Google apologises for Blogger outages

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

Topics

Blogger, Outage, Google

NEWS

Internet search giant Google has apologised for a series of "unplanned outages" on its Blogger site over the past week.

Google's blogging service experienced five outages, both planned and unplanned, due to "power failures, fileserver trouble, and wonky network hardware", according to Pete Hopkins, a Google programmer and blogger.

Major Blogger troubles began on Saturday with an outage that lasted more than three hours, caused by the failure of both a "critical component and its backup", according to the Blogger Status blog.

Hopkins wrote: "Blogger had a significant number of unplanned outages this last week (forgive me my euphemisms?) and a handful of planned ones to clean up from the unplanned ones."

On Tuesday there was a planned outage to repair faulty hardware. On Wednesday another unplanned outage meant Blogger was down "for some time", leaving users without access to either Blogger or BlogSpot. On Thursday there was a planned outage to replace the piece of network equipment that was causing the outages, according to Blogger Status.

Google apologised "profusely" for the outages, saying that the lack of service to users was not acceptable.

"We really regret these outages, which were a nuisance (or worse) to you. The past week's performance was not representative of the kind of service we want to provide for you," Hopkins said.

Blogger's unreliability affected a charity blog created by staff at CNET Networks UK, owners of ZDNet UK, to promote a 400km charity cycle ride across Kenya for IT charity Computer Aid.

Helen Cooke, marketing manager for CNET Networks UK, said uploading content, especially pictures, onto Blogger has been difficult in the past. "Although we really like the Blogger interface, we have spent lots of late nights trying to upload new content and the service is pretty up and down," she said.

Google is in the process of replacing "quirky" Blogger hardware and increasing its monitoring efforts, to try to prevent these kinds of outage in the future. Blogger was acquired by Google in 2002 while a start-up, but is still running on much of its old hardware, wrote Hopkins. A new version of Blogger, currently running in beta, will run on hardware with "proven reliability", according to Hopkins.

ZDNet UK's Andrew Donoghue contributed to this report.

Talkback

Is that you inherit infrastructure that doesn't scale.

Mike Barrett 28 October, 2006 17:22
Reply

If the acquiree had foresight and sense, then the infrastructure would scale. Mind you, if that were so it probably wouldn't have been acquired.

R

Rupert Goodwins 28 October, 2006 20:04
Reply

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

EvaBrian

This is a great start to leverage virtualization and standardized deployments, however even a well-managed virtualization solution has its...

31 minutes ago by EvaBrian on AWS CloudFormation automates cloud app deployment
EvaBrian

that's a great news for android users! The cloud is set as the battleground that will decide the fate of Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS as...

2 hours ago by EvaBrian on Google's 'Bouncer' scans Android apps for malware
EvaBrian

Google knows that the only way that Android is going to survive is by a superiority of numbers. By doing that, it is playing a completely different...

2 hours ago by EvaBrian on Apple vs Google: Cloud concepts that clash
awbMaven

""As a result of Butyka's alleged conduct, researchers were unable to use the computers for more than two months while NASA removed the malicious...

2 hours ago by awbMaven on US indicts Romanian over NASA climate change hack
subhorup

It simultaneously worries me and uplifts me that a self-proclaimed group of internet activists name themselves after Indian mythical figures....

11 hours ago by subhorup on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
naviathan

It's actually far easier to work anonymously on the internet than you think. With tools like Tor bouncing your traffic around the world before...

14 hours ago by naviathan on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
Agnostic_OS

1000272134 and bluedalmatian with you both there but then I'm still in 10.04 land (and happy with it)

14 hours ago by Agnostic_OS on Ten factors that make Ubuntu 11.10 a hit
apexwm

Interesting article and definitely see your points on the products mentioned. One of the top products for our Help Desk (approximately 20% of all...

21 hours ago by apexwm on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
Paul Hutchinson

Absolutely - this should obviously not be handled my isp - but handled by their hosting operator. What's been suggested here is that my isp police...

21 hours ago by Paul Hutchinson via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Techs UK

Looks like a great phone. I don't notice any deficiencies in WP7. used IOS before, that's pretty good. I don't spend much time in Apps, all i need...

1 day ago by Techs UK on Nokia pins US 're-entry' hopes on Lumia 900
Larry Bloggy

Now with the help of these apps you are always synced with MS outlook while on the move. Just download apps like xobni or outlookreflex and get...

1 day ago by Larry Bloggy via Facebook on Outlook Social Connector beta 2 and the LinkedIn connector
mike40g123

Your details are wrong. The version currently being made is the one with 2 USB ports, 256MB RAM and a network port. This is the Model B. The...

1 day ago by mike40g123 on Raspberry Pi boards set to go on sale
Moley

The thing that has been puzzling me for quite a while is how Anonymous can remain anonymous whilst not only being active on the Internet but also...

2 days ago by Moley on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
Don Dilly

If what Semantec is saying is rue, that is even worse and shows a complete disregard for thier users. If what Anonymous claims is true and the...

2 days ago by Don Dilly via Facebook on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
MattChurchy

Didn't seem particularly biased to me either. Oh though you might have mentioned some other competitors with free search and email services...

2 days ago by MattChurchy on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

James - exactly as much as anyone paid you for your comment; I don't feel that I need to say that I'm independant and unbiased, but just for you...

2 days ago by Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy
Carl White

Once they realise symantec are willing to pay real money, they will simply keep extorting, unless of course symantec/authorities can use the...

2 days ago by Carl White via Facebook on Symantec offered hackers $50k in source code sting
Jonathan Hassell

You can find more information on BS 8878 by Jonathan Hassell its lead-author at http://www.hassellinclusion.com/bs8878/ The page includes a...

3 days ago by Jonathan Hassell on BSI publishes first British web accessibility standard
servermanagement

Thanks for this list. Now I know, what to include on my system to make it more functional.

3 days ago by servermanagement on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
1000092626

What if it's a 4 car household? The point is, more bandwidth = more things you can do simultaneously, like streaming HD video in one room of the...

3 days ago by 1000092626 on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices