What exactly do you mean, cached pages? As in cached pages on their site, or cached pages on your sites? I use Navigator and Opera and using their service, have never had a problem updating entries.
What prob did you experience? V. interested in this email from you, since I have recently been having caching problems with caching on a client tango admin site which includes uploads causing it to not work exactly as developed. Garth At 01:08 19/07/02 -0700, you wrote: >To Garth, Ben, Mark and others ... thanks !! > >This has been a great exploration of DNS the last couple of days. > >And the winner is .. zoneedit.com ... by a country mile. They were >recommended by a friend elsewhere, too. I think most of the DNS hosting >options I checked had the feature list you mentioned below, Garth. However, >I think zoneedit strikes the right balance for me between security and >price. They also integrate nicely with OpenSRS, which I also use. > >One downside: In setting up a couple of domains with them this evening, I >did notice that they suffer terribly from cached pages. Meaning, you must be >very careful when editing pages, to ensure that you aren't viewing a cached >page with the wrong settings. In our development here, it's an issue that >we have wrestled pretty much to the ground (and talked to death on this list >previously). > >Thaks again. >Ian > >-----Original Message----- >From: Garth Penglase > >Hi Ian, >I use zoneedit.com and have found the service and support to be good. >advantages are: >- dns redundancy >- dynamic ip addressing >- round robin dns >- mail forwarding / web forwarding / cloaking >- they use ip blacklists for reduction of spam (when using their mail >forwarding feature) >- fast and immediate >there are other features that they provide that I don't use yet. > >disadvantages >- they use ip blacklists for reduction of spam (when using their mail >forwarding feature) which causes clients using ip addresses which are >blacklisted to be unable to get mail through their mail server. however, I >have only had a few cases of this and encouraged the client to bug their >ISP to fix the security hole on the blacklisted server and remove it from >the list. Providing the client with an email/web page which points out what >the problem is, who should solve it and how it should be solved seems to be >the best trick - I present it as a service to my clients and for them to >use with their clients. > >service is free for first 5 domains/services per client - they currently >host over 500,000 domains >definitely worth checking it out >Garth > > >At 10:31 17/07/02 -0700, you wrote: > >I am considering outsourcing our DNS service and am wondering if there are > >recommendations that anyone would share. > > > >I have looked at ultradns.com ... I'm wondering if there are others out > >there that listers have experience with. Please share pro's and con's. > > > >with thanks ... > > > >Ian Daniel, A.Sc.T., President > >New Creation Consulting & Information Management Inc. > ># 701, 889 West Pender Street, Vancouver, BC V6C 3B2 Canada > >===================================================== > ><mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.ncol.com > ><http://witango.ncol.com>http://witango.ncol.com > >Ph: (604) 576-3086 Fax: (604) 576-3025 > > > > >________________________________________________________________________ >TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send a plain text/US ASCII email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with unsubscribe witango-talk in the message body ________________________________________________________________________ TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send a plain text/US ASCII email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with unsubscribe witango-talk in the message body
