On 13/05/2022 10:28, NY wrote:
>
> "Andy Burns" <
use...@andyburns.uk> wrote in message
> news:je6jga...@mid.individual.net...
>>
[Quoting broken, someone else wrote:]
Here, my house's broadband connection is via mobile ISP Three, and, as
with Andy above, I also get the IP resolving to 91.215.41.4, but pings
and the last half of a tracert time out, while PaleMoon tells me the
site is blocked. You can guess that I'm not exactly weeping about that,
the unreality of Russian reporting on the conflict is truly astonishing!
Take, for just one example, the various reports of war-crimes. Of
those, very many in number, being committed by Russian soldiers, for
which I know of currently at least four, though quite possibly there are
many more, separate and entirely independent lines of evidence freely
available to anyone in the West, and therefore certainly to authorities
in Russia, all are denied by Russian official media against this
overwhelming evidence. By contrast, of those, much fewer in number,
being attributed to Ukrainian soldiers, Ukraine have said they will be
investigated.
And why is it that male soldiers so often make enemy women the first
targets of war crimes, often in horrifying and sickening ways? It's as
though there's an ongoing 'virtual' war always going on between the
sexes, which, when allowed by circumstances - such as the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, or a real war - suddenly becomes a real war.
> (*) The mixture of DNS servers was an attempt to work around an
> intermittent problem where one Android phone on the network sometimes
> (for about a week) fails to connect to one specific web site, although
> all other devices manage it perfectly - so I wanted to be able to fall
> back to an non-ISP DNS if there was an intermittent problem with the
> ISP's ones. It didn't work! The fault remains, and is not cured by
> rebooting phone or router, or by clearing the phone's DNS cache. It
> fails almost 100% of the time for every attempt, then suddenly one day
> works perfectly for a week or so, then it almost consistently fails
> again. Since the phone is connected by wifi, it is difficult to gather
> LAN traces with Wireshark because WS on a Windows/Linux PC (even if
> connected by wifi) cannot see all the phone-router traffic. Running
> NetAnalyzer Pro on the phone shows that at times of failure, pings by
> URL or IP work, but that a port scan finds all the web servers ports are
> closed or blocked. I can't decide whether it's a phone or ISP problem,
> but it is significant that if I turn off the phone's wifi, forcing it to
> connect by Vodafone mobile internet, it always works... But if it was an
> ISP problem (which is what it looks like) why would it only affect one
> device?
In u.t.broadband, a respondent called Theo gave you some very detailed
analysis of why this was failing. Were you ever able to resolve it,
with or without his help?
--
Fake news kills!
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www.macfh.co.uk