WEBVTT

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To have a short look on the agenda, some quick personal effects, I want to highlight the

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handed as a mission statement of the handnet, because it's very important.

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Give you a short introduction for a handnet in a nutshell, and we'll give you some ideas about

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how a handnet has evolved, what the pitfalls have been, and what Dr. David for mitigation.

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And I wanted to discuss a little bit about how a handnet can evolve further.

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So some personal effects, so my name is Jan Toshewski, my course on a Statue of 18 November

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by Koleff November.

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I am licensed since 1997, getting old, obviously, and I'm the VHF Manager of the German

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Emeterator Club, the DASC.

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You may know, I'm a member of the German IP coordination team for handnet.

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My colleagues are Eckberg, DD9QP, and Thomas, the online SAU.

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So together, we run the IP allocations for handnet in Germany.

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In the professionalist systems engineer at Schrodingschwarzen Munich, you may know that

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we do some measurement devices quite expensive, but it's nice gear to have on the DASC

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if you want to play with.

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And my family, I have three boys, they are all now under 10 years old, so eating up

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all of my time, but I finally made it at least to foster them.

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And of course, I love Levi.

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My location is to read November 590, but you'll get it's a Nürnberg.

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OK, so handnet, the mission statement.

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I think the mission statement is really important to understand what the project is about.

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And if it is cash about, how can you do this?

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Can you do that?

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I always reflect, is this the right way in terms of the mission statement?

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So the mission of the handnet is to build a maintainer European, or even larger,

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let's see.

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TSPIP-based radio only network for a moderator community, providing IPN to end connectivity.

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So everybody knows, Nat is evil.

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I don't know what the expression is coming from, but somebody created this.

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And that's why we want to have these end-to-end communication.

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Because you can do a lot of things if you're able to reach the wisest from one

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and two at the other end without any strange nut in between.

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So handnet in a nutshell.

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So we're talking about a close community, unfortunately.

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So we are talking about an emitter radio network where you need to have a license

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to take part of it.

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So we need to make sure that if you want to use the network,

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you need to be a emitter radio operator.

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And I think there are a lot of ways nowadays to get a license for this.

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The RF backbone is on the six-centimeter band.

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So it's like five gigahertz or like Wi-Fi gear.

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And yeah, sometimes we have even for the backbone.

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We are using other frequencies who come to that later.

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The RF user access is typically on the third-centimeter band.

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So two dot, three gigahertz and even on six-centimeter.

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But you always need the line of sight, or typically you need it,

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or you're very nearby to the sight in order to use that.

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And as of today, we are using that infrastructure 90% of the time,

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but for the end, users to be honest.

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But we are using it for interconnection of amateur infrastructure,

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like amateur repeaters and so on.

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So this is the main thing.

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And many people try to get a way how to get the local repeater connected

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to the internet in order to, for example,

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feeding APS information to the internet, I.S. stream.

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So we offer, if you're suffering from that line of sight problem,

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then we're offering a VPN access.

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I will show this later on how to gain access to the network.

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And most of the time, people are using this for service activity

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of the repeaters or whatever you can find there.

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So actually, we are using the IPv4 address space from the globally unique IP

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space, 44128-10.

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It has been formally 44-8, so very large,

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but this even this portion of the network is large enough

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for getting everything inside.

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We are using the 16-bit and 32-bit private anonymous system numbers.

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You can see the RFCs here for our internal BGP routing.

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So all the network is using BGP only.

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We have some new domains since last year,

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we're using the domains here in the radio,

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and the cloud in the dot network.

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I will come to that what it is, and how we are going to use it.

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And of course, there is really much potential for further project on the application layer.

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And I'm really interested in that M17,

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what we just heard about data communication.

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Let's see whether this is somehow integrated.

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So here you can see the hemat map,

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or let's say part of the map, of course, you can scroll around the world,

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but you will not find too much there.

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You can see this is where we are dense on the German speaking area.

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It's not wide known to non-German speaking area, unfortunately.

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And this is maybe hopefully with this talk,

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they're beginning to expand.

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And this, the picture on the right inside,

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you see a typical hemat installation.

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And the funny point is that I gave the exactly a talk 10 or 11 years

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ago in the US using the same picture, because it didn't change too much.

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So we have for the user access, we have small devices,

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which are covering different directions,

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nauseous, nauseous, is rest, with 90 degrees beams,

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so that you can easily access the hemat site.

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And below you see the interlinks.

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So they have a very narrow bound beam,

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so that they can point to other handed infrastructure

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to have a good link.

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Yeah, on the left side you can see the UL for our platform.

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If you go to hamnatdb.net and click here on the map,

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this map will open, you can scroll in, you can zoom in,

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you can do a lot of tools inside,

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and you can play around with that.

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So what is the amazing thing?

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The amazing part, there are people trying to ask,

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what can I do with it?

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It's not me.

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I'm only interested in building up the infrastructure,

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and there are many people really trying to build up

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that RF only infrastructure for our ematerial infrastructure,

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and we don't care about what is going on on the network.

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So we are really focusing on building up the network

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and thinking in layers, say, okay, look,

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you have now here a nice network, use it.

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I'm not interested what you're doing,

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but you can do it.

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So this is really satisfying to me.

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You can see here a trace route from the southern part

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of Germany going from here over Austria,

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and then even up to the Norse coast or east coast of the Norse.

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Yeah.

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And as you can see, we have 28 hops,

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and can down up down to 85 milliseconds.

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Yeah, around trip time.

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So this is what amazes me,

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and there are even plenty of other users

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or administrators who like to build up the network,

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and just see, okay, trace route is working.

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Now we have a new link.

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Now we can interconnect,

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there we don't need to have internet anymore.

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For example, you see a little bit that problem here,

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that bit is Berlin, and still there are two last people

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interested or two last nice sites

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to connect Berlin to our main network.

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So actually, we're using a VPN,

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and if I'm talking about radio,

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I'm talking about the radio layer,

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which is really important.

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I'm talking about this,

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the project to connect everything by radio.

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But of course, we have some islands

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which we need to connect by VPNs.

