[SDBUG] rack space, anyone?
Matthew Szubrycht
matts at bmihosting.com
Tue Mar 13 19:41:16 PDT 2007
Mike,
Thank you for the insight. It's funny - I am actually moving my client away
from Nextlevel too, and considering moving some more of my machines down
here from the East Coast. I do not need remote hands, third party DNS, mail
or anything other than rack space, + a block of IP's that have not been
abused by spammers + decent backbone connectivity @ a data center with a
standard set of redundancies and protections where I can have physical
access to the machines 24/7/365. I will give the Eric @ AIS a call and see
if he can help me. In the meantime, if you could forward to me your colo
price sheet, I would be grateful.
Thanks,
Matt
-----Original Message-----
From: sdbug-bounces at sdbug.org [mailto:sdbug-bounces at sdbug.org] On Behalf Of
Michael J McCafferty
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2007 3:03 PM
To: San Diego's BSD Users Group
Cc: Eric Lotspeich
Subject: RE: [SDBUG] rack space, anyone?
Matt,
I actually helped build some of the Level 3 infrastructure
back when they were a very large checkbook and freshly converted from
a Coal Mine and holdings company. I am quite proud of the work we
did. Level 3 will have a place in my heart... I learned a ton working
on that project, and had a good time with some of the biggest,
baddest, hardware there was at the time. But, let's talk about data
centers from a different angle... being a customer of one.
Level 3 has no remote hands that I know of. I was not aware
that they do fractions of cabinets, although there are people who can
sell you a fraction of a cabinet or rack there, such as NextLevel
Internet. I can tell you that several months ago, I helped a friend
who was a customer of NextLevel Internet in Level 3's Aero Drive Data
Center, move from them to AIS in the san Diego Tech Center. The
primary reasons were the cost of bandwidth, the lack of metering and
control of the power, and no inter-customer security (everyone was in
2-post racks, on top of each other). I don't have anything negative
to say about NextLevel as people or as a company, but it was not the
solution for my friend at the time.
AIS is all about the small to medium colo customer. they
have many 1/4, 1/3, 1/2 and full cabinets. The fractional cabinets
have their own, private locking doors and are physically separate
from each other. A good number of their customers are fractional
cabinets with 1Mbps. That is how I started. They were very helpful
and flexible with me as I grew my business to 6 cabinets (soon 7
cabinets) and multiple redundant 100Mbps connections. Their remote
hands service (no cost), is a real benefit. Reboot a wedged box, or
type something on the console, see what color and LED is, pop a CD in
to the drive, connect your KVM over IP.... sure is appreciated when
you have a customer tapping their toe, or when you goofed at 3am and
don't feel like driving over there.
The AIS network is excellent, performance-wise. The AIS data
center is not in a power crunch or heat crunch like others in town.
If you need lots of power, then knock yourself out (of course you
have to pay for it... and power is costly), you can have as much as
you can afford.
My business, M5 Hosting (www.m5hosting.com), does rent space
to colocation customers, from our space within AIS. We do mostly
Dedicated Servers, but we do have a good number of customer owned
gear colo'd with us. We offer colo pries based on the costs.... power
(by the Amp) , space (by the U) and bandwidth (in GB/mo transfer). It
would include KVM over IP, remote hands, etc. But, you can't just
walk in there any time of the day or night. We protect you and our
other customers from our other customers' hands. If you buy colo from
the data center directly, you can walk in there any time you want,
and you will have the remote hands, etc (no KVM over IP unless you
buy one), and you buy bandwidth at 95th percentile as you would from
any other local data center.... except that the AIS bandwidth is
outstanding in terms of performance.
Either way, I encourage you to check the place out. If you
have questions, I can help you get the straight scoop... I have been
a customer there for 4yrs. I donate hosting for the SDBUG web site
and mailing list, which are hosted on our shared hosting server in
the AIS data center.
I am copying my account rep at AIS. You can contact him
directly, and/or you can contact me.... whatever you think will best
suit your needs. I am always happy to talk colo or data centers.
Cheers,
Mike
At 12:14 PM 3/13/2007, you wrote:
>I am not dead set on L3, but I've had machines there for some 6-7 years and
>I do like the facility & location;
>
>Thanks,
>Matt
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: sdbug-bounces at sdbug.org [mailto:sdbug-bounces at sdbug.org] On Behalf Of
>Michael J McCafferty
>Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2007 9:44 AM
>To: San Diego's BSD Users Group
>Subject: Re: [SDBUG] rack space, anyone?
>
>
>Has to be at Level 3 on Aero ? No other data center ?
>
>At 11:38 AM 3/13/2007, you wrote:
> >Hello list,
> >
> >I am looking to rent (long term) a 1/4 of a cabinet @L3 data center in
SD,
> >with a /26 IP block. There will be 2 people that will need physical
access
> >to the rack.
> >Please email me if you can help.
> >
> >
> >Thanks,
> >Matt
> >
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