While I’m giving out good wishes, I’d like to also give a shout out and a thank you to Mark Silver at SpecTechUlar for including me on his list of “6 Blogs All Product and IT Specialists Should Add to Their 2017 Reading List.”
6 Blogs All Product and IT Specialists Should Add to Their 2017 Reading List
I fear that Mark has discovered my secret as he points out that “[my] eccentric personality definitely shows through in this technology blog.” I quite like that
Thank you, Mark, for the kind words and the inclusion on your list! Mark works as a Product Manager for WalkMe, and runs the SpecTechUlar blog, pulling together interesting stories and best practices about technology and product management written by himself and other guest authors. He has found some amazing images for his blog posts, and even a glance at the home page pulls you in to the articles (I should learn from this!).
Thanks, Mark; I enjoyed discovering SpecTechUlar too, and I think many of my readers may also enjoy visiting.
If you liked this post, please do click through to the source at MP on SpecTechUlar’s “6 Blogs for 2017” List and give me a share/like. Thank you!
mirroring-group 1 local
service-loopback group 1 type tunnel
interface <unused-interface>
port service-loopback group 1
quit
interface Tunnel0 mode gre
source <whatever>
destination <machine running wireshark>
mirroring-group 1 monitor-port
quit
interface <interesting-source-interface-1>
mirroring-group 1 mirroring-port inbound
interface <interesting-source-interface-2>
mirroring-group 1 mirroring-port inbound
I'm one of the lucky few to benefit from Google Fiber's recent expansion into new regions (before they nixed the whole thing). I've had the service fire three months now and figured I should write up my experience with it thus far.
Google Fiber announced that it would be expanding to the Raleigh-Durham metro area, known locally as "The Triangle", in January 2015. It's been a long game of hurry-up-and-wait since then, watching crews laying fiber all over town without hearing a peep from Google regarding availability. But in the fall of 2016, people were finally able to start signing up for service. Here's how my installation went.
Google Fiber registration opens! I sign up for service and pay a paltry $10 deposit, which gets credited toward my first bill. Over the next couple weeks, various utilities swing by to mark their lines in the ground. (Here's the color code for utility markings in the US, if you're curious.)
Google's contractor arrives on site to lay fiber from the curb to my house and to many of my neighbors' houses. Surprisingly, they cut my trench by hand, possibly due to the steep Continue reading
I'm one of the lucky few to benefit from Google Fiber's recent expansion into new regions (before they nixed the whole thing). I've had the service fire three months now and figured I should write up my experience with it thus far.
Google Fiber announced that it would be expanding to the Raleigh-Durham metro area, known locally as "The Triangle", in January 2015. It's been a long game of hurry-up-and-wait since then, watching crews laying fiber all over town without hearing a peep from Google regarding availability. But in the fall of 2016, people were finally able to start signing up for service. Here's how my installation went.
Google Fiber registration opens! I sign up for service and pay a paltry $10 deposit, which gets credited toward my first bill. Over the next couple weeks, various utilities swing by to mark their lines in the ground. (Here's the color code for utility markings in the US, if you're curious.)
Google's contractor arrives on site to lay fiber from the curb to my house and to many of my neighbors' houses. Surprisingly, they cut my trench by hand, possibly due to the steep Continue reading
I'm one of the lucky few to benefit from Google Fiber's recent expansion into new regions (before they nixed the whole thing). I've had the service fire three months now and figured I should write up my experience with it thus far.
Google Fiber announced that it would be expanding to the Raleigh-Durham metro area, known locally as "The Triangle", in January 2015. It's been a long game of hurry-up-and-wait since then, watching crews laying fiber all over town without hearing a peep from Google regarding availability. But in the fall of 2016, people were finally able to start signing up for service. Here's how my installation went.
Google Fiber registration opens! I sign up for service and pay a paltry $10 deposit, which gets credited toward my first bill. Over the next couple weeks, various utilities swing by to mark their lines in the ground. (Here's the color code for utility markings in the US, if you're curious.)
Google's contractor arrives on site to lay fiber from the curb to my house and to many of my neighbors' houses. Surprisingly, they cut my trench by hand, possibly due to the steep Continue reading
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