Ah ... sounds good. So ... I'm guessing soon...ish, you'll have 2603:3024:180d:f100:50:242:105:34 (nsx.sunnyside.com.) operational again (no extreme rush) ... or at least nsx.sunnyside.com. regaining an operational AAAA that also works for DNS. I noticed earlier it wasn't working ... then subsequently you apparently dropped the AAAA record for it (perfectly fine thing to do while it's not working!) ... I did try the IP directly - still no DNS response, but I note also that that AAAA record hasn't been restored yet either ... or any AAAA record for that domain. $ eval dig @ns0.sunnysidex.com. +noall +answer +norecurse nsx.sunnyside.com.\ A{,AAA} nsx.sunnyside.com. 600 IN A 50.242.105.52 $ https://dnsviz.net/d/balug.org/Zl6vNw/responses/ https://dnsviz.net/d/balug.org/ZmGAnw/responses/ https://dnsviz.net/d/balug.org/ZmHuow/responses/
19 tickets closed almost immediately without comment
Let's see, if we have a ticketing system, and highly incentivized folks to close tickets quickly, we get ... lots of tickets closed quickly ... doesn't mean anything gets fixed. And yes, have seen this before ... alas, even in some departments/areas at some employers I've worked at. "Be careful what you measure." (And how one uses it). Same employer, a much more astute manager with a much better functioning department ... how did they do it? They surveyed the customers, and used that as a large measure of determining how well the technicians were doing at getting issues solved ... not how quickly the techs closed tickets. Alas, that highly well performing department stuck out like a sore thumb ... so ... eventually management "fixed" that issue ... by subsuming that department into the other, thus ensuring there wouldn't be such a good standout to embarrass the rest.
Anyway, glad your Comcast issue finally got resolved.
< From: Michael Paoli michael.paoli@berkeley.edu < Date: Tue, Jun 4, 2024 at 4:21\xe2\x80\xafPM < Subject: Re: [BALUG-Admin] (forw) linuxmafia.com 2024-06-04 02:02 System Events < To: Rick Moen rick@linuxmafia.com < Cc: BALUG-Admin balug-admin@lists.balug.org, Al aw009@sunnyside.com < < And thirdly - relatively minor issue. Al's got < (at least last I checked, yesterday or so) issues with < 2603:3024:180d:f100:50:242:105:34 (nsx.sunnyside.com.) < not responding.
On Thu, Jun 6, 2024 at 7:45 AM Al aw009@sunnyside.com wrote:
The manager that took one of my tickets and refused to let it be closed has helped me to finally get my case resolved. I have tested access from AWS successfully, and the modem does in fact seem to have my /56 back in it instead of what looked very much like a dynamic /64. It's also amazing that anyone talked to me at all. I had 19 tickets closed almost immediately without comment.
-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: Comcast Service Ticket CR144883981 Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2024 14:12:18 +0000 From: To: awcomcast@sunnyside.com awcomcast@sunnyside.com
Good morning,
I am reaching out to you in regards to ticket CR144883981. This was in regards to reclaiming your original IPv6 prefix. I worked with our device support, and we were able to reclaim 2603:3024:180d:f100 for you. As of this morning, the IPv6 has been restored onto your modem.
Thank you for using Comcast,
Shana Rich
Tech 4, CSSA (ABS)
Complex & Strategic Service Assurance
Avail Hours Mon-Fri, 8:00am – 4:30pm MST
Comcast Business Services