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I want to talk a little bit about the involvement,

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so my personal case, who has been in 2009,

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locally, repeater has been connected

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from the university to the GV Tower in November,

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spectrum is crowded, 2.4 gigahertz,

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you can imagine 4 kilometers,

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it's quite too bad to operate.

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So the question was,

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can we use the 5 giga emitter spectrum with some more power

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to interconnect to this side,

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because our NPTEL is hosted there?

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And can't we use our global unique IP space,

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44th or 8, rather than VRC-1980 IP space,

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like 19268 and so on?

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And it turned out, yes, of course, we can.

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So the National Regulator approved our application

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for the 5 gigahertz channel.

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We have only 10 gigahertz channel bandwidth and Germany allowed.

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We started with 15 watts of ERP nowadays.

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We can run up to 1 kilowatt ERP.

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After talking to military because they are primary uses

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in that band.

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Of course, we switched them to network 44.

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IP space and promoted to do the same in other regions

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in Germany.

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So the idea was that everybody is building up their stuff

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in that unique IP space, so we can grow over time together

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and we don't need to re-number anything.

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That was at least the idea.

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So yeah.

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And of course, the Internet disconnected regions

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we have been connected by VPNs.

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Yeah, some pitfalls, let's say.

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So pitching versus routing.

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In Austria, there started some a little bit with a large ring,

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which is on layer two.

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But the problem was on layer two.

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If you build a wireless link over many hops,

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you have really problems to debug if things go wrong.

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So if you want to find out which, exactly,

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which link breaks from a user perspective,

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you're not able to do that.

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You need to have some interfaces.

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And that's why we switched over to normal layer three

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or IP hops transfer networks to solve that issue.

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So if you do a threshold from anywhere on the network,

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you can see each single rate you hop.

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And if things fail, you can see when it broke and tell,

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hey, you guys, here's something wrong.

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You need to check what's going on in your network.

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Yeah.

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So other best practices that we have are whole prefix

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for the whole side.

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If you talk about the hand inside,

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we have a site on a high building or high mountain.

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And we want to keep the routing tables small.

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So that's why we have one IP prefix for one site.

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And you split it internally in trustful, not trustful devices.

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So some of these devices are allowed to talk to the internet

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for example, local devices you have there.

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Or if you want to offer radio access,

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then you may think about, well, this is not a good idea

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to have access to the internet.

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OK, let's go to the routing protocols.

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We played a little bit.

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So the idea was that our IP allocation team said,

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this region can play with that routing protocol.

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You can do whatever you want.

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But over time, as I've seen,

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that the regions were built together.

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And then the first link between the regions came up.

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And then how do we interconnect this now?

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And so we need to do, yeah, we need to change the routing

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protocol on the borders.

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And the problem is, really, that you need to interact

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with every operator in a region to change things,

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if the topology changes on the network.

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And this was really annoying.

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And yeah, because if you talk to every one

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and you know people are people, and it's always

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hard to get everybody on the same page and to understand

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or you know you need to change the configuration,

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this was really a bad lesson.

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So the lesson here is we need to find a routing protocol,

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which is considering every single side

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as an absolutely independent side.

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And that's where EBGP has been chosen.

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So we were really thinking about it

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because EBGP is not the best way to do that.

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But finally, it turned out the pros are better

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than at the cons or the arguments to use this as higher.

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So we have there a 32-bit private A's end range.

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I mean, after six, nine, and six.

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So we have plenty of sides, which we coupled in the hand

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that right now.

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So 9 million will be, oh, is it 9 million?

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Yeah, 94 million.

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OK.

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So we have plenty of time to do that.

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So yeah, everything is side is fully independent.

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So we don't have any problems with the topology change.

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And only the direct, if you build up new links,

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then only the operators directly concerned with the new link

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will need to interact with the configuration.

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But the cons is that we cannot row back this decision.

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The routing protocol does only know 0 or 1.

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So it doesn't matter if you have a weak radio link,

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then you have a weak radio link.

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And if it's too bad, and they are alternative links,

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available, then it's not good to keep it running.

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So you really need to have a threshold where the link can be

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considered as a really good properly working link.

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And then you can keep it running, otherwise

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you need to turn it off, because it will disturb the whole

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transit on that one.

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And of course, the question is, does it scale?

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Because I have never seen so long AS hops in the internet

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to be honest.

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So if you try to get around the internet on the back bone

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of the internet, we'll not see that long AS pass, usually.

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So of course, it's maybe limited on 255, I don't know.

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But yeah.

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So up to now, we don't see any issues in this daily

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operation.

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It works quite well.

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For example, there's a hand inside, a hand inside

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is a part of the RF backbone.

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And it's usually running more, one of multiple RF links

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on the network.

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And yes, it can offer some services to you, like

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webcams, was a piece of whatever.

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And may offer our user access.

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This is not typical hand inside.

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And what is the hand?

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Users can connect to the hand it.

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Using that hand inside, it has radio gear pointed

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to the hand inside and get an IP address by DHCP

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protocol.

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Yeah, some people like to have static IP.

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So just call the operator of their tenant site and say,

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hey, I'm new to you.

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Here's my megator.

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Please give me a static IP here on the network.

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And of course, if you don't have line of size to a hand

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inside, then you need to make use of the hand that we

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pay in service.

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Yes.

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Well, this is a site in the central Germany.

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It's called the broken DBZHEX.

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And you can see here the adjacent channel

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interference problems.

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So if you have a lot of transmitters nearby,

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and you're like, like on a repeater,

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you cannot have a repeater without any filters.

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That's why, for example, we changed this antenna here,

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because the feet will have the other antennas around,

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even this one is changed now.

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This has an RF shield right around the feet.

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So that's isolated against each other and to have, yeah.

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This is a really challenging task to get this really

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working.

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So how can this be mitigated?

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You can do a frequency separation.

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Of course, we have limited spectrum.

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So we have 200 max of bandwidth and the 60-meter band

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depending on the country.

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You can use the whole 200 max, sometimes not.

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You can, of course, reduce the power.

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Usually you're interested in high speeds.

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So you look on a regular link that you

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reach the full modulation coding scheme in order

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to have the full capacity available.

