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Linux error, linux error!

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Are you using an IP-shade program that routes your network via another address? It may be that address is painfully slow, causing errors every now and then.

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Maybe is the criminal hand of the same guy who used to call you on your mobile phone in the middle of the night without talking.... 😕

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Hi Sicilian
Check that you don't have a proxy set up. (You might not have done it ...).

If you don't then check your dns settings. (type "ping www.redhotpawn.com"😉
For me, this comes back as "64 bytes from iiwsi.net (69.20.57.59)"

The only thing I can think of where this might happen legitimately is if your IP provider caches stuff.

Otherwise, it may be time to get worried. Have you virus checkers, firewalls, etc. installed.

The "uuid:/..." is pretty odd, to me.

Gezza

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Your router/modem is caching pages on your behalf and has gone tits up by the looks of it. Try resetting it.

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Originally posted by Caba
Your router/modem is caching pages on your behalf and has gone tits up by the looks of it. Try resetting it.
As above (router needs resetting) I have seen that with the Belkins when the UPnP mapping is broke.

I bet its a Belkin eh?

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wow, you are the first hit on google!

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4ADBF_enUS237US237&q=%22was+not+found+on+this+server%22+uuid

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here's something, it might not be the UUID you see, tho.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/windows2000serv/reskit/w2000Msgs/3949.mspx?mfr=true

Error Message:

The object universal unique identifier (UUID) was not found.

Explanation:

A UUID is used to uniquely identify objects, such as interfaces, RPC client stubs, and RPC server stubs. The RPC run time compares the UUID of an RPC client application with the UUID of an RPC server application to check for compatibility between the applications and to select among multiple implementations of a procedure. If the UUIDs of the RPC client and the RPC server application do not match, the RPC run time will not establish a session between the two applications.

User Action:

Contact the supplier of the running distributed application on the client.