Slashdot Back Online 346
I'm still not exactly clued in as to why we're back online, but hey, we are. Sometime saturday morning our Cisco router melted down. Ordinarily this would only be the end of the world, but none of our qualified personel were available to fix it, thus triggering the end of several nearby worlds as well. Props to Yazz, KurtG and Scott from Cisco for managing to help get us back online. We'll post more when we know it.
Re:Original Story (Score:4)
Jeff and Rob are not easy to work with. Best wishes to my replacement.
- Anne Tomlinson
Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:4)
Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:2)
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Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:2)
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Re:I went Outside!!!! (Score:4)
Staff reductions at VA (Score:2)
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
they're all OSDN stuff. it was an OSDN cisco router that melted, see http://usw-sf-log.sourceforge.net/
That's fine... Kuro5hin was up all weekend. Are they somewhere physically (and logically) different?
Can you say "single point of failure"? (Score:2)
This being
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
#define X(x,y) x##y
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
Re:Why did she quit? (Score:2)
Re:All your SlashDot belong to us (Score:2)
Welcome Back (Score:2)
Lando
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
It was pointed out to me a couple of years ago that bind doesn't really implement the RFC for dns. There are a lot of problems with the bind implementation, but since bind is the default, it's hard to get a "proper" dns working since the standard is bind's implementation.
Lando
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Will check it out.
Lando
24 bit stereo surround... (Score:2)
The attention to detail was truly amazing. Car horns honked and the sound echoed just the way you'd have expected in a ultra-realistic video game-- only better.
Very hard to describe, but definately worth it trying again in a couple months.
W
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Re:Interesting (NOT!) (Score:2)
If you'd read teh post on newsforge, you'd know that it was EXODUS's routers that went down, NOT OSDN's. RTF News Articles.
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
That's not Rob. (Score:2)
Rob would never use "you're" and "your" in the appropriate situation.
Champions of open source? (Score:2)
There is a big difference between covering open source and free software, and actually advocating and believing it. Slashdot does a pretty good job of the former, but is .. uh .. "objective" enough to
avoid doing the latter.
Although Slashdot seems to conform (mostly) when you look purely at the source-code aspect of things, they very clearly work directly against open source interests when you look at file format and multimedia issues. For example:
Slashdot does overall have a positive influence, though, and from the selection of stories, it is very clear that the editors are at least very interested in the topic of open source. But calling them "champions of open source" is completely inappropriate.
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Re:How to be a karma whore. (Score:2)
If you by any chance think its a valid comment, then drag itover ffs. You cannot expect everybody to read both places.
And listen you idiotic pup. Not everybody thinks that "Karma" is life, death and everything.
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Hiring qualified people (Score:2)
So why is it that most ISPs hire less qualified people? Is it because you get what you pay for?
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Yup. But DNS seems to be one of the most poorly managed things on the net. When it's only done half-right, most people can still get to most places and they think it's correct, but subtle problems do exist in many ways, especially with caching, and most admins have no clue about what or why or even realize it's a DNS problem, saying "It can't be DNS, I can get there".
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
Woo ... those deep deep technical terms again, like "melted". OMG, that's so deep it's not even in my CCIE books. Well at least it's back to solid form now.
Re:Melted down? (Score:2)
I had a Cisco router lose the smoke built into it's power supply once. Fortunately it was one of two routers running in parallel, so for the 4 hours it took to get a replacement, we were actually up all the time.
Re:Slashdot doesn't have redundant routers? (Score:2)
Nor are servers and ads.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
A choice today is djbdns [djbdns.org].
Re:Tee hee... (Score:2)
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Re:Self /.ing? (Score:2)
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Re:Shouldn't this have been a simple exercise? (Score:2)
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Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:2)
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What really happened (Score:3)
Poor bastard...
Join the Great Fujisan Expedition! [mmdc.net]
Re:Tee hee... (Score:3)
Well, for all of you wondering whether or not this is the real Sarcasta, as in Rob "Cmdr Dorko...err..Taco" Malda's other half, Kathleen Fent...here is your answer right here, plain as day.
If you check out this page [sarcasta.net]you'll quickly see that Aunt Kathy here doesn't have a cat named Kyoto .
Combine this with the fact that for a Mac using graphic designer (and I know many
Add to that the high user number (c'mon, if this was Taco's chick, she'd be like a high user number, right?
No way. Taco: If this user is really your chick, tell us.