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But if you're even above that enough margin

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that you can reduce the power, you

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then take back the power to avoid these issues.

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Or you use higher gain antennas.

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I know that many people on these sides

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have problems to install larger dishes,

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because the site owner say, well, it's got in large.

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It's got in huge.

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This is all for free for you, so don't use too much antennas.

18:18.160 --> 18:22.920
And yeah, sometimes physical separation is good.

18:22.920 --> 18:26.280
But as you have seen, this is a redone.

18:26.280 --> 18:37.800
And there's really hard to physically separate these things.

18:37.800 --> 18:40.000
OK.

18:40.000 --> 18:44.280
So yeah, as I said, the impact on the hand it is very large.

18:44.280 --> 18:48.920
If you have this turped link, because if you have such a high

18:48.920 --> 18:50.920
side and very good connected to hand it side,

18:50.920 --> 18:55.880
and traffic is passing through, then the beach

18:55.880 --> 18:58.320
is quite comfortable with that.

18:58.320 --> 19:02.600
It's telling the network, well, I'm a running link.

19:02.600 --> 19:06.520
But if soon as you put data on that,

19:06.520 --> 19:11.000
then you will have a problem because of other transmitters

19:11.000 --> 19:12.200
on the same side.

19:12.200 --> 19:14.560
So even if on large packages like if you want

19:14.560 --> 19:18.200
to have a real stream or large content, large data

19:18.200 --> 19:22.560
with M to U of 1500, you really run into issues

19:22.560 --> 19:27.360
because of the packets get chunked and then you need

19:27.360 --> 19:28.280
to take care.

19:28.280 --> 19:32.800
So please, if you have a problem like this,

19:32.800 --> 19:35.960
either explore the situation or sometimes

19:35.960 --> 19:40.760
it's even better to just don't establish that link.

19:40.760 --> 19:45.800
The capacity of that side is full.

19:45.800 --> 19:47.880
You have seen maybe on the map.

19:47.880 --> 19:53.600
Here is even some purple and some blue lines.

19:53.600 --> 19:57.600
And we don't even only use the amateur radio spectrum.

19:57.600 --> 19:59.600
We are making even use of other spectrum

19:59.600 --> 20:02.120
like public Wi-Fi stuff.

20:02.120 --> 20:07.320
And even 60 gigahertz equipment is quite nice nowadays

20:07.320 --> 20:10.560
to have high speed links or to, let's say,

20:10.560 --> 20:16.200
to interconnect links where you have these interference issues.

20:16.200 --> 20:19.760
For example, if you have only four or five kilometers

20:19.760 --> 20:24.760
long on such a high side, then just use some public Wi-Fi

20:24.760 --> 20:28.000
frequencies and make the configuration

20:28.000 --> 20:30.120
or make the established link.

20:33.680 --> 20:36.040
Net neutrality issues.

20:36.040 --> 20:41.040
So what we see very often is that on these B2P routers,

20:41.040 --> 20:45.520
it usually should act like a normal transit provider,

20:45.520 --> 20:51.480
but since everybody is learning how from scratch

20:51.480 --> 20:55.840
and the administrators don't want to just apply something

20:55.840 --> 20:58.200
that they want to learn, they want to, yeah,

20:58.200 --> 21:02.200
this is the whole part of it to learn how things are working.

21:02.200 --> 21:05.760
And sometimes they just didn't plan

21:05.760 --> 21:10.720
the standard configuration and then some nuts rules

21:10.720 --> 21:14.960
are still in the transit and it's really hard to track down

21:14.960 --> 21:20.120
if you have in the transit a nutting router in between.

21:20.120 --> 21:24.600
Or if the firewall has some modes for only established

21:24.600 --> 21:26.720
and related, there's a situation

21:26.720 --> 21:31.040
that we have asynchronous routing so that the package

21:31.040 --> 21:34.240
going forward is going another route

21:34.240 --> 21:36.000
than the package going back was.

21:36.000 --> 21:38.680
So that's creating issues on some firewalls.

21:38.680 --> 21:41.320
If there shouldn't be a firewall at all,

21:41.320 --> 21:43.680
at least in the backbone.

21:43.680 --> 21:47.360
So there were even some problems in the beginning

21:47.360 --> 21:49.480
that we have uncoordinated VPNs

21:49.480 --> 21:51.920
in between the sites, which is really bad

21:51.920 --> 21:54.480
because if you look on the map and you make a link

21:54.480 --> 21:59.600
between hamburger and Munich, you can transfer everything

21:59.600 --> 22:02.600
by radio, but this is not going to be used anymore

22:02.600 --> 22:04.000
because of the VPN tunnel.

22:04.000 --> 22:06.800
So we needed to interact and to, well,

22:06.800 --> 22:08.240
this is a radio project.

22:08.240 --> 22:10.560
We don't want to tunnel everything here.

22:10.560 --> 22:15.160
And so, and this was a problem in the beginning,

22:15.160 --> 22:16.800
but nowadays, it's not a problem.

22:16.800 --> 22:18.800
Everybody accepted at least in the SSL,

22:18.800 --> 22:21.880
in the German-speaking area, it's quite common

22:21.880 --> 22:24.480
that we don't have any issues anymore.

22:25.960 --> 22:29.080
Yeah, so now we come to a very interesting point

22:29.080 --> 22:32.120
that we have handed back bone capacity issues.

22:32.120 --> 22:35.960
Yeah, from the internet, usually the use of the internet

22:35.960 --> 22:40.400
thinks, oh, I have, my DSL has 50 megabits up and down,

22:40.400 --> 22:43.240
or let's say, up, down, 50 megabits.

22:43.240 --> 22:45.760
Why can't I see it on the handnet?

22:45.760 --> 22:49.480
So they don't understand that it's not being in the handnet.

22:49.480 --> 22:51.120
There is a backbone infrastructure behind,

22:51.120 --> 22:53.480
and if you want to have some data from handbook

22:53.480 --> 22:55.560
and you're setting a Munich, it takes time.

22:55.560 --> 22:58.560
It must cross all these back bones.

22:58.560 --> 23:00.280
It's not like on the internet, you click on it,

23:00.280 --> 23:00.920
and it's there.

