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 Inside Tech | Kevin Railsback    Subscribe
Thoughts on business, media, and technology




October 31, 2006

Stupid IT Tricks: Myspace.com

Managing your company's public DNS is serious business - a small typo or mistake can have serious consequences to your website, email, and other services.

For example, someone made what can only be assumed as a clueless mistake when updating their DNS - they added 127.0.0.1 to their records for the myspace.com. For those with weak network-fu, that is a special address which is only used for 'localhost' (your own computer). Since they had 5 hosts listed total, one out of five requests for their domain were going nowhere while this problem existed.


$ host -vv myspace.com
Trying "myspace.com"
;; ->>HEADER< <- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 24145
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 5, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 0

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;myspace.com. IN A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
myspace.com. 68350 IN A 216.178.32.51
myspace.com. 68350 IN A 216.178.32.50
myspace.com. 68350 IN A 216.178.32.49
myspace.com. 68350 IN A 216.178.32.48
myspace.com. 68350 IN A 127.0.0.1

Received 109 bytes from 208.67.222.222#53 in 9 ms


I'm not sure why they're still using round-robin DNS load balancing for their site with good ServerIron, Cisco, and F5 load balancers doing a much better job overall. We moved InfoWorld.com away from RRDNS years ago.

Fortunately either someone at MySpace noticed the issue quickly, or they saw the post at OpenDNS.com or on Digg and remedied the issue. But having such high TTLs in their DNS settings I'm sure the problem took a while to finally clear up completely.

Posted by Kevin Railsback on October 31, 2006 08:29 AM



October 24, 2006

Core2Duo MacBook Pros - not a big surprise
Apple has officially announced new MacBook Pro models with the Core 2 Duo (Merom) CPU. This has been in the rumor mill for some time. While the speed bump of the Core 2 Duo isn't huge, it's pure 64bit which will have a greater impact when Leopard comes out (which is fully 64bit).

For the time being, two other additions make this a very attractive release: they've now added Firewire 800 support back into the 15.4" model, and also made all SuperDrives dual-layer capable.

In the 2.33GHz model, the standard RAM has been upped to 2GB (InfoWorld's standard for both MBP and ThinkPad purchases) and the max RAM is now 3GB instead of 2GB.

Check out Enterprise Mac for more details, as well as the MacBook Pro page on Apple's site.

Posted by Kevin Railsback on October 24, 2006 11:50 AM



October 23, 2006

Firefox 2.0 posted a day early
The official festivities are scheduled for Tuesday 10/24, but the actual download files have already been posted to the official Firefox download site: http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/releases/2.0/

OS X:
http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/releases/2.0/mac/en-US/Firefox 2.0.dmg

Linux:
http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/releases/2.0/linux-i686/en-US/firefox-2.0.tar.gz

WinXP:
http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/releases/2.0/win32/en-US/Firefox Setup 2.0.exe

Enjoy!

Posted by Kevin Railsback on October 23, 2006 03:37 PM





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