You could always set up a bouncer somewhere that redirects port 80 to the
irc port on whichever server you're trying to connect to.
You wouldn't *actually* be connecting with HTTP, but you would be connecting
to the HTTP port, so your schoo's firewall wouldn't block it. If you don't
have an always-
<>
> And the telnet method of getting to IRC.openprojects.org didn't work. It
> sais it can't open port 6667. Which I'm pretty sure is the right port for
> IRC connections.
It could be that port 6667 is blocked at your school.
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I might be wrong, but doesn't http://127.0.0.1:8889/key_histogram.txt show
only the keys in the routing table (those keys that have node references
associated with them) and not all the keys in the datastore? I believe it
is normal (and beneficial) for node references to be removed from keys
Aaron Ingebrigtsen:
> I tried just going to the port 80, then I tried 8080 then and 8081
> too, and nothing worked. First it said that access to port 80 was not
> allowed, then for all the other ports it said cannot find server.
Its node is down, unfortunately.
> And the telnet method of
What port do I use?
I tried just going to the port 80, then I tried 8080 then and 8081 too,
and nothing worked. First it said that access to port 80 was not allowed,
then for all the other ports it said cannot find server.
>mewtwo.espnow.com
And the telnet method of getting to IRC.openpr
krepta at juno.com:
> So instead of typing /msg nickserv ghost [name] [password] in order to
> kill my user name I would type MSG NICKSERV GHOST [NAME] [PASSWORD]? In
> other words, no / before the command and all caps for all IRC commands,
> yes?
PRIVMSG nickserv :ghost name password
Don't forg