Image | ![]() |
EAN-13 | 0683904633132 ![]() |
UPC-A | 683904633132 ![]() |
Product Name | A Study in Terror - BD |
Category | Electronics / Photography: A/V Media: Movie / TV |
Amazon.com | ![]() |
Price New | 7.45 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Price Used | 7.44 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Run Time | 95 minutes |
Cast | Anthony Quayle, Barbara Windsor, Donald Houston, John Fraser, John Neville |
Run Time | 95 minutes |
Width | 5.5 inches (convert) |
Height | 0.75 inches (convert) |
Length | 6.75 inches (convert) |
Weight | 18 hundredths pounds (convert) |
Binding | Blu-ray |
Format | NTSC |
Run Time | 95 minutes |
Long Description | Sherlock Holmes takes on his greatest mystery... Jack The Ripper! Three of 19th Century England's most famous characters come together for the first time in this sumptuous, exciting mystery, as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson set out to bring down history's most notorious serial killer: Jack The Ripper! When a suspicious package arrives at the master sleuth's Baker Street home, he and his old friend must join the hunt before more murders are committed... even though the trail may lead to places they'd rather not go. John Neville is one of the most authentic Holmes portrayers ever, and he's ably supported by Donald Houston as Watson, as well as such British acting royalty as Anthony Quayle, Robert Morley, Frank Finlay, Barbara Windsor, Cecil Parker and, in one of her earliest screen roles, Academy Award® winner Dame Judi Dench (1998, Best Supporting Actress, Shakespeare in Love). |
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Created | 04-19-2018 12:13:57am |
Modified | 04-29-2020 10:18:18pm |
MD5 | 84cf926a5586891566d1f181f0dd1560 |
SHA256 | fab8c934918068d9b3285ad34f76949fbd6b19c5b52f6f0b34c446db359b61ba |
Search Google | by EAN or by Title |
Query Time | 0.0337911 |
Article of interest
This is just a general comment to those that might be interested in some technical info about our site and how Google interacts with it.
Their programmers are very curtious when it comes to their spiders and how they interact with various web sites. Apparently, they are sensative to the load that their spiders place on a web server and do a darn good job when it comes to not overloading a server.
Another major search engine is not quite so nice. If you don't tell them to leave you alone, they will hammer the heck out of your site and potentially bring you to your knees.
Over the past vew days, we have been doing a massive system backup to a couple new off-site backup servers. Normally, this process is pretty quick but because these were new servers they required fully syncronization. Well, I forgot to take into account the drain this could place on our server and I let more than one backup run at a time.
This caused our main server to experience a high load for several days. Google detected this load and backed off its crawling process which was very kind of them. The only bad thing is that when Google backed off, our monitoring process (mostly manual at this point) assumed everything was only slightly higher than normal.
Google may be awesome, but it can be frustrating some times too.
This cool and wonderful feature that Google has in place to prevent overloading a server had an unexpected side affect. Because Google thought our site was super busy (which it was) it reduced the number of people it was referring to the site too. DOH!
As we noticed the visitor count slowly drop we got very confused because the system load was still very high. And we noticed Google wasn't visiting as often as usual and then we saw it... The backup process had overloaded the system. Not to the extreme but enough to make Google think there was a problem. We still actually had plenty of bandwidth for real users just not as much for the bots that visit (which we limit when bandwidth is limited).
Anyway, it was a good learning experience and we are now seeing the referrals climb back up and the Google spider is picking up its pace again too.
We had to force a couple other bots (including that othe big search engine) to play nice because they were trying to take more than their share of our data.
All in all, Google is AWESOME and very powerful. So THANKS GOOGLE for playing nice with others!