So far I've treated a "service" as basically anything besides what's immediately needed to pass packets, so generally things that reside on things besides the networking hardware. Though this list is a bit outdated, here's what we in memphis are considering: - On-site services More Redundancy, More Internal Availability, Higher Maintenance - DNS (unbound) * - NTP * - Monitoring - On-site services, where convenient - Network Camera (Webcam on raspberry pi?) - Wideband remote receiver (WebSDR style by RTL-SDR and discone?) - ADS-B Receiver - NOAA POES APT Receiver/decoder/web interface - APRS i-gate - Point-to-point supported services - Connectivity for others’ voice/data repeater (d-star, irlp, etc) - Datacenter colocated services Less Maintenance, More External Availability, Less Redundancy - HamWAN Portal (web interface for managing authentication, static allocations, rDNS, ER firewalls, certificates) - DNS (powerDNS) * - VPN (sstp?) - Email - VoIP (Asterisk) - IRCd - Webhosting - 44net facing FTP/HTTP File Drop - GIS Server (Quantum) - Echolink conference server, IRLP reflector, and D-STAR reflector (Where suited) - Some sort of social network *: Anycast service On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 6:40 PM, Bill Vodall <wa7nwp@gmail.com> wrote:
A friend put up a repeater on 2 meters. ... and it's still transmitting all day long.
Is it June in Washington already? :)
I keep hearing this, "services," but what does it mean?
A reason to 'click' the link. The web based IRC system is a good example. It's a useful and fun resource that's worth 'clicking on'. Too easy perhaps as that shortcuts the much great effort necessary to do the same on Ham radio.
These days everything is so easy 'on the web' that there's little need to do anything else.
Bill, WA7NWP
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