Server designed for forums and blogs. WARROCK game or forum?

edited December 15 in English

Server designed for forums and blogs. WARROCK game or forum?

51.89.86.89 You can't deny that this is the IP address of a Warrock server, can you?

And this server is located roubaix france . OVH, 2 RUE KELLERMANN 59100 ROUBAIX France.

Starting with the publisher Nexon, players have been having problems with the game due to this company's crappy server. Papaya, citing a lack of money to rent a game server, doesn't change anything for the players. Don't players have the right to demand a good server? Papaya, you exist on the players' money.

Papaya always remember who gave you a job !!!!!!!!!

Papaya, if you want, shove my second account up your ass. I hope you enjoy it. 2acc in 1ass.


Comments

  • French are at least 10 years behind in the technology sector. The country and economy is in decay. We cannot blame this company, they are just providing a service they get paid for. But the real criminal here is papaya, for hosting a server here.

  • edited December 15

    This company's building containing its servers ( Strasbourg FRANCE )burned down a few years ago. This company is a piece of shit that doesn't maintain its outdated servers. Two pieces of shit have found each other (nexon-papaya-ovh cloud france)


  • What will happen to the game? Will it be shut down?

  • edited December 15

    It was 12.40am on Wednesday, March 10, 2021. Until that moment, SBG2 was an unremarkable data center on a not-very-interesting industrial site in Strasbourg, a small city best known for its role as a hub of European bureaucracy.

    SBG2 sported a large OVH logo (its owner’s full name is OVHcloud) alongside the kind of colorful cladding that often cheers up a facility whose facade has no other distinguishing features. Its five stories provided 500 sqm (5,380 sq ft) of data center space on the West bank of the river Rhine, where France borders Germany.

    It’s not clear precisely what happened next, but within six hours SBG2 would be the most talked-about data center in the world. It would also no longer exist.


    SBG2 burns to the ground

    – SDIX 67 / Laurent Schoenferber

    Before dawn broke, fire had ripped through the building. Its bright cladding was a misshapen, smoldering shell. The 30,000 servers inside were destroyed, and the adjacent SBG1 was terminally damaged. Data was lost, and companies across the Internet were reeling. At the height of the fire, 3.6 million websites corresponding to 464,000 domain names were unavailable.

    No one was hurt. But, in terms of property, this was the biggest single disaster ever to hit a data center. Never before or since has a complete data center burnt down.

    The sector exists to provide reliable storage for data, and prides itself on detailed preparations for every disaster which might happen. Data centers do not fail. But this one did more than that, it completely self-destructed.

    It is clear that something at SBG2 went badly wrong.

    Eerie silence

    In other industries, we would know what happened. When planes crash, “black box” flight recorders tell the story. When companies go under, forensic accountants reconstruct the process in detail.

    In striking contrast to that, the data center sector, which prides itself on the precision of its operations, has been silent over SBG2.

    Three years on, there is no official story of its final hours. OVHcloud has cleared away the rubble, built a new data center on the site, and ignored any requests for information about it. In the aftermath of the fire, hundreds of OVHcloud customers threatened to sue. Yet in three years, DCD is aware of only two customers who have reached the courts. Both were awarded compensation, but neither has seen any money yet, as the cases are being appealed.

    The secrecy will come as no surprise to data center people. Covering up failures is normal practice and, as industry observers have commented time and again, it is supremely bad practice - because it means the same thing will very likely happen again.

    Data center outages are often “recurring failures,” consultant Ed Ansett of i3 Solutions, told DCD in 2017. Ansett has been consulted on data center failure incidents for years, and told us that many have the same root causes. The failure data is hidden by non-disclosure agreements, and the mistakes are repeated.

    ”I came to the conclusion some time ago that people were not learning from experience,” said Ansett.

    Days after an outage at a British Airways data center grounded thousands of flights, Ansett and colleagues announced DCIRN, a “crash report” service to share data center incident data, learn from mistakes, and avoid repetitions.

    In the days after SBG2 burnt, Ansett and his DCIRN colleague Dennis Cronin shared lists of data center fires, and expressed the hope that maybe this fire would be the one that persuaded the data center industry to finally open up.

    Three years on, that hope has been dashed. The SBG2 fire has never been fully explained. And DCIRN itself was wound up in August 2021. “We were unable to attract sponsorship, so we’ve put the initiative on hold,” Ansett told us in 2021, on the first anniversary of the SBG2 fire.

    Despite this, we can piece together a lot of facts about the fire. And they do not make for comfortable reading.

    What is OVHcloud?

    But first, why should we care about OVHcloud? As the name suggests, it operates in the cloud, and has some similarities to market leader AWS (Amazon Web Services). It now has facilities in the US, Singapore, Australia, and India, but it has a very different character from the other cloud players.

    It is on a much smaller scale, it is based in Europe, with its headquarters in Paris, and it has made its own engineering choices at every stage, talking openly about them.

    OVH was founded in 1999 by Octave Klaba, a 24-year-old computer science student at the Icam University in Lille, who spotted the demand for Internet hosting, and borrowed around $3,000 (25,000 francs in France’s pre-Euro currency).


    Octave Klaba

    Klaba’s family had migrated from Poland to France after the fall of the Berlin Wall; his parents Henryk and Halina helped with the loans, and his brother Miroslav joined the initiative. The company started with rented servers in a Paris data center, but quickly took on its own 3,000 sqm (32,390 sq ft) space in Paris in 2003, before expanding into a derelict industrial site in Roubaix, northwest of Paris in 2005.

    OVH focused on building things in-house. As far back as 2001, Klaba was building casings and chassis, and in-house “GreenBox” servers. In 2003, he added his own design of water-cooling system.

    When OVH moved to the Roubaix complex, Henryk Klaba ran a metal workshop to make OVH’s casings and racks - using a horizontal rack design unique to the industry. That was still in operation in 2019, when DCD visited.

    The company’s liquid-cooled racks make lower demands on the building chillers, so the company was able to expand piecemeal within Roubaix’s warren of disused factories, rather than building new high-tech facilities.

  • I respect your efforts.


    It was far too clear and straightforward.

  • The problem is obvious and its solution is very simple. But no one wants to simply change servers. Players have been leaving the game for years because the publisher doesn't care about the people who created their jobs.

  • You're absolutely right, and cheaters continue to ruin the game.

  • edited December 16

    And how am I supposed to react calmly when they destroy the only game I've been playing since 2005?

    I have no problem buying any game, I work and earn money. But I want to play Warrock.

  • I can say this is my only game.


    They left us to deal with cheaters.


    They didn't fix the bugs.


    I'm especially upset that my unlimited items turned into temporary ones. This is theft of hard work.

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