23:00.920 --> 23:04.760
It's really neat and sand, what are you doing here?

23:04.760 --> 23:07.720
And what in the early days came up here

23:07.720 --> 23:11.840
is that a lot of VPN popped up in some regions,

23:11.840 --> 23:15.160
because people want to be nearby the infrastructure

23:15.160 --> 23:18.440
and locked by VPN into that network.

23:18.440 --> 23:20.920
The issue is here that if you have a lot of,

23:20.920 --> 23:25.640
and somebody says, hey, look, I have a new video stream in Munich,

23:25.640 --> 23:30.320
and people from Hamburg logging into a VPN provider in Hamburg,

23:30.320 --> 23:34.280
and they want to get all these data from Munich.

23:34.280 --> 23:38.920
So the question was, how can we free up the artifact

23:38.920 --> 23:46.920
on in terms of capacity by using so-called dual-homed handnet sites?

23:46.920 --> 23:52.400
We have one lag in the handnet and the other lag in the internet.

23:52.400 --> 23:55.560
So the hand cloud here has been born.

23:55.560 --> 23:59.600
What you can see here now is really a cloud infrastructure.

23:59.600 --> 24:02.240
You don't need to know much about the cloud inside.

24:02.320 --> 24:05.600
They show a little bit, but inside the cloud,

24:05.600 --> 24:08.400
it's more or less on the map.

24:08.400 --> 24:10.600
You have these blue icons.

24:10.600 --> 24:11.840
I have made them a little bit larger,

24:11.840 --> 24:13.560
so you can see them better.

24:13.560 --> 24:17.680
They have these dual-homed handnet sites,

24:17.680 --> 24:20.640
and they all maintain a VPN connection

24:20.640 --> 24:22.760
to this cloud service.

24:22.760 --> 24:26.560
And the key is now that the whole infrastructure,

24:26.560 --> 24:30.560
or the whole topology, the routing,

24:31.360 --> 24:33.520
will be transferred by VPN to this cloud.

24:33.520 --> 24:38.320
So this cloud always knows the best and fastest pass

24:38.320 --> 24:40.160
inside of the handnet.

24:40.160 --> 24:42.520
Everything is living in here.

24:42.520 --> 24:46.160
And this is the prefix we actually using.

24:46.160 --> 24:50.960
So everything inside that prefix or inside that network

24:50.960 --> 24:53.960
is making use of that technology.

24:53.960 --> 25:01.360
So we have run about 70 or 80 dual-homed systems in handnet.

25:01.360 --> 25:04.480
So as soon as you lock in here by the VPN user,

25:04.480 --> 25:06.840
by the way, this is the URL if you want to join.

25:06.840 --> 25:11.080
There are two ways I will show that later.

25:11.080 --> 25:14.120
So just click on it and you can see

25:14.120 --> 25:17.480
how you can join in the handnet on VPN

25:17.480 --> 25:21.680
if you don't have radio with you.

25:22.680 --> 25:25.120
And even we have some basic services.

25:25.120 --> 25:27.280
But of course, this is not the main mission.

25:27.280 --> 25:29.960
Again, about the mission, the mission is to build a radio network.

25:29.960 --> 25:36.480
But this project is only there to get rid of all these data,

25:36.480 --> 25:38.480
which is going to be passed on the RF,

25:38.480 --> 25:39.880
which we don't want to have there.

25:39.880 --> 25:44.160
So the idea is to get data which is supposed to go to the internet

25:44.160 --> 25:48.720
or coming from the internet on the quickest way out of the network.

25:48.880 --> 25:49.880
Yeah.

25:49.880 --> 25:55.080
So yeah, this is maybe what I just explained.

25:55.080 --> 25:56.280
Import or write from handnet.

25:56.280 --> 26:00.560
Yeah, export or write this, that prefix will not be.

26:00.560 --> 26:03.560
The internet handed into routing will not be influenced.

26:03.560 --> 26:05.760
This was the important part.

26:05.760 --> 26:08.800
And yeah, a shorter pass.

26:08.800 --> 26:11.800
And I think it's from the best connectivity.

26:11.800 --> 26:13.000
Yeah, got it.

26:13.000 --> 26:16.600
And this is, yeah, this is what you can see here.

26:16.600 --> 26:19.840
Of course, it's not a single, a single system.

26:19.840 --> 26:23.480
It is a system out of three.

26:23.480 --> 26:28.080
I think one in Berlin, one in Aachen, and one in Duysburg,

26:28.080 --> 26:30.840
which is interconnecting by other VPN tons, which is OSPF.

26:30.840 --> 26:31.120
And so on.

26:31.120 --> 26:31.960
So forget about that.

26:31.960 --> 26:35.080
This is not really important.

26:35.080 --> 26:35.960
It just works.

26:35.960 --> 26:38.600
Yeah, in that case.

26:38.600 --> 26:39.240
OK.

26:39.240 --> 26:44.120
So yeah, some key factors in general about SSL.

26:44.120 --> 26:45.160
It's a community project.

26:45.160 --> 26:49.800
So you need to find people contributing.

26:49.800 --> 26:53.360
And to get people on board, one of the principles we

26:53.360 --> 26:58.240
have seen is really worse to look at is keep it simple, stupid.

26:58.240 --> 27:03.760
The complex system, the more problems you will generate here.

27:03.760 --> 27:05.320
Make things transparent.

27:05.320 --> 27:08.920
Make a clear policy that people can understand.

27:08.920 --> 27:11.680
And give the power to the user so that they can select

27:11.680 --> 27:13.240
how to route your traffic.

27:13.240 --> 27:15.360
So that you have to have the power to decide

27:15.360 --> 27:18.960
that I want to use the radio, even if the radio is bad.

27:18.960 --> 27:21.640
And since we have now the new domains,

27:21.640 --> 27:25.920
we are trying to reflect this ideas into the main names

27:25.920 --> 27:32.400
so that you can select better how to use the resources.

27:32.400 --> 27:34.640
Yeah, just a quick overview.

27:34.640 --> 27:39.280
So we have some services on the same cloud.

27:39.280 --> 27:42.400
So the network is everything we do on the internet.

