RIM Toys With Blackberry Addicts Again; Cuts Off Users For 3.5 Hours
from the want-to-stay-connected? dept
Last April, RIM woke many Blackberry users up to the idea that they might be Crackberry addicts by having the system go offline for a few hours overnight. It's amazing how people recognize just how dependent they are on a service once it goes away. The eventual excuse given by RIM (a botched software upgrade) was unconvincing. However, there hadn't been any more outages, so questions about the service died down. However, with widespread Blackberry outages Monday afternoon, lasting about three and a half hours, impacting all mobile operators, some of those questions are going to be raised again. The Blackberry system involves all traffic going through RIM machines, and a cascading problem across those machines can certainly cause quite a bit of trouble. At some point, people are going to start asking if there isn't a more robust, distributed way of offering a Blackberry (or Blackberry-like) service that would be more immune to these types of issues.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: addiction, blackberry, centralized services, mobile email, outage
Companies: rim
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Didn't notice...
Most people I know use them instead of dragging around laptops.
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Re: Didn't notice...
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Heh...didn't notice either
RIM buying Skype, and using the robust P2P as a backchannel and backup routing system?
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Length of outage underestimated
Imagine my surprise when one of the users found an article on CNN that mentioned an outage!
Talk about a crappy setup........
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Re: Length of outage underestimated
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Hmm...
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Re: Hmm...
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Re: Hmm...
Oh, that would be for end-to-end encryption of all communications regardless of what the end-users do with it.
Oh, and the performance of said encrypted communications.
I bet the average IT shop has way more downtime than the RIM network has had in its lifetime.
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Must be a slow day for Techdirt
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Re: Must be a slow day for Techdirt
Indeed, but does that make it any less newsworthy? Given that Google News currently shows 797 articles on the topic, it would appear that it's rather relevant.
This is extremely low downtime and it's ridicules to suggest that a "more robust system" would have less downtime.
How often does "the internet" go down? Ah, right, it doesn't. That's what I mean by a more robust system. People rely on their Blackberries quite a bit. To have such massive downtime, even if only once per year, has a serious impact and there are better ways to deal with it.
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Re: Re: Must be a slow day for Techdirt
You are right, that "the internet" doesn't go down. But ISPs do, service to blocks of the 'net do, entire subnets do. Routers die, servers go down. It happens.
In this case, a block of the RIM net went down. Shouldn't happen, but it did.
But why is it in the corporate world an Exchange server (or Domino or whatever) goes down and it is "grumble, grumble" but if RIM goes down it is "the end of the world".
They were back on the air after only a few hours and from my experience it was an intermittency issue, not a full blackout for the 3 1/2 hours.
Yah, I'm not thrilled with it. But considering the alternatives (oh, right, there ISN'T one that comes anywhere near)...RIM's doing a pretty good job overall.
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Re: Re: Re: Must be a slow day for Techdirt
Right, and if you have a proper contract with your ISP, you can get a refund for services not received.
But why is it in the corporate world an Exchange server (or Domino or whatever) goes down and it is "grumble, grumble" but if RIM goes down it is "the end of the world".
Not sure what "corporate world" you live in, but when our email server goes down, it's "fix it! 2 hours ago!". It's even worse when the problem is not in your hands, as is the case with RIM.
Yah, I'm not thrilled with it. But considering the alternatives (oh, right, there ISN'T one that comes anywhere near)...RIM's doing a pretty good job overall.
There are plenty of alternatives, RIM built a shitty system that has a single point of failure, they fail.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Must be a slow day for Techdirt
Name just one.
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Re: Must be a slow day for Techdirt
The amount of downtime isn't the issue. The issue is the number of people affected by the downtime.
We are used to dealing with scattered outages within our communication systems. Your phone or your internet connection may stop working, but it normally affects people in your city or your neighborhood. It seems that RIM's service is not sufficiently diverse. A fire at a data center or a backhoe operator might be able to bring down BB service for weeks at a time not just for a small group of customers in one area, but worldwide.
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I must have missed it
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Why do people continue?
Use IMAP, use Windows Mobile, heck use POP if you have to, at least you're relying on people that you have a direct relationship with - your email provider (most cases your own company's mail server) and your cell phone provider who provides the data network. With both, you have somebody to scream at and get answers and possibly a partial credit, what do you think you're going to get from RIM who only answers to the big boys?
Wake up people.
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Re: Why do people continue?
I'm sorry, but those options would be???
Realize, the reason that IT chooses BlackBerry even paranoid Financial Services, Insurance, Government, DoD, etc..., isn't because it has a keyboard or a built-in mp3/phone/camera/gps...
It is because of the RIM platform:
- end-to-end encryption
- extremely fine-grained control of what the device can do
- complete logging of everything done with the device
- near-zero end-user maintenance (OTA sync, OTA installs, OTA upgrades, etc...)
- seemless data trickle synchronization
- direct, secure(!) integration with enterprise infrastructure including leveraging webservices-enabled apps
- did I mention END-To-END encryption?
What other platform comes close? RIM now offers the BB platform on Symbian (Nokia) and PocketPC/SmartPhone. This wouldn't happen if those platforms stood any kind of chance against BB.
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Re: Re: Why do people continue?
Well, if you bothered to read past the second sentence of my post, you would know the answer to that.
I'm not going to go through your points because EVERYTHING else in the same market as Blackberrys does EVERYTHING on your list, and to a greater extent in some cases.
Quit being lazy and answer your own questions with a simple Google search.
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Re: Re: Re: Why do people continue?
Again, I ask that you NAME just one mobile technology device/platform that comes anywhere near what the BB platform is (from a corporate point of view...consumer devices are not RIM's market and prosumer is something new to them...and they are doing quite well there too).
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- "Works for me"
- "Didn't notice"
- "Haven't experienced any issues"
- "I'm super-awesome my world is pervert"
- "I posted this just to increase to post count to give you false hope of finding an answer/solution"
Don't...I would suggest a nice leisurely bath with a toaster would better serve the society.
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Re:
Though it is the killer app for end-users, IT staff choose BB for many other reasons...the main one being security.
What exactly is it that IMAP offers for security? Something that the end-users cannot futch?
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SSL is simply one piece of the puzzle. Configuration of it is often tedious, error prone, involves the user to at least provide yet-another-password, etc.
"SSL", in and of itself, does not ensure encrypted communications of all applications.
SSL does not prevent installation and/or running of mischievous applications.
SSL does not ensure that applications have been created (and signed) by a trusted party, traceable to the party that created it.
SSL does not allow remote administration of the device, restricting what the device can have installed, what it can do, wiping a device when it is in unknown hands, etc.
SSL does not provide logging of usage.
etc, etc, etc....
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