And to the holder of this Sarcasta account: Do try to do a little research before you troll as Sarcasta, 'k?
Re:Nope, another single point... (Score:2)
Particularly enjoy
"OUR SUCCESS DEPENDS ON DEVELOPING NEW SYSTEMS THAT ACHIEVE MARKET ACCEPTANCE AND ON THE SUCCESS OF OUR PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ORGANIZATION" (their shouting),
"WE COULD BE PREVENTED FROM SELLING OR DEVELOPING OUR PRODUCTS IF THE GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE AND SIMILAR LICENSES UNDER WHICH THE OPERATING SYSTEM INCORPORATED INTO OUR PRODUCTS IS DEVELOPED AND LICENSED, ARE NOT ENFORCEABLE"
and especially for today "WE ARE VULNERABLE TO UNEXPECTED NETWORK INTERRUPTIONS CAUSED BY SYSTEM FAILURES, WHICH MAY RESULT IN REDUCED VISITOR TRAFFIC ON OUR NETWORK, DECREASED REVENUE
AND HARM TO OUR REPUTATION".
FWIW I think they'll actually be fine. No zillionaires, but afloat none the less.
Dave
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
When's the last time Rob's gross was measured in the billions?
When's the last time Slashdot's DNS servers were down?
Get the hint? I could go on...
When's the last time Slashdot attempted to publically humiliate Microsoft?
uh, scratch that one.
Re:Exodus (Score:5)
Re:Original Story (Score:2)
Am I the only one that doesn't think this post should be taken at face value? To believe that this is really the tech in question, you have to believe one of these things:
Does anyone want to buy some Man Beef [manbeef.com] or a Bonsai Kitten [bonsaikitten.com] kit?
Greg
Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
And people wonder why Linux users buy less software than Windows users... If mtr was a standard program on all Windows (even server-level only) boxes, people wouldn't have to buy a shareware program to do the same thing..
And what admin in the middle of a huge crash cares about the pretty path the packets take? They want to know which router is down, but they don't care about its ICBM address (unless the problem is really bad.)
* The other reason Linux users don't buy software is that 1) many Linux boxes don't have users, 2) many Linux users are in 'poor' countries where the purchase price of MS Office would be a year's wages, or 3) is it worth paying $30 for a shareware program when the free one is just as good and maybe just not quite as pretty?
I buy windows software but not Linux, not because I don't think Linux developers need money, but because I haven't found a Linux program that I'd want to buy (and had to buy).
Now, if Q3 for Linux came out as soon as for Win32, I'd have bought that, but I'm not waiting a few weeks for a political statement.
Re:Politically correct (Score:2)
Re:Really a load test of slashnet (Score:2)
+1 Pimp (those that were there will know.... )
-Restil
Re:Politically correct (Score:2)
The presedent of the company I worked for would come running down the hall if the server crashed, he would immediatly start asking us what happened. Of course we would not have an answer yet. It one instance he came running down the hall so fast we did not even have the chance to stand up and walk over to the server 5ft away from us. (Then he started questioning everything we did and simply insisted we call HP. Even though it was obvious we had to cycle the power since even the console was not responding. Server came up just fine after we cycled the power.)
People often over react to the situation. Yes, it is a very bad thing. (Server crash, connection down, etc. But those people most effected should probably NOT be allowed in the room unless they are skilled enough to do the job themselves.(And being vaugly familiar with routers IS NOT being skilled with them).
Re:Single point of failure (Score:2)
Mabe a stock price drop makes that spare router a bit more economically feasible.
Re:Exodus (Score:2)
1. ipchains -I output -d 0/0 80 -y -l -j ACCEPT # i.e. log the IP address of outbound web connections; this is for Linux 2.2, YMMV
2. Pull up a site which has round robin A records with multiple IP's (IIRC www.yahoo.com will do; if you want URL for one of ours, send me email - I don't want to Slashdot my customers
3. Find out the IP address the browser is using in the logs. Observe that since the browser caches the result of gethostbyname() it keeps using the same one.
4. ipchains -I output -d xxxx -j REJECT
5. Hit another link and see what happens
Exodus (Score:5)
We use Exodus, and they provide us with two separate ethernet feeds, down separate cable runs, from two separate routers in different parts of the internal NOC. No need for any routers at all; we have separate endpoint hardware on each feed and just do a rough load balance across the feeds with round robin DNS.