27:42.400 --> 27:45.240
So there's a link where you can see, unfortunately,

27:45.240 --> 27:47.840
still in German, so things are to do.

27:47.840 --> 27:51.640
So there are some services running on it.

27:51.640 --> 27:54.280
And yeah.

27:54.280 --> 27:57.000
So the connection from the hemids to the hemplot

27:57.000 --> 28:00.040
is available to many VPN tunnels, as we said.

28:00.040 --> 28:02.920
It doesn't matter if the current VPN tunnel will fail,

28:02.920 --> 28:08.440
because the new route, the new route will just take other RF

28:08.440 --> 28:09.480
tops.

28:09.480 --> 28:10.400
So this is the beauty.

28:10.400 --> 28:12.560
So if you contribute on the network,

28:12.560 --> 28:14.760
your service is getting much more stable,

28:14.760 --> 28:19.400
because if your local internet connection will break,

28:19.400 --> 28:22.800
or your local VPN tunnel to the hemplot will break,

28:22.800 --> 28:25.600
the system will automatically reroute

28:25.600 --> 28:29.680
to the nearest way to the same cloud thing.

28:29.680 --> 28:30.120
Yeah.

28:30.120 --> 28:33.160
So we get redundancy.

28:33.160 --> 28:35.320
Yeah, what else is possible on the hand-to-backbone?

28:35.320 --> 28:37.160
Well, it's an IP network.

28:37.200 --> 28:41.000
It can transport almost everything from HP and vice versa.

28:41.000 --> 28:43.240
Be just creative.

28:43.240 --> 28:45.320
It's just some examples.

28:45.320 --> 28:47.080
In the hembrated frame, which is often

28:47.080 --> 28:48.960
we usually show a two and a half megabits

28:48.960 --> 28:54.160
we just stream from DBZVHPS, which is almost 1000 kilometers

28:54.160 --> 28:58.160
if you count all the hops, lengths together.

28:58.160 --> 29:01.160
And it's fluent, usually.

29:01.160 --> 29:04.360
We provide access to web SDRs from the Alps

29:04.360 --> 29:08.920
and during that fair, or through a radio.

29:08.920 --> 29:10.720
Yeah, some regions that are interconnected

29:10.720 --> 29:12.840
all of their FM repeaters by that network.

29:12.840 --> 29:14.360
This is quite nice.

29:14.360 --> 29:17.360
And some regions run MCOM services on it,

29:17.360 --> 29:20.840
like they're even some projects where you have

29:20.840 --> 29:23.400
from the government, get some funding

29:23.400 --> 29:26.280
for making hardening the hand-to-site

29:26.280 --> 29:29.560
in terms of power outages.

29:29.560 --> 29:30.840
There's something to play, like, voiceover,

29:30.840 --> 29:34.200
a piece of stuff inside the hand-to-pump pump.

29:34.200 --> 29:38.880
So yeah, this is what we present in three to a half, usually.

29:38.880 --> 29:43.800
So you can see the optical fuel on the right bottom side

29:43.800 --> 29:48.480
and the hole of the fair on the left side and the parcel

29:48.480 --> 29:49.760
the network.

29:49.760 --> 29:53.760
Same here for the radio stream.

29:53.760 --> 29:55.040
Yeah.

29:55.040 --> 29:59.400
So this is the concentration, I have 50 minutes, so and good.

29:59.400 --> 30:03.120
We have the future revolvement of the timets.

30:03.120 --> 30:08.960
What you can see here now is, can you see what this is?

30:08.960 --> 30:10.080
I remember.

30:10.080 --> 30:12.000
It's Europe.

30:12.000 --> 30:14.760
Yeah, it's broken, yeah, I know.

30:14.760 --> 30:18.040
But this shows Europe in the late 90s.

30:18.040 --> 30:19.320
This is a map.

30:19.320 --> 30:23.280
There was some guy in Slovakia trying to get what

30:23.280 --> 30:26.800
we formally built in Picard Radio.

30:26.800 --> 30:28.760
And I can remember the times when I was young

30:28.760 --> 30:31.960
that I was able to sit in front of the PC,

30:31.960 --> 30:35.080
you remember that even internet was not there yet.

30:35.080 --> 30:37.720
Oh, well, not papity here, there.

30:37.720 --> 30:41.880
So sitting in front of the PC and trying to go down

30:41.880 --> 30:43.640
to Spain through the network.

30:43.640 --> 30:48.640
This was really a beauty to go through it and have fun.

30:48.640 --> 30:50.600
And you can see the speed.

30:50.600 --> 30:53.680
Well, it's better than I'm 17, isn't it?

30:53.680 --> 30:54.880
It's not.

30:54.880 --> 30:58.120
I apologize.

30:58.120 --> 31:00.840
But I'm looking forward to it to integrate maybe something.

31:00.840 --> 31:04.960
And the question is, yes, on 23 centimeter,

31:04.960 --> 31:07.840
you don't need that line of sight.

31:07.840 --> 31:11.040
You don't have that line of sight requirement.

31:11.040 --> 31:14.240
But even if you have good sight, I have a one link

31:14.240 --> 31:20.600
on 217 kilometers with minus 60 dBm and 50 megabits,

31:20.600 --> 31:21.200
both directions.

31:21.200 --> 31:22.720
So it's only a matter.

31:22.720 --> 31:25.400
Can you see each other?

31:25.520 --> 31:27.200
The question is, can we grow that large?

31:30.040 --> 31:32.760
So what do we need for further expansion?

31:32.760 --> 31:35.360
Of course, we need the sights.

31:35.360 --> 31:37.240
This is all the important thing.

31:37.240 --> 31:40.920
We need the sights where we can climb on top of mountain

31:40.920 --> 31:42.640
and put some stuff there.

31:42.640 --> 31:45.480
You need to have some buildings, high buildings where

31:45.480 --> 31:48.440
you are allowed to put some large dishes on it,

31:48.440 --> 31:49.760
or even smaller dishes.

31:49.760 --> 31:51.920
It really depends.

31:51.920 --> 31:53.520
We need some tools.

