Posted on August 21st, 2008 by Connie
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Posted on August 20th, 2008 by Masood
Since I started using ssh remotely to manage servers like 12 or so years ago I have been in love with its power and what you can do with a few command lines. In the last 7 or 8 years many web based control panels have appeared making life easier for the end user. One would expect that ssh would go obselete now that you can do things with a few mouse clicks. Not really.
Last night I was trying to activate an IP by setting “Active in IWorx-CP” to yes under IP Management of Nodeworx but it gave me blank screen. There was no error. I could not see anything in logs. So I fired a ticket with interworx support and here was their response:
Try running this script and see if adds the IPs as expected:~iworx/cron/ip.pex—sync
Yes, finally something to do via shell. So I did and it resolved the issue. Moral of the story, the real thing is still linux shell
Filed under Control Panels, Linux Hosting | No Comments »
Posted on August 19th, 2008 by Jag
Tougher economic times compel businesses to look for ways to cut costs while still maintaining the essential infrastructure and services they need to operate and grow their business. An excellent way to do this is outsourcing IT requirements to a third party hosting provider.
Hosting providers provide a safe home for information technology needs with their redundant connectivity, hardened infrastructure and bulletproof security. All this is supported by a team of dedicated IT professionals whose sole objective is to keep IT infrastructure safe and running smoothly 24×7x365.
A business of any size can derive a number of benefits from outsourcing IT infrastructure to a hosting provider. First and foremost, there are significant cost savings. Hosting in-house, for example, requires significant man-hours and qualified personnel, which does not come cheaply. Using the services of a hosting provider, on the other hand, reduces that significant piece of overhead to a single monthly fee.
On top of the cost savings, outsourcing IT infrastructure to a hosting company frees up internal resources. Instead of having IT staffers configuring servers or trying to handle tricky email issues, it makes much more business sense to have them working on high priority tasks related to the organization’s core operations – ranging from anything such as desktop support to application development. Working with a hosting company gives IT staffers the time and energy to do their jobs better. And in smaller organizations where IT expertise is scare, outsourced hosting puts mission-critical needs in the hands of knowledgeable professionals – exactly where they belong.
Outsourcing to a Web hosting provider also gives businesses peace of mind. Rather than having to worry about security threats, downtime or technical glitches, businesses can be certain that their infrastructure is in the hands of someone that understands exactly how to handle the intricacies of information technology in an online environment. This peace of mind is sometimes overlooked, but can be an integral component of a well-run enterprise.
Hosting companies also provide a very desirable degree of specialization that delivers performance levels local IT or design agencies can’t match. Hosting providers reside in world-class data center facilities and are devoted to a single purpose: the housing, security and protection of valuable content. Everything they do, from the software development to the construction of facilities is designed to provide an environment that is up and running around the clock. Local IT shops are built on a different area of specialization. They design, install and customize. Hosting and managing infrastructure is not their core competency and expecting them to be able to do this at a high level of precision is an unrealistic expectation. The logic is pretty straightforward: you would not ask a bicycle repairman to fix your car.
Finally, outsourcing to a hosting provider is akin to having an advisory service which does not charge exorbitant consulting fees. Businesses can consult their hosting provider on any matter relating to technology and get a knowledgeable answer. What are the pros and cons of hosting on Linux? Should I be outsourcing my email to a hosting provider? Should I be upgrading my dedicated server’s memory and hard drive? Is a virtual private server a better option for my growing business? These questions and many others fall under the expertise of a hosting provider and businesses can expect an informative answer. And conveniently, it is very likely that the hosting company offers the product or service that can address the needs expressed by the customer.
Hosting providers rent space on a server or an entire physical server to support IT infrastructure ranging from email and web sites to advanced applications and databases. The server renting business, however, also translates well into related expertise such as data backup and storage.
Backup and storage services do not just provide a home for valuable data and content, but they also guarantee protection against its loss or corruption. With the help of replication software and redundant physical infrastructure, hosting companies are able to keep duplicate copies of data that is retrievable in real-time even when a disaster strikes.
In a world where growing amounts of both personal and business data are being stored in an online environment, the demand for this type of service will only grow in the future. This creates a strong opportunity for the hosting business, which is ideally suited to serving this need.
Outsourcing IT infrastructure to a third party hosting provider is not only cost-effective, but ensures reliable and best in class performance. Web hosting companies are able to handle a wide range of IT requirements and businesses should consider working with them to improve their business processes or leverage the online world to create bottom-line value.
Filed under Inside Jag's head | 2 Comments »
Posted on August 19th, 2008 by Connie
Domain owners receive a email like this.
