Posts Mentioning RSS Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • sbostedor 6:29 am on November 19, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: The specified request cannot be executed from current Application Pool   

    OWA: The specified request cannot be executed from current Application Pool 

    I just spent an hour Googling and hammering away at our Exchange 2003 server to find out why some users suddenly started getting the error “The specified request cannot be executed from current Application Pool” when they attempted to log into OWA (Outlook Web Access).

    These users never log into an actual workstation anywhere so I figured that if I did that for them and launched an actual Outlook 2003 session, maybe I would get an error that would lead me in the right direction.

    I was greeted with a prompt to change their password because their Active Directory password has expired. Bingo! I changed their password and the error went away.

    I thought that I’d share this here because Google doesn’t return any other sites that have this tip when you search for the error.

     
  • sbostedor 2:31 pm on October 10, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Almost time for Vegas! 

    image

     
  • sbostedor 6:14 am on September 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Acid Reflux (GERD) Medication Scandal? 

    Article referenced: http://is.gd/3MyIa

    acidreflux I was diagnosed with Acid Reflux Disease (GERD) in 2001.  I vaguely remember drinking some hot coffee on the way to work one morning in the car.  I was trying to take a sip when I hit a rather large pot hole or something and ended up taking a large gulp of the scolding hot coffee. 

    For the next couple of weeks, I experienced a lot of heartburn and it felt like my food was in my throat for a while after each meal; almost like it was standing in line to digest and wasn’t being kept in the stomach where it belonged.

    I went to my doctor and he immediately prescribed Prilosec (OMEPRAZOLE) to me.  After a few days on the drug, my symptoms went away and I was feeling great!  The medicine really does work as advertised.

    I stayed with it for about two months.  I decided at that time that whatever had caused me to have these symptoms must have healed by then, so I stopped taking them.  Within 48 hours, I started getting the worst sustained heartburn attacks that I have ever had.

    The only way that I (and my doctor) could make sense of this is that I simply had an ongoing disease that meant that I would be on the medicine for the rest of my life.  This made no sense to me since it was an injury that caused it in the first place.  It wasn’t a disease.

    About 7 years into the “treatment”, I started noticing that I was getting more acid reflux symptoms and some even felt like irregular heartbeats and heart attack symptoms.  I went to my new doctor and his response was to double my dosage of Prilosec. 

    The new higher dosage did take away all of these symptoms but left me wondering why.  I’m always a “why” kind of guy.  Everything has an answer even if nobody knows it.  The response that I’ve gotten from all of the docs so far was that there was no answer and this was just the reality that I need to live with,

    This morning, I read this article about withdrawal symptoms to drugs like Prilosec.  The information that it gave was exactly what I have been suspecting for years and even brought up to my doctor in my last visit.

    I asked, “is it possible that the Prilosec is actually turning off my acid pumps and causing my body to adjust by just pushing out more when I miss a dosage?”  I told him that I tried stopping it a few times and the acid reflux was much worse than it had ever been before.

    He “assured” me that it was just the GERD disease and that the Prilosec is the treatment and not the cause.

    I think that these doctors must be getting strong armed by the drug companies to push their meds or something.     I’m going to attempt to take myself off the drug slowly by supplementing with regular antacids.  I’ll need to stay away from acid enhancing foods while I do this.

    Here’s how I plan to do it:

    • Week 1 – decrease from 40mg to 20mg every other evening
    • Week 2 – Decrease from 40mg to 20mg every evening
    • Week 3 – Only take 1 20mg pill every evening
    • Week 4 – only take 1 20mg pill every other evening’

    Through this whole process, I will be eating a lot of Activia Yogurt, consuming standard antacids if needed, and staying away from foods that produce a lot of gas or acid.

    I’m going to start this whole thing on October 18, 2009 and blog the progress here

     
  • sbostedor 6:43 am on September 25, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    It’s Amazing … 

    … that humans have come so far and still have not evolved past our most primitive impulses to spend more energy placing blame than accepting responsibility.

