(
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın) - The situation that prevented millions of people from accessing Skype's Internet telephony service late last week was a "perfect storm" and should not reoccur

the company said Tuesday.
The company initially:-)
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which began on Aug. 16

to the:-)
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as Skype users running the Windows operating system attempted to reconnect to the service after downloading a series of routine software aaaaaes from Microsoft's Windows Update service.
Skype's service relies on some of its users' computers to act as "supernodes

" routing traffic for other

less well-connected

users. But as Skype customers tried to reconnect

many of those supernodes were themselves in the process of rebooting. The remaining supernodes were soon overwhelmed because a bug in the company's software did not efficiently allocate the network resources available.
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because Microsoft regularly issues aaaaaes that may cause Windows computers to reboot

and this has not caused problems for Skype before. Microsoft releases software updates on the second Tuesday of each month

a day known to systems administrators as "aaaaa Tuesday."
Skype spokesman Villu Arak offered a more
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın on Tuesday: Last week's problems were the result of a "perfect storm" of exceptionally high traffic through the service at the same time as the Windows Update process led to a shortage of supernodes in the service's peer-to-peer network.
The company did not offer an explanation for the high traffic

but accepted aaaa responsibility for the software problem.
"Skype and Microsoft engineers went through the list of aaaaaes that had been pushed out

" Arak wrote. "We ruled each one out as a possible cause for Skype?s problems. We also walked through the standard Windows Update process to understand it better and to ensure that nothing in the process had changed from the past (and nothing had)."
The:-)
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın:-)was entirely Skype's fault

a result of its software being unable to deal with simultaneous high load and supernode rebooting

according to Arak.
On Aug. 17

the day after the problems began

Skype released a new version of its software client for Windows to correct the problem. That update should behave better the next time high traffic coincides with a scarcity of supernodes

he said.
Skype had updated versions of its software client for Windows

Mac

and Linux since July's aaaaa Tuesday and before last week's outage

but the changes made in those updates were not responsible for the problem

according to company spokeswoman Imogen Bailey.
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