31:53.560 --> 31:56.600
We have some nice propagation tool in the hand of database,

31:56.600 --> 31:58.400
so you click on it, and you can quickly

31:58.400 --> 32:02.280
draw whether I have a line of sight between two sides.

32:02.280 --> 32:04.000
We have ready for another.com.

32:04.000 --> 32:05.120
We'll see that later, and of course,

32:05.120 --> 32:08.800
you need to have the IP resources, but this is all solved.

32:08.800 --> 32:11.720
So for example, I can do it even live,

32:11.720 --> 32:12.920
but time is running.

32:12.920 --> 32:16.640
So yeah, okay, I do it live.

32:18.640 --> 32:22.040
Someone was laughing, so that's challenging.

32:23.640 --> 32:24.480
Where are we?

32:24.480 --> 32:27.000
So this is Brussels here on the left hand side.

32:27.000 --> 32:33.000
This is Arhan from, let's say, go to this side.

32:33.000 --> 32:35.840
It's not too, and it.

32:35.840 --> 32:39.200
So you can see, so you can easily check,

32:39.200 --> 32:40.680
check whether you have a line of sight

32:40.680 --> 32:43.480
and even make a larger profile out of it.

32:43.480 --> 32:44.920
And forget about the tree.

32:44.920 --> 32:49.360
There are some measures you can take about the trees, yeah?

32:49.360 --> 32:50.920
All right.

32:50.920 --> 32:54.360
So it's really quick where you can check that.

32:56.960 --> 32:59.600
About the IP resources, AS numbers,

32:59.600 --> 33:01.560
and how to get an ended up length,

33:01.560 --> 33:03.320
if you need it by radio, VPN connections,

33:03.320 --> 33:05.120
please just contact me.

33:05.120 --> 33:06.440
I'm available on the email address,

33:06.440 --> 33:09.160
and even on my course line is available

33:09.160 --> 33:11.160
on all the messages out there.

33:11.160 --> 33:13.600
And there's even some quick stuff thing.

33:13.600 --> 33:16.680
So we thought about, okay, we have country allocations,

33:16.680 --> 33:18.400
but nowadays we even have some,

33:18.400 --> 33:21.240
let's say, global hand-to-project allocations.

33:21.240 --> 33:25.880
So we can simply allocate in a very easy scheme resource,

33:25.880 --> 33:27.480
so that you can immediately start

33:27.480 --> 33:31.520
if you have good sites and want to contribute on the network.

33:33.080 --> 33:36.080
Yeah, and these are the two uplink providers,

33:36.080 --> 33:40.720
calls for getting a hand net islands into the network.

33:42.280 --> 33:43.280
Applications.

33:44.760 --> 33:46.520
I have a personal backlog.

33:46.520 --> 33:49.400
So just imagine that in this hemp cloud thing,

33:49.400 --> 33:54.400
I have a CIPServer providing a CIPServer for phones,

33:55.840 --> 33:58.960
which you can connect on your radio.

34:00.520 --> 34:04.400
And if you have two CIPS clients,

34:04.400 --> 34:08.200
and I connect for usually know that these phones

34:08.200 --> 34:10.600
have one to three direct CIPS clients,

34:10.600 --> 34:13.800
where you can just click on that, which line to use.

34:13.800 --> 34:17.960
And it would be nice to have one line for peer-to-peer mode,

34:17.960 --> 34:19.880
so that you have the directory service,

34:19.880 --> 34:22.080
like the voice of a piece of indie hemp cloud.

34:22.080 --> 34:26.680
So you just using it for getting the information,

34:26.680 --> 34:29.120
which IP address has your partner, your own a call,

34:29.120 --> 34:31.200
or your device should call.

34:31.200 --> 34:34.880
And if you do that, then we can easily

34:34.880 --> 34:39.880
and quickly phone to each other either by radio only,

34:39.880 --> 34:41.480
if possible.

34:41.480 --> 34:43.040
And you can compare it afterwards.

34:43.040 --> 34:46.440
If you do the second supply, where the server is forcing

34:46.440 --> 34:48.800
that all the audio stream is not going past directly,

34:48.800 --> 34:52.520
but over the hemp cloud, on the VPN tunnel.

34:52.520 --> 34:54.880
So this is actually one of the projects

34:54.880 --> 34:57.720
which I'm trying to do in 2025.

34:57.720 --> 35:01.240
And of course, I have a lot of other further ideas,

35:01.240 --> 35:06.240
but as you can see, I hide them because of personal overload here.

35:06.240 --> 35:08.240
And of course, what are you at the DSC?

35:08.240 --> 35:09.800
I'm looking for inputs.

35:09.800 --> 35:14.800
So about RF access.

35:14.800 --> 35:18.600
I told you that line-of-sight is always necessary.

35:18.600 --> 35:26.600
Unfortunately, there are not too many solutions out there

35:26.600 --> 35:29.760
how to get around this.

35:29.760 --> 35:32.840
So we have on the 23 centimeter band, 60 max,

35:32.840 --> 35:35.000
still, even with scaleneo issues.

35:35.000 --> 35:37.960
So let's see how much we can still keep.

35:37.960 --> 35:39.880
But we could use standard RF, I guarantee,

35:39.880 --> 35:46.080
have transferred us to mix down a 5m chunk

35:46.080 --> 35:49.120
in order to use the 23 centimeter band.

35:49.120 --> 35:54.040
Or you have heard about this new packet radius project,

35:54.040 --> 35:57.560
maybe, and there's a solution for 70 centimeter.

35:57.560 --> 36:01.560
And soon, there will be something for 23 centimeter.

36:01.560 --> 36:02.560
This can be used.

36:02.560 --> 36:08.680
But it depends on our technology, how good it is.

36:08.680 --> 36:11.200
We have another project.

36:11.200 --> 36:14.320
We're running GSM, or GPRS, on 70 centimeter,

36:14.320 --> 36:16.960
thanks to Eric Osmocom.

36:16.960 --> 36:19.560
There's an implementation now available

36:19.560 --> 36:25.600
where you can build up a GSM system on home radio frequencies.

