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Not always easy to puy your finger on the motives I guess. If it's important to begin with.

Last week I saw two strange posts in the microphone section. Both were removed very quickly.
New "members"; first posts.
One came from Lithuania, or so it said in the handle, but it was written in Russian.
The other was from Namibia if I recall well. Africa in any case. It was written in English and dealt with Viagra, which BTW was spelled wrong, or spelt wrongly if you will.  ;)
 
micaddict said:
Not always easy to puy your finger on the motives I guess. If it's important to begin with.

Last week I saw two strange posts in the microphone section. Both were removed very quickly.
New "members"; first posts.
One came from Lithuania, or so it said in the handle, but it was written in Russian.
The other was from Namibia if I recall well. Africa in any case. It was written in English and dealt with Viagra, which BTW was spelled wrong, or spelt wrongly if you will.  ;)
that the real work that mods do... taking out the garbage, or post that look like garbage.

JR
 
GroupDIY is administered by Ethan.

The recent "work stories" column on The Register tells a tale of a computer worker and a ticket-sales network which crashed when the boxoffice opened and came back when it closed. Totally strange yet perfectly logical once figured out. Supposedly names and places are anonymized, but I wonder....

https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/06/09/on_call/
Please do not scare the pigeons – they'll crash the network
Sysadmin outsmarts rats with wings, but they manage to have the final turd

On-Call Welcome again to On-Call, The Register's Friday column in which we share readers' recollections of odd jobs in odd places at odd times.

This week, meet “Ethan” who tells us that “in the heady days of the 1990s I was employed as an IT engineer at a company providing booking systems to entertainment venues around the UK.”

Ethan says the job mostly involved “driving around the country and plugging cables back in that had spontaneously become disconnected and often evaporated completely”, evaporation being Ethan's best guess about the cause of problems in situations when users would not admit to having touched a thing.

One day he came across something even odder. To set the scene, Ethan told us this took place “in the days of 10BASE2 cheapernet cabling that was hung around the office like a string of Christmas lights. For those not old enough to remember, the major disadvantage of this type of cabling is that a single break anywhere would bring down the entire network.”

The problem on this site was that the network would go down just as punters filed into venues to pick up their tickets before a show. When the production started, Ethan says “the network would miraculously come back up again.”

So Ethan was “dispatched to drive four hours each way across the country (with a vague promise of lieu time) to fix the problem.”

Upon arrival he quickly observed that the problem was real: just as the first theatregoers arrived for the evening performance the network fell over. So Ethan grabbed his trusty cable tester and started to follow the wires through the theatre.

“I eventually found a cable exiting the building through a hole in the wall. Tracing it, I found that it left the building and continued to an outdoor box office kiosk suspended by a wire support about three meters above the ground.”

“However, as soon as I went to the little used external box office, the network came up again. I returned to the main building and tested again – the network was down. I repeated this several times and found that the same thing occurred… as soon as I left to look at the outbuilding, the network was up and when I went inside, down it would go.”

“It took a while but I eventually discovered the cause. When the general public arrived for the start of the show, they would disturb the pigeons pecking around outside the building which would immediately fly up and sit on the same wire supporting the network cable. If three or more pigeons sat there, their weight was enough to stress the cable enough to cause a break in one of the connectors.”

But if Ethan appeared to look at the cable, the pigeons would fly off and the network would revive.

The fix was simple: Ethan re-crimped the cable, which made it strong enough to endure a little more weight.

But the pigeons took revenge: he got back to his car to find “the birds had had the last laugh and carpet bombed my car with their special presents.”
 
Nice one! I must tell my wife that one. In the recent warm weather, she took to ironing outdoors until one of the local pigeons took exception to it and left his calling card on her ironing board.

Cheers

Ian
 

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