The recommended (by Exodus) alternative is to have a pair of peered routers which actively load balance across the feeds at the IP level, and back up each other if one goes down. I didn't do this as we're a startup I didn't want to pay for an extra pair of routers.
Either of the above will ensure that there is no single point of failure on the front end. This is referred to as a dual-homed configuration. Exodus' WAN will ensure there is no SPF further out; making your own equipment cluster and software fault tolerant is your problem
It sounds like Slashdot is running with a single-homed connection, and that the router which failed is their own kit in their own rack. $$ permitting, they could have either (a) done a proper dual-homed setup, as per one of the above, or (b) had a spare router sitting in the rack and lease Exodus' managed hardware monitoring service, which would have meant Exodus techs switching it out when it failed.
I don't know what Slashdot's budget for hosting is, but we are a much smaller company than Andover and dual-homed service is not exactly killing our budget. I would conservatively assume that bandwidth is Slashdot's biggest expense.
You cannot throw pies at the co-lo provider for your own failure to have a robust setup and make proper use of the facilities they offer.
Not linux load-balancers.... (Score:2)
Re:Suuuuuure it was a Cisco... (Score:2)
Not at all, if you'd take less than 5 minutes to look at why. But here, I'll do it for you.
Let's sart with slashdot.org's IP address as a base, so we know where "home" is -- 64.28.67.150 (Exodus). Now, looking up slashdot.org's info in NSI's database tells me that the first name server (64.28.67.55) is in the same netblock, but the second one (209.192.217.105) is somewhere else entirely (belonging to Shore.net).
So we've established that even if our link to "home" is severed, we can still do DNS lookups.
Now let's look up sebastian.slashdot.org -- 206.170.14.75, yet another netblock entirely (appears to belong to Up Networks [upn.net]).
So in a nutshell, router to Exodus goes down, so the dns lookup for sebastian.slashdot.org goes to Shore.net instead, where it gets pointed to Up Networks.
nslookup and traceroute are your friends. Use them.
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Damn you! (Score:2)
Damn you Slashdot, due to your outage, I actually went outside!
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
(Other than the fact that
Re:Original Story (Score:2)
your cisco? (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
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Re:Original Story (Score:2)
Don't sweat it too much. One good thing about our job is we don't have to put up with the assholes we are currently working with. We can easily find a job with a completely new set of assholes.
On a side note, if you are in the process of doing your job and a customer is hovering over you, that qualifies as harasment. My current contract obligates me to hourly updates for priority customers. Anything more than that, and I cut them off. I would rather be elbows deep in a 7507 than in a meeting describing what I'll be doing when I am elbows deep.
Re:thought it was me... (Score:2)
Very. (Score:4)
I do all system administration -- DNS, mail, etc., whereas the VA owned sites all share the same pool of cool admins (like Yaz, Alliecat, etc).
Rusty and I are happy with our current colocation service (vhosting [vhosting.com]). We've never, ever had problems of connectivity (only of perl/admin error
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Re:your cisco? (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Re:Why did she quit? (Score:3)
And when our qualified personel arrived, we discovered that she wasn't actuually as qualified as we had hoped. Then she quit
I see you are checking your employees references just as much as you are checking the submission hyperlinks.....
Sorry, I had to take that stab. :)
What really happened (Score:2)
Re:PLATO (offtopic) (wasRe:Missing Data) (Score:2)
Sometime shortly after midnight on Saturday morning, I posted the following (with some edits since this version is from a copy I sent to my private email list). I verified it appeared on Slashdot but it is now gone from the Cyc story to which it had been posted and within which it did appear prior to the outtage, indicating there may need to be an investigation to ascertain the problem's full extent:
Fanatic responds:
What this has to do with Slashdot being down is anyone's guess
Are you referring to the idea, apparently shared by a moderator, that missing data is "Offtopic" when discussing a system outtage?
Re:PLATO (offtopic) (wasRe:Missing Data) (Score:2)
Ah, I see, so the missing data, itself, would not be helpful to those who might wish to determine what had happened to it?
Re:I went Outside!!!! (Score:2)
The original to this was a reader's letter submitted to GameFan[1] years ago. Circa 1996, I'd say.
