Ok, as a followup to my favorite Netflix is down post, I am unable to reach zdnet.com/news or zdnet.com/blog

Anyone one else experiencing this issue? or did I mess something up again on my network security settings? Everything else seems to work for me, including downloads.zdnet.com

downornot.com shows zdnet is working good, but I cannot reach anything on that site. My ISP is Comcast. I am not sure when the issue started, but I first discovered it at about 10:15am EST today

*** Update *** 11:35am EST
I have tried from another computer at my current location and received the same errors, I have also tried accessing it from my cell phone using my cell carrier for the ISP (Sprint) instead of Comcast, and it is working fine, but when I put my phone on wifi and connect to my network, it is blocked from there also.

*** Update *** 12:39pm EST

still unable to connect from home, all other websites work fine. I’ve run some tests and even changed my DNS entries to remove comcast.


C:\Windows\system32>tracert zdnet.com

Tracing route to zdnet.com [216.239.116.157]
over a maximum of 30 hops:

1 <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms *************************
2 43 ms 29 ms 29 ms *************************
3 9 ms 8 ms 9 ms *************************
4 11 ms 12 ms 8 ms *************************
5 13 ms 13 ms 13 ms te-1-3-ar02.savannah.ga.savannah.comcast.net [68.86.250.97]
6 17 ms 16 ms 15 ms te-8-8-ar01.westside.fl.jacksvil.comcast.net [68.86.168.209]
7 27 ms 27 ms 28 ms te-1-0-0-1-cr01.charlotte.nc.ibone.comcast.net [68.86.93.169]
8 33 ms 32 ms 30 ms pos-3-15-0-0-cr01.atlanta.ga.ibone.comcast.net [68.86.85.225]
9 35 ms 35 ms 35 ms pos-0-1-0-0-pe01.56marietta.ga.ibone.comcast.net [68.86.86.86]
10 31 ms 31 ms 41 ms 66.208.229.218
11 50 ms 52 ms 49 ms tge16-1.fr3.dal.llnw.net [68.142.125.17]
12 * * * Request timed out.
13 * * * Request timed out.
14 * * * Request timed out.
15 * * * Request timed out.
16 * * * Request timed out.
17 * * * Request timed out.
18 * * * Request timed out.
19 * * * Request timed out.
20 * * * Request timed out.
21 * * * Request timed out.
22 * * * Request timed out.
23 * * * Request timed out.
24 * * * Request timed out.
25 * * * Request timed out.
26 * * * Request timed out.
27 * * * Request timed out.
28 * * * Request timed out.
29 * * * Request timed out.
30 * * * Request timed out.

Trace complete.

C:\Windows\system32>nslookup zdnet.com
Server: cdns01.comcast.net
Address: 75.75.75.75

Non-authoritative answer:
Name: zdnet.com
Address: 216.239.116.157

C:\Windows\system32>nslookup zdnet.com
Server: google-public-dns-a.google.com
Address: 8.8.8.8

C:\Windows\system32>ping 216.239.116.157

Pinging 216.239.116.157 with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.

Ping statistics for 216.239.116.157:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 0, Lost = 4 (100% loss),

Non-authoritative answer:
Name: zdnet.com
Address: 216.239.116.157

C:\Windows\system32>

I then tried a traceroute from my Cell phone…

# /system/xbin/busybox traceroute 216.239.116.157
traceroute to 216.239.116.157 (216.239.116.157), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets
1  ****************************        394.470 ms   86.303 ms  125.550 ms
2  ****************************         91.034 ms   89.569 ms  106.568 ms
3  ****************************        139.923 ms  136.292 ms  270.050 ms
4  68.28.245.69 (68.28.245.69)         169.830 ms  244.751 ms  230.164 ms
5  144.223.135.121 (144.223.135.121)   304.443 ms  216.858 ms  227.814 ms
6  144.232.25.115 (144.232.25.115)     214.782 ms
   144.232.4.45 (144.232.4.45)         211.884 ms
   144.232.25.115 (144.232.25.115)     224.548 ms
7  144.232.25.55 (144.232.25.55)       158.600 ms
   144.232.25.117 (144.232.25.117)     117.797 ms
   144.232.2.189 (144.232.2.189)       205.444 ms
8  144.232.18.234 (144.232.18.234)     194.030 ms  184.754 ms  221.557 ms
9  4.69.138.126 (4.69.138.126)         266.510 ms  204.926 ms  286.407 ms
10  4.69.140.142 (4.69.140.142)        229.339 ms  225.311 ms  178.193 ms
11  4.69.148.253 (4.69.148.253)        190.643 ms  234.008 ms  194.855 ms
12  4.69.134.21 (4.69.134.21)          174.835 ms  289.795 ms  449.829 ms
13  4.69.132.77 (4.69.132.77)          251.526 ms  213.044 ms  288.421 ms
14  4.69.148.202 (4.69.148.202)        303.009 ms  354.676 ms  331.573 ms
15  4.69.148.142 (4.69.148.142)        413.544 ms  269.379 ms  263.153 ms
16  4.69.153.33 (4.69.153.33)          255.035 ms  361.939 ms  406.097 ms
17  4.69.140.153 (4.69.140.153)        335.083 ms  341.430 ms  222.839 ms
18  4.69.140.145 (4.69.140.145)        156.372 ms  348.267 ms  345.398 ms
19  4.69.133.149 (4.69.133.149)        319.336 ms  323.516 ms  297.790 ms
20  4.53.132.2 (4.53.132.2)            339.081 ms  313.660 ms  217.193 ms
21  216.239.127.38 (216.239.127.38)    181.030 ms  288.055 ms  341.584 ms
22  216.239.116.157 (216.239.116.157)  336.456 ms  334.961 ms  328.094 ms
#

