The other side of this besides the delayed receiving of messages is
with monitoring you want to get the alerts even if your network is down
and unable to send via email to your pager, cellphone, etc. Having an
out of band method to get those alerts out on criticial alerts is
Doesn't sound like sabotage to me. In fact, it sounds like bad luck.
Will this now be termed Anchor fade in the future?
Tuc
On 10/29/07, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/29/07, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unfortunately, we cannot provide you with
specific information other than to suggest a review
of the questionnaire we supplied and try
On Oct 29, 2007 11:01 PM, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Fix your forwarding a lot better. Not sure what this
means. My machines are MX's for the clients domain. They
accept it, and either forward it around locally to one of the
processing MX's or ARE one one
On 10/29/07, Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unfortunately, we cannot provide you with
specific information other than to suggest a review
of the questionnaire we supplied and try to determine
where your mailing practices may be improved upon.
In other words
Background:
We MX for a domain, and turn it right around
to Yahoo! Mail. I know others have run into this
before. Because a fair amount of it is spam,
Yahoo stops accepting the mail, yadda yadda yadda.
Problem:
I jumped through all the hoops, and they
tell me I'm denied. When
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED] you write:
Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET wrote:
Down is there isn't power to it until it gets repaired. So its not
answering period. A nslookup shows timed-out. A dig shows
connection timed out; no servers could be reached (When querying ONLY
against
If they can be avoided, why do we put up with them? Do we really
want our colo in downtown San Francisco bad enough to take the risk
of having a single point of failure? How can we, as engineers, ask
questions about how many generators, how much fuel, and yet take
for granted that there is
But as George mentions... Sh*t happens There are things you can't
forsee, or maybe spend way too much engineering to overcome that 1
in a million oops. I've been at Telehouse 25B a few times when
the I never expected something like that would happen happened.
(I remember two guys with VERY
I would imagine that if we're talking about unsophisticated users,
the majority of them have no idea what IRC is anyway -- most of them
are using AIM, or Yahoo! IM, or
Quite true. I do know of a small fraction, however, that when Yahoo
stopped supporting the chats for their
I have a very special voice mailbox assigned to a fictional person. Any
sales calls get transferred to it. No, I don't monitor it. :-)
Yes, he works here too... Devlin Nuhl Good old Dev Nuhl.
There are things he is responsible for that even I can't handle.
Hi all,
(And especially to those emailing privately, Joe Abley
and Adam Rothschild... I never disappeared... ;) )
Yes, I've misspoke. Bad on me #1. You can subdomain
IN-ADDR.ARPA. I understand that if you do more than just simply
put NS records in, it can be done.
The
Hi,
I seem to be having a problem. Limelight has SWIP'd
69.28.185.0/24 to me, and I asked for IN-ADDR.ARPA control.
I recently went to check and it seemed not to be working
right. I sent them an email around 11p Eastern Sunday nite
asking it to be fixed. I even included a reference to a
Maybe you should check your word of hearsay on what a country of over
150 mill people largest industry is before posting. Wouldn't this mean
the possibility of getting a few hundreds of spam weekly? Scam is big
in Nigeria but a lot of other things such as natural resources are
bigger
Hi there,
What really confuses the heck out of me is that a company this size can't
control/monitor their change management??. Then again not having all the
facts has had everyone perplexed.
later,
vicky
At 07:38 PM 10/5/2002 -0400, you wrote:
On Sat, 5 Oct 2002, Tim Thorne wrote:
After
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