1. The best console gaming mag in existance, until Imagine publishing killed it.
Funny, I Thought it was the Mogollon Rim Network (Score:2)
Kinda feel bad, now that I'm home, that I didn't trust that squirrel and re-negged on the nuts. Guess I'll have to go back up there and make good on it. Sh|t, he's still got my WAP device! No wonder I don't have any mail.
Linux rocks!!! www.dedserius.com [dedserius.com]
Really a load test of slashnet (Score:2)
By the number of people on #slashdot, I thought the whole thing was a clever ruse intended to see if they could bring down slashnet (as six thousand trolls go to see why they couldn't get their fix).
Steve
PLATO (offtopic) (wasRe:Missing Data) (Score:2)
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Re:PLATO (offtopic) (wasRe:Missing Data) (Score:2)
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Re:PLATO (offtopic) (wasRe:Missing Data) (Score:2)
would have been just as helpful on the other thread, with a pointer here. Especially since the folks 'who might wish to determine what had happend to it' (yeah, right) aren't the readers of either thread, so he could have just emailed it to whoever. Why are you so sensitive? I didn't moderate him down, I just made an offhand comment.
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Rapper brings down slashdot (Score:2)
Original Story (Score:5)
I'm still not exactly clued in as to why we're back online, but hey, we are. Sometime saturday morning our Cisco router melted down. Ordinarily this would only be the end of the world, but none of our qualified personel were available to fix it, thus triggering the end of several nearby worlds as well. And when our qualified personel arrived, we discovered that she wasn't actuually as qualified as we had hoped. Then she quit, thus terminating 3 local star systems. Hemos or I will update this story as soon as we know what the hell happened. But apparently creds go to Kurt Grey and Cisco tech support. Hopefully we'll have more info soon.
Hard to get good help these days (Score:2)
Re:Why did she quit? (Score:2)
Re:Original Story (Score:2)
Unfortunately, Cisco's support has gone the way of everyone else's. Most of the time they seem to wait for you to figure it out and then find out what you did. Don't think it's *taht* amazing because they got called. But hey! You can't expect a tech to know *everything!* So what if they call Cisco? Cisco gear melts down all the time, and it's not as reliable as all that. We used to have a 25% DOA rate on access servers at my old job. These thigns cost $60,000 with a 75% discount! Their quality control has gone down the drain to meet the demand of their manufacturing line.
Dunno who did or said what, but Cisco ain't that great, and they're surprised by nearly everything you ask them. You say "every router has this config and it works on all of them but this." They say "then the others are all broken, this one works to specs." SOunds funny, but it's happened to me.
An Unpleasant Lapse (Score:2)
It was like a mystery story that begins with the death of a controversial man. Everyone had a motive, from Microsoft to the MPAA to the Scientologists.
I had a surge of unhappiness at the thought that if Slashdot were really the victim of legal asault, we probably wouldn't learn the truth for a long time. VA's attorney would have told the employees not to comment. The whole community revolving around this site really counts for less to the legal system than some shopkeeper's (in the last analysis) claim of malicious interference with his tomatoes.
It made me think of the moment in The Hacker Crackdown when AT&T pulled the plug on a machine hosting an online community.
I tried reading kuro5hin. Everything is more reasoned, grammatical, lucid, correclty spelled -- and yet strangely lacking vitality. It was like walking through a clean and quiet museum, with 'do not touch' signs everywhere. There were no street urchins chalking obscene sketches on the marble walls. Maybe I'm a denizen of the lower depths of the internet and not suited to such musem atomspheres. Slashdot is like a real city, complete with beggars and drug addicts, while kuro5hin is perhaps like a mall.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Withdrawl...cannot...take anymore.. (Score:2)
Even more important, freshmeat is back. A weekend without freshmeat is no weekend at all.
How to be a karma whore. (Score:3)
A: Steal posts from kuro5hin.
I wonder why
Exhibit A [kuro5hin.org]
Funny that when Microsoft's router failed (probably a Cisco also) it was catastrophic incompetence but for you guy's it's just bad luck.
Exhibit B [kuro5hin.org]
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Re:Why did she quit? (Score:2)
I'm still not exactly clued in as to why we're back online, but hey, we are. Sometime saturday morning our Cisco router melted down. Ordinarily this would only be the end of the world, but none of our qualified personel were available to fix it. And when our qualified personel arrived, we discovered that she wasn't actuually as qualified as we had hoped. Then she quit. Hemos or I will update this story as soon as we know what the hell happened
Hope this clears up what that poster was trying to say for all those late-comers.
