-
18 votes
-
Keeping Everquest alive twenty-five years later
9 votes -
o3 - wow
16 votes -
What happened to the world's largest tube TV/CRT?
21 votes -
US government report - The cost of anticompetitive pricing algorithms in rental housing
19 votes -
Your theme for 2025
8 votes -
Armageddon MUD is closing after thirty-four years
9 votes -
Two-time winner Gary Anderson endured a birthday to forget as he crashed out of the PDC World Darts Championship following a shock second-round defeat by Jeffrey de Graaf
2 votes -
Journal that published faulty black plastic study removed from science index
39 votes -
Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
32 votes -
Setting the record straight on Ukraine’s grain exports
8 votes -
Weekly thread for casual chat and photos of pets
This is the place for casual discussion about our pets. Photos are welcome, show us your pet(s) and tell us about them!
6 votes -
Steam Winter Sale 2024: Hidden gems
Inspired by the recurring topic every Steam sale over at /r/GameDealsMeta: What are some lesser-known Steam games that you recommend? Are there any genres you’d like hidden gem recommendations...
Inspired by the recurring topic every Steam sale over at /r/GameDealsMeta:
-
What are some lesser-known Steam games that you recommend?
-
Are there any genres you’d like hidden gem recommendations for?
If you're interested in previous Hidden Gem topics, you can find them here.
For popular recommendations and general purpose sale discussion, please use the main Steam Sale topic.
Optional: Feel free to categorize your recommendations by number of reviews (as a proxy for popularity)
Category Maximum Review Count Shockingly Overlooked 20 Under the Radar 50 Buried Treasure 150 Underrated Great 500 Cult Classic 1000 Gem Graduate 1000+ 45 votes -
-
Abyssus | Announcement trailer
2 votes -
Watch as Scott Bradlee, the mastermind behind Postmodern Jukebox, hears My Chemical Romance's "Helena" for the first time and transforms it into a captivating new genre: Emo Ragtime
12 votes -
The Ukrainian naval war (2024) - Armed drones, exports and the battle for the Black Sea
7 votes -
Tildes Book Club 2024 retrospective
Hey folks, Since we're not reading a book this month, I thought it might be nice to have a short retrospective of the last year instead. As some of you may know, the book club originally started...
Hey folks,
Since we're not reading a book this month, I thought it might be nice to have a short retrospective of the last year instead.
As some of you may know, the book club originally started back in 2023 with a "pop-up event" hosted by @cfabbro. We read Roadside Picnic after a few users expressed interest in the title. The discussion had some great comments, and that helped lay the groundwork for making the book club a regular feature.
A few months later, @boxer_dogs_dance kicked the book club off proper in January 2024 with the first nomination thread. Cloud Atlas was selected based on voter interest and ideal library wait times. Despite being a difficult first book, participation was still high and has remained so for each month thereafter.
Boxer has since organized numerous nomination and voting threads, helped establish our format and rules, and has created many discussion prompts for each book. Huge thanks to you for the efforts, @boxer_dogs_dance!
Onto some stats for 2024:
- Books Read: 9
- Total Pages: 3,277 (average of 364 per book)
- Unique Contributors: 59 (or 140 total, when counting returning participants)
- Total Comments: 476 (across 121 top-level threads)
- Nominations Submitted: 102
- Votes Cast: 508
- Repeat Nominations: 11 titles were nominated twice, and 6 were eventually chosen. Perseverance pays off!
The list of past discussions can be found here:
- March: Cloud Atlas
- April: Piranesi
- May: The Dispossessed
- June: Project Hail Mary
- July: Ocean at the End of the Lane
- Aug: Small Gods
- Sep: This is How You Lose the Time War
- Oct: Kindred
- Nov: The City We Became
A big thank you to all who have participated, helped organize, commented, or quietly read along! You folks are what make the Tildes community so great.
So just to be clear, this isn't a nomination thread or an official post. I just thought it might be nice to look back, recap our progress, and maybe touch on some of the best picks from the last year.
What were your favourite reads from this past year? What are you looking forward to most in 2025?
See you all in January when we kick off 2025 with Kim Stanley Robinson's Ministry for the Future!
15 votes -
Day 21: Keypad Conundrum
Today's problem description: https://adventofcode.com/2024/day/21 Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it...
Today's problem description: https://adventofcode.com/2024/day/21
Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it nicely, with the code collapsed by default inside an expandable section with syntax highlighting (you can replace
python
with any of the "short names" listed in this page of supported languages):<details> <summary>Part 1</summary> ```python Your code here. ``` </details>
5 votes -
How to make friends as an adult
31 votes -
Tildes Video Thread
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you. It...
