Saturday, April 24, 2010

Most of the times I go onto the net I get a popup that IE saying '59.148.220.121 - HTTP404 Not

most of the times I go onto the net I get a popup IE saying '59.148.220.121 - HTTP404 Not Foun



Most of the times I go onto the net I get a popup that IE saying '59.148.220.121 - HTTP404 Not Found?windows 2000





A 404 error means that that page has either been deleted or that your AV software has blocked it. Don't worry about it.



Most of the times I go onto the net I get a popup that IE saying '59.148.220.121 - HTTP404 Not Found?internet explorer internet explorer



Your Web server thinks that the HTTP data stream sent by the client (e.g. your Web browser or our CheckUpDown robot) was correct, but simply can not provide the access to the resource specified by your URL. This is equivalent to the 'return to sender - address unknown' response for conventional postal mail services.
What it means by HTTP 404.



The first 4 indicates a client error. The server is saying that you've done something wrong, such as misspell the URL or request a page which is no longer there. Conversely, a 5xx error indicates a server-side problem. It also indicates an error which may be transient; if you try it again, it may work.



The middle 0 refers to a general syntax error. This could indicate a spelling mistake.



The last 4 just indicates the specific error in the group of 40x, which also includes 400: Bad Request, 401: Unauthorized, etc.



Room 404 asserts that 404 was named after a room at CERN where the original web servers were located.



"Having visited CERN myself, I can tell you that Room 404 is not on the fourth floor - the CERN office numbering system doesn't work like that - the first digit usually refers to the *building* number (ie. building 4), and the second two to the office number. But, strangely, there is no room "04" in building "4", the offices start at "410" and work upwards - don't ask me why. Sorry to disappoint you all, but there is no Room 404 in CERN - it simply doesn't exist, and certainly hasn't been preserved as "the place where the web began". In fact, there *is* a display about this, including a model of the first NeXT server, but the whole "Room 404" thing is just a myth."



According to the W3C, 404 Not Found is only supposed to be used in cases where the server cannot find the requested location and is unsure of its status. If a page has permanently been deleted, it is supposed to use 410: Gone to indicate a permanent change. But has anyone ever seen 410? It must be 404...

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