|  | Posted by Toby A Inkster on 01/19/08 23:50 
Jerry Stuckle wrote:
 > Additionally, some larger corporations and ISPs use multiple proxies;
 > each request can come from a different IP, even though it's a single
 > computer.  AOL is famous for this.
 
 Our office has about 70-80 workstations, hardly a large corporation, but
 we have two ADSL lines (with different ISPs, for redundancy) and one SDSL
 line coming into the building, all connected to a load-balancing router.
 So requests from a single visitor in the office may well be distributed
 between three IP addresses.
 
 And that load-balancing router wasn't bespoke for us -- it's mass-produced.
 
 --
 Toby A Inkster BSc (Hons) ARCS
 [Geek of HTML/SQL/Perl/PHP/Python/Apache/Linux]
 [OS: Linux 2.6.17.14-mm-desktop-9mdvsmp, up 20 days, 11:00.]
 
 Ham vs Bacon vs Pork
 http://tobyinkster.co.uk/blog/2008/01/17/pork-etc/
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