36:25.600 --> 36:28.240
And yes, of course, if we want to have speed,

36:28.240 --> 36:31.960
we need to have multi-slots implemented in action on.

36:31.960 --> 36:34.200
But of course, you always need to have some room

36:34.200 --> 36:35.920
for improvement.

36:35.920 --> 36:37.960
And some satellite things.

36:37.960 --> 36:39.960
We have the Q100 Transponder in there,

36:39.960 --> 36:43.440
there's one project from the same guy who's doing this NPR thing.

36:43.440 --> 36:47.240
And I think Daniel, your system is even described here.

36:47.240 --> 36:49.960
And I'm really interested in whether this can be turned out

36:49.960 --> 36:51.520
to a permanent solution, maybe.

36:51.520 --> 36:56.640
I have good context to the M-set people and maybe a good site,

36:56.640 --> 37:01.640
good spot where we can get the data into the handled network.

37:01.640 --> 37:05.840
And of course, we have some spectrum available

37:05.840 --> 37:09.920
in the Tengik band, which I would like to use,

37:09.920 --> 37:15.200
because I fear that if we don't use it, we lose it.

37:15.200 --> 37:17.360
We can see that all the commercials are eating up

37:17.360 --> 37:20.040
over our frequencies.

37:20.040 --> 37:22.920
So I want to use the Tengik help span.

37:22.920 --> 37:25.280
We have two links on Tengik help.

37:25.280 --> 37:29.960
We're making use of 160 max spentwas.

37:29.960 --> 37:32.880
There's plenty of pentwas available, 500 max,

37:32.880 --> 37:34.880
but the gear is very expensive right now.

37:34.880 --> 37:41.880
So we actually pay two k for one end, plus antenna.

37:41.880 --> 37:43.640
So this is not easy to do.

37:43.640 --> 37:45.880
But of course, the same thing applies,

37:45.880 --> 37:48.840
like if we have transmetors and go from standard Wi-Fi gear

37:48.840 --> 37:52.040
up to 10 gigs, this would be a beauty.

37:52.040 --> 37:54.440
Yeah, other stuff to explore.

37:54.440 --> 37:58.880
We could even look about the terahats, so laser links.

38:00.040 --> 38:01.280
They are high speed, of course.

38:01.280 --> 38:03.800
As you know, that space exists playing around in space

38:03.800 --> 38:05.360
with that.

38:05.360 --> 38:07.480
Of course, they don't have any archie in,

38:07.480 --> 38:10.800
or some other molecules, as they're facing the Earth.

38:10.800 --> 38:15.440
So of course, we know that laser links are suffering

38:15.440 --> 38:20.880
from fork, but we don't have any service-level equipment,

38:20.880 --> 38:22.760
don't do we.

38:22.760 --> 38:28.880
So even if you just reach 90% and this is good in our case,

38:28.880 --> 38:31.560
the commercial, you can forget about that.

38:31.560 --> 38:36.400
But this makes me think about why not using laser links

38:36.400 --> 38:38.360
on a terrestrial level.

38:38.360 --> 38:41.000
And the feedback can, if fork is there,

38:41.000 --> 38:44.680
and we use the existing in five weeks infrastructure

38:44.680 --> 38:47.080
as a backup.

38:47.080 --> 38:48.920
Playing a little bit about with LTE,

38:48.920 --> 38:52.520
there's a time division duplex band.

38:52.520 --> 38:54.120
It's called B40.

38:54.120 --> 38:55.800
On the surgery centimeter band,

38:55.800 --> 39:00.760
so 2,300 to 2,400, it's overlapping with the M2 radio

39:00.760 --> 39:02.280
allocation.

39:02.280 --> 39:07.160
And we're actually looking for an X&B for a 40T radio.

39:07.160 --> 39:11.600
If you have some context, let me know.

39:11.600 --> 39:14.600
And some pure software implementation could be

39:14.600 --> 39:17.560
from SRS.

39:17.560 --> 39:21.480
SRS around project, so that we can maybe even start with 5G.

39:21.480 --> 39:25.200
But yeah, there are a lot of, well, of course,

39:25.200 --> 39:26.560
it's talking to your phone.

39:26.560 --> 39:32.080
So the distance would not be solved, the distance issues.

39:32.080 --> 39:35.760
And we can play with open Wi-Fi, if you have seen that.

39:35.760 --> 39:37.880
And I think this was the last slide I have five minutes left.

39:37.880 --> 39:39.520
APPLAUSE

39:39.520 --> 39:41.520
APPLAUSE

39:47.520 --> 39:48.040
Thank you.

39:48.040 --> 39:49.520
So any questions, please?

39:49.520 --> 39:52.800
Yeah, but for over Wi-Fi, you might as a misplug the mega wide,

39:52.800 --> 39:56.000
so it will fit exactly 70% of the time.

39:56.000 --> 40:00.720
Well, there are quarter and half rate and quarter rate chips.

40:00.720 --> 40:02.000
So there are even some chips,

40:02.000 --> 40:04.560
which could go down to 2.5 max.

40:04.560 --> 40:08.240
There are terrorist chipsets, 600, 600, blah, blah, blah.

40:08.240 --> 40:10.240
So there are some projects where you can narrow it.

40:10.240 --> 40:13.320
And it's standard is 10 max and 5 max.

40:13.320 --> 40:17.840
On the 80, 11, a X, it's not available anymore.

40:17.840 --> 40:22.040
But if you have some oligas, you can just tell the radio

40:22.040 --> 40:25.960
to go down to 5 max.

40:25.960 --> 40:26.960
OK.

40:26.960 --> 40:27.960
Another question.

40:27.960 --> 40:28.960
Another question?

40:28.960 --> 40:30.600
I have a question.

40:30.600 --> 40:33.120
How have you got the tune that needs to be time hours

40:33.120 --> 40:35.040
or enable the directional hardware detection

40:35.040 --> 40:40.440
or something like this, the noise that the whole thing has.

40:40.440 --> 40:44.920
Well, of course, we actually, I said, keep it simple stupid.

40:44.920 --> 40:48.920
So the idea is always, if you have a sitting in front of a configuration,

40:48.920 --> 40:52.840
I will have a look at the configuration.

