December 2010

Early yesterday afternoon, one of our developers poked his head into my office.  “Hey,  have you been following the twitter traffic on Skype?  Apparently it’s down.  Are you still connected?”.  Sure enough, the Skype on my desktop was down.  In fact, it had crashed, and the client needed to be restarted.  And yesterday evening I discovered that the same had happened on my home computer.

Much has been written about the scale and magnitude of the outage – how big it was, how it happened, the technical underpinnings of Skype’s super-node model, whether businesses should rely on Skype, and so on.  Om Malik called Skype “one of the key applications of the modern web”, and pointed out the incomprehensible productivity loss associated with the outage.

At its low, fewer than 100,000 computers were connected to the Skype.  At 6 PM EST yesterday, reports were coming in that low hundreds of thousands of people were attached, and by midnight I was seeing 1.7 million.  This morning at 7 AM, 5 million, and as I write this, 6.8 million.

Skype is coming back online.  Slowly, but it is coming back to life.  It’s no small task, either.  If 25 million Skype users need to reboot their PC’s, and it takes 5 minutes per reboot, then the aggregate time to get the Skype network back online would be 125 billion minutes, or 237.8 years of rebooting.  Naturally, most of that activity is going to take place in parallel – that is at the same time as other Skype users are rebooting their computers.  But what will the elapsed time actually be?

It seems as if people are waking up, discovering that their Skype clients have crashed, and then restarting them.  In turn, super-nodes are coming back online, and capacity on the network is increasing.   Even so, we may not see Skype’s full recovery for another couple of weeks, as many people have already left for their holidays.

If Skype were a true telephone company, they likely could have been back online much more quickly.  The concentrated and centralized architecture of a telco lends itself much more easily to a restart, and that begs the question “How does a peer-to-peer network plan for a catastrophic failure?”

So far, Skype’s answer seems to be to bring online a cluster of “mega-super-nodes” – big beefy computers that can presumably seed the core super-node network, rather than relying on third parties.   By maintaining these nodes directly, Skype can presumably start a cascade reboot if necessary.  If, for example, Skype maintained 100 massive servers that could each act as super-node for 10,000 Skype users, they could bring 1,000,000 users back online within a matter of minutes, instead of the nearly 12 hours it took yesterday.

The businesses that Skype is courting as part of its push to increase revenues are going to want answers.  It’s simply impossible to rely on voice service that might take days to come back to life.

Over to you, Skype.

{ 3 comments }

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Don’t be afraid to kill old business lines.

by alec on December 13, 2010

Successfully transitioning from a current product to a next generation, without damaging the business today, is one of the toughest balancing acts in business.  That’s the challenge that the darling of the Canadian mobile market, RIM, faces today.

Friday afternoon a customer casually asked me what I thought of RIM Co-CEO Mike Lazaridis’ session at All Things D last week.  I hadn’t seen it, but the online commentary would lead you to believe that it was an unmitigated disaster.  The video highlights and the live blog of the session show host Walt Mossberg drilling on business questions, and Lazaridis gamely trying to focus the discussion on technology.  Mossberg was having none of it, unfortunately.

Lazaridis really had to do two things with this interview:

  • Defuse the growing criticisms of RIM’s competitive position versus iPhone and Android.
  • Paint a compelling picture of the future of BlackBerry without killing the current business.

Frankly, he didn’t do either very well.

In insisting RIM is today still a global leader, Lazaridis sacrificed credibility, and appeared defensive.  He would have been better to take a more humble stance and simply acknowledge that the company is late to the game in next generation smart phones, and then talk about the roadmap to making up that lost ground.  That would have been a great story, because it’s such a compelling future.

When it came to talking about the future, Lazaridis tap-danced around directly stating that future BlackBerry phones would be built on QNX, although that statement was a required element in order to paint a cohesive roadmap. It left the audience confused, not enlightened, and resulted in some of the scathing commentary published later.  His best option would have been to directly state “BlackBerry OS 7 will be built on QNX, and we expect to release that in the second half of 2011”, or something like that.

If you’re transitioning a business:

  1. Make sure you paint a compelling picture of the future for customers.  You have to get them enrolled in your vision, and excited about what’s coming down the pipe.
  2. Don’t be afraid to shoot your old business in the head.  The best way to get customers to upgrade to your new products is to position your old products as somehow deficient.

Now, where can I get one of those RIM PlayBooks?  I want one!

{ 4 comments }

5 mobile workforce predictions for 2011. iPass Mobile peers into their crystal ball.

December 9, 2010
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Mobility is one of the defining trends of today’s workforce.  More and more people are working on the go, outside of “normal” office hours, and from an increasing array of different kinds of mobile devices. Today iPass Mobile has released their report titled The iPass Mobile Workforce Report, Year End Review and 2011 Predictions.  It [...]

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3 lessons for start-up founders from Wikileaks

December 8, 2010
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The world is caught up in the Wikileaks story right now.  Whether it be the salacious details of the sex crimes founder Julian Assange is charged with, the all-out cyberwar being waged by Wikileaks supporters against targets like Mastercard, or the actual content of the leaks themselves, every day is another day that Wikileaks is [...]

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Enjoy the beaches, Tom!

December 7, 2010
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Monday morning one of our engineers, Tom, jumped on a plane for Australia.  He’s going to be living there with some friends for the next 12 months.  Tom’s not leaving us, though.  We’re going to use our own products to work productively and effectively with Tom as a part of our team. Initially I had [...]

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Bill C-32 enshrines planned obsolescence

December 6, 2010
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In my basement, there are three milk crates of vinyl records – the music I collected in my teens.  Those records haven’t been played in a very long time.  They became obsolete in October 1982 with the introduction of the audio CD.  CD’s were convenient, easy, and mostly scratch proof.  We all loved them, and [...]

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Viber–the best iPhone VoIP experience yet.

December 3, 2010
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Viber is a new VoIP client for iPhone users that provides free calling between Viber users.  Plus, it’s a free download from the Apple App Store.  Free and free.  You can’t get much better than that, can you? Some folks are hyping this application as the Skype Killer on mobile devices.  High praise! I thought [...]

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RIM scorched earth tactics send wrong message to developers.

December 2, 2010
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If you’re in the platform business, as RIM is, you need to be willing to tolerate a certain amount of competition for the core applications on the platform. It just goes with the territory.  That’s why I think that RIM are getting bad advice with respect to alleged patent infringer Kik Interactive. If you’re not [...]

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Lies, damn lies, and statistics

December 1, 2010
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Like a lot of mobile software developers, we track which handsets and operating systems are most popular. It’s critical to our business to understand which platforms have market share, are in ascendancy, decline and so on.  That’s the reason I read Royal Pingdom’s study of mobile OS usage so carefully this morning.  Region by region, [...]

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