/Mattias Wadenstein
Re:Story keeps changing? (Score:5)
All the versions I've seen personally in chronological order:
The one from another comment:
Story keeps changing? (Score:3)
Version 1: I'm still not exactly clued in as to why we're back online, but hey, we are. Sometime saturday morning our Cisco router melted down. Ordinarily this would only be the end of the world, but none of our qualified personel were available to fix it. Hemos or I will update this story as soon as we know what the hell happened.
Version 2: Inject some stuff about the qualified person being a she, and not being very qualified, and quitting.
Version 3: Inject some weird stuff about neighboring starsystems also being blown up.
Am I losing my mind?
Interesting (Score:3)
Your qualified personell would be just as qualified as the woman who quit, and it would have cost less. Plus, you could appeal to the masses with an Ask Slashdot about the best way to set it up!
Funny that when Microsoft's router failed (probably a Cisco also) it was catastrophic incompetence but for you guy's it's just bad luck.
Re:Politically correct (Score:3)
I don't know whether the stories of Rob and Jeff flaming the tech for not being able to her job are true but the fact remains that:
Makes me wonder where editorial control heading.
Re:Interesting (Score:3)
Re:your cisco? (Score:5)
- by Robin "Roblimo" Miller - On Saturday, June 23, the primary controller in the router that controls access to all OSDN servers hosted at the Exodus facility in Waltham, MA, suffered a catastrophic failure. The sites affected were Slashdot, freshmeat, NewsForge, and Mediabuilder, among others. The secondary controller did not automatically take over as it shoud have. It did not work when activated manually, either. The first Cisco support people contacted professed to be "amazed" at the situation, saying it was the first time they had seen a failure of this kind. OSDN and Cisco people, working through Saturday night, were unable to cure the problem. Sunday afternoon, OSDN employee Kurt Gray and Cisco rep Scott, working by telephone, were stepping through the router's configuration and, says Kurt, as they worked to undo other changes that had been made, "on one reset everything came back." OSDN network operations were already in the process of rebuilding the company's network to eliminate the router as a potential single point of failure. As of 7 p.m. US EDT most of the sites were available at least part of the time, but full service was not yet restored. There may still be slowdowns or intermttent failures until a permanent fix is made. We'll have a more complete story within a few days. Right now, OSDN network operations staff members are too busy working to talk.
Interesting (NOT!) (Score:5)
IIRC, they are using a Linux box for their load ballancer. It was their router that got fried, which is a completely different beast. Heavy duty routers remain specialized boxes, and Linux hasn't really serious inroads into that market yet.
Not funny at all when you get the facts straight. The serious problems that MS had were with their DNS servers- which were running Windows- not their routers. IIRC the DNS servers were later cracked, too, which was rightly seen as an indication of poor security. When Microsoft uses its own products, they don't stand up to the use they're being put to, and then Microsoft has to use *BSD based systems to get working again, that's very different from when a Linux site has its non-Linux hardware melt down (and the description did make it sound like a hardware, not software, problem).
Maybe she didn't quit... (Score:3)
Slashdot doesn't have redundant routers? (Score:3)
I called my ISP! (Score:5)
ISP : Sa-lash dot?
Me : Dude slashdot.org!
ISP : www.
Me : No no no... listen 64.28.67.150
ISP : Uh... www
Me : Damnit I'm down can't you see I'm down?
ISP : We're like up and stuff. Is this a Macintosh?
Me : I am calling my lawyer! I'll sue you blind!
ISP : Uh I have to get my supervisor.
Me : -click-
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Why did she quit? (Score:3)
Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:4)
As a perfectionist, you'll of course want to know that you use "me" when the reference comes after the verb. "Neither of those phrases sounds like Jeff or me".
Also, given that you're a perfectionist, you'll be appalled to hear that someone has been using the "CmdrTaco" identity to post poorly spelled, ungrammatical crap all over Slashdot for the last three years. That same person has always tried to justify himself by whining that he "doesn't care about that stuff" and "doesn't want to be too fussy". This may or may not be the person who wrote the notoriously buggy first release of Slash, and said that it was "close enough".
But of course that couldn't be you
Because you're a perfectionist.
Ha, ha, ha. I think I'm going to have to give up satire.
I used to work for an ISP (Score:3)
You: I can't reach my favorate site:
ISP: Ok, can you reach other sites?
