The latest tips and news from the Blogger team
The Blogger Outages (a novel)
October 26, 2006
It was a dark and stormy night. The air was quiet. Too quiet. Yet stormy. Suddenly, a beep rang out from a bedside pager. The engineer woke up, grabbing a soda to sharpen his senses. Blogger was down. He needed to bring it back up.
When I get the chance to write my pulp story of a gritty Blogger engineer struggling to keep the site alive, I may look back on this past week as a prime source of choice dramatic fodder. Until then, I, like many of you, will look upon this past week with irritation, disappointment, and maybe even a bit of anger.
You need to look no further than our
status blog
or perhaps your own experiences to know that
Blogger had a significant number of unplanned outages this last week
(forgive me my euphemisms?) and a handful of planned ones to clean up from the unplanned ones. It’s been a Murphyesque cavalcade of power failures, fileserver trouble, and wonky network hardware, and I hope you’ll believe me when I say that the Blogger staff is even more sick of it than you are.
First up,
our apologies
. We really regret these outages, which were a nuisance (or worse) to you. The past week’s performance was
not
representative of the kind of service we want to provide for you.
More importantly, though, what are we doing to prevent this in the future? Some good news:
In the short term,
we’re replacing quirky hardware and increasing our monitoring
to stop problems before they start (forgive me my clichés?). This afternoon’s planned outage did just such a thing.
In the long term,
we’re developing a new version of Blogger
with some great new features that is built on technology and hardware that has proven, Google-quality reliability. The current Blogger infrastructure is — albeit in a very
Lincoln’s axe
way — the same that Google acquired four years ago. Sure, we’ve built on it and expanded it significantly since then, but the truth is we’ve more than out-grown it. The new version is ground-up more scalable and less error-prone.
The news gets better: We foresaw the need for the long-term solution, well, a long time ago. Long enough ago that
it’s almost done, and you can use it
as the
new version of Blogger in beta
. If you can switch to it (see
requirements
) you really should. The new version of Blogger is better in almost* every way, including reliability. (It’s worth pointing out that none of this past week’s trouble affected the new version of Blogger or its blogs.)
It’s been a bad week for Blogger, and, as I hope you can tell, we’re not denying it. Instead, we have taken and will continue to take specific steps that make Blogger a more reliable, overall better service for you to use.
Oh, and as a final
dogfoodish
note, I’m pleased to point out that our
status blog
is now powered by the new version of Blogger. This means that we will be free of the Catch-22 of problems with the current version of Blogger preventing us from reporting about the problems with the current version of Blogger. (And we’ll fix that bug that makes it look like all the posts came from me. We’re on it.)
* The new version of Blogger is available only in English, which we will remedy very shortly. Also FTP publishing isn’t there yet, but that’s coming soon, too. Once these are in place, the new version
will
be better than the current version in every way.
Labels
+1
3
10th Birthday
13
2010
1
accessibility
1
ads
1
adsense
7
Amazon
1
Android
2
Blog2Print
1
Blogger
26
Blogger birthday
1
Blogger Fiesta
2
Blogger Meetup
2
Blogger Stats
2
Blogger Template Designer
1
Blogger2Print
1
blogspot
2
BlogThis
1
blogworld
2
Buzz
1
calendar
1
Chrome
2
code
1
commenting
2
community
8
conference
2
custom domain
1
developers
2
DMCA
1
draft
1
dynamic views
5
events
2
feedburner
2
feeds
1
firefox
1
follow by email
1
following
2
foxytunes
1
FTP
1
gadgets
10
GAN
3
Google Analytics
1
Google Buzz
1
Google Sites
1
google+
10
grandcentral
1
help
2
ios
1
jump
1
knol
1
lightbox
1
mobile
5
monetize
3
music
1
navbar
2
New UI
4
next blog
1
OneTrueFan
1
openid
1
OpenSky
1
Page Creator
1
pages
1
pixelodeon
1
polls
1
post summaries
1
read more
1
recommend
1
SEO
2
Share
3
support
1
SXSW
1
template designer
2
twitter
1
video
2
videoblogging
1
Viglink
1
web fonts
1
webcall
1
youtube
3
zemanta
1
Archive
2020
May
2019
Jan
2018
May
2017
Mar
2016
Nov
May
Apr
Mar
2015
Dec
Sep
Jun
May
Jan
2014
Feb
2013
Dec
Sep
Aug
Jun
Apr
2012
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2011
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2010
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2009
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2008
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2007
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2006
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2005
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feed