Grodie wrote:
Why is Sony so determined to patch this additional release when 95% of the players on EQ can't even log in?
That would seem to be the ideal time to do a patch.
Quote:
I am not going to go thru the darn hassle of change anything..... It is SOE's responsibility to get the game up and running. The player should not have to program an ISP into their PC to play the game, for a few hours just to have it shut down for a game patch and fix that is completely silly !
Then we, (the player), have to go back in and reset all the changes we done for a few hours of playtime.... ***** that. Shut the damn game down completely and fix the problem.... that is more of a logical solution I would think.
Wait a couple days, and it will. The problem is that once this sort of thing happens, SOE can't actually fix it directly. Your computer resolves names (like sonyonline.net) to addresses (like 145.230.86.120) by communicating with a dns server, most likely one owned by your ISP (ie: *not* Sony). Those systems get their dns maps from another tier of servers, which get them from another, and another, etc. New namespace additions can take several days to propagate around the internet depending on the update schedule of each server in the chain. When Network Solutions decided to unset the namespace that SOE was no longer paying for, it pushed out that change. As dns servers around the world updated with the new change, any client computer that used them to connect to SOE stopped being able to connect via the name resolution. Fixing this requires reversing the process, which takes time.
Adding to this is that your own client computer will cache addresses it's used recently (so as to reduce calls to your dns server). That's why you need to do the dnsflush. But that will only really help once the dns server you're connected to has the correct name information. Point being that this isn't something that SOE can magically fix. All they can do is get the addresses back and then wait. If you want it to work sooner, you'll have to manually point your computer at a dns server with the correct addresses. There's nothing more they can do at this point.