It seems that you can not often get onto the site, particularly betqween 7 and 9pm a lot, I was reading a great journal, and I all of a sudden could not read the next entry. Why?
Kirby
30-5-2???
It seems that you can not often get onto the site, particularly betqween 7 and 9pm a lot, I was reading a great journal, and I all of a sudden could not read the next entry. Why?
Kirby
30-5-2???
Most likely it is because they exceed their bandwidth capability during a peak usage period that is between 7 and 9.
SGT Rock
http://hikinghq.net
My 2008 Trail Journal of the BMT/AT
BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
-----------------------------------------
NO SNIVELING
yea i noticed the same thing but if you keep trying sometimes it will let you back in.....
More likely it's more an issue of server capacity; the server is getting more requests than it can handle and can't answer all of them. Usually excessive bandwidth usage results in shutting off access to the server entirely for some period of time (usually until the website owner ponies up for more bandwidth from the hosting company), so you wouldn't just get back in.
Sounds like they need to upgrade to some bigger iron.
"when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." --HST
Uncle Silly VA->VT '05, VT->ME '07, VA->GA ??
Wow. At least they're aware of the issues and trying to deal with them. Hope they get it figured out.
Maybe, if you had an account you had to log into, that the cookie was doing for you. You'll have to find the username/password and log in again. If that's not the case, who knows.
"when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." --HST
Uncle Silly VA->VT '05, VT->ME '07, VA->GA ??
Can you get on? http://www.trailjournals.com
SGT Rock
http://hikinghq.net
My 2008 Trail Journal of the BMT/AT
BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
-----------------------------------------
NO SNIVELING
Today I can. Didn't see your post last night so I didn't try it.
Dunno, but it wouldn't hurt to find out what (and who) they're currently using, and whether you can exceed that. I'd estimate, based on nothing whatsoever, that their traffic is roughly equivalent to Whiteblaze's own. Do you think you guys could comfortably host two Whiteblazes?
"when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." --HST
Uncle Silly VA->VT '05, VT->ME '07, VA->GA ??
Yeah,today it's working for me too, but I did rolled back my computer to get a program back I deleted and added the trailjournals cookie back. So who knows.
Trailjournals.com sucks.
Postholer.com rocks.
p.s. The reason they are out of server space is that they do not allow hikers to delete their journals. Ever. Serve's em right that this has come back to bite em in the ass.
Maybe someday they will have a system that recognizes "junk journals" and they get rid of them. I reckon they could also move some of the journals into an archive after so many years so it doesn't tax their database.
SGT Rock
http://hikinghq.net
My 2008 Trail Journal of the BMT/AT
BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
-----------------------------------------
NO SNIVELING
Not me, but this guy (Post #35) in this thread:
http://www.whiteblaze.net/forum/show...locked+journal
Got locked out of TJ for posting a complaint on their site about the problem. This, after apparently begging them over and over to delete his stuff.
Bvll*****. I call thread drift. This has nothing to do with the problems we're talking about; you just wanna b!tch about what you don't like about TrailJournals.
If this was the problem, you'd see some different error messages. You'd get people complaining that they couldn't add an update to their journal, or upload a new picture, or create much of anything. But you wouldn't see people going "I can't load the next page on an existing journal" -- cause that symptom is caused by something else.
We're talking about symptoms that suggest they're experiencing an effective DOS. That's denial-of-service for the non-technical; it's what happens when there's so many people trying to use a website that the website can't answer all the requests. When you click the link to go to the journal's next page, and it never loads, that's a DOS. Nothing to do with what space is or isn't on the server, and nothing to do with not allowing people to delete their journals.
How do you fix a DOS? Well, you figure out where the bottleneck is, and then you add the resource you need (RAM, another CPU, more bandwidth, a faster server, whatever) until the server can handle your traffic.
How do you fix a site refusing to delete your stuff? Complain to the management, file a cease-and-desist letter, and stop using the site. Or you could b!tch about it uselessly here, I guess, which is all you're doing; but I'm reasonably sure that won't get you anywhere. If it's really worth it to you, go talk to your favorite copyright lawyer about sending them a cease-and-desist letter.
"when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." --HST
Uncle Silly VA->VT '05, VT->ME '07, VA->GA ??
Imagine that. Discussing what people don't like about Trailjournals in a thread about what people don't like about Trailjournals... Worst cast of thread drift I've ever seen!
Yeah, cuz they're all overloading the site searching for the elusive "delete" button that ain't there.We're talking about symptoms that suggest they're experiencing an effective DOS. That's denial-of-service for the non-technical; it's what happens when there's so many people trying to use a website that the website can't answer all the requests.
You can always go back and delete the entries. I recently looked for the TJ of someone whom I found particularly irritating, and all her entries and photos were gone. So it IS possible.
If not NOW, then WHEN?
ME>GA 2006
http://www.trailjournals.com/entry.cfm?trailname=3277
Instagram hiking photos: five.leafed.clover