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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?"

4 of 430 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Stallman is laughing by Etrias · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Have you really looked at it? I mean actually go to the Google Apps page at looked at it, or did you just hit reply without knowing. Oh, who am I kidding, this is /. and I'm lucky you read any of my message.

    Seriously, here's a link to the Google Apps business page. Look around. This isn't free stuff. I'm not sure why you scoff at this and not other business webmail applications. There...do you see that...do you see how Gmail isn't always free?

    My point remains...if they paid for it, Google owes them an explanation.

  2. Re:The benefits of cloud computing by Moebius+Loop · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Honestly, I've maintained my own mail server for 5 years, and my company's corporate server for 2 years, and I can count on one hand the number of times either of them have failed in that period. When they did fail (because I was being irresponsible about configuration changes, or hardware failures, etc), there was pretty much no way I was going to be getting in bed before I got them back up.

    Granted, I don't have millions of users and petabytes of email. But I also am not any kind of real system administrator, I don't have a massive redundant data storage facility, and neither do I have millions of dollars and endlessly brilliant engineers working at my beck and call.

    Some GMail downtime is, of course, to be expected. But these kind of high-profile outages from Amazon and Google are truly shocking. I don't think it puts the nail in the coffin of SaaS by any means, but it does indicate a significant necessity of SLAs for paying customers.

    I would desperately love to divest myself of the responsibility for these mail servers, but I want to know that I can trust GMail's response time during crisis as much as I can trust my own.

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    have you been seen on slash?
  3. Re:The benefits of cloud computing by kestasjk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The worst thing is the update to iGoogle (which is extensive and undoubtedly the cause of the outage) is quite a step backwards. It's a pretty clunky hybrid of a window based system and a widget based system, with a lot more AJAX and a lot fewer clickable links.

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  4. Re:the "small IT shops are worse than SaaS" BS by Terrasque · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, got a rude awakening there myself. My gmail account was closed a month ago, no prior warning. No way to get to support. No way to actually contact a human.

    I still have absolutely no clue why it was closed. I also lost blog, gallery, docs, calendar, site stats, rss reader, notebook... You get the idea. Luckily I didn't have any serious data there, but still. It's a lot of things I used daily just suddenly gone.

    And google's ToS says "We can close an account for any reason. Absolutely any reason. Like, we didn't like the color of the sky today is a good reason." Which isn't helping the issue much either.

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    It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."