Around The World In 1 Year (On A Website) 86
chrischoo writes "From the guys who brought you a crushing experience, Tsunamii.Net and Fragnetics are working on taking the Tsunamii.Net website around the world by obtaining webhosting services in 44 countries. Known as alpha 3.8 Translocation, it is commissioned by the Walker Arts Center. The website is now on it's second stop in Malaysia. Our teams need the help of the Slashdot community to plot a traceroute for each server we visit. Traceroutes are plotted onto a world map which is refreshed every time the website stops at a new server in a different geographical location. Our next stops include Thailand and Myanmar. It'll be great if we have more people willing to sponsor a webserver from your country to host one of the Tsunamii stopovers!"
Cool... (Score:5, Funny)
2. Airline tickets with bulk baggage - $3000
3. Spending two nights in customs - just your dignity
4. Getting it all Slashdotted after all that - priceless
There are some things money can't buy.
For everything else, there's Mastercard [martin-studio.com].
How original! (Score:5, Funny)
You mean... just like your standard warez site?
Uhh... Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
But then, I never did understand why some people consider Open Source and art form [slashdot.org].
Re:Uhh... Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not exactly exciting, but it's an interesting statement, and a lot of art can essentially boil down to little more than that. The web is this worldwide phenomenon, and yet each site is located in one particular place on the globe -- why not turn the system on its head a little and have the web site rove around the world, being hosted all over the place. I say turn the system on its head, whe
and to be /.'d in every country... (Score:3, Funny)
(depending how you look at it)
Re:interesting (Score:1)
Hmmm, saying that makes it all seem a bit sad.
Servers (Score:1)
Farthest away (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Farthest away (Score:2, Insightful)
Content ... (Score:1, Insightful)
This would be a lot cooler if... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This would be a lot cooler if... (Score:1)
Now if the concept was slashdot-a-country-per-day that'd be cool. Monitor the effects of page availability of other sites in the country that were not specifically slashdoted, etc. Similar to what Keynote [keynote.com] does.
Could we bump a country off the internet just for giggles? Hmmm.
Re:This would be a lot cooler if... (Score:3, Insightful)
What a waste of effort!
If you ever get this bored, please consider donating time to a voluntary environmental organisation.
correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:2, Funny)
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:2)
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:2, Informative)
If you're referring to Canada's geographic centre, that would be Boumfouque, Saskatchewan. Moron.
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:3, Informative)
If you're referring to Canada's geographic centre, that would be Boumfouque, Saskatchewan. Moron.
How did this get moderated to +1 Informative? For one thing the geographical center of Canada is Brandon, Manitoba. For another, don't be sarcastic when moderating...there's not much evidence for people to see your sarcasm...for I am assuming the moderator was being sarcastic with that moderation of +1 Informative. + FUNNY, yes I can see that.
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:2)
This is Slashdot. I think you're assuming too much (especially considering non-Canadians' geographical knowledge of Canada).
First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. -- Gandhi
Brandon isn't the center (Score:1)
Re:Brandon isn't the center (Score:1)
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:1)
It turns out to be rather difficult to maintain a database like this one due to the natural growth and mergers of ISPs (anybody remember ebone?) and the ambiguity of place names like Rochester (Minnesota, not New York, in Qwest), Springfield (Massachussets, not Illinois in Sprint), Vienna (Austria or Virginia?), etc. Resolving these requires humans and humans take time.
De
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:1)
Great stuff! Thanks for the links.
Re:Saskatchewan: Technology leader (Score:2)
Why is the new synchrotron located in Saskatchewan? I humbly submit that it is because it is smarter to build a large facility--one that generates significant radiation, not to mention powerful electric and magnetic fields--in a province that is mostly flat, mostly empty, and has low real estate costs.
Why a thriving biotech sector? Might have something to do with agribusiness...a whole heck of a lot of Saska
Re:correlating IP addresses to physical locations (Score:2)
Slash-Log (Score:3, Funny)
Then plot that on a map, and see where the bulk of the /.'ing came from.
Re:Slash-Log (Score:1)
And the point is? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Route (Score:2, Insightful)
It is not that I am getting paranoid these days, I always have been paranoid.
cool idea (Score:2, Insightful)
The whole point of this is a STUDY. That doesn't mean it has to have a purpose aside from educational.
