Dorian Moore wrote:
>
> It could also be, depending on the content of the page, that someone has
> set up a program to check for updates to that page?.... or at an
> offchance that maybe there is a meta refresh [client pull] header on
> that page, and that someone has left their browser pointing at it. Do
> you have a record of the agent string, referer string, or any idea why
> someone may want to grab content from that page on your site?
This is one of the Apache log lines:
209.204.137.249 - - [10/Feb/2000:01:48:29 -0600] "GET /resume.html
HTTP/1.0" 200 14855 "-" "Mozilla/3.0 (compatible)"
The page is plain and simple HTML text with no fancy stuff. I know,
I wrote it myself, and checked it.
> "Michael E. Cummins" wrote:
> >
> > This may be related, or it may be absurd - but there are several programs
> > out there that help to test internet connectivity, measuring both speed and
> > reliability. Many of these programs allow you to set up custom URL's at
> > scheduled intervals, and the servers can get either pinged or have a page
> > retrieved.
This is a possibility, but I would expect the time intervals between
page retreivals to be more consistant if that was the case. This is
jumping all over the place.
--
| Bryan Andersen | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://softail.visi.com |
| Buzzwords are like annoying little flies that deserve to be swatted. |
| -Bryan Andersen |
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