How well does ATR actually work?
Additional Truncated Response (ATR) does not completely fix the issue of large responses but it is worth considering if you want a faster DNS service.
Additional Truncated Response (ATR) does not completely fix the issue of large responses but it is worth considering if you want a faster DNS service.
Guest Post: Read why women who graduate with degrees in engineering, computer science and ICT in Mongolia are less likely to be employed in tech jobs than men.
Guest Post: For many enterprises, IPv6 is a long way from being on their to-do lists, with many citing several blockers to adopting it.
APNIC participated at APAN 45 in Singapore from 25 to 29 March 2018.
APNIC participated at ICANN 61 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from 10 to 15 March 2018.
APNIC Labs attempts to validate the proportion of resolvers reporting trust in KSK-2017 ahead of the restart of the Root Zone DNS key roll process.
Opinion: The collective enthusiasm for extending the Internet’s protocols should be matched by due care and constraint.
Build your profile in the APNIC community and submit a paper for APNIC 46.
Guest Post: Russ White reminds us why latency and jitter are more of a killer for application performance than lack of bandwidth.
Guest Post: A first-of-its-kind study characterizes cellular network configuration and usage around the world.