• On TV.com: Sexy summer bodies photo gallery
December 12, 2008 8:41 AM PST

Postal Service's 'Click-N-Ship' glitch resolved

by Stephanie Condon

The U.S. Postal Service learned Monday customers were having problems with its Click-N-Ship application but has since resolved them.

(Credit: U.S. Postal Service)

Updated at 9:50 a.m. PDT with new information.

While the federal government scrambles to find ways to stimulate economic activity, one of the U.S. Postal Service's most popular online services was malfunctioning and temporarily out of service during the Post Office's second-busiest week of business for the year.

The U.S. Postal Service Web site experienced a system-wide failure Monday morning, bringing to a halt one programs such as one Web tool that powers 20 online services including the site's free package pick up service, its zip code locator, and its rate estimator. Those programs were running again by Monday afternoon with intermittent interruptions, according to U.S. Postal Service Spokesman Michael Woods.

However, the Postal Service's "Click-N-Ship" application, which allows customers to go online and print and pay for postage and shipping labels, continued to malfunction, preventing customers from printing labels. The Postal Service took interim steps to mitigate the problem throughout the week, and as of Friday morning, the service is once again functional, Woods said.

"This is one of the busiest times for the Postal Service, and we're very sorry for the inconvenience this may have caused," Woods said. "We worked around the clock internally and with external business partners to find a solution."

Woods said he could not elaborate on the nature of the problem because they are still diagnosing the root cause of it. He said, however, that "it was a technical glitch in the system we had not been aware of" and that increased traffic was a factor. He said the glitch is resolved and it should not reoccur.

"We're confident we found the solution, but we're being very cautious and continuing to troubleshoot and do diagnostic tests of USPS.com," Woods said.

The Postal Service took the Click-N-Ship application offline completely for a brief period Tuesday night, Woods said. During the outage, as well as the rest of the week, customers were encouraged to sign up for free trial services at Stamps.com and Endicia.com.

With two million registered users, Click-N-Ship is one of the Postal Service's most popular online features. Thirty-four million labels were printed last year-- and the second week of December is typically the second-busiest week of business for the Postal Service. The third week is the busiest week of the year.

The Postal Service sent out 900,000 e-mails this week to explain the problem to its most active users, Woods said, and even put in some personal phone calls.

Stephanie Condon is a staff writer for CNET News focused on the intersection of technology and politics. She is based in Washington, D.C. E-mail Stephanie.
Recent posts from Politics and Law
Report: Microsoft, EU in talks over antitrust issues
Report: Guilty verdict overturned in MySpace suicide case
Court: MySpace not liable for offline assaults
New dashboard shows where federal IT tax dollars go
China delays rule for Net-screening software
Amazon positioned to win state tax battle
NY mayor: Info to the people will improve gov't
E-mails indicate EPA suppressed report skeptical of global warming
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by cyberpav December 12, 2008 9:35 AM PST
Is the next thing we can expect is that the USPS will be asking for a Congressional bailout while they complain about losing money as they raise their rates and give fat bonuses to themselves? Their service continues to deteriorate as well.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

With Chrome, Google reignites the OS wars

roundup Google Chrome OS, due in 2010, underscores the Web giant's cloud-computing ambitions and opens new competition with Microsoft.
• What Chrome OS has on Windows that Linux doesn't

Laying a guilt trip on military robots

q&a Georgia Tech's Ronald Arkin aims to configure armed robots with a built-in "guilt system" to help them avoid civilian casualties.

About Politics and Law

News at the intersection of technology, politics, and law, ranging from intellectual property to censorship to tech policy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Politics and Law topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right