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October 11th, 2009

The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going mainstream

Posted by Larry Dignan @ 2:41 am

Categories: General, IT Management, Microsoft, Mobile, Wired & Wireless

Tags: IT Administration, Information Technology, T-Mobile, Strategy, Management, Larry Dignan

If you’re a T-Mobile Sidekick user who put data, contacts and other items in the cloud we have some bad news for you: Your data is gone…probably forever. With cloud computing increasingly reaching the masses the average consumer will soon be enmeshed in the world of poor IT management. Welcome on board the IT failure express.

T-Mobile depended on Microsoft’s Danger unit to provide data services. Danger’s servers blew and apparently there weren’t backups. Oops. T-Mobile’s forums reveal (Techmeme):

Regrettably, based on Microsoft/Danger’s latest recovery assessment of their systems, we must now inform you that personal information stored on your device - such as contacts, calendar entries, to-do lists or photos - that is no longer on your Sidekick almost certainly has been lost as a result of a server failure at Microsoft/Danger. That said, our teams continue to work around-the-clock in hopes of discovering some way to recover this information. However, the likelihood of a successful outcome is extremely low.

T-Mobile then sends you to an FAQ so you can rebuild your contacts. In a nutshell, Microsoft/Danger can’t recover your data. Granted, it’s only photos, contacts and the rest of your life, but it could have been worse I suppose. Here are a few observations from this debacle:

  • Poor IT management is going mainstream. As we rely on the cloud more there will become a day when everyone will have some basic knowledge of IT management. Rest assured, Sidekick customers will know you’re supposed to back up your servers better. Gmail customers may learn a bit about scalability. And TD Bank customers certainly know that you can’t merge systems without a fallback plan if things go awry.
  • Cloud is nice. Hybrid may be better. A local backup of data is a necessary backup to the cloud. After all, photos, contacts and other items could be summed up in two words: Your life. T-Mobile’s hybrid approach: Don’t reset your phone.
  • These IT snafus will become more public. In many cases, IT failures happen behind the scenes. IT failures usually ding a company’s financial results or operations and there’s a good bit of finger pointing (the consultant, vendor, customer loop). Customer facing applications usually don’t blow up in such spectacular fashion. Today, all applications are becoming customer facing.
  • Corporate reputations will be partially be based on IT management skills. The number of IT failures and a company’s reaction to IT screwups will feed into a corporation’s reputation.

IT failures make our little world go around—Michael Krigsman (our IT Mr. Sunshine) even has a blog dedicated to them—and now you’re on the IT failure express too. Welcome.

Larry DignanLarry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and Editorial Director of ZDNet sister site TechRepublic. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 21 Talkback(s)
You should have already been doing that
Not doing backups of your data is just plain dumb, and a full system backup ccasionally as well if you have any sense at all.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: bsit@... Posted on: 10/14/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Always have local copies of your data  P. Douglas | 10/11/09
So why bother with the cloud  bsit@... | 10/14/09
Very few IT admins...  bjbrock | 10/11/09
Fire IT seniors, keep stock prices up  inetd | 10/12/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going  Cinder247 | 10/11/09
You should have already been doing that  bsit@... | 10/14/09
Grammar Nazi alert  davebarnes | 10/11/09
AP style seems to indicate  Larry DignanZDNet Moderator | 10/11/09
Found this in the AP Stylebook  Bill4 | 10/11/09
Verdict  David GroberZDNet Moderator | 10/12/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going  inetd | 10/12/09
Was there a way to synchronize to your PC?  Roque Mocan | 10/12/09
Actually there is on most phones  Michael L Hereid Sr | 10/12/09
Not according to a newspaper article  Qman_z | 10/13/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going mainstream  Michael L Hereid Sr | 10/12/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going mainstream  hrpuffnstuff | 10/13/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going  partman1969@... | 10/13/09
Yes, poor IT management is not going away  8string | 10/13/09
Stop calling this a server failure....  alsw | 10/13/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going mainstream  jake_t | 10/13/09
RE: The T-Mobile-Microsoft Sidekick data disaster: Poor IT management going mainstream  MikeBytes@... | 10/13/09

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