wow! I woke up 15 min ago! l0l0l0lllolol000l0l! I was sleeping during the whole process:)
You Are stupid why did you fall asleep
]]>... a couple of my posts disappeared.
Sorry, but there is no predicting who gets which location (old/new) during the "domain name propagation".
When you request a website the first step is to turn the name into a number (www.website.com => 192.200.3.100), then you are sent to that numbered location.
If there was one central name=>number machine (called a name server) it couldn't cope, so there are thousands of them. And they update off each other in some complex fashion.
So, when I sign up with a new hosting company, some central nameserver is told about the new location. Then during the day other nameservers check in and find out about the new location. And later on other lower-down nameservers find out from those ... and so on. Can take days to complete this process. And with bad luck the namserver that your internet connection is set up on could be one of the last to know, and still be sending you to the old site!
]]>I noticed as some posts went a bit wrong, and a couple of my posts disappeared.
]]>1. Pretty much the same
2. Better
3. Worse
4. Curate's Egg ("partly good / partly bad")
It called me stupid!
]]>It has been time-consuming and complicated, but I have found a new host for the website. I am in the process of copying everything over now.
At some point I will press the button which tells the internet of the websites new location. Once started, this process radiates over the internet and can take a day or more to reach every corner of the internet.
So, during that time, some people will see the old version, and some will see the new version! And if you post a message on the old one, it won't appear on the new one.
So, when I activate the change I will make the old forum "read only". Check back next day and hopefully you will see the new forum (which will look exactly like the old forum but with a "This is the new forum" message)
There is no way around this. If in doubt Google "domain name propagation" to see what I am talking about.
(BTW: this is a difficult and painful process for me but hopefully, on average, things will be better afterwards. If not, you will hear my screams)
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