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February 13, 2008 3:40 AM PST

RIM's co-CEO downplays BlackBerry outage

by Marguerite Reardon

BARCELONA--Research In Motion's co-chief executive officer, Jim Balsillie, doesn't seem too worried that the second major outage of the company's BlackBerry service in 10 months could hurt its reputation with corporate customers.

RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie

(Credit: Research In Motion)

"It was an intermittent delay, a couple of hours," he said. "It's old news. It happened days ago."

Balsillie's comments were in response to a question about Monday's outage and how it might impact the company's relationship with corporate customers. Balsillie had just given a keynote speech and participated in a panel discussion at the Mobile World Congress here Wednesday morning. He declined to answer further questions about the situation.

The BlackBerry outage, the service's second major interruption since April 2007, began at about 3:30 p.m. New York time Monday. Service was restored roughly three hours later, the company said in a statement. No messages were lost. Calling and text-messaging services weren't affected.

Research In Motion said in a statement issued late Tuesday afternoon that the outage was caused by "a problem with an internal data routing system within the BlackBerry service infrastructure that had been recently upgraded." The company has been upgrading capacity throughout its server farms to accommodate growing demand for its BlackBerry services.

This recent snafu and the company's previous major outage in April highlight a key weakness of the company's system, which is that it has a single point of failure.

RIM's service is centralized and works by routing all BlackBerry e-mails through one of two main network operations centers, which are essentially large data centers. One center is located in Canada and primarily serves the Western Hemisphere as well as parts of Asia. The other data center, located in the U.K., handles e-mail traffic in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East.

Of course, the world didn't stop on Monday when people were unable to get their BlackBerry e-mail for a few hours. After all, e-mail was still available the old-fashioned way, on desktop PCs. But the outage was an inconvenience. And as mobile phones become a bigger part of people's personal and business lives, frequent outages of any kind could drive these customers to consider other solutions.

It's safe to say that RIM has built a strong reputation as a reliable service provider that has attracted bankers, lawyers and lawmakers as subscribers. But if the outages persist or even become more frequent, the company risks losing some of these very valuable customers to competitors such as Apple and Microsoft, which also offer smartphones with e-mail capabilities.

Microsoft, in particular, presents a threat since most corporate e-mail already runs on Microsoft software. What's more, corporate users are familiar with Microsoft. Its software is also available on a wide variety of handsets offered from almost every major cell phone maker, including Sony Ericsson, which just announced its first Windows Mobile phone this week at MWC.

There's no question the stakes are high for RIM as competition grows. The smartphone market is the fastest-growing segment of the cell phone market. It grew about 72 percent last quarter for a total of 35.5 million phones sold worldwide. This compares to about 13 percent growth for the total mobile phone market.

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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What an idiot
by cchenoweth6 February 13, 2008 8:02 AM PST
I wouldn't downplay anything with Microsoft and Apple down your throat. This guy sounds like an old CIO I knew that was "Let Go".

Get the redundancy in! My Exchange based Windows Mobile 6 has never been down.
Reply to this comment
How extraordinarily arrogant
by polaris20 February 13, 2008 8:16 AM PST
"It was an intermittent delay, a couple of hours," he said. "It's old news. It happened days ago."

Yeah. No big deal. Just a couple hours of lawyers billing (yes, they do bill while reading and responding to e-mail on their BB's), board members responding to e-mail, etc.

No big deal. I love how in-house IT staff is expected at most places to have near 100% uptime, but these clowns at RIM think that they're not in the same boat.

I'm no MS lover, but WM6 is really nice, and works great, and requires no additional software beyond the Exchange server.

Seeing as how Exchange has the largest install base, RIM might want to consider buying some redundancy to avoid losing their status.
Reply to this comment
Uptime
by DigitalFrog February 13, 2008 8:57 AM PST
" I love how in-house IT staff is expected at most places to have near 100% uptime, but these clowns at RIM think that they're not in the same boat"

Do the math, 3 hours a year is still better than 99.9% uptime. And our BlackBerrys and BES servers have better uptime than our Exchange servers by far.

I do agree on the need for redundancy though.
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BlackBerry outage
by Bill_I February 13, 2008 8:20 AM PST
This guy is living in a dream-world. He sounds like some flaky cable operator who never gets concerned about his unreliable service. What if Edison power, Bell and Verizon phone outfits had the same cavalier attitude? Too big for his britches, he should resign instantly.
Reply to this comment
That was so yesterday
by jtfrazier2000 February 13, 2008 9:21 AM PST
A line we'll be using about RIM if they continue in their arrogance (gee I think Palm had a pretty good chunk of the smart phone market with Treo, what's happening now?) Things move fast RIM
Reply to this comment
stupid guy
by plee9 February 13, 2008 10:10 AM PST
for some companies, one hour means millions of dollars. i will never buy a blackberry in my life because of this incident and the ceo's response to the situation.
Reply to this comment
Single Point of Failure
by JayWes February 13, 2008 5:57 PM PST
In the age of Tornados, Hurricares, and terrists running a large system from on data center [niether data center backs up the other] is not very smart, if not gross mis-conduct, as the lawyers would say.
Get in the real world. provide backup capable so that when a Katrinia happens, or a major power outage occurs, and they will occur, that the system will still work from the backup site.
Reply to this comment
I love my new iPhone.....
by ralfsiemens February 19, 2008 10:08 AM PST
Super arrogant attitude. Not that I couldn't do without an hour of messages last week, but their whole attitude bugs me, coupled with the fact that they don't have distributed architecture. Can you say 1970's. So I went out on Fri and got myself the new 1GB iPhone. I don't miss my Blackberry....
Reply to this comment
!1GB
by ralfsiemens February 19, 2008 10:11 AM PST
As in 16GB....
RIM's Management Is tThe Problem
by cradvisor February 24, 2008 12:39 PM PST
Rim's CEO's comments were reflective of how far from reality RIM mgmt is from their customers. Consider a year ago that the top two execs were caught doing some dubious options manipulation - this says a lot. Their Board should clean house.
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