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you.
It could be one quirky video that you feel deserves some eyeballs on it, or perhaps you've got a curated list of videos that you'd love to talk us through...
Share some of the best video content you've watched this past week/fortnight with us!
8 votes -
Listen to Orson Welles' presentation of Charles Dicken's "A Christmas Carol"
7 votes -
After twelve years of writing about bitcoin, here's how my thinking has changed
17 votes -
Willow - Google's latest quantum chip
13 votes -
Sudan's biggest refugee camp was already struck with famine. Now it's being shelled.
15 votes -
Car drives into people on Christmas market in Germany – death toll rises to four with more than 205 injured
31 votes -
Why I am pursuing a life, professionally and personally, of Christian Virtue
I promised @chocobean that I would talk about my recent turn to Christianity, so here goes. The short, trite answer is that I’m taking a leap of faith on a few mystical experiences, and because...
I promised @chocobean that I would talk about my recent turn to Christianity, so here goes.
The short, trite answer is that I’m taking a leap of faith on a few mystical experiences, and because I’ve run out of spiritual options. Everything else I have tried to do with my life has come up short. A lot of this outcome results from a traumatic early childhood formed, perhaps ironically, in part from Christian religious abuse. In some way perhaps I am trying to synthesize and re-narrate that experience. But also, I really want to go to a Church that is fun, fulfilling, challenging, and does progressive good in the world. There just ain’t a lot of those to choose from, so I figure I need to start my own. For a little more detail, read on. You can skip to the last two paragraphs for a little more reasoned “why Christianity here and now,” independent of my experience.
I was born into a fundamentalist family. Lots of rules, hell, purity, that sort of thing. Very traumatic, and I mean clinical trauma. I left the church in high school thanks to drugs and some smart people, but I maintained a kind of love affair (infatuation?) with good preaching. Something deep inside me responds to the gospel message. I cry when I listen to Jesus Christ Superstar, and a passionate preacher with a good heart, and great gospel music. This is likely tied to suffering-religion at its best helps us grieve and carry on, find joy in a broken world.
One time in college, after a psychedelic party, I found myself unable to sleep, a common side effect I experienced from LSD. I turned on the local gospel station, and suddenly was struck with the urge to go to church. This was black folks gospel, and so I wanted to go to a black church. There was one I knew about, and I have no idea how it was in my consciousness. It was called Life Community Church in Durham, NC. I put on my best suit, tied my tie, and with dilated eyes and doughy disposition I set off. I arrived at precisely 10:30, the service time identified on the marquee.
You may be familiar with black folks time, which is often most evident at church. Black folks time is about moving when the spirit moves you. When I arrived, on white folks time, the church was half-full. It met in an old movie theater, the kind with hundreds of seats. I was ushered to a seat, which was basically the next available seat, they were filled sequentially from the front. This was different from other churches I attended, where members generally seat themselves in their customary location, a respectful distance from others.
There was a large, energetic gospel ensemble delivering the real gospel goods. Large choir, lots of electric instruments, percussion. Everybody dressed better than I was. And I did my best to keep up, clapping hands and shouting and grinning. I was all in.
After a while, the pastor came on stage, a 6’8 Nigerian native. He made a few comments, and invited us to pass the peace. In a white church, this takes a couple minutes, and you politely smile and shake the hands of the people around you. At Life Community, however, everybody left their seats and wandered around giving hugs and smiles and lots of time to each other. No idea how long we were at that, but I did notice that space was now standing room only.
Then the preacher was joined by his 5’4 (at most) Guatemalan wife, who greeted us cheerfully before the pastor began his sermon. It was all mostly about leading a decent life, strong families, moderation, godliness, fairly conservative socially. I was riveted to every word, I clapped and shouted and prayed.
When everything was finally over, and I had been repeatedly and warmly welcomed and invited to come back, I finally made it to my car and noted the time: 3:30 p.m.! And I knew then, this was what I wanted to do with my life-bring this kind of joy, and be a channel of this kind of power.I didn’t have any real religion then, however, wrongly thinking that was some kind of requirement, and so I left the dream on the table. I went on to become a drug addict, get clean, get married, have kids and begin life as a lawyer.
