Re: Skype info

2010-12-22 Thread Paul Graydon



On 12/22/2010 10:24 AM, Tim Connolly wrote:

Any word as to the root cause of the skype outage(s)?

Tim Connolly
Director of IT


Details are on their blog: http://bit.ly/edtjxB

Essentially the supernodes clients connected to started dying, so 
they're setting up temporary mega-supernodes whilst the supernodes are 
fixed.


Paul



Re: Skype info

2010-12-22 Thread Jack Carrozzo
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Paul Graydon p...@paulgraydon.co.ukwrote:


  Details are on their blog: http://bit.ly/edtjxB


%wget http://blogs.skype.com/ -O/dev/null
--2010-12-22 20:45:36--  http://blogs.skype.com/
Resolving blogs.skype.com... 204.9.163.155
Connecting to blogs.skype.com|204.9.163.155|:80... failed: Operation timed
out.

...

-Jack


Re: Skype info

2010-12-22 Thread Jeremy Parr
Skype downtime today

Earlier today, we noticed that the number of people online on Skype
was falling, which wasn’t typical or expected, so we began to
investigate.

Skype isn’t a network like a conventional phone or IM network –
instead, it relies on millions of individual connections between
computers and phones to keep things up and running. Some of these
computers are what we call ‘supernodes’ – they act a bit like phone
directories for Skype. If you want to talk to someone, and your Skype
app can’t find them immediately (for example, because they’re
connecting from a different location or from a different device) your
computer or phone will first try to find a supernode to figure out how
to reach them.

Under normal circumstances, there are a large number of supernodes
available. Unfortunately, today, many of them were taken offline by a
problem affecting some versions of Skype. As Skype relies on being
able to maintain contact with supernodes, it may appear offline for
some of you.

What are we doing to help? Our engineers are creating new
‘mega-supernodes’ as fast as they can, which should gradually return
things to normal. This may take a few hours, and we sincerely
apologise for the disruption to your conversations. Some features,
like group video calling, may take longer to return to normal.

Stay tuned to @skype on Twitter for the latest updates on the
situation – and many thanks for your continued patience in the
meantime.

On 22 December 2010 15:46, Jack Carrozzo j...@crepinc.com wrote:

 On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Paul Graydon p...@paulgraydon.co.ukwrote:
 
 
   Details are on their blog: http://bit.ly/edtjxB


 %wget http://blogs.skype.com/ -O/dev/null
 --2010-12-22 20:45:36--  http://blogs.skype.com/
 Resolving blogs.skype.com... 204.9.163.155
 Connecting to blogs.skype.com|204.9.163.155|:80... failed: Operation timed
 out.

 ...

 -Jack



Re: Skype info

2010-12-22 Thread Jack Carrozzo
Creating new mega-supernodes as fast as they can!

Definitely using that in a meeting tomorrow.

Cheers,

-Jack

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:52 PM, Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com wrote:

 Skype downtime today

 Earlier today, we noticed that the number of people online on Skype
 was falling, which wasn’t typical or expected, so we began to
 investigate.

 Skype isn’t a network like a conventional phone or IM network –
 instead, it relies on millions of individual connections between
 computers and phones to keep things up and running. Some of these
 computers are what we call ‘supernodes’ – they act a bit like phone
 directories for Skype. If you want to talk to someone, and your Skype
 app can’t find them immediately (for example, because they’re
 connecting from a different location or from a different device) your
 computer or phone will first try to find a supernode to figure out how
 to reach them.

 Under normal circumstances, there are a large number of supernodes
 available. Unfortunately, today, many of them were taken offline by a
 problem affecting some versions of Skype. As Skype relies on being
 able to maintain contact with supernodes, it may appear offline for
 some of you.

 What are we doing to help? Our engineers are creating new
 ‘mega-supernodes’ as fast as they can, which should gradually return
 things to normal. This may take a few hours, and we sincerely
 apologise for the disruption to your conversations. Some features,
 like group video calling, may take longer to return to normal.

 Stay tuned to @skype on Twitter for the latest updates on the
 situation – and many thanks for your continued patience in the
 meantime.

 On 22 December 2010 15:46, Jack Carrozzo j...@crepinc.com wrote:
 
  On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Paul Graydon p...@paulgraydon.co.uk
 wrote:
  
  
Details are on their blog: http://bit.ly/edtjxB
 
 
  %wget http://blogs.skype.com/ -O/dev/null
  --2010-12-22 20:45:36--  http://blogs.skype.com/
  Resolving blogs.skype.com... 204.9.163.155
  Connecting to blogs.skype.com|204.9.163.155|:80... failed: Operation
 timed
  out.
 
  ...
 
  -Jack



Re: Skype info

2010-12-22 Thread Jeffrey Lyon
I was actually going to say, you might as well have said it needs a
new flux capacitor.

Jeff

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 4:04 PM, Jack Carrozzo j...@crepinc.com wrote:
 Creating new mega-supernodes as fast as they can!

 Definitely using that in a meeting tomorrow.

 Cheers,

 -Jack

 On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:52 PM, Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com wrote:

 Skype downtime today

 Earlier today, we noticed that the number of people online on Skype
 was falling, which wasn’t typical or expected, so we began to
 investigate.

 Skype isn’t a network like a conventional phone or IM network –
 instead, it relies on millions of individual connections between
 computers and phones to keep things up and running. Some of these
 computers are what we call ‘supernodes’ – they act a bit like phone
 directories for Skype. If you want to talk to someone, and your Skype
 app can’t find them immediately (for example, because they’re
 connecting from a different location or from a different device) your
 computer or phone will first try to find a supernode to figure out how
 to reach them.

 Under normal circumstances, there are a large number of supernodes
 available. Unfortunately, today, many of them were taken offline by a
 problem affecting some versions of Skype. As Skype relies on being
 able to maintain contact with supernodes, it may appear offline for
 some of you.

 What are we doing to help? Our engineers are creating new
 ‘mega-supernodes’ as fast as they can, which should gradually return
 things to normal. This may take a few hours, and we sincerely
 apologise for the disruption to your conversations. Some features,
 like group video calling, may take longer to return to normal.

 Stay tuned to @skype on Twitter for the latest updates on the
 situation – and many thanks for your continued patience in the
 meantime.

 On 22 December 2010 15:46, Jack Carrozzo j...@crepinc.com wrote:
 
  On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Paul Graydon p...@paulgraydon.co.uk
 wrote:
  
  
    Details are on their blog: http://bit.ly/edtjxB
 
 
  %wget http://blogs.skype.com/ -O/dev/null
  --2010-12-22 20:45:36--  http://blogs.skype.com/
  Resolving blogs.skype.com... 204.9.163.155
  Connecting to blogs.skype.com|204.9.163.155|:80... failed: Operation
 timed
  out.
 
  ...
 
  -Jack





-- 
Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net
Black Lotus Communications - AS32421
First and Leading in DDoS Protection Solutions