Extended Gmail Outage Frustrates Admins
CWmike writes "A prolonged, ongoing Gmail outage has some Google Apps administrators pulling their hair out as their end users, including high-ranking executives, complain loudly while they wait for service to be restored. At about 5 p.m. US Eastern on Wednesday, Google announced that the company was aware of the problem preventing Gmail users from logging into their accounts and that it expected to fix it by 9 p.m. on Thursday. Google offered no explanation of the problem or why it would take it so long to solve the problem, a '502' error when trying to access Gmail. Google said the bug is affecting 'a small number of users,' but that is little comfort for Google Apps administrators. Admin Bill W. posted a desperate message on the forum Thursday morning, saying his company's CEO is steaming about being locked out of his e-mail account since around 4 p.m. on Wednesday. It's not the first Gmail outage. So, will this one prompt calls for a service-level agreement for paying customers? And a more immediate question: Why no Gears for offline Gmail access at very least, Google?"
Someone else deals with all the problems, right?
It's a risk you take any time you let someone else handle something for you.
You can't count on Google to run your IT...sorry buddy. Using Google may be cost effective, but the obvious trade off is that someone else is really doing your job, and if that person drops the ball, then you really screwed the pooch, at least that's what your boss will think.
"Admin Bill W. posted a desperate message on the forum Thursday morning, saying his company's CEO is steaming about being locked out of his e-mail account"
Run your own damned mail server if it's THAT IMPORTANT. Seriously, it's not hard to set one up, and you've obviously got the money to do it.
Once again, it's a case of rich people with more money than brains having the problems. Nothing important here, nothing of value lost.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
This is the main reason not to turn to Software as a Service. Sure, it's nice to just rent some functionality, but you are not in control of your own destiny. What if Google decides that GMail no longer fits their business model? Poof...
To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
The thing is someone will always drop the ball. In this case, the CEO can't chew out the guy in IT who pooched the email server and is working frantically trying to get it back up and running because that guy works for a different company. Or do people honestly think that an internally-run email server never has problems?... Just because it's Google does not mean it's infallible.
I've been at plenty of places that run their own mailservers where uptime is considerably worse than Gmail's, so it'd be an improvement to offload it. The biggest problem seems to be at medium-sized shops: big enough for there to be problems, but not so big that you have some sort of massively redundant setup with transparent failover and 24/7 staffing. The ideal of the cloud-computing style of outsourcing is that you'd outsource to someone who was big enough to have a massively redundant setup with transparent failover and 24/7 staffing. However Google seems not to have delivered on that ideal.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
You can't count on the USPS to deliver your mail...sorry buddy.
You can't count on Verizon to run your telecommunications...sorry buddy.
Every service you use was, at one point, decentralized and every large corporation ran it themselves. Then someone did a better job and companies slowly released the reins. Does Verizon's phone service go down? Yep. Does the USPS lose mail? Yep. Goes Google mail go down? Yep. But, in the end we've decided that we'd rather rely on these external services than continue to try to run increasingly large services with ever-diminishing returns for the individual business.
No, it's the sound of one hand clapping.
What I mean to say is, what admin HASN'T had an outage like this?
Shit happens. I'd rather get email that works 99% of the time, and when there's a problem, google engineers are dealing with it, leaving me time to work on more important things.
Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
You're paying less than $1 a week per user. If email was important to you you'd be paying a *lot* more than that. Stop being a cheapskate.