More likely some network hickup durring the lookup timed out.  I've seen
some oddities like that before.  When it rains in Ga you never know
where packets are going to go.

Thus spake Thorsten Haude ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):

> Date: Sat, 2 Nov 2002 00:40:31 +0100
> From: Thorsten Haude <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: GPG/PGP signing
> Organization: Central Services - We do the work, you do the pleasure.
> X-Mailing-List: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> archive/latest/242794
> 
> Hi,
> 
> * Robert Waldner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [02-11-02 00:19]:
> >On Sat, 02 Nov 2002 00:08:08 +0100, Thorsten Haude writes:
> >>Well, yours is the first signature I was not able to get from
> >>wwwkeys.eu.pgp.net. There are those that don't know about keyservers,
> >>but everybody else seems to use *.pgp.net.
> >
> >Hmm? It sure is on there, for ages even:
> 
> I see it now. The solution must be that GPG scans my outgoing mail and
> only accepts keys after I complained that they are not available.
> 
> 
> Thorsten
> -- 
> Auch Hunger ist Krieg.
>     - Willy Brandt
> 
> 
> -- 
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:wq!
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert L. Harris                
                               
DISCLAIMER:
      These are MY OPINIONS ALONE.  I speak for no-one else.
FYI:
 perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5,(41*2),sqrt(7056),(unpack(c,H)-2),oct(115),10);'


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