They advised that they were going onto their original cable last
night as it had now been repaired. They also said in the weekend
newsletter that they were, well read it yourself...
TRIALS AND
TRIBULATIONS
Hello Fellow ChartWatchers,
We're taking a break from
our on-going Technical Analysis 101 seriesto give you an update
on the two disruptions that happened last week. I want to make sure
everyone understands what happened and what we are doing to prevent
it from happening again.
In case you missed it, on Wednesday, September 9th, our main
connection to the Internet was cut. Around 4:45pm Eastern, "some
guys" working in a manhole cover outside our offices damaged our
fiber cable which knocked us off the air. (I actually spotted those
workers as soon as the problem occurred and I went over as asked
them if they had touched our cable. Unfortunately, they lied to me
and said that they didn't.) Compounding things, the true nature of
the problem wasn't obvious for several hours and we had to try and
eliminate several alternate theories before we discovered that the
cable had in fact been damaged.
After nine hours of testing various theories, we gave up on the
fiber cable and moved our site back onto the four T3 connections
that - luckily - we still had available. As a result of the
nine-hour outage, we gave existing members a free week of
additional service.
The following Monday, our index data vendor ThomsonReuters
stopped providing us with data for the S&P 500 index along with
about 10 other important CBOE-based indexes. The problem was traced
down quickly, but Thomson did not re-enable that data for us until
after the market closed.
Both of these issues are completely unacceptable.
Here's what we are doing to prevent them in the future.
1.) The Gigabit Fiber connection has been fixed. We hope to move
our Internet traffic back onto that larger, faster connection
Monday evening.
2.) We have ordered a second Gigabit Fiber connection that uses
a different physical path so that if one connection gets damaged,
the other will continue to work.
3.) We are installing additional physical protection devices for
our cables down in the conduits next to our building. We are also
trying to track down "those guys" who caused the problem and
recover some of our costs.
4.) We have purchased a second router and fiber-optic interfaces
to act as backups for our primary equipment.
5.) We are moving our primary data source for CBOE index data
from ThomasReuters to IDC/Comstock this week. We are also
expediting our entire move off ThomsonReuters as a primary data
provider although that process will still take time.
6.) We have sent letters of protest to ThomsonReuters and CBOE
about their vague and contradictory communication policies.
Unfortunately, we don't have much leverage with those huge
companies - which is part of the core problem.
When we do have disruptive problems like this, we will try to
communicate as much information about them to you as we can via
our Status Blog. Make sure to check that blog whenever you
experience a problem accessing our charts.
Stockcharts down?
Posted by huylam on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:38 am
any of you guys having trouble with stockcharts this morning?
Going back onto original cable.
Posted by saturn6 on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:57 am
They advised that they were going onto their original cable last night as it had now been repaired. They also said in the weekend newsletter that they were, well read it yourself...
TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS
Hello Fellow ChartWatchers,
We're taking a break from our on-going Technical Analysis 101 seriesto give you an update on the two disruptions that happened last week. I want to make sure everyone understands what happened and what we are doing to prevent it from happening again.
In case you missed it, on Wednesday, September 9th, our main connection to the Internet was cut. Around 4:45pm Eastern, "some guys" working in a manhole cover outside our offices damaged our fiber cable which knocked us off the air. (I actually spotted those workers as soon as the problem occurred and I went over as asked them if they had touched our cable. Unfortunately, they lied to me and said that they didn't.) Compounding things, the true nature of the problem wasn't obvious for several hours and we had to try and eliminate several alternate theories before we discovered that the cable had in fact been damaged.
After nine hours of testing various theories, we gave up on the fiber cable and moved our site back onto the four T3 connections that - luckily - we still had available. As a result of the nine-hour outage, we gave existing members a free week of additional service.
The following Monday, our index data vendor ThomsonReuters stopped providing us with data for the S&P 500 index along with about 10 other important CBOE-based indexes. The problem was traced down quickly, but Thomson did not re-enable that data for us until after the market closed.
Both of these issues are completely unacceptable. Here's what we are doing to prevent them in the future.
1.) The Gigabit Fiber connection has been fixed. We hope to move our Internet traffic back onto that larger, faster connection Monday evening.
2.) We have ordered a second Gigabit Fiber connection that uses a different physical path so that if one connection gets damaged, the other will continue to work.
3.) We are installing additional physical protection devices for our cables down in the conduits next to our building. We are also trying to track down "those guys" who caused the problem and recover some of our costs.
4.) We have purchased a second router and fiber-optic interfaces to act as backups for our primary equipment.
5.) We are moving our primary data source for CBOE index data from ThomasReuters to IDC/Comstock this week. We are also expediting our entire move off ThomsonReuters as a primary data provider although that process will still take time.
6.) We have sent letters of protest to ThomsonReuters and CBOE about their vague and contradictory communication policies. Unfortunately, we don't have much leverage with those huge companies - which is part of the core problem.
When we do have disruptive problems like this, we will try to communicate as much information about them to you as we can via our Status Blog. Make sure to check that blog whenever you experience a problem accessing our charts.
same here! yesterdays price in
Posted by huylam on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:47 am
same here! yesterdays price in view summary!
yes prices are from yesterday,
Posted by matt on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:48 am
yes prices are from yesterday, however the candles are right, yes Stockcharts is a POS at times.
Stockcharts seems to be off
Posted by idshni on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:46 am
Stockcharts seems to be off line
Price is updating but the
Posted by seadelight on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:43 am
Price is updating but the chart and the averages are not.
yes, bad data
Posted by moksha on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:42 am
the charts are ok, but the prices are stuck
yes! pain in you know where
Posted by macnsc on 22nd of Sep 2009 at 09:41 am