I think this is a good idea. However it could lead to the government deciding that everyone was supposed to have a dedicated ip address. That way a simple traceroute could tell them where you were at any given time anywhere in the world. Much like credit card transactions can be tracked by number and location.
They are trying to do this with phone numbers. Although there a
Re:cool idea (Score:1)
You can't really do that without making the routing tables even more ungodly huge than they already are.
Everytime you sign in, you would have to have your new upstream (since we're signing in from ANYWHERE) advertise your IP on the BGP tables. That's fine for
Apparently there's work going on in this area for wireless mesh networks and the like, but it isn't practica
How about.. (Score:1)
I want my webspace hosted off of the moon! Out of this world website speed! (and reliability!)
Re:How about.. (Score:1)
excerpt from alpha 3.8 bulletin. (Score:1)
Backpack instead (Score:1)
Re:Shit (Score:1)
And here we go... (Score:2)
For the next few days, you need new hosts every few minutes, as they and their connections buckle under the load...
DNS LOC records (Score:2)
Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've lived there for three years, 1993-1996. Myanmar is ruled by a repressive, brutal and notoriously paranoid military junta.
In a nutshell, "they no like internet".
Going in the country with a computer is theoretically not permitted. Using a fax machine or the internet to connect abroad is considered a crime. Nationals face jail for this (and strangers too, in theory, but that never happened I think) and, trust me, you positively DON'T WANT TO GO TO JAIL in Myanmar. (death is not the maximal sentence over there: it is only second to death... by torture)
Besides, I'm not sure you would/could actually be able to host a website there (hint: without the government's permission, it's probably "forget it"). A mere slashdotting could bring the whole country's internet system to its knees. Even the government's websites are hosted in other countries, mostly US and Australia. Only some of them are in Rangoon...
Well, maybe things have changed over there. But somehow, I doubt it.
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm... this just went from being useless, boring, WTF, non-news to being somewhat interesting.
No change, but a few sites I think (Score:1)
Anyway, there is at least some web serving capacity in the country. Still, I agree with
Not bringing in a computer (Score:1)
BTW how were you able to live there for 3 years without a computer? That my friend was self inflicted torture, can't blame the junta for that.
Re:Not bringing in a computer (Score:2)
I did, in fact, RTFA. My point being that the simple fact of hosting a webserver over there is complicated. I mean, nationals don't even have the right to own a computer. And I'm pretty sure you need
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:3, Informative)
In a nutshell, "they no like internet".
Yes it's true. I travelled through Myanmar(aka Burma) for several weeks, and the parent poster is right on.
One thing that I found really interesting, there were only 2 places in the country where I could use my credit card. The national bank in rangoon, and mandalay. That's right, 2 places in the entire country that accept credit cards in order to withdraw funds. Not exactly the mos
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:2)
Frankly, even pointing an IP address there is loathsome. There's an international boycott of the country in protest at the human rights abuses, lots more information on that here [burmacampaign.org.uk].
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:2)
Hmmm... this is exagerated, at the least. I don't want to compare two juntas in two totally different contexts, but I don't think Saddam's regime was any milder than the burmese's is. Both are equally horrid.
This is one country that could really use regime change.
Yeah, but guess what? There's no oil in Burma, so I don't think Burma is in
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:1)
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? (Score:2)
Though, it's a good idea to document what kind of procedures you go through to be able to host a webserver over there...
but the whole point of this is
Myanmar? Whoa? - trhings are changing. (Score:1)
"Myanmar has one of the high literacy as a country. Bookshops are extrememly popular. - And also schools set up to teach web-desig
Re:Myanmar? Whoa? - trhings are changing. (Score:2)
Nice to see things changing over there, even if it's "the burmese way": sloooooowly.
The junta probably just figured out they needed internet to appeal to foreign investment and tourists? (the junta badly needs cash right now, and is trying to develop tourism and economic activity). bagan.net.mm is probably state-run, or at least tightly controlled.
I wonder if they run some kind of filtering, like China does?
A new milestone (Score:3, Funny)
Goldeneye anyone??? (Score:1)
This is at the Walker? Sweet! (Score:1)
EuropeAsia (Score:1)
Even traffic from here in the UK to India goes via the States. Africa is the same.
Routing Asymmetry and DNS lookups (Score:2)