Mobile Tech Today

CIO Today Network Sites:   Top Tech News  |   CIO Today   |   Mobile Tech Today   |   Data Storage Today
News & Product Reviews for Mobile Tech Users
Tuesday, February 9th 
Home
iPad
Laptops
Mobile Phones
Mobile Gadgets
GPS & RFID
Wireless Connectivity
Wireless Security
Mobile Industry News
MTT Press Releases
 
Free Newsletters
Top CIO News
 
Mobile Tech Today
 

Advertisement
Mobile Industry News

Sidekick Data Lost -- And Vendors Say Oops, Sorry

Sidekick Data Lost -- And Vendors Say Oops, Sorry
October 12, 2009 9:50AM

Bookmark and Share
In a historic failure, all T-Mobile Sidekick user data was wiped out. T-Mobile and the cloud-computing provider, Microsoft subsidiary Danger, said they "express our apologies." An analyst called the Sidekick data loss "an unmitigated disaster" that may kill T-Mobile's device. It appears that Microsoft's Danger had no Sidekick data backup.


In the annals of company failures that permanently affect a product, the Sidekick wipeout may have its own chapter. On Saturday, T-Mobile and Microsoft Relevant Products/Services announced that a Microsoft subsidiary had suffered a "data Relevant Products/Services-service Relevant Products/Services disruption" that wiped out all Sidekick users' contacts, calendar entries, to-do lists, and photos.

The Sidekick phone emphasizes its social connectivity Relevant Products/Services, so the personal data is particularly important to most owners. Sidekick's data is maintained by a company appropriately named Danger, a subsidiary of Microsoft. For more than a week, the phones have been suffering data outages, and there have been reports of some users trying to reboot their phones by removing the battery -- which erases saved info on the device.

A joint statement said T-Mobile and Microsoft/Danger "express our apologies" for the wipeout.

'An Unmitigated Disaster'

Apologies may not be enough for the estimated one million T-Mobile Sidekick customers. Avi Greengart, an analyst with industry research firm Current Analysis, called the episode "an unmitigated disaster."

In fact, he said, "this may prove to be a fatal blow to the Sidekick brand." Greengart pointed out that this was "much worse than just a service outage."

At the very least, he said, Sidekick will take a "very large hit," but it may well turn out to be a final hit. The phone is already facing serious competition, he noted, from "flashier smartphones" such as Motorola's CLIQ, which has more to offer the same young customer Relevant Products/Services who wants a socially connected device.

"I wouldn't buy a Sidekick today," he said, adding that T-Mobile will survive this disaster even if the device doesn't.

Greengart said a big reason that the episode is such a head-slapping failure is a rumor he's heard that Danger didn't have a backup for the servers that went down. "I've been hearing from a lot of IT Relevant Products/Services people, from small shops and from Fortune 500 companies, that there must have been no backup," he said, adding that such basic caution is "IT 101." Neither Microsoft nor Danger have released details about whether there was a backup.

If a Backup, the Loss 'Makes No Sense'

If there was a backup, he said, the loss of data "makes no sense." Greengart noted that, ironically, Microsoft said when it bought Danger last year that it did so because of Danger's experience in cloud Relevant Products/Services computing Relevant Products/Services.

In the joint statement, Microsoft/Danger and T-Mobile said its teams were working "around the clock in hopes of discovering some way to recover this information." However, it noted that the likelihood of doing so "is extremely low." It offered a page of FAQs with tips on how to rebuild address-book contacts.

The statement also advised customers not to reset the devices by removing the battery or letting the battery drain completely, as any current content on the device would be lost.

The Sidekick wipeout may also be a wake-up call for the cloud-computing industry, which is growing by leaps and bounds as companies and individuals trust online vendors with their data. Most users assume that such vendors are backing up the data, but disasters such as the Sidekick episode may lead customers to look more carefully at their agreements.