Asia Network is the company of internet services that the domain
registration is one of the major online style of our service range. Now we have something need to confirm with you.We hope you to cooperate with us.On Aug. 5th 2008,we received an application from one person named “Karl Fischer” who wants to register some domains(designsbyoldcrow.asia designsbyoldcrow.com.cn designsbyoldcrow.eu designsbyoldcrow.info designsbyoldcrow.cn designsbyoldcrow.net).According to our investigation,we found that domain names have relevance to your company’s name and trademark,so we send this email for you to confirm it.We are dealing with this
affair in these days,so we wish to get the confirmation and the assent of your company.If Karl Fischer doesn’t belong to your company and you don’t authorize him to register these domains,Pls contact with me asap in order to prevent some guy from abusing your trademarks and the company names.
In addition,I must declare that we have time limited for one person or one company’s registration.It is just 15 days.If your company has no response to us within the dispute period,we will unconditionally authorized the application of Karl Fischer.In order to deal with this issue better,please let someone who is responsible for trademark or domain name contact me asap.Thank you for your cooperate.
Best Regards,
*Eamonn Young
*Sponsoring Registrar:
Asia Network
Add:UNITS A&B 15/F NEICH TOWER 128 GLOUCESTER RD WANCHAI, HK
Tel: +852 3118 1808
Fax: +852 3065 8189
Email:eamonn@asianetworks.asia
It appears that the name of Karl Fisher is used in a lot of these emails. A lot of them do come from Asia. The name can change, and the Country can change. A lot of these scams are also comming from China.
The emails are targeting the owners of the first registered domain name. They imply that someone is interested in registering all the other country specific extension of your domain name.
Unfortunately a lot of people panic, because they think their actual domain name may be in jeopardy. In fact when I recived a email like this a few weeks ago that was my first thought. Someone was trying to register my domain name. Then I realized that was not possible.
I didn’t start looking into this until a couple of people I knew had also received a similar email
Here are a couple of blog articles that will explain this scam better than I can. It is a scam.
Filed under Fraud/Security/Spam | No Comments »
Posted on August 19th, 2008 by Masood
A couple of months ago a power surge burnt (not literally) one of the memory sticks in my PC. I found it after quite a hassle. My computer would start normally but there was no video output. First I thought it had something to do with video card but eventually after removing one memory stick at a time I found the bad one. I was down to 3GB.
That was not the end of it. A couple of weeks ago my Windows Vista started crashing frequently with the blue death screen. Unfortunately the blue screen disappears so quickly, you would need a photoghraphic memory to capture the information from it. First I thought it was some bad software and refreshed my system with OS reload. But this continued. Googling found that it had something to do with some outdated driver or memory. So I went to memtest86.com and downloaded the small iso zip file and booted my pc through it. And viola I do have bad memory – pun intended :). Thanks to this laptop I’m still connected to the world.
Now I have to find which stick is bad so I’m going through one stick at a time. It is painfully slow process but that’s life. I will post the results later how it goes. With two sticks gone bad it is time to buy more RAM, and may be ddr800 this time as the prices have insanely gone down since I bought ddr667 last year.
Tags: system crash, testing pc memory, windows vista
Filed under General | 1 Comment »
Posted on August 18th, 2008 by Tracie
It was all the buzz. GMail experienced a hiccup and was down for a couple hours last week. I missed the whole thing. However; when I started checking my newsreader and twitter, email, etc. everywhere I turned people had been crying, “GMail is down! We’re DOOMED!“
I was quite surprised at the public outrage. I use GMail for my personal email. I’ve been using it for years without issue. I think in all those years I’ve experienced (personally) about 10 minutes of downtime. I had no idea it was down last week during the actual outage as I was working and didn’t try to check my email during those few hours. Even if I did, I would have felt at most slightly annoyed and would have came back to it later.
What’s surprising is how many stated they felt disconnected, unproductive, and were moving to another free email service, such as Yahoo. In this day and age of technology, there are countless ways to communicate, and while email is very convenient especially with those abroad, it certainly isn’t the only form of communication. Systems go down. Services fail. It’s just a fact of life in this world of computers, routers, networks, and email. One should always have a backup plan.
To Google’s credit, they explained, “We feel your pain, and we’re sorry” Which is all they can really do.
Tags: email, GMail
Filed under General, Inside Jag's head | 8 Comments »
Posted on August 14th, 2008 by Tracie
Today we find in our voicemail queue that someone overnight left a rather unique message. We were rickrolled.
Wikipedia definition of “Rickrolling”
Rickrolling is an Internet meme involving the music video for the 1987 Rick Astley song “Never Gonna Give You Up“. The meme is a bait and switch: a person provides a Web link they claim is relevant to the topic at hand, but the link actually takes the user to the Astley video. The URL can be masked or obfuscated in some manner so that the user cannot determine the true source of the link without clicking (and thus satisfying their curiosity). When a person clicks on the link given and is led to the web page he/she is said to have been “Rickrolled”.
I love when our customers have a sense of humor. Here’s the message.
So… anyone gonna confess?
Filed under General, Inside Jag's head, Site Management | 2 Comments »