pick up an appletalk network, you might need to play > > around with spanning-tree on the switch you connect it to, but otherwise > > it has been great for us. > > > > --------------------------------------------- > > Casey Feskens > > System Administrator/Network Svcs. Consultant > > Willamette Integrated Technology Services > > Willamette University, Salem, OR > > Phone: (503) 370-6950 > > Fax: (503) 375-5456 > > --------------------------------------------- From jdriskell at ups.edu Fri Dec 8 11:31:42 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <3A31371E.D5F94C8F@ups.edu> Please see our answers below. Let me know if anyone has specific questions. Jim Driskell University of Puget Sound Marianne Colgrove wrote: > Hello all, > > We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with > dial > up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated > proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are > available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear > your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy > servers. > > Thanks! > > Marianne > mcolgrove@reed.edu > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? ==> Yes. We currently have an interim Netscape proxy server using LDAP, running on a dec unix box. We will convert to a Sun box with Netscape proxy using LDAP during Christmas break. > > > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration ==> We use Netscape Proxy as an explicit proxy server. > > > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? ==> Our passwords are currently in the clear and specific to the interim system, but well use SSL when the new system comes on line. We intend to populate the LDAP store with our email passwd file. We're also converting our email system to LDAP. > > > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support > problems with VPNs? ==> Not yet, but we're considering it. > > > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? ==> Use a proxy server authenticated by LDAP encrypted by SSL. From houstobc at whitman.edu Mon Dec 11 15:20:05 2000 From: houstobc at whitman.edu (Ben Cody Houston) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> References: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <976576805.3a35612575363@webmail.whitman.edu> I'll be answering for Whitman: Quoting Marianne Colgrove : > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site > licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal > events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? 1. yes we do... > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, > what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration 2. We use the mod_proxy part of Apache, and in most cases use automatic configuration files. If the .pac isn't working, we do suggest using our server as an explicit proxy (and mention to only use it in this fashion as needed). > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are > they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If > password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy > system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus > resources? 3. in the clear! > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? > If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more > limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any > support > problems with VPNs? 4. no. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing > web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? > 5. I don't, sorry :) -ben ------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP: webmail.whitman.edu From rtanner at linfield.edu Thu Dec 14 23:21:10 2000 From: rtanner at linfield.edu (Rob Tanner) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Proxy server survey In-Reply-To: <14031150@isis.reed.edu> Message-ID: <42840000.976864870@cheshire.onlinemac.com> This message not get distributed when I originally posted it last Thursday. The listproc server was apparently hungry, and it took the folks a while to figure out the problem. -- Rob --On Thursday, December 07, 2000 09:29:00 AM -0800 Marianne Colgrove wrote: > Hello all, > > We're working on a project to use a proxy server to allow remote users (with > dial > up Internet access from an outside ISP) to have securely authenticated > proxy access to a large number of subscription services which are > available only to Reed College IP addresses. We'd be very interested to hear > your answers to these questions, and any other thoughts you might have on proxy > servers. > > Thanks! > > Marianne > mcolgrove@reed.edu > > > 1. Do you provide access to IP-restricted web services (off-site licensed > databases such as JSTOR and OED, non-public directories, internal events > calendar, etc.) from off-campus? Yes > 2. If so, do you use a web proxy server to enable such access? If so, what > product do you use? How do you use it?: > > - explicit proxy > - automatic configuration file (PAC) > - reverse proxy configuration Automatic proxy > 3. If you are using a web proxy server, do you encrypt passwords or are they > flying in the clear? If you encrypt them, what product do you use? If password > exchanges are not encrypted, is the password specific to the proxy system or is > it a password that enables access to a wide variety of campus resources? Plain text, proxy server only. Since all password management services are automated, the system can assure that users aren't requesting the same password as their email passwords, for example. Also, I have successfully experimented in another context with doing digest MD5 (one time passwords) authentication, using javascript at the browser to do the MD5 encryption. This mechanism also requires one to implement cookie management as well. A lot of folks cringe at the idea of cookies, but that's kind of silly since they're used all over the place. And actually, from my point of view, it's a more secure system because using cookies makes implementing an inactivity time-out system much more straight forward. > 4. Do you use virtual private network (VPN) technology on your campus? If so, > is it used widely by students and faculty, or is it only used in more limited > ways? What VPN technology do you use? Have you encountered any support > problems with VPNs? Depends on what you actually mean by VPN -- thanks to media hype, there are only about 39,000 definitions (okay I exaggerate). We are implementing WebAdvisor (a Datatel product) using secure SSL links and PIN numbers. It will be available on and off campus. We also provide WEB tools for computer account requests and password management whether on campus or off. That too is also done with secure SSL links. But we do not implement, in the strict sense of usinmg tunnels etc, a VPN such that off-campus sites (incuding somebody at home) can access services as if they were on campus. > 5. Do you have any words of wisdom you could offer us about providing web proxy > service that uses encrypted user names and passwords? I'd be glad to share more details for using digest MDT one-time passwords if you'd like. The other thing to think about is the amount of work, etc, to accomplish that level of security, versus your exposure if you don't. When I look at our proxy logs, off-campus is not a high volume service, especially as compared to on-campus. non-proxied access to library subscription services. Security is critically important, but needs to be addressed from a realistic point of view, and spending a lot of time, energy and dollars to prevent occurrences of non-authorized folks from accessing subscription services may well be a case of spending a dollar to save a dime. Thus, when I ask about your level of exposure is with plain text passwords that are exclusive to the proxy server, I'm really asking about risk in terms of dollars and cents versus the cost of reducing that risk -- then take the cheaper of the two. -- Rob _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ /\_\_\_\_\ /\_\ /\_\_\_\_\_\ /\/_/_/_/_/ /\/_/ \/_/_/_/_/_/ QUIDQUID LATINE DICTUM SIT, /\/_/__\/_/ __ /\/_/ /\/_/ PROFUNDUM VIDITUR /\/_/_/_/_/ /\_\ /\/_/ /\/_/ /\/_/ \/_/ /\/_/_/\/_/ /\/_/ (Whatever is said in Latin \/_/ \/_/ \/_/_/_/_/ \/_/ appears profound) Rob Tanner UNIX and Networks Manager Linfield College, McMinnville OR (503) 434-2558 From krupicka at pacificu.edu Tue Dec 19 13:33:40 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From rellis at ups.edu Tue Dec 19 14:13:42 2000 From: rellis at ups.edu (Raney Ellis) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A3FDD96.414FA621@ups.edu> Ted, Do you want to propose this seminar as an NWACC workshop? I chair the Workshop Committee, and am on the lookout for good topics and people to present them. Raney Ellis "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From jdriskell at ups.edu Tue Dec 19 14:49:35 2000 From: jdriskell at ups.edu (James M. Driskell) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A3FE5FF.71595F93@ups.edu> We would be very interested in attending and the 26th is a good date. We'll probably have two reps. Subjects that interest us are, QoS, Firewalls and VPN's. I'd also be interested in discussing other techniques to identify and control the high bandwidth applications that the students think up. Jim Driskell Network Services Manager University of Puget Sound 253-879-2642 "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From pitterk at whitman.edu Tue Dec 19 15:07:46 2000 From: pitterk at whitman.edu (Keiko Pitter) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From PietrasP at evergreen.edu Tue Dec 19 15:22:11 2000 From: PietrasP at evergreen.edu (Pietras, Julian) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: Probably 2 or 3 from Evergreen. Topics of interest indicated by Network Manager are 1. QOS for IP networks (Potentially by Cisco) 2. Showcase of Analysis tools-- how to determine who's using bandwitdth for what. 3. Discussion on Bandwidth management of residential networks. 4. IPSEC VPN primer. Julian > ---------- > From: Krupicka, Ted > Reply To: nw-heat@nw-heat.org > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:57 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: Bandwidth Management Training > > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth > management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively > scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in > some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of > Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I > will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the > date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you > might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.nw-heat.org/pipermail/nw-heat/attachments/20001219/707a59a3/attachment.html From mextine at stmartin.edu Tue Dec 19 16:53:11 2000 From: mextine at stmartin.edu (Extine, Michael W.) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: Probably two of us from Saint Martin's College Mike -----Original Message----- From: Krupicka, Ted [mailto:krupicka@pacificu.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From krupicka at pacificu.edu Tue Dec 19 17:05:19 2000 From: krupicka at pacificu.edu (Krupicka, Ted) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel and lodging (if needed). As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be problems for NWACC. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ -----Original Message----- From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From JYoung at cascade.edu Tue Dec 19 18:06:26 2000 From: JYoung at cascade.edu (Young, Jimmy) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <998E425950C6D311A87A00902740AD91256A5F@www.cascade.edu> One from Cascade. The 26th is good. I second Mr. Driskell's motion for topics. I also liked the idea of the showcase of analysis tools, specifically inexpensive tools for the smaller schools and schools with small I.T. budgets (that's all of us isn't it?) Jimmy Young Director of Information Technology Cascade College <>< Portland, OR (503) 257-1252 -----Original Message----- From: James M. Driskell [mailto:jdriskell@ups.