Man 9.0 " per hour rain rain woooo

Man is this a bad storm were having … At the peak WD showed a 9" per hour rain rate. Boltek lightning detector showing 1100 strikes per minute.

I captured this image showing 8" per hour. I glad that’s over.

That is a bit steep, Seems our warm air went your direction and hit the cold front. Strange weather . Glad you didn’t have to build that ark again.

I captured this image showing 8" per hour. I glad that's over. http://12.219.144.217:8000/wderrors/weather.jpg

Not sure if you have any control over this, but port 8000 isn’t really allocated to HTTP (although I know some people use it). People behind secure firewalls may not be able to see your image (I’ll have to wait until I get home to see it).

Not sure if you have any control over this, but port 8000 isn't really allocated to HTTP (although I know some people use it). People behind secure firewalls may not be able to see your image (I'll have to wait until I get home to see it).
Yes. I never see anything that uses port 8000. I just move on if I see 8000 in a address.

CaptDilli,
Why?

i can see it OK… :wink:

I don

CaptDilli, Why?
Please don't read this the wrong way...I'm not trying to be antagonistic, but an equally valid question is 'Why use port 8000 for http'? There are three other ports available for http use, i.e. 80, 8008 and 8080, so why use 8000 which is allocated to something completely different, i.e. a protocol called iRDMI?

I come at this from the angle of living behind a very secure firewall during the day. Whilst CaptDilli chooses not to look at things on weird port numbers (which I will admit to having concerns about), I (and probably many other people behind firewalls) are unable to access material provided on weird port numbers. At least one large company has lost business because I was unable to access information on part of their web site locked away behind a non-standard port number.

Chris,
I already have web servers running on 8008 and 8080. The reason I do not use 80 is this is the default port and by NOT using this you can eliminate about 99% of all probe attacks on a web site. The other probes are on the “standard” web ports. By simply moving off of these posts is one of the easiest and effective ways of preventing probes and or other nasty web effects. I also use 8088, and 8081 and 81 and most of the time you guys probably do not even know your going to these ports because my domain forwards to these accounts. I throw my screen shots in a directory that is not forwarded to so thus the ipaddress and port have to be entered. With stealth port forwarding you probably go to ports you never imagine. The company I work for has done just the opposite and moved off of standard ports for security reasons. Oh well to each his own. This new age of web attacks has us all questioning and changing. Greg