The Daily IPv4 Report

A few allocations yesterday, the biggest one of which went to “Marcel Edler trading as Optimate-Server” of Germany, which was a /15.  An allocation of /16 went to Kazaktelecom and /15s to Globalcity Telecom of Romania and Vodafone Poland and Asiatech in Iran.  Total of about 0.03 /8s gone in one day today – we really can’t have long to go now.  Days rather than weeks.

The Daily IPv4 Report

A relatively disappointing day yesterday compared to the previous two – in terms of large blocks, just a /16 allocated to Kyivstar of Ukraine.  On the plus side, the Huston-o-Meter‘s predictions are indicating just one week left!  Roll on next week!

Update: I rather liked the tweet from RIPE NCC yesterday – https://twitter.com/RIPE_NCC/status/246204688104579072 – with only somewhere between a /11 and a /12 available at the time of writing, if even RIPE are wondering if people are taking bets we must be pretty close to the end now!

The Daily IPv4 Report

So, there were a couple of large blocks allocated by RIPE yesterday – Etisalat (Saudi Arabia) had a /14, and an ISP in Germany had a /15.  That’s another day of allocating 0.03 /8s in a day – we have days to go now if this continues, not weeks.  The Huston-o-Meter is predicting 21 September as of today, but I’m not sure it’ll be that long if the allocation rate continues at the same pace.

The Daily IPv4 Report

A short report today, but amongst other smaller allocations yesterday, 256K addresses were allocated to Tele2 Sverige AB in Sweden, which brings us down another 0.03 /8s or so.  If the allocation rates continue at that pace we might well be out by the beginning of next week …

This week in the IPv4 world

It’s been an interesting week in the world of IPv4.  Still plenty of people trying to tell you that there’s no problem and no-one’s running out, but a couple of significant things have happened this week which are worth noting.

Firstly, RIPE NCC, the regional Internet registry for Europe made an official announcement last Tuesday (4 September) that they were down to their last /10 above the final /8, which is 0.25 of a /8 or 4,194,304 addresses.  When this happens, RIPE move to ‘Phase 1’, which means that their allocation people work in pairs and scrutinise things much more closely.  In addition, things are processed very strictly in order and they will only communicate with you when your ticket is in the front of the queue.  RIPE have also made their official graph update daily now, which you can find at http://www.ripe.net/internet-coordination/ipv4-exhaustion/ipv4-available-pool-graph

The second thing to happen this week has come from a rather unusual place – Iran.  Two different ISPs (who may or may not be government owned/controlled, I don’t know), asked for two blocks of addresses, one a /12 and another a /13 – a total of 1,572,864 in just one week.  The sensation caused the “Huston-o-Meter” (at http://ipv4.potaroo.net) to jump from 4 October to 27 September and now stands, at the time of writing, at 22 September.  If any more large allocations occur between now and then, we could be looking at a run-out date of less than 2 weeks time!

Good time to keep your head in the sand, isn’t it?

Review: Waitrose Decaffeinated Peruvian Coffee Beans

Having recently bought myself a coffee grinder, the hunt was on for the rather elusive product that should be available but seemingly isn’t – decaffeinated coffee beans. My usual supermarket (Tesco) had a whole array of decaf ground coffee, but not actually any beans – and it turns out the only supermarket I can find that sells decaffeinated coffee beans turns out to be Waitrose, and my nearest branch is slightly over 10 miles away. However, next time I passed it, I popped in and bought a few packets to see what it’s like, having bought some ‘normal’ Tesco coffee beans to compare it with of roughly the same strength.

The decaf coffee is marked as ‘3’, which is a medium strength coffee. With the Tesco beans, I thought that 40g of ground coffee per litre of water was about right, but when I tried a similar amount of the decaf, I thought it came out a bit weak. So this morning I upped the “dosage “to 55g/litre, which is the recommendation on the SCAA web site (and being an American web site should be a suitably strong dosage).  I found 55g/litre to be a bit too strong with the Tesco beans, but with the Waitrose beans it tasted just right.  A very nice tasting coffee with no bitterness and tasted like a high quality cup of coffee, which doesn’t taste all that “decaf” if you make it strong enough.  And with all the benefits of being able to sleep at night, too.

Right, where’s my mug … ?