Videos tagged with DNS


Velocity 09: Richard Crowley, "Building OpenDNS Stats"

Velocity 09: Richard Crowley, "Building OpenDNS Stats"

Posted in Networking, Conferences, Development, Databases

The old OpenDNS Stats system was built when we were doing 1 billion queries a day and had far outlived its usefulness. Playing hot potato with load on overworked servers all struggling to keep up gets old after a while, doesn’t it? This gave me the opportunity to start from a blank slate and build the system we need to serve us at 8 billion queries a day and scale to 16 or 24 billion. We ...

Tags: Networking, DNS, Conferences, PHP, Databases, MySQL, Scalability, MapReduce, C and C++, Performance, Development, ...




Systm #90: Dynamic DNS: Access Your Home Computer Remotely

Systm #90: Dynamic DNS: Access Your Home Computer Remotely

Posted in Networking, Web Technologies, Podcasts

Want access to your files stored at home? How about hosting a home web server? Static IPs are expensive, if you can even get one. We set up Dynamic DNS instead! 'Back in the day' if you wanted to run a web server, email server, or FTP server from home you needed a static IP... and they often added quite a bit to the monthly bill from your ISP. Dynamic DNS, however, lets you use a DHCP assigned ...

Tags: Networking, DNS, Technologies, Hardware, Server, Web, Systm, Revision3


CSS-Tricks #46: Domains, DNS, Hosting and Google Apps

CSS-Tricks #46: Domains, DNS, Hosting and Google Apps

Posted in Networking, Graphics, Web Technologies

Dealing with domains and hosting and all the server setup stuff isn’t usually the most comfortable stuff for web designers. In this screencast I walk though my regular process and share many little tips of how I like to handle it. I use a real live domain name that I recently purchased on Go Daddy, point it to my Media Temple hosting and then switch the email handling to Google Apps.

Tags: Networking, DNS, Design, HTML, CSS, hosting, CSS-Tricks, GoDaddy


Tekzilla #1: The Adventure Begins!

Tekzilla #1: The Adventure Begins!

Posted in Networking, Operating Systems, Podcasts

Welcome to Tekzilla! Vudu's video on demand box doesn't require a computer. Jessica Corbin has tips to make your video pop. Patrick Norton turns $60 in parts from the hardware store into a portable power supply. Halo3 hits the streets, DNSStuff, testing your memory. It's the very first episode of Tekzilla: Jessica Corbin and Patrick Norton Vudu: Forget about Media Center or iTunes. This video o...

Tags: Networking, DNS, OS, Windows, XBox, MacOS, Hardware, Games, Revision3, Tekzilla, Vudu, ...



ITidiots Episode 61: Windows 2008 Server Core

ITidiots Episode 61: Windows 2008 Server Core

Posted in Networking, Operating Systems, Podcasts

This weeks training screencast: Previously we upgraded our Windows 2003 domain to Windows 2008 and now we add a Windows 2008 core server. Windows 2008 server core is basically a stripped down version of Windows Server 2008, no GUI, no tools, not even solitaire! Core servers can host a number of key services, e.g. DNS, Active Directory or DHCP and when adding these roles only the required files ...

Tags: Networking, DNS, OS, Windows, ITidiots, DHCP, Active Directory, Transfer Protocols




DomainKeys Identified Mail Technology

DomainKeys Identified Mail Technology

Posted in Conferences, Companies, Networking

Google Tech Talks December, 5 2007 DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) is an emerging IETF standard (RFC 4871) to authenticate sending domains in SMTP mail. It is designed to be scalable, extensible, back-compatible, and adoptable without any flag days. This talk will cover the background of sender domain authentication in general and DKIM in particular, details of how DKIM works, and other issue...

Tags: Techtalks, Google, Networking, DNS, Conferences, Technologies, Lectures, SMTP, Broadcasting, Screencasts, Companies, ...


Drive-By Pharming and Other WebApp Bummers

Drive-By Pharming and Other WebApp Bummers

Posted in Conferences, Companies, Networking

Google Tech Talks June 28, 2007 ABSTRACT Inexpensive broadband routers are a popular way for people to create an internal, and sometimes wireless, network in their homes. By purchasing such a router and plugging it in, they can have a network set up in seconds. Unfortunately, by visiting a malicious web page, a person can inadvertently open up his router for attack; settings on the router can b...

Tags: Techtalks, Google, Networking, TCP/IP, DNS, Conferences, Lectures, Broadcasting, Companies