Update: BlackBerry blackout hits RIM's customers

Hanging on the telephone

By Jo Best, 18 April 2007 13:16

NEWS

BlackBerry addicts were forced to undergo a period of unplanned cold turkey last night after a massive outage on Tuesday.

The outage reportedly affected users in Canada and the US for several hours and resulted in emails not being sent from or delivered to the handhelds. Customers of BlackBerry-maker RIM also report not being able to access service books.

Users posting on BlackBerry forums have reported that US BlackBerry Enterprise Servers and US BlackBerry Internet Service accounts have experienced the outage. Users in other countries, including the UK, who connect via a North American server will also be experiencing the blackout.

One such user is Nic Evans, IT director of Key Equipment Finance. Evans told silicon.com he has been experiencing delays in his email traffic and said his address book look-up no longer works.

RIM users have today received an email update informing them the server problem should now be resolved, although users on Cingular, T-Mobile and Verizon are still having "sporadic issues" connecting to the server.

"Most all BlackBerries should be working now. If your BlackBerry is not, please remove your battery and then place it back into the device allowing the BlackBerry to reboot. The signal should resume and emails should start coming into your BlackBerry. If it does not, your carrier is still having issues and we will send out another email when we are notified from the carrier that the issue is fully resolved," the email continued.

However, it seems UK users with servers based on this side of the pond have dodged the outage. Several UK CIOs confirmed to silicon.com that their BlackBerry service has been uninterrupted throughout the outage period.

UK mobile networks have confirmed that users in this country should be unaffected. Spokespeople for O2 and Orange said there had been no problems with UK customers, while an O2 spokeswoman told silicon.com only users with US-based servers will have seen any break in service.

According to US news channel WNBC.com, RIM's infrastructure failed at around 20:00(EST) following a reset and has been out ever since. The troubles are expected to continue today with the possibility of further problems caused as the backed up email filters through the system.

A RIM spokesman told WNBC.com the system is not expected to crash as the backlog of messages is delivered, however.

RIM told silicon.com in a statement: "A service interruption occurred Tuesday night that affected BlackBerry in North America. Email delivery was delayed or intermittent during the service interruption. Phone service on BlackBerry handsets was unaffected. Root cause is currently under review, but service for most customers was restored overnight and RIM is closely monitoring systems in order to maintain normal service levels."

There are now more than eight million BlackBerry users worldwide, according to company figures.

silicon.com's Andy McCue contributed to this report

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Firozali A.Mulla MBA PhD

    There are now more than eight million BlackBerry users worldwide, according to company figures.

    There are more Nokia usesr and the other.
    Why?
    i have one Blackberry that has a soffare problem and in Tanzania we would rather go for MOTORAZOR, Nokia, BenQ, Erricksonn, and other brands simply beacuse the balckberry was the cult. The big machine with the gun like hoster then now the faults pouring in about the size, RIM has made this like Nonia 6300.
    If you satrt copying other, you fail. RIM had risen too far too fast. Noe it has to come down.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