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April 13, 2009 3:52 PM PDT

BlackBerry consumers experience e-mail outage

by Marguerite Reardon
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Update 4:22 p.m. PDT: Comments from a Research In Motion representative added.

BlackBerry users around the country were without e-mail for about 3 hours in a nationwide outage that affected users on all major wireless networks.

BlackBerry Curve

(Credit: Research In Motion)

From about 1 p.m. EDT to about 4 p.m. EDT people who subscribe to a BlackBerry e-mail service through their wireless carrier instead of being offered the service through their companies, could not send or receive e-mail or access the BlackBerry Internet Service Web site. They also weren't able to create new accounts, access their Internet mailboxes, integrate third-party e-mail accounts, or view e-mail attachments during this time.

Marisa Conway, a spokeswoman for Research In Motion, the company that makes the BlackBerry devices and operates its push-e-mail service, said that "some customers experienced a delay receiving e-mail earlier today, but it wasn't system-wide." Service is now operating normally, she added.

But a representative from Sprint Nextel confirmed the outage and said the outage also affected the BlackBerry Internet Service Web site.

Subscribers on all four major U.S. wireless networks--AT&T, Sprint Nextel, T-Mobile USA, and Verizon Wireless--complained that they had no access to e-mail until about 4 p.m. EDT, at which time they started getting a flood of e-mails that had been sent earlier in the day.

Research In Motion, the company that makes BlackBerry smartphones, offers two main services for connecting to the Internet and getting access to e-mail. The first is RIM's enterprise solution, which requires companies use a BlackBerry server through which all corporate e-mail goes through. It links directly with a user's work e-mail, contacts, calendars, and business applications.

The other service offered by RIM is the BlackBerry Internet Service, whrough which it provides consumers with connectivity to personal e-mail services and the subscriber's carrier acts as the liaison between the users e-mail and the BlackBerry smartphone.

RIM uses a centralized architecture to filter all its e-mail traffic and push it out to consumers' phones. Critics of the BlackBerry service and architecture say that this centralized approach makes the service more vulnerable to outages. And indeed, the company has had some serious outages in the past. In April 2007, the company's enterprise service suffered a huge outage that left millions of corporate BlackBerry users without access to e-mail.

While any sort of outage is not good, the fact that the problem affected consumers rather than corporate customers is an important distinction. Some of the BlackBerry users, who had lost e-mail for a few hours, said they didn't even notice that they weren't able to send or receive e-mail. By contrast, during the massive corporate BlackBerry two years ago, consumers felt the affect more acutely as many business users rely on their BlackBerry devices for corporate e-mail.

That said, there are still many small-business and self-employed people using RIM's BlackBerry Internet Service for business purposes. What's more, as RIM aggressively courts consumer customers, the company will need to avoid service glitches of any kind to woo consumers that already have a wide array of options when it comes to smartphones. The smartphone market is highly competitive, and cell phone users don't need another reason to choose an alternative device, such as Apple's iPhone or the upcoming Palm Pre.

Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies. E-mail Maggie.
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by boychuk April 13, 2009 4:11 PM PDT
In an unrelated development, iPhone users were able to freely send and receive emails without relying on a central server.
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by Perry_Clease April 13, 2009 4:31 PM PDT
I have an iPhone. To be fair if AT&T had problems with 3G and Edge, and I wasn't in range of a joinable wireless network, then I could not send/receive email.
by gggg sssss April 13, 2009 5:26 PM PDT
mobile me anyone?does it work at all yet? or hav eall teh fan boy sgiven upon it?
by seven7dust April 13, 2009 10:31 PM PDT
@gggg sssss
yes it works fine ! thx for your concern btw
by AlanHub April 13, 2009 10:50 PM PDT
lol boy shut up, besides iphones dont have push
by azahn16 April 25, 2009 7:06 AM PDT
well thats ture with blackberrys buy a pre or an i phone or or a windows moble phone
by Hep Cat April 13, 2009 4:17 PM PDT
Biggest problem with Blackberries: Single point of failure. BB users have lost e-mail several times over the past few years - what gives?
Reply to this comment
by solu1978 April 13, 2009 4:34 PM PDT
Its funny how the clowns jump on to news and start comparing anything and everything with Apple
Reply to this comment
by bonesbautista April 13, 2009 4:53 PM PDT
I think that the commenter you're reacting to was just being silly. I own a BB for work and an iPhone and was surprised to see the iPhone getting notifications first today - really, but kept it to myself all day until now. I'm cutting boychuk some slack...
by sting7k April 13, 2009 4:56 PM PDT
I can't believe the world is still turning, BB email was down for hours. How did people survive?
Reply to this comment
by jimmy88008 April 13, 2009 5:02 PM PDT
I survived!
In fact, I noticed it, but I get other BB slows too. So I wasn't entirely surprised. Unfortunately, I wasn't in a life or death situation.
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by gggg sssss April 13, 2009 5:28 PM PDT
time to get back to Windows mobile. No central server. No BES BS. And cheaper to boot.
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by Shaun822 April 13, 2009 7:37 PM PDT
Meh, between 1 and 4 I was at my computer so not a big deal. If it breaks during the commute or on a day I'm away from the computer I would be slightly more worried, but in 99% of the isntances the world will keep turning during a 3 hour break.
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by Bill_I April 14, 2009 10:27 AM PDT
There seems to be a weird dialect known as "spokespeak" which comes with rosy-vision glasses and is hosted by Dr. Pangloss. --- Prime example: "Marisa Conway, a spokeswoman for Research In Motion, the company that makes the BlackBerry devices and operates its push-e-mail service, said that "some customers experienced a delay receiving e-mail earlier today, but it wasn't system-wide." Service is now operating normally, she added." --- Additional examples abound, they work for large banks that are somehow solvent, and auto makers supposedly not going bankrupt, and Bernie Madoff. Timmy "turbo-tax" Geithner has applied for membership, but not accepted yet.
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