Sent from my HTC Evo unrEVOked forever.  Running MikG 2.4.1 rooted Gingerbread Rom with HTC Sense 2.1+ 3.0

*** Update *** 1:00pm EST
since I am sure someone will ask, yes I have cleared all browsing data, cache, and cookies

*** Update *** 5:20pm EST
all seems to be working now

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not too much content this time (unless I get carried away again).  couple of neat articles I read today (not the most trusted sources for news, but you have to make your own decisions… (both the things I started this post to talk about came from blogs.zdnet.com ) (another note, all links on my site “SHOULD” open in new windows, for some reason they never implemented “open link in a new tab” feature to HTML, or I just haven’t found it yet)

VirtualBox 3.1 - has been released with it’s new “big” feature… “teleport”.  some people might recognize this as being extremely similar to IBM’s Power System’s Live Partition Mobility.  in a nutshell this means:

Partition mobility provides the ability to move a logical partition from one system to another.  Live (or active) partition mobility allows you to move a running logical partition, including its operating system and applications, from one system to another.  The applications do not need to be shut down.  Inactive partition mobility allows you to move a powered off (or deactivated) logical partition from one system to another.

Live Partition Mobility
Live partition mobility allows you to migrate running AIX and Linux partitions and their hosted applications from one physical server to another without disrupting the infrastructured services.  The migration operation, which takes just a few seconds, maintains complete transactional integrity.  The migration transfers the entire system environment, including processor state, memory, attached virtual devices, and connected users.

(actually quoted from the IBM training manual for IBM course AU78 “System p LPAR and Virtualization II: Implementing Advanced Configurations”  a training class I took in July of this year) and so it goes on… (I guess I just killed the “no long post” part at the beginning…)  This has to be the coolest thing I have ever seen/witnessed/done in my life.  I setup an LPAR (logical partition) on a System p server, installed AIX 6.1 on it, then while another person in the training class was logged in and doing something in the server, I migrated it to another physical machine in less than 15 minutes with less than 5 seconds of down time (monitored with a CPU and HDD activity monitors running on the virtual server and a custom script that basically played the worm game and changed colors when the host system changed so we knew when it had actually made the switch)

Words cannot describe watching a multi-gigabyte installation of a server migrate to another physical box and keep working with less than 5 seconds of down time over the course of 12-15 minutes.  I am guilty of not having checked the total used size of the data drive, so I do not know how large the transfer was).  now to have this option in a freeware app that I can run on my Quad-core at home is very cool.  Especially since VirtualBox is currently my VM-app of choice.  Don’t get me wrong, I do/have used Virtual PC from Microsoft quite a good bit, but the configuration options and multiple VHD file format compatibility make VirtualBox the winner in that contest hands down.  Also, I have nothing against VMWare personally; however it is intensely confusing to go from Virtual PC to a VMWare workstation application and figure out what is going on and how to set it up without going back to “what already works… and is simple to use.”   Press release for VirtualBox 3.1

ok, after over 550 words, lets move on to the second half of my post (definitely not going to be a quick post… but then I always have a lot to say about stuff…)

OS and Web Browser share reports… Windows XP and Vista and MAC OS X are down, Win7 and Linux are up.  Firefox and IE8 usage are up, IE6 and IE7 are down, and everybody else, well no comment was made… original article is here on ZDNet - FYI how/where this info came from is sited on the ZDNet page.

right few comments about the above, first interesting how Firefox #’s are combined for all versions, does that mean Mozilla does a better job getting people to upgrade? or that Firefox users are less likely to fall very far behind on versions? same thing goes for the Safari #’s. yes Safari and Chrome are mentioned in the #’s, but no comments were made as to their rise or fall.

(completely unrelated, but I am listening to Pandora right now on my Sprint HTC Touch and they just played “Coloured Rain” by Slade, whom I have never heard before, at least not knowingly.  They are a British Rock band from the 70′s and I could have sworn it was The Beatles when it started playing…) (a note on that note, I Bing’d “wikipedia the beatles” and on the first page I got the Wikipedia page on the Beatles in the following languages, but not English… in order: sco, simple, nl, fr, ro, it.  I know what all of those are, except ro (Russian? it doesn’t look Russian)…  there were other results, including 2 Beatles albums’ pages on Wikipedia in English…)

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