Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Data Management
Storage
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

HP's hosted storage service down for almost a week

Not only are there synchronization problems, the client software has security issues as well

Zone

Featured Zone
Business Continuity Zone
An organization's business continuity plan helps keep critical functions running during an emergency–the power fails, a virus is unleashed on your network, a natural disaster has occurred. Even the slightest downtime or loss of data can cripple your operation. CDW can help you prevent disaster by implementing a well-planned recovery strategy.
Click here to visit the Zone
See All Zones

April 22, 2008 (IDG News Service) Hewlett-Packard Co. said its new online storage service will protect your data "whether your hardware fails, your computer is lost or catastrophe strikes." But catastrophe appears to have struck HP instead. The company's Upline service, launched April 7, has been suspended for almost a week because of technical issues with one user's account.

HP is working to resolve the issue and the service could be back up this week, said Sheila Watson, an HP spokeswoman. The service's Web site appears to be online, but users are unable to purchase the service.

"HP chose to temporarily suspend the Upline service to investigate what we believe is an isolated technical issue. We anticipate that the Upline service will again be available to users this week," Watson said.

She declined comment on the number of users affected by the outage. Files on Upline, a hosted service to backup and store digital content, will remain intact, Watson said. HP launched the Upline service after its recent acquisition of Opelin, an online storage services firm.

HP notified users of the suspension originally last week and offered a full refund to U.S. users, Watson said. The service charges between $4.99 to $8.99 per month for unlimited online storage to home, family and professional users.

While happy with HP's refund decision, users reported problems in the client software to upload and synchronize files with the hosted service. Calling Upline a good idea that was horribly executed, blogger Derek Pegritz said the software disappeared randomly despite multiple installs. The software didn't even crash, it just disappeared, Pegritz wrote.

"Only $60 a year to back up literally all your data? That's serious value there ... but not if the software client you need to get your data up that Upline can't even stay afloat long enough to tally up a single folder's worth of Microsoft Word documents. Pathetic," Pegritz wrote.

In addition to being unable to synchronize gigabytes of data, the client software raised security concerns for one user.

"Upon checking I realized that the app had suddenly connected me to some other person's account," wrote "Ridz" in a comment on TechCrunch. "I'm just wondering if anyone else got logged into MY account and if MY data could have somehow ended up in someone else's account," Ridz wrote.

The service meltdown in the early stages could be part of growing pains to evolve the service, one user wrote.

"I guess they had a few headaches ... as the service is relatively new. ... I am not surprised," wrote "Jon," in a comment on TechCrunch.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2008 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

What People Are Saying

TODAY'S TOP BLOG
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols: 64-Bit Linux Adobe Flash Player: Surprisingly good When Adobe decided it was time to provide a 64-bit Flash Player, they released it on Linux and Solaris. Wow. [more]
White Papers
2008 Internet Malware Trends Report
Researchers at IronPort, now part of Cisco, have identified a link between originators of malware, such as Storm, and illegal pharmaceutical supply chain businesses that recruit the botnets to send spam. This report highlights the impact and uncovers the true drivers of pharmacy spam and continued malware innovation.
Download this report now! 
Your Say
Chrome a Windows killer?
Anonymous wrote: Having to be connected to use apps that are not inherently dependent upon being connected is a liability...
[read the story | have your say]
Hot topics now:
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
Infoblox IP Address Management Solutions Brief
2008 Internet Malware Trends Report
Enterprise Findability Without the Complexity
View more whitepapers 
 

Forrester Analyst Report: X86 Server Virtualization For High Availability and Disaster Recovery
According to a recent Forrester study, 49% of enterprises surveyed that are implementing or interested in x86 server virtualization. In particular, x86 server virtualization can improve the availability of business-critical systems that are important to the business but not critical enough to warrant the investment in expensive and complex resiliency technologies like fault-tolerant hardware or clustering.

Download this whitepaper 
Yankee Group. "Disaster Strikes! Is Your Business Ready? Disaster Preparedness for Mid-Sized Firms"
Mid-sized businesses have long struggled to protect their IT systems. Many firms are inadequately protected and mistakenly think that a disaster is rare and won't happen to them anytime soon. This custom Yankee Group Report studies the newest technology trends, such as virtualization and storage replication, which make powerful DR solutions attainable and affordable even for mid-sized businesses.

Download this whitepaper 
VMware White Paper: Transforming Disaster Recovery - VMware Infrastructure for rapid, reliable and cost-effective Disaster Recovery
VMware Infrastructure transforms disaster recovery by providing you fast, reliable and cost-effective disaster recovery. Why suffer from the slow, expensive and unreliable problems associated with traditional disaster recovery solution? VMware makes disaster recovery affordable through consolidation savings and re-use of existing servers for your disaster recovery site. Experience the speed of virtualization!

Download this whitepaper