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Passport Database Outage Leaves Thousands Stranded

linuxwrangler (582055) writes Job interviews missed, work and wedding plans disrupted, children unable to fly home with their adoptive parents. All this disruption is due to a outage involving the passport and visa processing database at the U.S. State Department. The problems have been ongoing since July 19 and the best estimate for repair is "soon." The system "crashed shortly after maintenance."

5 of 162 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Change management fail by roc97007 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's the wave of the future. A typical contract with offshore IT is for "current minus one", which means that each new firmware, OS or driver release causes a flurry of "maintenance" by remote "admins" who follow written procedures to update the systems with no real understanding of what they're doing, in what order they should do it, or what to do if something goes wrong. A typical list of systems to update may randomly contain a haphazard collection of prod and development machines, and may include some but not all members of a cluster. Systems are patched in Asset Management order, with no thought to rolling through dev and QA first before doing prod.

    The backout plan is to engage the vendor.

    Our outsourced IT bricks a few servers a year. We try to take it in stride. We've argued hysterically that if they really have to do firmware updates, to at least do dev servers first for God's Sake. They seem to not understand this.

    So yeah, I could definitely see this happening. We will be seeing more of same. You get what you pay for.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  2. Replication != Backup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From their Q&A:

    Q: Why wasn’t there a back-up server?
    Back-up capability and redundancy are built into the system. The upgrade affected our current processing capability, in part because it interfered with the smooth interoperability of redundant nodes.

    We don't need backups, the data is replicated, we're cool.

  3. Re:Change management fail by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry, what part of paying you to do a job requires me to give a shit about whether or not your failed third-world culture doesn't like answering direct fucking questions?

    The part about you paying them far less than you would pay someone culturally compatible. If you want to pay peanuts, you need to deal with the cultural consequences. I have dealt with Indians for years, and have learned how to ask questions so that I get the answer I am looking for. It is not that hard.

  4. Re:Change management fail by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Interesting

    simple yes or no questions

    It is only simple because you speak English. You need to widen your cultural perspectives. In other languages, and other cultures, it is not so simple. For instance, Chinese does not even have the words "yes" and "no". If you ask a Chinese speaker if they have a pen, they will answer "have" or "not have". If you ask them if they are going to lunch, they will answer "going" or "not going". There is no such thing as a "yes or no question" in Chinese, and culturally, Chinese are much more direct than Indians or Japanese.

  5. Re:Change management fail by ruir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, it also affects my ability to do the job people lying to me or choosing to reply with half truths to save face. My culture considers that extremely rude too. The rules of engagement have to change in a multicultural world, and if I am the customer, their obligation to bend somewhat their culture is a ball on their side. Or I may take my business and wallet elsewhere.