nanog mailing list archives

Re: NAP History (was RE: The large ISPs and Peering)


From: Sean Donelan <sean () donelan com>
Date: 26 Jul 2001 13:33:25 -0700


On Thu, 26 July 2001, Robert E. Seastrom wrote:
At the time, the "center of the universe" was AS690, which was paid
for by US taxpayer money and consequently had an AUP.  The NAPs were
envisioned as a transitional mechanism away from that arrangement.  A
lot of us at the time wondered aloud why NSF needed to provide a stamp
of approval on US-based exchange points, as the FIXes, MAE East, and
Milo's setup at NASA-Ames were already going concerns without any kind
of endorsement from the NSF.  Some companies (notably UUnet) thought
this was gratuitous enough that they never showed up at any NAPs.

If I recall, the objection was to using ATM for a exchange fabric, because
several people thought it was less reliable at the time.  I thought UUNET
was at the New York NAP (SPRINT Pennsauken, NJ) as well as the MAE-East
alternate NAP, which used FDDI.

There were several ISPs at that time which only connected to FDDI/Gigaswitch
based exchange points, and shunned the ATM exchange points.



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