Advertisement



 Mobile Industry News
1. DT Ponders the Future of T-Mobile
2. Obama Seeks Phone-Tax Repeal
3. Verizon Will Offer Motorola Devour
4. Sony Ericsson Unveils Aspen Handset
5. Intel & Micron Double Flash Memory


advertisement


 Most Popular Articles
1. Reporters Invited To an Apple Event Set Next Week
2. French Telecom Exec Confirms Apple Tablet on the Way
3. iPhone Loses Global Market Share as Rivals Advance
4. Nexus One Complaints Flood the Online Forums
5. Verizon Requires Data Plan, But Voice Gets Cheaper


advertisement

Have an informed opinion on this story?
Send a Letter to the Editor.
We want to know what you think.
Send us your Feedback.

 Related Topics  Latest News & Special Reports

  Macworld Focuses on Mobile Apps
  MS: Windows 7 Doesn't Hurt Battery
  Nexus One 'Support' Passes the Buck
  The Pros and Cons of Apple's iPad
  DT Ponders the Future of T-Mobile

 Technology Marketplace
Compliance
Stand out from other IS Professionals and increase your earning potential.®).
 
Enterprise Hardware
Now is the best time to buy a new APC Smart-UPS!
HP ProLiant G6 Servers: Perform like a superstar, Save like an accountant www.hp.com
 
Enterprise I.T.
Learn how Microsoft server upgrades can create efficiencies
Stand out from other IS Professionals and increase your earning potential.®).
 
Hardware
Find out why now is the best time to buy a new APC Smart-UPS!
 
Microsoft/Windows
Read about how to add efficiencies with Microsoft Virtualization.
 
Network Security
AT&T Synaptic Compute as a Service. Boost your power on demand.
 
Mobile Enterprise Spotlight

To Love or Not To Love: Apple iPad Pros and Cons
Now that the iPad has officially been announced, opinions are rolling in on this device that combines the features of an iPod, e-reader, and tablet PC. Will the iPad turn fewer heads than the iPhone?

Analysts See iPad Price Drop, with Some Cannibalization
Just weeks before Apple officially rolls out the iPad, financial analysts are making pricing predictions. But could the analysis itself hinder the initial demand for the pricey tablet computer?

Bar Codes Go Mobile, Get Hip Again
For decades, retailers have used patterns of black dots and lines to encode data onto products. Now, bar codes are gaining favor as an easy way for cell-phone users to view ads and other data instantly.

Advertisement
Enterprise Software Spotlight

Macworld Focuses on Mobile Apps as Apple Stays Away
Macworld 2010 kicked off in San Francisco showcasing hundreds of Mac products and services, expert advice, and demonstrations -- but this year mobile apps may steal the show.

Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.

SAP CEO Abruptly Resigns; Co-CEOs Will Take Over
Business-software maker SAP announced an abrupt strategic shift in the corporate suite with CEO Léo Apotheker resigning, to be replaced by co-CEOs Bill McDermott (left) and Jim Hagemann Snabe (right).

Advertisement
Enterprise Hardware Spotlight

Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.

IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."

'Dead Simple, Dirt Cheap' JooJoo Tablet Shipping Soon
The JooJoo, a web-browsing tablet device that is the subject of a high-profile legal dispute, appears on track to reach buyers at the end of February, but the tablet scene has dramatically changed.

Advertisement
Enterprise Security Spotlight

Chinese Cyberattacks Seen as a Pervasive Threat
Google's accusation that e-mail accounts were hacked from China landed like a bombshell because it cast light on a problem few firms will discuss: the pervasive threat from China-based cyberattacks.

Patch Tuesday Release Will Tie Microsoft's Record
After a light start to the year, Microsoft is getting ready to dump a heavy load on the shoulders of IT administrators. On Patch Tuesday next week, Microsoft will release 13 patches.

Cybersecurity Vendors Look Hot in 2010
Tech-security companies are poised to become Wall Street darlings this year, thanks in part to Google's tiff with China, which reinforced an already positive outlook for major security vendors.

Advertisement
Navigation
Mobile Tech Today
Home/Top News | iPad | Laptops | Mobile Phones | Mobile Gadgets | GPS & RFID | Wireless Connectivity
Wireless Security | Mobile Industry News | MTT Press Releases
Also visit these Enterprise Technology Sites
Top Tech News | CIO Today | Mobile Tech Today | Data Storage Today

Services:
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About CIO Today Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Services for PR Pros (In partnership with NewsFactor) | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 Mobile Tech Today. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.