Gmail Outage Exposes Curse of Cloud Computing

Last week’s Gmail outage, which lasted for about 28 hours, has once again highlighted a major shortcoming of cloud computing and web-based services. The incidence exemplifies cloud computing skeptics’ greatest concern that unheralded disruptions in cloud computing services might cost businesses’ and individuals dearly.
Some Gmail users – including paying Google Apps subscribers - couldn’t access their accounts between 16 and 17 October. Incensed users expressed their indignation across the internet, while Mark, a Google Apps adviser, provided regular updates on the status of the issue, as long as it lasted.
“We know how important Gmail is to our users, so we take issues like this very seriously, and we apologize for the inconvenience,” Mark wrote in a Google Groups post.
Earlier this year, Amazon’s Simple Storage Service remained unavailable for 8 hours. That particular episode had also spawned similar questions regarding cloud computing. Companies will have to come out with ways to keep outages to a negligible count.
Image Credit: Web Monkey
Comments
Comments are closed on this article
![]()
Teknobenji
October 22, 2008 at 12:21pm
The Distric of Columbia signed a contract with Google for Gmail and all Google apps for appx 475,000 a year vs the avg 3-6 million a city that size would spend on its intranet (which would probably be more problamatic and have more than 28 hours downtime over the course of an average year)
![]()
maniacm0nk3y
October 21, 2008 at 1:09pm
Didn't some government being just go to google online apps? This is why internet apps will never be a mainstay.
Log in to MaximumPC directly or log in using Facebook
Forgot your username or password?
Click here for help.