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Re: Bandwidth Management Training We would be very interested in attending and the 26th is a good date. We'll probably have two reps. Subjects that interest us are, QoS, Firewalls and VPN's. I'd also be interested in discussing other techniques to identify and control the high bandwidth applications that the students think up. Jim Driskell Network Services Manager University of Puget Sound 253-879-2642 From rellis at ups.edu Wed Dec 20 08:06:57 2000 From: rellis at ups.edu (Raney Ellis) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A40D920.F281BDAE@ups.edu> Ted, We can cut the approval short if we get the proposal fairly soon--we now have the holidays coming up, and I don't know the plans of the committee members. A limit on attendance would not be a problem; we did this with the recent Portals workshop, and it worked out fine. We also have paid travel subsidies for people coming from goodly distances--such as from Idaho, N. Dak, Alaska, Eastern WA and OR. Raney "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for > the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay > for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the > T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel > and lodging (if needed). > > As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer > for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site > states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. > If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the > number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be > problems for NWACC. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ > > -----Original Message----- > From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training > > Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? > > Keiko > > -----Original Message----- > From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of > Krupicka, Ted > Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: Bandwidth Management Training > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From barnold at georgefox.edu Wed Dec 20 14:25:16 2000 From: barnold at georgefox.edu (Bruce Arnold) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: nw-heat@nw-heat.org writes: >I'm personally interested in some >training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of >Voice >over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other >bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, >Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? GFU will send two people. They've indicated an interest in all of the above, especially the three from the last sentence. ----- Brother Bruce :) Bruce Arnold Computer Support Specialist George Fox University (503) 554-2578 FAX (503) 554-3589 From jballing at willamette.edu Wed Dec 20 14:50:26 2000 From: jballing at willamette.edu (John D. Balling) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A4137B2.6C7B139F@willamette.edu> Willamette will plan to send 3 people. Others have already mentioned most of the topics of interest to us. My staff specifically put in votes for QoS and VPN. "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ -- -------------------------------------------------------------------- John D. Balling Voice: 503.370.6004 Executive Director Fax: 503.375.5456 Willamette University E-mail: jballing@willamette.edu Integrated Technology Services 900 State Street Salem, OR 97301 -------------------------------------------------------------------- From Gary.Schlickeiser at directory.reed.edu Wed Dec 20 15:05:42 2000 From: Gary.Schlickeiser at directory.reed.edu (Gary Schlickeiser) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <14178276@isis.reed.edu> Reed would like to send two or three people but the 26th will not work for us. My network administrator will be out of town the week of the 22nd and he is the person who could most benefit from the meeting. Of less importance is my aversion to attending meeting on my birthday:) We could attend earlier in the month or the week of the 29th. Gary Schlickeiser Reed College From pitterk at whitman.edu Wed Dec 20 15:14:29 2000 From: pitterk at whitman.edu (Keiko Pitter) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66DB@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: Ted Thank you for doing this. This is wonderful. Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 5:43 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training So far, Pacific will pick up the cost of maintaining an old T1 circuit for the training and I'm working on the vendors to see if I can get them to pay for food. Verio has already agreed to give us free Internet access on the T1 for the session. I'm hoping that the only cost to you would be travel and lodging (if needed). As for NWACC funding, this may be interesting if we want to hire a trainer for QoS training or if we can't get a vendor to pay for food. The web site states that it takes 6 weeks for approval which would be cutting it close. If we open this up to everyone in NWACC I may have to put a limit on the number of people that attend (~40 Max). I don't know if these will be problems for NWACC. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ -----Original Message----- From: Keiko Pitter [mailto:pitterk@whitman.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 3:13 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: Bandwidth Management Training Two from Whitman. what's the cost involved in doing this? Keiko -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From BKirk at warnerpacific.edu Wed Dec 20 16:23:51 2000 From: BKirk at warnerpacific.edu (Bill Kirk) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Message-ID: <814110E5ACC0D211BACF00105A04432FDB8F52@SHASTA> Warner would send one possibly two (if there's room). We would be interested in the subjects already mentioned. ___________________________________ William A. Kirk Director, Technology & Information Services Warner Pacific College (503) 517-1397 (503) 517-1394 FAX bkirk@warnerpacific.edu -----Original Message----- From: Krupicka, Ted [mailto:krupicka@pacificu.edu] Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From barthe at up.edu Wed Dec 20 16:45:16 2000 From: barthe at up.edu (Jason Barthe) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training References: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: <3A41529C.3D7B68B6@email.up.edu> Three of us from the University of Portland would be interested in attending on the 26th. The contact person will be Matt Liston (liston@up.edu) or myself as a backup. Bandwidth management topics (and others) we would be interested in are QOS, VPN's, multi homed connections, and traffic analysis tools. ~Jason "Krupicka, Ted" wrote: > Greetings! > > As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University > is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management > in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be > interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've > checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled > it for Friday, January 26. > > I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their > Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they > might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some > training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice > over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other > bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, > Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? > > If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how > many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will > continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date > is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might > be able to do it. > > Regards, > > -Ted Krupicka > Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu > University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 > 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 > Forest Grove, OR 97116 > http://www.pacificu.edu/ From kelly at whitman.edu Wed Dec 20 16:52:15 2000 From: kelly at whitman.edu (Kevin Kelly) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Bandwidth Management Training In-Reply-To: <87E3B0D6A976D311BA7B00902798A5E9AB66CF@everest.pacificu.edu> Message-ID: We would be most interested in how everyone is controlling online bandwidth hogs like Napster, Gnutella and ScourExch. Kevin Kelly Director, Network and Technical Services Whitman College -----Original Message----- From: nw-heat@nw-heat.org [mailto:nw-heat@nw-heat.org]On Behalf Of Krupicka, Ted Sent: Tuesday, December 19, 2000 1:58 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Bandwidth Management Training Greetings! As we stated at the fall NW-HEAT meeting at Willamette, Pacific University is looking into holding a technical training seminar on bandwidth management in January. I'm sending this message to see what topics people might be interested in and how many people might be interested in attending. I've checked into possible dates that work for us and I've tentatively scheduled it for Friday, January 26. I've already talked with the people at Packeteer about training on their Packetshaper products and I've asked a couple other vendors for ideas they might be interested in doing training on. I'm personally interested in some training on setting up quality of service (QoS) for the possibility of Voice over IP or Video Teleconferencing, but I'm sure there must be other bandwidth issues or products that you would like to look at. Maybe VPN's, Firewalls, or using BGP for multi homed Internet connections? If each institution could pick a representative to send me a count of how many people would like to come and what topics you are interested in I will continue to see if we can get vendor support for the training. If the date is out of the question for you please let me know when in January you might be able to do it. Regards, -Ted Krupicka Technical Operations Manager Email: krupicka@pacificu.edu University Information Services Tel: (503) 359-2927 2043 College Way Fax: (503) 359-3162 Forest Grove, OR 97116 http://www.pacificu.edu/ From kelly at whitman.edu Wed Dec 27 11:57:52 2000 From: kelly at whitman.edu (Kevin Kelly) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: RFP for data/voice installation Message-ID: We are just starting the construction of a new student center. I have been charged with getting bids for the installation of the data and voice for the new building. Does anyone have an RFP for installation of data/voice wiring that they would be willing to share? Kevin Kelly Director, Network and Technical Services Whitman College From ANDPPH at ritvax.isc.rit.edu Thu Dec 28 07:16:15 2000 From: ANDPPH at ritvax.isc.rit.edu (ADavidhazy) Date: Thu Oct 5 10:00:22 2006 Subject: Fellowship supported Basic Photo/Imaging workshop for Educators Message-ID: <01JY8FW8GSWMU7JGFX@ritvax.isc.rit.edu> ANNOUNCEMENT Fellowship Supported 2001 Basic Photo/Imaging Workshop for Educators presented by the faculty and staff of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences Rochester Institute of Technology A Fellowship supported workshop for educators teaching photography and imaging primarily at the High School and Community College levels (although open to other educators as well) will again be offered by the faculty of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences at Rochester Institute of Technology located in upstate New York. The workshop will be offered from March 23-25, 2001 and will include technical as well as practical photographic topics such as Intro to Studio photography and lighting, Photomacrography, Intro to Fashion Photography, Effective Use of Electronic Flash, the 4x5 View Camera for Landscape or Studio work, the Polaroid transfer technique, Special Effects photography, etc. A section on Digital Photography and publishing is also included. This unique seminar is designed to be an intensive and challenging experience that will provide you with not only basic technical information but also with useful experiences and projects that you should be able to apply directly in your own teaching endeavors. Fellowships for $495, equal to the attendance fee for this seminar, will be awarded to all qualifying individuals. Others may attend at their own expense. Primary selection criteria for Fellowships will include secondary, Community College or University affilitation, courses taught and order of application receipt based on postmark or timestamp. The Announcement, Fellowship Aplication and Tentative Schedule are available at the following website: http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/workshop-2001.html Please note that the major activities will take place on Friday and Saturday. Events scheduled on Thursday evening and Sunday morning are mostly devoted to introductions, sharing educational goals, successes, teaching activities, etc. This is a volunteer initiative of the faculty of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences at RIT and there are participating faculty from every department within the School. The objective we have is to contribute to photographic and imaging education at the grass-roots level and in the true meaning of fellowship. --------- sent to this list by Andrew Davidhazy, andpph@rit.edu ----------