Database corruption due to all the power issues this last week
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Originally posted by Bobby HendersonI'm thankful things here on the North side of the Red River didn't turn out nearly as bad as they did in Texas.
That's not to deny that we have infrastructure challenges, the big ones being water supply and wildfire prevention. Fingers crossed for a quick and effective recovery in Texas.
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Interestingly, around the same time the unexpected and unprecedented cold hit a large part of the southern United States, we also had a major dip in temperature here in large parts of Europe. While most of the infrastructure here is built to withstand those kind of temperatures as they used to be pretty common, it has been about 10 years now since we last had such cold weather... Now, just a week later, temperatures are like it's late April or May already... Apparently, we just had the warmest days in February on record...
Originally posted by Brad Miller View PostDatabase corruption due to all the power issues this last week. The forums have been rolled back to last Sunday's backup.
Haven't you considered putting public stuff like your site and the forum onto some "cloud" server somewhere? Not that the cloud is without problems, but at least most Texas DCs seem to have made it through the ordeal, mostly unharmed.Last edited by Marcel Birgelen; 02-24-2021, 01:37 AM.
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When the site went down for a day, I figured that it was due to power outages in Texas. After that, it would come back up but would only serve empty pages. I figured that the server had crashed.
Originally posted by Marcel Birgelen View PostHaven't you considered putting public stuff like your site and the forum onto some "cloud" server somewhere?
There was another guy in Alaska and a third in central Canada. With three backups in three different parts of North America, we figured it would take a zombie apocalypse to destroy all three copies. At least one of the three of us would be able to restore the site or, if need be, re-point the address to another server and rebuild the site at a new location.
Beats the crap out of any cloud thing-a-ma-jiggy!
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The cloud can be good for some things, but is actually often more expensive than self hosting. Remember, the cloud is just someone else's computer, and you can have a better or worse setup than cloud providers. It seems that Brad has proper backups in place, and with the extraordinary events in Texas, an outage of a few days isn't unreasonable. I'm glad it's back, though - I had to resort to using an archived version of the site on the Internet Archive to get a couple of manuals I needed!
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Originally posted by Randy StankeyBeats the crap out of any cloud thing-a-ma-jiggy!
Originally posted by David Ferguson View PostThe cloud can be good for some things, but is actually often more expensive than self hosting. Remember, the cloud is just someone else's computer, and you can have a better or worse setup than cloud providers. It seems that Brad has proper backups in place, and with the extraordinary events in Texas, an outage of a few days isn't unreasonable. I'm glad it's back, though - I had to resort to using an archived version of the site on the Internet Archive to get a couple of manuals I needed!
If you have a lot of stuff to host, then self-hosting can be cheaper. Still, always take into account the time and money you need to spend to keep things up. To make proper backups, etc., etc.
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We had a five-day stretch last week where the thermometer didn't climb above zero at all. The "peak" cold was -39 or -41, depending on who you ask. Here in town, everybody looks at the time-n-temp clock on the bank, and the lowest temp I saw on that was -31. The absolute worst was out on 'the flat" east of town, where there are no hills to stop the wind. Out there it was below zero AND windy.
The cool thing was, one week after that -31, the temperature was 80 degrees higher and it felt like mid summer outside, even though it was only 49 degrees.
It's been a fairly normal winter for us in Montana, although in my part of the state (southeastern MT) we still have less snow than we normally would at this time of year. The ground is mostly bare right now.
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I'm out on that -40°F stuff. That's almost cold enough for you to spit in the air and have it freeze by the time it hits the ground. I think that's supposed to be able happen at -50°F. When I was a kid I was able to experience -23°F on Christmas Eve in Syracuse, NY. The high temperature Christmas Day was a balmy 0°F.
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Two weeks ago we had a couple of nights that got down to -54, days around -40 or so. Almost nobody came to the shows those nights, of course, because their cars would freeze up while they were here. What a difference a couple of weeks makes: right now it's -4 and yesterday the snow was melting...
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Originally posted by Mike Blakesley View PostWe had a five-day stretch last week where the thermometer didn't climb above zero at all. The "peak" cold was -39 or -41, depending on who you ask. Here in town, everybody looks at the time-n-temp clock on the bank, and the lowest temp I saw on that was -31. The absolute worst was out on 'the flat" east of town, where there are no hills to stop the wind. Out there it was below zero AND windy.
The cool thing was, one week after that -31, the temperature was 80 degrees higher and it felt like mid summer outside, even though it was only 49 degrees..
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I don't ever remember it being that cold in Forsyth, or in Montana in winter on the trips I made there over 20+ years.
I can relate about the humidity. A few years ago we were in Florida during January when they were having record cold temps down there. It was in the 30s which wouldn't feel bad at all here, but in all that humidity it felt like we were going to freeze to death.
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Originally posted by Mike Blakesley View PostIt's pretty rare to have the extended cold in this part of the state, but we usually do get maybe one stretch per winter where it's in the -20 or colder range for a day or two. Last year, I don't think it ever got colder than -10. Those poor people at Plentywood (extreme north-east) always seem to have the coldest weather in Montana ... if there is a cold snap, it's almost always the coldest at Plentywood.
I can relate about the humidity. A few years ago we were in Florida during January when they were having record cold temps down there. It was in the 30s which wouldn't feel bad at all here, but in all that humidity it felt like we were going to freeze to death.
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Originally posted by Marcel BirgelenInterestingly, around the same time the unexpected and unprecedented cold hit a large part of the southern United States, we also had a major dip in temperature here in large parts of Europe. While most of the infrastructure here is built to withstand those kind of temperatures as they used to be pretty common, it has been about 10 years now since we last had such cold weather...
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The cold freeze and the deep snow here were the first in 43 years. So we are not on the ten year cycle in Nashville. But both the old and the new Farmers Almanac's said this was going to be a really bad winter. And when both those agree we better take it seriously... My hell! I wonder what it says about 2021???Attached Files
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Driving to a service call this morning, a weather expert on a local talk radio show said that the last time snow fell in downtown LA was in February 1948. There was a little in Malibu along the Pacific Coast Highway a couple of weeks ago, but it didn't make it over the LA city limits, so the record still stands.
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