Another update
The speed of the repair halved while I was sleeping, several more hours of downtime seem likely.
The speed of the repair halved while I was sleeping, several more hours of downtime seem likely.
Some filesystem corruption appeared to have happened when my server had its failure the other day. The filesystem on which the mailspool resides has been taken down for repair. At the current rate of repair, this should take somewhere between 6 and 7 hours. During this time, all mail to melon.org will bounce. With luck, the repair will go smoothly, and no further downtime will be required.
apparently the power supply on my mailserver melted down yesterday evening. i should be replacing it tomorrow night.
in other news, i’ve moved moorings from blue 10 to blue 18. the new mooring is 8 slips closer to the bridge between algonquin and ward’s islands. the club wifi amplifier has also been installed, so even though i’m further from the antenna, i’m getting much better signal, and can be online a bit more.
Due to an inability to log into my server for the past few days (I think my connections are down), I haven’t been able to check most of my email. If you have sent me anything since last Thursday morning, I have not yet had a chance to read it, and am sorry if it was time-sensitive. I will be working to remedy this shortly.
My new cellphone is now working. The number to call me at is now +1(416)937-5596. This phone has an answering service, so I will generally be leaving it on the boat, as a home phone.
Also, I have now moved to my Winter mooring, and have not yet set up internet access in my cabin (and can no longer walk to the clubhouse to use the internet there), so I will only be checking LJ/mail/etc. from school for the next short while. That said, now that I am on the city side, my being at school (or anywhere else on the city side) is no longer influenced by the availability of tenders, ferries, or water taxis.
I have decided to abandon internet telephony, and subscribed to cellphone service earlier today. There seem to be some technical difficulties, and my new phone isn’t working yet. I suspect that my old prepaid phone is low on minutes, and I will not be adding more minutes to it, so until my new phone works, I will be effectively phoneless.
Since the new phone has an answering service, I will be treating it more as a home phone than as a cellphone (i.e. not carrying it around with me quite so often).
My website has been updated with the new phone number.
Now that most of the boats at my club are hauled out, I have moved to a mooring closer to the clubhouse. This provides a shorter walk to the showers (now that the weather is getting less pleasant), to the tender, and an internet signal strong enough to be usable in my cabin.
So far, I have been unable to reproduce my previous success making my internet telephony box work. All of the settings on all the relevant hardware (over which I have any control) are the same. I seem to have adequate bandwidth, and reasonably low latency (and a sufficiently non-standard setup to render any technical support from the service provider completely useless)
If the internet telephony remains unreliable, I will abandon it, and my prepaid cellphone in favour of a cellphone with a proper subscription.
At this point, I’d like to believe that my continually referring people to my website for contact information, will prevent the resulting changes in phone number from being too problematic. I’d like to believe this, but I don’t.
I just got my internet telephony service working from a location close enough to the club’s antenna to get decent connectivity.
I still do not have a usable wireless signal in my cabin, so the only practical change is that I have set up my voicemail on my VOIP number, and that I know the service to work with the type of connection I intend to give it.
I may still have issues with reliability.
Having added my LJ username to the contact information provided on my website, I have decided to protect most of my entries as friends-only in order to maintain this policy.