How Did Danger Not Backup Its Servers? How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
from the one-of-those-times-where-epic-fail-applies dept
I bought the very first Danger smartphone the day it came out (rare for me -- I'm not so much of an early adopter on mobile phones). One of the features I liked the best was the fact that all of the data on the phone was immediately and automatically backed up to Danger's servers. Since then, I've always been amazed that other providers didn't make similar features standard. Danger never fully lived up to its hype, and eventually sold out to Microsoft. It was never entirely clear why Microsoft would want Danger, but at the very least you would think that it would make sure that the servers were pretty safe and redundant. Or so you would think. Apparently Danger had a massive server failure and is warning people that their data may be completely lost. The company is telling people not to turn off their devices, as the only way to keep the data alive is to keep the phone going.It's difficult to think of a system failure that makes a company look quite this bad. Tons of people have Sidekick phones and rely on server backup to keep their data. Not having a working redundant backup is a stunning sort of failure for Microsoft, and should remind people of the inherent dangers in relying on a cloud based service. While there are lots of cloud-based solutions that are quite useful, people are definitely going to need to be able to have alternative local and remote backups to make sure that, in this kind of situation, they're not totally relying on a company who should do things right, but perhaps did not.
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Filed Under: backup, cloud computing, danger, server side, sidekicks
Companies: danger, microsoft
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Massive FAIL
What we use internally, for instance, backs up locally for quick restores and than replicates to an offsite secure datacenter on one side of the country. When it's done doing that it replicates from the one offsite to a 2nd offsite on the OTHER side of the country. For us, and the customers who use our recommendation for this solution, that offers us three restore points.
We like to tell people that to lose their data, their building would have to burn down AND global warming would have to sink California...otherwise they're in good shape.
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Danger
It is called DANGER,
For Christ sake what did you expect from a product with such a name?
:):)
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Re:
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Buy an iPhone
Not only is iPhone the best smart phone on the market, it backs up to your own computer during syncing. That's the best way to go.
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Wow
There will be some major fallout from this cluster*%@# I bet.
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cloud
Not good in my book. I'll use your services, but let me keep my data local.
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Hi.
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Re: Buy an iPhone
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Damn
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Re: Wow
Of course it is a first rate failure on Microsoft's part for getting into this situation without proper backups. Surely they understand the need for it?
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Re: Massive FAIL
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sidekick
This whole system was in place to begin with. It's not as though MS got a hold of it and changed the way the phone worked so that it sucked. It already sucked. None of the WinMo phones behave this way...no smartphone does. The sidekick is a toy. I find it curious that someone would be smart enough to write a script to pull their data off of Danger's web pages, but not smart enough to ditch the thing as soon as they realized they had to write a script in order to have an offline copy of their stuff.
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Re: Re: Massive FAIL
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Re: Buy an iPhone
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Re: Re: Buy an iPhone
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Server Failure
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Re: Danger
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Microsoft's ongoing failures
When is the world going to wake up?
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Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/08/26/microsoft.ad.gaffe/index.html
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/08/21/microsoft-fail-motorola-tosses-office-for-google-aps -city-of-l/
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
"Google's not a real company. It's a house of cards."
"I have never, honestly, thrown a chair in my life."
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/09/05/chair_chucking/
"Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."
"My children - in many dimensions they're as poorly behaved as many other children, but at least on this dimension I've got my kids brainwashed: You don't use Google, and you don't use an iPod."
"What we've gone through in the last several years has caused some people to question 'Can we trust Microsoft?'"
We don't have a monopoly. We have market share. There's a difference."
"I don't know what a monopoly is until somebody tells me."
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Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
*Slams face plate down*
...Keep firing, Assholes!!!!
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Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Interesting
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Microsoft doesn't get the cloud
Cloud computing may have its attendant risks, but of Yahoo, Microsoft and Google, only Microsoft has ever deleted all my stuff. I would never, ever trust them with my data -- not on a Windows OS, not in an Office application, and certainly not ever in the "cloud".
The difference between Google and Microsoft in this respect couldn't be more obvious. Google may screw up eventually, but they strike me as archivists by nature. Microsoft? No way.
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Re: Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
Massive brain-drain.
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back this up on your iPhone
And while AT&T tries to tell me what apps I can run on my phone (no worries, it's unlocked now ;) ), Microsoft can't kill anything - unlike the iPhone.
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Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Re: Re: Wow
No, by that line of reasoning it's actually a massive FAIL for the subscribers. After all, they're the one who signed contracts with T-Mobile that didn't "specify backups, redundancy, load balancing and all other manners of service level agreements". T-Mobile was under no contractual obligation to provide such things and so did not require them of own their providers.
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Re: sidekick
That's why it fit so well with them.
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Re: back this up on your iPhone
Well stop fucking doing that you little pussy, before I throw a chair at you, you little fucking traitor!
PS - Way to slam the iPhone though... I did pop a boner when you did that. Just get off the Google teat, will ya'?
SB
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Re: Server Failure
Someone from the mail room maybe? How about an intern? Remember, sh*t runs down hill so don't expect one of the bosses to be a sacrificial lamb.
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Re: Re: Re: Wow
So yes, massive FAIL for TMobile.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Wow
Well, you're the one who introduced the "contract" reasoning.
What about the black eye they are getting?
What about it? That's not a contract issue.
So yes, massive FAIL for TMobile.
Massive FAIL for you for not even being able to stick to your own reasoning.
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Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
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common sense
Only one person made a mistake, everyone else was just part of the "trend"
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Indeed. If anything, OS/2 was a Win for Microsoft -- they ousted IBM out of the PC market using that kind of sleaze.
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Re: Microsoft doesn't get the cloud
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No Big Surprise
I know what you’re thinking—isn’t the OS a separate thing from user data? It is on a rationally-designed OS, where you can backup and restore one without touching the other. Unfortunately that’s not true of Microsoft OSes.
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They wanted to make the cloud look bad...
not saying that's the case, but it would help their cause, and hurt people who see the cloud as the future...
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Re: Re: Re: How Did Microsoft Allow Such A Failure?
Thanks for playing.
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Re:
Great legacy Microsoft. Ruthless and incapable of completing a contract for one of your best customers, and the customer who, by the way, was responsible for your very success.
This is what they have now done to a million T-Mobile customers.
OS2: Yet another failure that Microsoft "allowed".
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Re: They wanted to make the cloud look bad...
They *definitely* have done one thing:
They have hurt my confidence in *any* cloud proposition that Microsoft would care to float in the future. I'd rather stick needles in my eyes.
Data *is* fragile. Don't trust Ballmer with it...
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Then it's no less far-fetched to say this is sabotage by some other company who wants to hurt Microsoft's cloud efforts.
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NOT Cloud Computing
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In the end, it is a matter of putting all the consumers' eggs in the same basket and giving the basket to a bunch of strangers. What reassurance do you have that those strangers won't conveniently forget to set up replicas to cut their costs, or, perhaps worse yet, get curious and start poking in your private data?
I wouldn't personally want to put _all_ the data on my computer on somebody else's server no matter how safe or secure they claim it is!
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