When the kids started to get mobile, their mom and I decided we ought to go to church, that it would be good for the kids morals, provide community, that sort of thing. I was buddhist/atheist/soft new age, not really in on the Jesus thing, but it seemed right. We found a church with a great garden out front and a pride sticker on the door, and headed in. Compared to Life Community Church, the preaching was good, but not as passionate, though the message more closely aligned with my values.
The best part of the experience was Sunday school, however, and I even taught a couple classes, really enjoyed doing the bible study part of it. I started paying more attention and getting more involved. We brought in Nadia Bolz-Weber as guest preacher one Sunday. Nadia is a powerful preacher, and her work in Colorado was very promising for a time. While she was preaching, I had a mystical experience, a feeling of lightness and an urgent awareness that I should be up there doing that same thing. My (now Ex) wife was surprisingly into the idea, and so were the pastors. I went and toured a seminary in pursuit of the call. But at the seminary I was like, there is no way I can spend three years with these people, and I still wasn’t really a believer, so I let the moment pass. It’s one of the few regrets I have in life, following the call then may have led to my marriage having a very different outcome. Alas for life choices.
Come forward a few years, the marriage has dissolved bitterly, I have come out of denial about how awful my childhood was and how dysfunction of a human I had become, and how much my kids suffered as a result. Among my many ongoing efforts to remedy this, I found myself at a spiritual retreat in what is known in some circles (mainly Quaker) as a “Clearness Committee.” It’s a space where someone with some kind of intractable problem becomes the subject of a conclave of caring folks. I was there to figure out career transition. There were some q and a, some breathwork, and in the middle of a silent spot someone asked the shockingly straightforward question, “what do you really want to do?”
The answer in my mind was immediately, “I want to preach.” And almost as immediately, a voice came into mind “you can’t do that,” coupled with a profound fear of saying so out loud. I knew from previous spiritual work this was a sign that I should immediately take the contrary action, and so spoke it out.
Now, this was not a Christian gathering, but as it happened, the person who asked the question was a Christian pastor, and she gave me some names and numbers of people to talk to. As it also happened, she used to work for a guy in my current Church, who, as it further happened, was the past president of a prestigious divinity school. This was my favorite guy in Church, and so I talked to him, and here we are. A lot of yes all in a row.
So, it’s really a gamble on a set of experiences I don’t fully understand about a God I barely believe in. But I knew almost instantly as soon as I arrived in divinity school that I was doing the right thing. I still don’t believe, but I have made a decision to act in faith anyway. From an intellectual point of view, I have a strong impulse to do something, anything, to try and bring some goodness to the world. And since, in my estimation, for better or worse, America is a Christian nation, it seems Church could be an effective vehicle for that. Plus, I really do want to be a preacher.
I was about to end there because it sounded cool, but I want to say a little more about why Christianity might be especially good for my values, and for the West. More than just custom and tradition, I’m discovering that a lot of the way I think about the existence of the world is really Christian in nature. Most intellectuals since the 18th century or so would point to Plato, or more recently, to chaos as the proper way to order a mind. But in practice, most people are espousing a neo-Platonist Christian kind of justice and morality. In a super short sentence, this is that creation and humanity were made for each other. Ten years ago I would have said, and a large part of me still believes, the truth is more a kind of Manifestatum ex Chao of both together, and perhaps there is nothing particularly special about humanity. However, most people, practically at least, seem to recognize that rational ordering exists uniquely in the human mind alongside a more programmatic animal nature. They also seem to believe in the notion of goodness. Many humanists argue that we can be “good without God,” however, as far as I can tell they arguing about a goodness which is derived from Christian scholarship (love your neighbor). Even if I’m wrong on that, and/or they are right about the uselessness of God for good, most people in the way they act suggest an assumption that true compassion flows from the Christian God. As a result, I think the best way to foment good for most people here where I am geographically is within the Christian religious framework.
Finally, I’m partial to the notion of classical (medieval?) professionalism: a professional is one who professes a noble principle, i.e. clergy profess goodness, educators profess truth, military officers, peace, lawyers, justice, physicians, health, and artists, beauty.
46 votes -
Molina feat. ML Buch – Organs (2024)
5 votes -
What are some professions, crafts, competitions, or activities in which being older is considered advantageous?
That is just a general random question by me, nothing to do with the fact that I am getting older. That is just a coincidence!
17 votes -
Day 22: Monkey Market
Today's problem description: https://adventofcode.com/2024/day/22 Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it...
Today's problem description: https://adventofcode.com/2024/day/22
Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it nicely, with the code collapsed by default inside an expandable section with syntax highlighting (you can replace
python
with any of the "short names" listed in this page of supported languages):<details> <summary>Part 1</summary> ```python Your code here. ``` </details>
5 votes -
What are your favorite special kitchen ingredients?
