But I am glad it was 10 years ago! Now I would not be so sure. I do have kids, 3 boys and they are, fortunately, in their teens now and quite frankly very nice chaps they were given unrestricted and, god forbid, unsupervised access to the Web since they were about that age. What kind of message is that giving out? The web is crap… and don’t trust it, but then it’s usually too late, I am afraid to say, the poor sod is reduced to pay criminals. I have problems with this and I am a veteran, so imagine what it does to people who’ve never been on the web until today, like 3-4-5 years old kids or even people in their 60-70’s who can barely understand a Computer to start with, and could potentially find themselves in front of a page that says “Your computer is infected”* on their first hour of web browsing. Today the web can be and still is very useful, but it’s getting harder to sort the weed from the chaff. This, I think, happened more than 5 years ago. “The creativity that is allowed to be broadcast to the world via the web will soon be locked down and that will be the death of the Web the commercial world will take over and that will be it! Snap! All will no longer be free, that will be it, the web will be dead, and the good times will be gone forever”
#Plesk backup tv
In 1996 I watched a TV program about the web, and there was an interview of an artist from around L.A.
#Plesk backup free
The useful stuff is usually no longer free though, this can be a good thing, but it tends to become a little silly most times.
#Plesk backup full
Today the web is turning into an ugly beast, full of useless stuff drowning the useful stuff. I must be getting too old for this stuff (I am 44)īack in the days, about 15 years ago, the Web was great, things were simple you didn’t get (much) spam, most things were free and the information was more or less useful. Now I find that very intrusive and pardon if I might be “Gay” (I am not, but my son use this all the time) but I cannot begin to understand the buzz (and I’ll come to this later) behind this. I don’t know why but even though I am quite open to new technologies, when they’re useful that is, I feel that the web is turning into a very strange hurly whirly of virtual “I need to be online all the time with everyone I know and let them know what I do every seconds of my life” thingy, stuff etc. Tbc… Posted on Categories Sysadmin Backup strategy – Appliance I have still got a ticket opened with the DC regarding this… User-Agent: Internet Messaging Program (IMP) H3 (4.1.6)Īs one can see, the IP AOL sees (92.xx.69.187) is not the IP of the sending Server (92.xx.68.118)
Received: from srv–.-.co.uk (unknown )īy .aol.com (Internet Inbound) with ESMTP id C6E7B3800009A Here is the email I receive on my AOL email address (after several hours and having added the sender’s email address in my list of contacts, as AOL seems to tell to do that): Please visit our web page at: for more information about AOL Email Policies and methods to fix delivery issues. The problems comes from the fact that the IP address seen by AOL when receiving emails is apparently (obfuscated to protect address, throughout this post)Īnd the email I get back from AOL using webmail on my dedi is: Okay, this problem always seems to happen every time I move to a new server, so if I document it I might actually get it sorted before it starts happening It’ll probably a combination of local network and other remote backup site… Posted on Categories Disaster Recovery Backup strategy – Websites So I might very well do that as a disaster recovery option… And having over 500GB of available space it makes sense. If I were to rsync all the backup content on my own internal network backup server, this would be quite fast to pull, however ADSL push would need a serious amount of time to upload the content back, even though it is probably the safest way to keep data.
#Plesk backup series
In case of disaster the off site backup could either be burned on a series of DVD’s and posted to the DC to have them restored or sent back to the dedicated server via ftp or other, this is where it is important to have a good backup server capable of coping well with large files. This is done using the rsync command to mirror the entire content of the local backups directory as all backups are stored under this directory. The various elements of the backup strategy having been defined and documented earlier, the last step involves the off site backup of the local backups.