Archive for the ‘Sidekick’ Category

T-Mobile Begins Selling Sidekick Again After Server Outage

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

T-Mobile announced it would begin selling its Sidekick smartphone again, over a month after it was forced to suspend sales following a massive data failure on the servers holding user information. The servers were run by Microsoft subsidiary Danger, and Microsoft engineers scrambled after the outage to restore Sidekick user data starting with contacts. T-Mobile had offered affected Sidekick users a gift card and a month of free data service, compensation judged as too little, too late by many users on the T-Mobile Forums.

Sidekick Phone Repair at Dr. Cell Phone

Sidekick Phone Repair at Dr. Cell Phone

T-Mobile will begin selling models of its Sidekick smartphone again, more than a month after being forced to pull the devices due to a massive server outage that deleted user data.
Early in October, a hardware issue on servers run by Microsoft subsidiary Danger wiped the personal data from nearly 800,000 Sidekick users’ phones. In the wake of that incident, T-Mobile had listed the Sidekick smartphones as “Temporarily Out of Stock” on its Website. The general assumption was that sales would be suspended until service was restored.
“T-Mobile is pleased to announce that Sidekick sales have resumed,” a T-Mobile spokesperson wrote in a statement emailed to eWEEK on Nov. 17. “New pricing for the Sidekick LX 2009 will be $149.99 with a two-year contract and the Sidekick 2008 will be $49.99 with a two-year contract.”

Microsoft has been busily working to restore Sidekick user data, releasing a recovery tool on Oct. 20 for T-Mobile Sidekick users through the My T-Mobile Website that would allow them to restore their contacts. At that time, Microsoft promised that it would work to restore users’ photographs, notes, to-do lists, marketplace data and high scores.
But the contact-restoration process was not an entirely smooth one, with many Sidekick users complaining on the T-Mobile forums that their information had only been partially restored. As of Nov. 17, customers on the forums were still voicing displeasure over issues such as missing photos or receiving other peoples’ photos on their devices.
However, the situation overall seems more hopeful than on Oct. 10, when T-Mobile issued a statement suggesting that Sidekick users’ information had been irretrievably sent to data heaven: “based on Microsoft/Danger’s latest recovery assessment of their systems, we must now inform you that personal information stored on your device … almost certainly has been lost as a result of server failure at Microsoft/Danger.”
To make up for the widespread destruction, T-Mobile offered Sidekick customers a $100 T-Mobile gift card and a month of free data service, although users posting messages on the T-Mobile Forum seemed to generally find the offer insufficient.
Microsoft’s experience with the Sidekick data could affect how it potentially introduces “Project Pink,” a branded smartphone rumored to roll out sometime in early 2010. While Microsoft has categorically refused to comment on the existence of the project, a variety of blogs and rumor sites have suggested that a combined Microsoft and Danger team has been developing two smartphones with a sliding form-factor.

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Sidekick Data Restoration Still Not Underway

Monday, October 19th, 2009

By the time lost Sidekick data reappears, will anybody care? Of course, but the longer it takes Microsoft to restore data lost Oct. 5 in a massive server crash, the less the data is worth.

Dr. Cell Phone Repairs all sidekick models

Dr. Cell Phone Repairs all sidekick models

Or, at least the more customers will have invested, mostly in terms of their own time, in recreating address books and calendars. Some items will never be recreated, including photographs stored on the not-so-smartphone, so recovering the lost information is still helpful.

Last Monday, Microsoft and Danger told customers all their data was almost certainly lost for good.On Thursday, Microsoft took a more upbeat note, promising most data would be restored.

On Sunday, Microsoft apologized for the delay and saying only that data restoration would begin “this week.” They hope.

“The Danger/Microsoft team is continuing to work around the clock on the data restoration process,” Microsoftsaid in a press release. “We apologize that this is taking so long, but we want to make sure we are doing everything possible to maintain the integrity of your data.

“We continue to make steady progress, and we hope to be able to begin restoring personal contacts for affected users this week, with the remainder of the content (photographs, notes, to-do-lists, marketplace data, and high scores) shortly thereafter. ”

T-Mobile continues offering a $100 gift card and a month of free data service to afflicted Sidekick customers. Lawsuits have already been filed on behalf of angry owners. And our month of living Danger-ously continues…..

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/

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Microsoft, T-Mobile Apologize For Data Loss, Offer Month Credit

Monday, October 12th, 2009

T-Mobile and Microsoft said on Saturday that personal information that had disappeared from some customers’ Sidekick mobile devices was almost certainly lost and apologized for the incident.

Affected data includes contacts, calendar entries, photos, notes, and saved e-mails.

Dr. Cell Phone Repairs Sidekick Phones

Dr. Cell Phone Repairs Sidekick Phones

T-Mobile has partnered with Microsoft subsidiary Danger to manage data services for its Sidekick mobile devices. Danger began experiencing technical troubles last week that lead to the loss of some of the customer data stored on its servers.

For Sidekick users who ran out of battery power, removed their battery, or reset their devices during this period, data was lost both locally and remotely.

The company said that it plans to publish an incident update on Monday.

T-Mobile is warning users not to remove their Sidekick batteries or reset their devices because “the Microsoft/Danger network remains unstable and all content (including contacts, calendar, and notes) that you re-input into your device is not backed up on the network.”

T-Mobile said that it will credit affected customers the cost of their data plan for one month.

Those affected are not happy and have been complaining on T-Mobile’s online forum and elsewhere.

“I’ve been with T-Mobile for almost five years,” said a forum postattributed to “Lanisa.” “I want to leave them after this fiasco! All my important information is now lost.”

A widely circulated post on Sidekick news site Hiptop3.com claims that Microsoft hired Hitachi to upgrade its Storage Area Network (SAN) and that no backups were made before the upgrade process began. When problems arose during the upgrade, data was lost.

At the time this story was filed, Hiptop3.com was overloaded with traffic and non-responsive. An excerpt from Hiptop3.com’s report has been posted to T-Mobile’s forum.

Declining to comment on that report, a Microsoft spokesperson said, “Microsoft is working around the clockto understand the situation.”

John Pescatore, VP and research fellow in Gartner Research, said the incident was pretty unusual, noting that there have been plenty of cloud computing outages but nothing comparable in terms of data loss that he could recall. He said that while he had no confirmation about the report of the botched upgrade, it’s “Business 101 that you make a backup.”

To Pescatore, the incident represents a cautionary tale about risk that businesses face if they use consumer Internet services. “The consumer-grade services by definition are not business ready,” he said. “The issue is not that cloud computing can’t be done securely. It’s that consumer clouds don’t meet enterprise needs.”

Source:http://www.informationweek.com/news/

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