Posts Tagged ‘microsoft’

Here Today, Gone Tomorrow; or Redundancy, x 2

October 16th, 2009

Last week a “minority” of T-Mobile Sidekick users learned the “Rule of Data Redundancy” the long, slow, hard way – and through no fault of their own.

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Sidekick users who stored their data locally (on the device) or backed up their data on a PC through a sync still have their data and should not be affected, but few customers purchased Sidekicks to sync their data with their pc.

Om Malik of GigaOm likens the Sidekick to a dumb terminal or “thin client,” since the device serves mainly as a display and user interface to each Sidekick user’s email, SMS messages, photos, address books and calendars, all stored remotely on servers owned and operated by Microsoft.

Last week, Danger / Microsoft hired Hitachi to do an upgrade to their Storage Area Network (SAN). That’s usually not a problem, as the owner of the data (Microsoft in this case) performs a backup of all the data in case of an issue.

Except in this instance.  While Microsoft still tries to recover lost Sidekick user data, those impacted users were forced to recreate their contact list and calendars to effectively use their device.

For their time and considerable inconvenience, Sidekick customers will be compensated with a mere $100 T-Mobile gift card and a month of free data service.  Two data loss lawsuits were filed this week; this “user experience” will linger for years.

PC World’s David Coursey noted in yesterday’s TechInciter column:

In a letter posted on the T-Mobile customer forum, Microsoft’s Roz Ho, who runs the company’s laughably named “Premium Mobile Experiences” group, said only that a “minority” of Sidekick users suffered data loss. With a supposed 1 million Sidekick customers, a “minority” sounds small but could be up to 499,999 of them.

“We have determined that the outage was caused by a system failure that created data loss in the core database and the back-up,” Ho wrote.

“We rebuilt the system component by component, recovering data along the way. This careful process has taken a significant amount of time, but was necessary to preserve the integrity of the data.”

Those two paragraphs could be replaced by a single sentence: “We weren’t very smart, and we were very slow.”

All information on those impacted Sidekicks is now gone if the smartphone lost power had the battery required removal, or was fully drained.

T-Mobile has halted sales of the Sidekick amid the ongoing issues.

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Most people spend more time and energy going around problems than in trying to solve them.
— Henry Ford (1863 – 1947)

“Most people spend more time and energy going around problems than in trying to solve them.” — Henry Ford (1863 – 1947)

Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely.” – Auguste Rodin (1840 – 1917)

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A Netflix Stream in Hand…

… would be a killer app – and in more ways than one; streaming more than one movie would easily eat up most people’s iPhone minutes package on AT&T without making *any* calls… Today, from TechCrunch, via Hacking Netflix: Rumor: Netflix Streaming Coming To The iPhone by MG Siegler on August 3, 2009 One big story …

Customer Experience, Part II

A t-shirt popular within the Apple Computer team building v.1 of Quicktime read “Apple: 80 hours a week, and loving it!” So much for work  | life balance. At the same time, I think Steve Jobs gets a lot of things right – including not making decisions for the short term without …

Desperately Seeking 6Sigma.

While not an avid gamer myself, I still think massively multiplayer online role-playing games will continue to help shape pop-culture and our society as a whole – if one of the main manufacturers of game box hardware can improve their hardware failure rate and overall customer experience. A local body shop’s …

MP3s as Keys to the Galaxy.

Knowledge can indeed be free, especially within the technology space; all it takes is a little initiative to find key web community sites, plus iTunes to unlock the podcast keys to the galaxy. My favorites include: Software Engineering Radio The Pragmatic Bookshelf IT Conversations Network Controlling Chaos Harvard Business Ideacast Business Now – if we’re bored, not learning …

Success – and Failure – Really Do Depend on the Customer Experience.

And, customers experience your company in a lot more ways than you realize. Every day, and via multiple mediums, customers receive some kind of experience, ranging from positive to negative;  with customer experience being defined as the sum total of conscious events/experiences.  A company’s ability to deliver an experience that sets …

Systems Thinking in the Real World

The more I read about  Steve Jobs, the more I want to work for Apple; except for the work | life balance, he really, really gets it, and on so many levels – about  people and about products. The good and bad of thinking in terms of systems is not many …

The View From Here is Recursive.

A friend recently drew my attention to the differences between strategic and analytical thinking. I realized while I haven’t normally attach those traits to other people;  I have recognized and planned for project impacts from those stakeholder characteristics. We each view the world slightl

Tags: email sms, data redundancy, david coursey, microsoft, t mobile sidekick, address books, redundancy
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Marketing Really is All About Targeting Your Customers.

September 9th, 2009

From TechCrunch, today:

badabing

…but one thing about Bing really stands out – it may be the best porn search engine ever created (see Badda-Bing Indeed). In private conversations Microsoft employees always said that the porn search feature was an unintended byproduct of good video search. But we always wondered if that was true.

Anyway, in May we noticed Bing ads on Google, which seemed a little ironic to us given how seriously the two companies compete with each other.

But one thing we didn’t notice until now is that Bing is also advertising on Google for the query “pornography.”

Which in our opinion removes all doubt about Bing’s intentions. There’s nothing wrong with being a good porn search engine, in our opinion. And why not go ahead and advertise it to the world.

Discovered via a TechCrunch employee who has asked to remain anonymous….

Check out the full story here.

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For Whom The Bell Tolls… or, Another Business Model for $0.00

From Techcrunch, last week: At first this announcement appeared to be a good candidate for “News of the Weird:” Microsoft Officially Retires Soapbox, The Poor Man’s YouTube by Leena Rao on July 21, 2009 Microsoft’s YouTube clone Soapbox is officially shutting its doors, according to reports today. Soapbox, which was launched in 2006 as a hub for downloading …

Free is Sometimes Free: The Future of a Radical Price

For those not able to make the Seattle Chamber of Commerce breakfast tomorrow, featuring Chris Anderson talking about his book Free: The Future of a Radical Price, his presentation at Wired’s “Disruptive Business Conference” is available online, for free: Related content: Free is Not Always Free. So – the featured speaker at …

Tags: badda bing, google, whom the bell tolls, youtube, chris anderson, porn search, techcrunch, breakfast tomorrow, free
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Words of Wisdom from RayO

June 22nd, 2009

Microsoft’s Ray Ozzie shared some good ideas during a recent keynote:

1. Constraints are empowering

2. Accept threats as resignations

3. Never follow; either leapfrog or stop

4. Diversity means survival

5. Don’t tolerate intolerance

6. Strategy and architecture are inseparable

7. Short and direct earns respect

8. Delaying the inevitable inevitably backfires

9. A re-org will never cure what ails you

10. You needn’t be an #%@hole to get things done

Tags: constraints, words of wisdom, keynote, rayo, resignations
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