Roundup: Skype's Massive Service Outage
The Internet telephony service Skype is experiencing a massive outage today, leaving its users to ponder a new question: what's a mega-supernode? Here's a roundup of some of the notable analysis and commentary.
December 22, 2010
The Internet telephony service Skype is experiencing a massive outage today, leaving its users to ponder a new question: what's a mega-supernode? That's apparently the key to restoring Skype's service, which is built atop peer-to-peer networking technology.
"Under normal circumstances, there are a large number of supernodes available," Skype wrote on its blog (currently unavailable). "Unfortunately, today, many of them were taken offline by a problem affecting some versions of Skype ... Our engineers are creating new ‘mega-supernodes’ as fast as they can, which should gradually return things to normal. This may take a few hours, and we sincerely apologise for the disruption to your conversations." Skype's popular video calling may be the last service to be restored, the company said.
Given Skype's enormous global user base, the Web has been abuzz with discussion of the outage and its impact. Here's a roundup of some of the notable analysis and commentary:
GigaOm - Skype is one of the key applications of the modern web. It has become a major telephony provider. For the first six months of 2010, Skype had 6.4 million billing minutes versus 10.7 billion minutes during entire 2009. Clearly, it is already a hit with consumers, and over past few years it has become part of the economic fabric for startups and small businesses around the world. I am not sure we can comprehend the productivity cost of this outage.
Faster Forward (Washington Post) - Do not rely on Skype's own "heartbeat" system-status page, which reports that everything is working fine except for a text-messaging issue reported on Dec. 16. FYI to Skype management: You might want to update that page a little more often
Cloud Avenue - There are people who are eager to see (Skype) fail because of their political or business interests. Skype has already responded about the downtime and, in spite of their reasoning, the talk about “the cloud fail” continues to spread. I thought I will do a quick post to highlight the FUD as a public service message.
AllThingsD - Maybe the company was just trying to reinforce its warning that Skype is not a replacement for the telephone in an emergency. Needless to say, this isn’t the kind of conversation the company was seeking to spark as it tries to build momentum for a pending stock offering.
Mashable - Last month, Skype hit a new usage record, hosting 25 million people on its service concurrently, speaking to both the ubiquity of the service and the problem created when it goes down.
Digits (Wall Street Journal) - Downtime is a potentially huge problem for Internet services like Skype, which have made an effort to convince users that they’re as stable as traditional carriers. The service is known for being relatively reliable, with its last major outage in August 2007.
If any of our readers are familiar with mega-supernodes, please feel free to share your insight in the comments.
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