I’m looking to explore a bit so i’d love to hear your thoughts. These are the items that make my kitchen special. I mainly cook Asian style food (Chinese, Japanese), so my ingredients trend in...
I’m looking to explore a bit so i’d love to hear your thoughts. These are the items that make my kitchen special. I mainly cook Asian style food (Chinese, Japanese), so my ingredients trend in that direction. This is a combination of ingredients, condiments, and even snacks that bring joy to me.
If there’s a particular special brand that you think is extra special, i’d love to hear it too!
- Mirin (in Toronto there is a small store that makes homemade mirin)
- Yuzu ponzu sauce (same supplier)
- Furikake / shichimi
- Korean seasoned salt
- Perilla Oil (an amazing nuttier substitute to sesame oil) - great on subtle dishes like zaru soba
- Szechuan peppercorns - amazing to put into the mortar with other aromatics
- Chinese cured pork belly - wow how immensely flavorful - I like the five spice one. Small cubes makes fried rice sing
- Oyster sauce (two ladies LKK not panda LKK)
- Nem Chua
- Good butter (Kerrygold or St Brigid)
- Sambal Oelek
- Pandan leaves and frozen chopped lemongrass
- Maldon salt
- Frozen cheap chocolate squares (Swiss Delice)
- Lao Gan Ma black bean chili crisp
- Salted yolk potato chips, Honey Butter chips
- Korean seaweed sheets for stock along with the little anchovies
- Frozen unshelled clam meat - just throw a handful into anything like pasta or stir fries. So cheap and so good!
- Chinese cooking wine
- Perilla leaves (gganib)
- when I can find them, Alphonso, Kesar, or Colombian Sugar Mangos
- Concord or Muscat grapes
- fatty Biltong (Florence meats is best)
- wavy soba (for some reason I like the mouth feel)
- frozen special handmade ramen
- Calabrian peppers
- Peperoncinos (I like the ones from Terroni)
- Peruvian sweety drop peppers
- Thai kefir leaves (frozen)
- Thai birdseye peppers
- Vietnamese veggies (rau ram) and Thai basil mmm
- fermented tofu bricks - kinda smelly but adds a slickness and sourness when stir frying Chinese veggies
- Korean coque d’asses (Japanese ones are a bit dry for me). Great frozen as well.
- mango gummy candy from cocoa land lot 100
- Chinese snow pear
- kewpie mayo (creepy baby)
- kozlik triple crunch mustard
- Vietnamese fried onions (need to figure out what brand is best)
- affordable soy sauce (made in Japan ones - yamasa or kikkoman)
- fermented black pepper (I like the Trader Joe’s ones - I put it into ramen broth)
- kecap manis (abc brand) for making Indonesian stuff
- Hungarian Hunters sausages - great snacks that last
18 votes -
Meeting a trans elder
I thought I would share this story as I've been thinking about it ever since coming out as transfem and it always makes me smile. for every year it's been going on -- which is two... but I digress...
I thought I would share this story as I've been thinking about it ever since coming out as transfem and it always makes me smile.
for every year it's been going on -- which is two... but I digress -- I've helped out at a major trade show to put some iconic industry products on display as mainly fully working examples for people to play around with.
I noticed this lady looking at one of our exhibits and struck up a conversation with her as I had done with countless other people that day. turns out she was working at the company who built that exhibit during its production run in the early eighties! we spoke a lot about her experiences with that company.
after a bit, a few more people from that same company came over and they were all reminiscing about their time working there. it was at this point I realised she was trans because she kept saying to all these old guys "you probably knew me by a different name back then"! they were all really accepting and had no issues, goes to show older people can and do respect trans people!
it really inspired me to meet not only a trans elder but a trans elder working in my industry, who had worked on an exhibit I had set up the day before -- we opened it up later and found her initials on an electrical testing label from 1983! in meeting her it feels like I saw a possible future for myself, which is not something I had properly envisioned before, not on the order of decades at the very least. I like the idea of having a future. it gives me something to strive for. I want to be the lady who goes to trade shows and regales bright-eyed students with tales of a long and fulfilling career in my industry. I want to have stories to tell and I want to be there to tell them. meeting her made all that seem that much more possible.
I hope this makes someone else smile like it does me and I'd love to hear more stories like this if anyone is willing to share!
42 votes -
What’s something you’re personally proud of from this year?