40:52.840 --> 40:56.760
The configuration is good if you don't touch it as much as possible.

40:56.760 --> 41:01.360
So there's BFD, as I have heard.

41:01.360 --> 41:02.880
And we can play with that.

41:02.880 --> 41:06.320
We didn't investigate so far because we're concentrating on the mission.

41:06.320 --> 41:08.960
So that's why we didn't look at this too much.

41:08.960 --> 41:11.560
But yes, if a link is getting weak,

41:11.560 --> 41:15.000
we would like to see it more faster than the three minutes

41:15.000 --> 41:18.920
limit, I think, which actually is BFD standards.

41:18.920 --> 41:27.120
Yeah, but the thing is, to make a large change

41:27.120 --> 41:29.360
and you don't have full control of network,

41:29.360 --> 41:31.640
means that, well, can you change it?

41:31.640 --> 41:33.040
Can you change it?

41:33.040 --> 41:37.800
So it takes time until we will decision the propagates

41:37.800 --> 41:39.480
through the whole network.

41:39.480 --> 41:42.280
There was another question?

41:42.360 --> 41:44.080
Yeah, please.

41:44.080 --> 41:46.840
Maybe something you might be interested in is, of course,

41:46.840 --> 41:50.160
especially point points in and over a Q100.

41:50.160 --> 41:57.400
We did some testing with a hand from Savakya on the custom protocol

41:57.400 --> 42:00.480
for any over QPSK.

42:00.480 --> 42:04.840
And so we reached a few megabits per second

42:04.840 --> 42:06.120
with a custom protocol.

42:06.120 --> 42:08.720
And so that could be used instead of,

42:08.720 --> 42:12.200
is it somehow broad on the ULA available where

42:12.200 --> 42:14.640
can we talk about it or, yeah, I can send you a link.

42:14.640 --> 42:15.200
OK, great.

42:15.200 --> 42:16.640
So I can edit later.

42:16.640 --> 42:19.120
Thank you very much.

42:19.120 --> 42:22.560
The other question for the, from the matrix channel,

42:22.560 --> 42:25.640
are you so is asking you what about IPBs?

42:25.640 --> 42:27.240
Yes, I was waiting for this question.

42:27.240 --> 42:32.520
OK.

42:32.520 --> 42:36.200
Again, the thing is, I am really concentrating on the mission.

42:36.200 --> 42:40.040
I know that we are trying to solve a problem

42:40.040 --> 42:41.200
which we actually don't have.

42:44.200 --> 42:48.000
Yeah, well, slash 10 is really hard to deplete.

42:48.000 --> 42:48.960
Well, it depends on you.

42:48.960 --> 42:51.000
Yeah, of course, if you're far from.

42:51.000 --> 42:53.120
But yes, we have looked at it.

42:53.120 --> 42:57.000
We were thinking about some ways how to do that.

42:57.000 --> 43:00.840
I think even though you had a proposal written,

43:00.840 --> 43:02.000
it's just not my project.

43:02.000 --> 43:03.640
So you're absolutely invited.

43:03.640 --> 43:06.160
It's a community thing.

43:06.480 --> 43:12.120
If it's low, low effort for me to take part on your idea,

43:12.120 --> 43:16.000
feel free to contact us and to push things.

43:16.000 --> 43:18.240
Of course, if you want to have a large IPv6

43:18.240 --> 43:20.040
prefix, that's just the other thing.

43:20.040 --> 43:22.480
If you want to have the large one, you need to coordinate

43:22.480 --> 43:25.480
in a worldwide system.

43:25.480 --> 43:29.120
And to really have everyone in the world to accept that,

43:29.120 --> 43:32.640
if you come and say, hey, I have a slash 40 for the whole world,

43:32.640 --> 43:35.760
then whoa, am I slash 40 is even better?

43:35.760 --> 43:37.800
So they have accepted the same problem.

43:37.800 --> 43:40.120
So you need to have a slash 24 or something

43:40.120 --> 43:43.120
in order to get it approved by the emincerator community

43:43.120 --> 43:46.200
to have a single IPv6 prefix.

43:46.200 --> 43:48.080
There are other ideas like, from Daniel there,

43:48.080 --> 43:50.440
where you have a list of chunks where you have these

43:50.440 --> 43:53.720
prefixes just collected and say, this is belonging to emincer

43:53.720 --> 43:54.640
or not.

43:54.640 --> 43:58.440
So there are many ways around how to do that.

43:58.440 --> 44:04.000
But yeah, again, it's not the mission, it's not my mission, actually.

44:04.000 --> 44:04.840
Further questions?

44:04.840 --> 44:08.320
Well, I have 30 seconds.

44:08.320 --> 44:09.320
Yes, please.

44:09.320 --> 44:11.960
So it's very advanced, like, then for the half of the board,

44:11.960 --> 44:14.240
like, you know, I mean, another of nodes

44:14.240 --> 44:16.000
and he comes to you, it's something like more real work.

44:16.000 --> 44:19.080
Then can you look at this being, like,

44:19.080 --> 44:20.960
starting, like, a full work Internet,

44:20.960 --> 44:23.520
just in case something would happen to the world.

44:23.520 --> 44:24.880
Yes.

44:24.880 --> 44:33.240
It is absolutely a system which can be used for emergency communication

44:33.240 --> 44:35.120
and we're even getting support, as I said,

44:35.120 --> 44:35.960
from the government.

44:35.960 --> 44:37.760
They're even some projects inside and Germany,

44:37.760 --> 44:43.120
where you have, let's say, all these m-com guys

44:43.120 --> 44:49.400
trying to get in touch and even to collaborate somehow.

44:49.560 --> 44:51.320
Of course, it's a bit a little bit tricky

44:51.320 --> 44:56.160
about the emincerator regulations, but technical, yes.

44:56.160 --> 45:00.280
And you can adapt even regulations, if necessary.

45:00.280 --> 45:02.000
Okay, thank you very much again.

45:02.000 --> 45:03.000
Thank you.

45:03.000 --> 45:04.000
Thank you.

45:04.000 --> 45:06.000
Thank you.

45:06.000 --> 45:07.000
Thank you.

