On Mon, 2004-11-08 at 19:29 +0000, Alex White wrote:
On Mon, 8 Nov 2004, Jules Richardson wrote:
On Mon, 2004-11-08 at 16:47 +0000, Alex White
wrote:
Want me to diagram it in UML?
UML diag could be useful just to capture your thoughts, if it's a quick
job for you.
http://www.microvax.org/~melt/computers/computerMuseum.png
grabbed a local copy - thanks :) Will take a proper look in a mo...
I used qSEE Superlite if you want to grab the .qsee
file from that
directory. Free (0 quid) for noncommercial use, will generate ugly XML and
Java from UML.
rats - no Windows around here :-)
I can't
mail you privately by the way - NTL's bouncing the message with
a 'microvax.org not found' error, although it resolves via ping OK.
Dodgy MX record somewhere?
Strange. I'm logged into
mail.microvax.org right now in Pine and
everything else is coming through fine. Maybe it's because i'm on an NTL
residential line myself (yes, i'm breaking one of my own cardinal rules
about hosting an email server on a residential line but it's for my own
use only, and I can't afford any better right now). Strange stuff, though.
Have poked my unreliable nameservice provider.
Hmm, I run my mail using the same setup; I send outgoing mail via a
local running sendmail and then to NTL's mailserver(s) though - the NTL
server's a smart relay host in my local sendmail config.
*very* occasionally I'll find I can't mail someone because their ISP
detects that the mail originated from a machine within a dynamic address
range, but by very occasionally I mean once every 6 months or so. And
that's me sending out from here anyway, not receiving.
I've never seen this problem before though; I rather suspect it was just
NTL's systems having a total spaz. If I remember (or prod me!) I'll see
you a test msg tomorrow and see if that goes through...
FWIW, yahoo's junk filter is flagging your messages as spam, so it
thinks something is up too (unfortunately it isn't useful enough to tell
me *why* it thinks it's spam)
cheers
Jules