Errors on the Internet, and those annoying error messages, occur quite frequently -- and can be quite frustrating, especially if you do not know the difference between a 404 error and a 502 error. Many times they have more to do with the Web servers you're trying to access rather than something being wrong with your computer. Here is a list of error messages you might encounter while surfing the Web and their respective meanings to help you figure out just what the problem is.
400 Bad File Request 401 Unauthorized 403 Forbidden/Access Denied 404 File Not Found 408 Request Timeout 500 Internal Error 501 Not Implemented 502 Service Temporarily Overloaded 503 Service Unavailable Connection Refused by Host File Contains No Data Bad File Request Failed DNS Lookup Host Unavailable Unable to Locate Host Network Connection Refused by the Server
Usually means the syntax used in the URL is incorrect (e.g., uppercase letter should be lowercase letter; wrong punctuation marks).
Server is looking for some encryption key from the client and is not getting it. Also, wrong password may have been entered. Try it again, paying close attention to case sensitivity.
Similar to 401; special permission needed to access the site -- a password and/or username if it is a registration issue. Other times you may not have the proper permissions set up on the server or the site's administrator just doesn't want you to be able to access the site.
Server cannot find the file you requested. File has either been moved or deleted, or you entered the wrong URL or document name. Look at the URL. If a word looks misspelled, then correct it and try it again. If that doesn't work backtrack by deleting information between each backslash, until you come to a page on that site that isn't a 404. From there you may be able to find the page you're looking for.
Client stopped the request before the server finished retrieving it. A user will either hit the stop button, close the browser, or click on a link before the page loads. Usually occurs when servers are slow or file sizes are large.
Couldn't retrieve the HTML document because of server-configuration problems. Contact site administrator.
Web server doesn't support a requested feature.
Server congestion; too many connections; high traffic. Keep trying until the page loads.
Server busy, site may have moved ,or you lost your dial-up Internet connection.
Either you do not have permission to access the site or your password is incorrect.
Page is there but is not showing anything. Error occurs in the document. Attributed to bad table formatting, or stripped header information.
Browser may not support the form or other coding you're trying to access.
The Domain Name Server can't translate your domain request into a valid Internet address. Server may be busy or down, or incorrect URL was entered.
Host server down. Hit reload or go to the site later.
Host server is down, Internet connection is lost, or URL typed incorrectly.
The Web server is busy.
Still to come:
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