but I think part of the reason it's getting so much attention is that it is such a remarkable fuck up for a big company. It sounds like they basically directed the whole of their business for Europe through one set of servers in Slough, which they then updated all at the same time, without a backup, and without checking if the operation was going to work first.
Some exec from RIM has been in news today basically saying 'We don't know what's wrong, but we're sorry, and we'll fix it as soon as we can'. Pretty shoddy.
DISCLAIMER: I do not really understand IT and base the above on stuff I read on the Guardian website.
(, Wed 12 Oct 2011, 14:38, Reply)
Snowy, youre absolutely right with everything you said above. Was that a copy and paste from Guardian site?
Youre right, you cant put all your eggs in one basket, and in the case of such a large userbase such as blackberry, you should put your eggs in about as many baskets are you can afford!
(, Wed 12 Oct 2011, 14:41, Reply)
even medium companies that are nowhere near the size of RIM have some contingency plan/disaster recovery in place.
(, Wed 12 Oct 2011, 14:46, Reply)
Generally if anythings free you'll get exactly what you pay for.
(, Wed 12 Oct 2011, 18:51, Reply)
and even companies like Google and Hotmail get that wrong sometimes.
(, Wed 12 Oct 2011, 14:53, Reply)