J
Jim Thompson
I can offer webhosting..
It was a DNS issue, solved, but it'll take a few days to ripple thru
the system.
Never do business with your kids :-(
...Jim Thompson
I can offer webhosting..
Here's what I get trying from Vancouver BC:Jim Thompson said:I think it's possible that my website provider was hacked over the
weekend. (Or the link into Dallas from the west is broken.)
Please try to access:
http://www.analog-innovations.com
and report back what error message you get.
Thanks!
P.S. Don't try to send E-mail to me... that's hosed also :-(
...Jim Thompson
Jim Thompson said:It was a DNS issue, solved, but it'll take a few days to ripple thru
the system.
There had to have been at least two, one primary and one secondary.
Anyway I hope this is not a Go Daddy problem as I was just contemplating
moving some domains there. So do let us know who's fault this is. And
don't even think about moving to register.com, they already know how to
do this exact same crap.
So, if the above are really your name servers you need to speak with who
ever administers the primary site asap...
Billy Y..
Eugene said:Here's what I get trying from Vancouver BC:
Gateway Timeout
The following error occurred:
A DNS lookup error occurred because the request timed out during the lookup.
(DNS_TIMEOUT)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Please contact the administrator.
Regards,
Eugene
Chuck Simmons said:I get resolution here. It seems to be getting updated in the DNS
servers.
I think it's possible that my website provider was hacked over the
weekend. (Or the link into Dallas from the west is broken.)
Please try to access:
http://www.analog-innovations.com
and report back what error message you get.
Thanks!
P.S. Don't try to send E-mail to me... that's hosed also :-(
...Jim Thompson
There be whales down here Jim!I think it's possible that my website provider was hacked over the
weekend. (Or the link into Dallas from the west is broken.)
Please try to access:
http://www.analog-innovations.com
and report back what error message you get.
Thanks!
P.S. Don't try to send E-mail to me... that's hosed also :-(
...Jim Thompson
There be whales down here Jim!
You do have it backed up........ right?
Jim- said:Looks like the new DNS rippled thru *much* faster than expected...
everything is back up this morning.
...Jim Thompson
Watson said:Yesterday at work I tried to browse www.vnunet.com and it came
back with Host not found. Last night I could get on it from
home, so this morning I asked one of the network guys why it
wasn't out there. After a lengthy investigation, they found
that a BT Internet class B IP range was being denied access by
the router, because we were being attacked by a DOS attack
from BT internet. So they opened up a couple holes in that
range for the DNS and mail servers. Now it works okay.
Isn't so nice to have folks who foul up things so easily, and
will undo their foulups, if someone only holds their feet to
the fire and gets them to actually DO something??? Sheesh.
Mark Jones said:Welcome to today's workforce...
Paul Wylie said:[...]
Please try to access:[...]http://www.analog-innovations.com
and report back what error message you get.
The problem appears to be with your DNS. Whois at godaddy.com reveals
your two authoritative DNS servers are:
NS.ADTSOFT.COM
NS.BREAKINGNEWSNETWORK.COM
The first one doesn't respond to DNS queries for your domain. The second
reports no domain found. Methinks only the first DNS server ever actually
had your DNS entries (or perhaps it was the primary while the other was
secondary) and now that the first DNS server is hosed, your domain
effectively does not exist.
If you knew the IP address of your website, you could always try putting
that into your web browser to see if the hosting site is still up. Keep
in mind that shared hosting often uses the same IP address for multiple
domains and only sorts which domain to show you by the domain name in the
URL. You could get around that little problem by temporarily putting the
IP address of your hosting server into your HOSTS[1] file and then trying
to pull up your website in a browser.
[1] In Win9x, the HOSTS file is in the \WINDOWS directory, for NT/2K/XP,
it's in the \WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC folder. In any *NIX it's in /etc.
--Paul
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