You: Yes, but I can't reach this one. It must be your fault.
ISP: Well, what site are you trying to reach?
You: Slashdot. It's never down. It always works
ISP: I can't seem to reach it from here either. My guess is it's down.
You: No, it's your fault. I want to see my slashdot.
ISP: Let me do some tests. No, I'm sorry, that sight is down.
You: You are lying to me!! Just like AOL did. Your ISP sucks! I want a refund.
ISP: Well, you can reach every other site, right?
You: Yes.
ISP: Then most likely, the problem is with the website.
You: *explitive deleted* I want you supervisor.
ISP: Fine.
*ahem* (Score:5)
if that was a post about a guy, and he was thought to be less than qualified, would you be posting this?
sexism goes both ways, assuming someone isn't incompetent due to their gender is just as stupid as assuming they are
equal rights for incompetent people dammit! *L*
and yes, I am a chick
on a personal note, maybe that post was taken down due to it's rudeness, rather than the sex of the person involved...
my 2 cents...
Re:What really happened (Score:5)
CiscoChick: Hi Rob. It's that time again. I came by to check on your equipment.
Rob: Equipment!?! Okay. Just give me a minute to get my pants off.
CiscoChick: No, no! I meant your Cisco router. I'm here for a scheduled routine preventative maintainence checkup.
Rob: Oh! That equipment.
CiscoChick: Yeah, the router. But when I'm finished, I could check out any other hard ware you have around. <wink>
Rob: Okay. Just let me know when youre ready.
later.....
CiscoChick: Okay, Rob. I'm done checking the Cisco router.
Rob: Okay. Cool.
CiscoChick: Wow! Look at that equipment!
Rob: Yeah.
CiscoChick: I mean, it's so small!
Rob: Yeah, it's the latest new thing in miniaturization.
CiscoChick: Okay, well.... Let's not focus on the size. What is the uptime on that thing? Does it go down very often, like Windows?
Rob: Ummm... Have you ever done it in a co-location cage?
CiscoChick: No, but there's a first time for everything.
3 minutes later...
Rob: Ahhhhh! I needed that.
CiscoChick: Oh, no! What's happening!
Rob: Eeeeeeiiiiiiieeeee!!!! The router is melting!
--
"Linux is a cancer" -- Steve Ballmer, CEO Microsoft.
Oh man... (Score:3)
-Karl /dos]# file msdos.sys
---------
[root@kgutwin
Hmmm. (Score:4)
When I couldn't get my Slashdot, I assumed the worse. High-profile hijacking. Aliens beaming up the OSDN headquarters. Servers sneakily migrated to Windows, which then promptly crashed.
Kidding aside, I'm glad Slashdot is back up.
I went Outside!!!! (Score:5)
When I stepped outside it looked like everything was being generated by 500,000,000 GeForce3s!!! The trees looked REAL!! It must have been at least 1,600,000,000 x 1,240,000,000!!! I couln't even see any jaggies! Talk about anti-ailiasing!!
After spending 2 days outside sue to lack of Slashdot it's hard to come back to my Power Mac 6100/60 with a 14" monitor at 640x480. I wish I had reality's 3D card...
And it seem's Slashdot has slashdotted itself. How did that happen??
--Volrath50
Re:Original Story: Who are you? (Score:5)
I mean who is this CmdrTaco guy and how the heck did he get UID #1???
It's obvious that this isn't the real Rob Malda, we all know that Slashdot editors NEVER post at Slashdot....
--Volrath50
Re:Interesting (Score:4)
That would be a pretty dumb comment to make in this context since the router that went down was on the premises of the customer whose sites went down.
I mean, if you step on the modem in your house, you lose your link to the internet, but that doesn't mean you've identified an Achilles' heel in the internet's infrastructure - "Aha! This single modem controls access to the ENTIRE INTERNET! By stepping on it I have rendered the whole network inaccessible to EVERYONE in my house!!"
Seems that should be pretty obvious.
Translation (Score:5)
Congratulations... (Score:5)
Gathering data from your May 2nd demographic evauation, Im thinking that you nearly lost five percent of your readers in the space of forty five minutes.
Yours in disappointment,
Re:Interesting (Score:3)
Because you use the right tool for the job. Linux can can very well be used for many purposes, including acting as a router for your home/small business network. That does not, however, qualify it as a full blowing routing device which is up to the job of handling router needs of something like slashdot.