Tell us something you’re proud of. Celebrate your successes! Pat yourself on the back! Bragging about yourself is not only allowed but encouraged in this topic. If you’re naturally humble and...
Tell us something you’re proud of.
Celebrate your successes! Pat yourself on the back!
Bragging about yourself is not only allowed but encouraged in this topic.
If you’re naturally humble and don’t know what to say: pretend like this is a job interview and you have to sell everyone here on your strengths and successes.
20 votes -
US youth drug use defies expectations, continues historic decline
22 votes -
Hank Green on the recent US drone sightings
15 votes -
The 2024 Steam Winter Sale is live (runs December 19 - January 2)
Quick links: Steam Store IsThereAnyDeal SteamDB Sales Tool Hidden Gems recommendations topic Share noteworthy deals! Ask for recommendations! Discuss what you bought!
33 votes -
Which Fallout 3 city has the best job market?
12 votes -
Team Fortress #7 - The Days Have Worn Away
19 votes -
Superman | Official teaser trailer
34 votes -
'Avatar: Seven Havens' series rumor roundup
9 votes -
AI ‘street photography’ isn’t photography: What we lose by simulating experience
10 votes -
Magnus Carlsen defeated Ian Nepomniachtchi 4-1 to win the 2024 Champions Chess Tour Finals and his fifth consecutive title
9 votes -
The Wicked movie that almost was: Imagine no songs, Demi Moore or Whoopi Goldberg as Elphaba—and it came out twenty-five years ago
6 votes -
Russian Civil War, Winter 1917-1918
3 votes -
How do you know where to start with prolific authors?
Hello Tildes! I often find myself intimidated by authors of great sagas, trilogies upon trilogies, and dozens of standalone novels. How do I know which book (or series) to read first? I've been...
Hello Tildes! I often find myself intimidated by authors of great sagas, trilogies upon trilogies, and dozens of standalone novels. How do I know which book (or series) to read first?
I've been recommended Terry Pratchett and Brandon Sanderson recently. I've read zero novels by either author. I've also been warned that there is a definitive best place in the canon to start, "and it's this one!" But then someone else interjects and says, "no, it's this one!" followed by passionate reasoning. Okay. If it is really worth starting somewhere in particular, where should I begin?
I'm unlikely to read an author's entire corpus. I just have too many books to read and not enough time. But I'm not opposed to reading longer series if they're really fun. I'd appreciate any input about these authors in particular and this problem in general. Thanks!
14 votes -
Dozens of sites linked to the Viking great army as it ravaged Anglo-Saxon England more than 1,000 years ago have been discovered
10 votes -
How the novel became a laboratory for experimental physics
7 votes -
Three of the biggest US banks are facing a lawsuit for ‘widespread fraud’ on Zelle
31 votes -
I think I have a broken AT&T route?
Posting for ideas/advice, if anyone has any, as I'm unsure of where else to turn. I have a VPS (Named "Bucket") I rent and self host a few services on, along with a home server (Named "Vergil")...
Posting for ideas/advice, if anyone has any, as I'm unsure of where else to turn.
I have a VPS (Named "Bucket") I rent and self host a few services on, along with a home server (Named "Vergil") that lives under my basement stairs and I host many more services on. At 2:01 AM today I got a notification from Bucket that my Plex (hosted on Vergil) was down/unreachable. I'm assuming that's when this issue started.
When investigating I found that Plex wasn't down, but Bucket couldn't reach/talk to Vergil. Further investigation showed that it wasn't just Bucket, but nothing can reach/talk to Vergil. At first I thought it was an issue with my router, as I have my gateway set up in IP bypass mode and manage my network via my third party router (UDM-Pro). But after digging through logs looking for any automated blocks from any misclassified intrusion attempts, I realized that none of my attempts were even reaching the router. So I checked the route, and that's where I found what I think is the problem.
