View Full Version : Google Playing With Data Centers
AussieWebmaster
02-08-2006, 03:12 PM
Our site was wiped out of Google for a couple of hours today. Though we were still in two of the three Big Daddy centers.
Nothing like that panic of being completely erased to clear the cobwebs and see how fast you can reach out to people.
Did anyone else see their sites dropped briefly today?
glengara
02-08-2006, 04:10 PM
Sorry for your trouble, but monitoring experimental datacentres as putative future SERPs is a waste of time, IMO ;-)
WilliamC
02-10-2006, 09:53 AM
Heyas Aussie, have not seen anything that drastic at all lately. Bet it got the ticker going tho eh mate? :P
PhilC
02-10-2006, 10:18 AM
The BD DCs are not experimental. BD is being rolled out across all the DCs.
AussieWebmaster
02-10-2006, 10:31 AM
Sorry for your trouble, but monitoring experimental datacentres as putative future SERPs is a waste of time, IMO ;-)
No the drop was in regular Google results and then I started looking at all the individual center addresses I knew to see what was happening.
AussieWebmaster
02-10-2006, 10:32 AM
Heyas Aussie, have not seen anything that drastic at all lately. Bet it got the ticker going tho eh mate? :P
I would rather just have coffeee....
WilliamC
02-10-2006, 10:32 AM
The BD DCs are not experimental. BD is being rolled out across all the DCs.
Yes, they are moving it right out rather quickly now. We are seeing BD results almost fulltime in whatever DC's they have us seeing in florida now.
Aussie: I would imagine so :P
vayapues
02-11-2006, 05:33 PM
FYI: We have been seeing some strange things the last week. Each day in the morning about 12:30 am, our site disappears from many of the searches. If we search the big daddy servers it is all still there. Then at exactly 7:00 pm each day we come back up everywhere.
Like flipping a switch, we can see the results reflected in our logs and AdSense revenues. Not only do we find the site again, but so do google users all over.
BTW, this is the site for the company I work for, not my personal kids websites, which appear to be unaffected by the phenomena.