     
  • sbostedor 7:52 pm on September 21, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Fall has arrived in my front yard 

     

    Fall has arrived

     
  • sbostedor 9:29 am on August 21, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Bees 

    I just called around to get pricing on bee control and the prices are outrageous!  Looks like I’ll be throwing on the winter clothing and putting on my exterminator hat tonight.

     
  • sbostedor 12:15 pm on June 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Charter, Internet, , Router, Sonicwall, , TZ170   

    Charter Business Internet has been making my day HELL! 

    Here’s the chain of events:

    Here’s what happened …

    1. Lightning struck near our building, sending a surge into the building by way of the COAX broadband Internet cable
    2. The strike blew the cable modem
    3. Charter was called and they brought us a new cable modem.  The tech seemed to be unsure of how to provision it but seemed confident that he had it correct when he left. The initial tests of Internet connectivity seemed to confirm this.
    4. After the cable connection was revived, I quickly discovered that the current from the lightning strike followed the Ethernet cable out of the back of the cable modem and into the firebox firewall that provided Internet access to a critical web server and a number of other shop floor devices.  The device would appear powered on but would not route traffic.
    5. This was the backup device that was put into place because it’s predecessor had died a couple of weeks earlier.  This left us with no device to fail over to.  we were forced to put the web server back onto the TZ170 router that it was removed from in the past due to performance reasons.
    6. I configured the Sonicwall TZ170 for the NAT and performed a connectivity test.  The speed tests on the TZ170 were equal to the old firebox.  Everything looked great  … at first …
    7. Over the weekend, the TZ170 stopped routing published traffic to and from the servers.  A reboot of the router seemed to have cleared it up for a while
    8. Reports were pouring in that customers could not access the web and our remote staff could not access the remote terminal server reliably.
    9. This morning, I started to investigate these reports and believed that I had found the root cause. I thought that it was because the cable guy just forgot to provision the correct static IP addresses for our router.
    10. I called Charter again and they assured me that the correct addresses were provisioned correctly.  We rebooted the cable modem and the TZ170 and everything seemed to work for the duration of the support call.  We hung up.
    11. 15 minutes later, the servers were inaccessible from the outside again.
    12. I connected my MacBook Pro directly into the cable modem and assigned it an available static IP address from our public pool.  I got nothing.
    13. I removed the static IP from the macbook and set it to obtain via DHCP and … It was gived an address by the modem!  This was bad!  Really bad!  But really good at the same time because now I knew exactly what the problem was without a doubt!

    The cable modem should NEVER be giving out automatic dynamic IP addresses because everything is statically assigned to published servers.  We only have a small range of addresses assigned to us and all but two are taken by servers and services.  The address that the modem gave to my MacBook Pro was actually the address that the TZ170 was statically assigned.

    So, this whole thing was cased by an IP address conflict caused by a misconfiguration that left the DHCP server running on the modem.  The Charter guy should have known better.

    I called Charter back and let them know what I found.  They logged into the router, disabled DHCP, and everything has been working since.

    To add to this story, we performed a Pretty massive server room consolidation project over the weekend that went off without a hitch.  Instead of getting praise for the awesome job that we did, this Charter screwup made it look to the company like our move caused the Internet servers to go off line for 2 days off and on.

    They will never understand the root cause … and this is the thankless life of an IT Admin.

     
  • sbostedor 3:19 am on June 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    New Utter from Steve Bostedor 

    Blog Post: New Utter from Steve Bostedor http://ping.fm/8GL2L

    Mobile post sent by Sbostedor using Utterlireply-count Replies.

     
  • sbostedor 1:18 am on June 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    New Utter from Steve Bostedor 

    Blog Post: New Utter from Steve Bostedor http://ping.fm/LljvJ

    Mobile post sent by Sbostedor using Utterlireply-count Replies.

     
  • sbostedor 11:18 pm on June 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    New Utter from Steve Bostedor 

    Blog Post: New Utter from Steve Bostedor http://ping.fm/S3uKS

    Mobile post sent by Sbostedor using Utterlireply-count Replies.

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
esc
cancel