Running
mtr
to route from Vergil to Bucket gives full resolution of the route:mtr -rwzbc 10 45.79.209.169 Start: 2024-12-19T16:49:53-0500 HOST: Vergil.goose.ws Loss% Snt Last Avg Best Wrst StDev 1. AS??? 192.168.2.1 0.0% 10 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.0 2. AS??? 192.168.99.254 10.0% 10 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.8 0.1 3. AS7018 45-26-156-1.lightspeed.tukrga.sbcglobal.net (45.26.156.1) 0.0% 10 4.4 3.6 2.0 5.9 1.2 4. AS7018 107.212.169.24 0.0% 10 5.2 3.7 1.6 6.1 1.5 5. AS7018 12.242.113.31 0.0% 10 2.2 3.7 2.2 5.3 1.0 6. AS7018 12.247.68.178 0.0% 10 2.8 3.8 2.2 5.8 1.2 7. AS20940 ae6.r21.atl01.mag.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.94) 0.0% 10 3.2 4.3 2.3 5.7 1.1 8. AS20940 ae0.r21.atl01.icn.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.65) 0.0% 10 3.7 4.1 1.9 6.5 1.5 9. AS20940 ae1.r21.atl01.ien.netarch.akamai.com (23.207.235.35) 0.0% 10 4.2 3.5 1.9 5.6 1.1 10. AS20940 ae22.gw3.atl1.netarch.akamai.com (23.203.144.39) 0.0% 10 5.2 5.0 2.4 8.8 2.0 11. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 12. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 13. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 14. AS63949 bucket.goose.ws (45.79.209.169)
However, routing from Bucket to Vergil does not:
mtr -rwzbc 10 99.42.115.109 Start: 2024-12-19T16:49:13-0500 HOST: Bucket.goose.ws Loss% Snt Last Avg Best Wrst StDev 1. AS??? 10.204.3.155 0.0% 10 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.8 0.2 2. AS??? 10.204.35.16 0.0% 10 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.5 0.1 3. AS??? 10.204.32.2 0.0% 10 0.7 9.4 0.4 74.3 23.2 4. AS63949 lo0-0.gw4.atl1.us.linode.com (74.207.239.106) 0.0% 10 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.7 0.1 5. AS20940 ae45.r22.atl01.ien.netarch.akamai.com (23.203.144.36) 0.0% 10 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.6 0.1 6. AS20940 ae4.r22.atl01.mag.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.98) 0.0% 10 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.8 0.1 7. AS20940 ae1.r24.atl01.ien.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.103) 0.0% 10 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.6 0.0 8. AS7018 12.247.68.177 0.0% 10 1.0 1.0 0.8 1.2 0.1 9. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 10. AS7018 107.212.169.25 0.0% 10 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.5 0.0 11. AS??? ???
Calling the tier 1 support number for AT&T residential support was very less-than-helpful. They kept on wanting to send a tech out to the house claiming there's an issue with the line. I kindly thanked them for their efforts but gave up, and tried emailing the contact email address for the AT&T datacenter/core router from the WHOIS in that last successful hop of the trace from Bucket to Vergil. I doubt I'll hear anything back, but I'm unsure of who else to turn to/what else to try. I've never seen/experienced a route broken in one direction like this. But I'm unable to access any of my devices/services from outside my house, due to it. Hoping someone has an idea or suggestion?
Edit:
Well, after about 38 hours of this issue, the power went out at my house. My networking equipment is on a UPS, so it did not go down. But when the power returned, the route began resolving again, and I am connectable again. Don't know if an area power outage rebooted some AT&T equipment nearby, I would imagine their stuff is also on UPS. But who knows?
For the non-believer about my route previously being complete:
[goose@Bucket: ~ ] $ mtr -rwzbc 10 99.42.115.109 Start: 2024-12-20T15:20:23-0500 HOST: Bucket.goose.ws Loss% Snt Last Avg Best Wrst StDev 1. AS??? 10.204.3.155 0.0% 10 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.0 2. AS??? 10.204.35.16 0.0% 10 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.4 0.1 3. AS??? 10.204.32.2 0.0% 10 0.6 1.8 0.4 9.9 2.9 4. AS63949 lo0-0.gw4.atl1.us.linode.com (74.207.239.106) 0.0% 10 0.4 2.0 0.3 15.6 4.8 5. AS20940 ae45.r22.atl01.ien.netarch.akamai.com (23.203.144.36) 0.0% 10 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.5 0.1 6. AS20940 ae4.r21.atl01.mag.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.90) 0.0% 10 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.9 0.1 7. AS20940 ae0.r24.atl01.ien.netarch.akamai.com (23.192.0.95) 0.0% 10 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.5 0.0 8. AS7018 12.247.68.177 0.0% 10 0.8 0.9 0.8 1.2 0.1 9. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 10. AS7018 107.212.169.25 0.0% 10 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.6 0.1 11. AS??? ??? 100.0 10 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 12. AS7018 99-42-115-109.lightspeed.tukrga.sbcglobal.net (99.42.115.109) 0.0% 10 3.6 3.2 2.1 4.9 0.9 [goose@Bucket: ~ ] $
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