back to article OneDrive is broken: Microsoft's cloudy storage drops from the sky for EU users

It is OneDrive's turn to get a beating with the stick of fail as the service took a tumble this morning. Issues first began appearing at around 08:00 GMT as users around Europe logged in, expecting to find their files, and found instead a picture of a bicycle with a flat tyre or a dropped ice cream cone. Oh, you guys! @ …

  1. tin 2

    Every developer who's decide they can just say "something went wrong" with a little twee jovial pic or phrase, and suggest to the potentially harassed and pissed off user that they just try again needs a massive slap around the chops.

    1. Inventor of the Marmite Laser Silver badge

      With a brick

      1. Chunky Munky
        Devil

        I like to think that maybe they need a high five.......

        In the face..........

        With a chair!

        1. A.P. Veening Silver badge

          High five

          I would recommend a clue bat, that chair might get damaged.

          1. Fungus Bob

            Re: High five

            The Salmon of Correction (frozen)

      2. eldakka

        Backpfeifengesicht.

        1. Is It Me

          That is an awesome word

    2. MyffyW Silver badge

      Oh I don't know @tin_2 ... the little picture of a paper aeroplane with a snubbed nose well and truly made up for my inability to get to all my fecking files.

      "How I learnt to stop worrying and came to love the cloud" - as nobody ever wrote.

      1. bombastic bob Silver badge
        FAIL

        " the little picture of a paper aeroplane with a snubbed nose well and truly made up for my inability to get to all my fecking files."

        Is there a collection of these someplace? It might be fun to "share" it in a snarky manner around 'teh intarwebs'.

        So, at Micro-shaft, do they have *ENOUGH* *TIME* to draw these 'cutesy' "ooops ME BAD" types of "excuse" pics? But NOT! ENOUGH! TIME! TO! MAKE! THEIR! SERVICES! RELIABLE!!!

        I'd say they need to "re-think their priorities".

    3. Zippy´s Sausage Factory
      Windows

      Well the bicycle made me think of "The Prisoner", which is I guess familiar to anyone who has to use MS software...

    4. Mr Benny

      "and suggest to the potentially harassed and pissed off user that they just try again needs a massive slap around the chops."

      Perhaps iits the user that needs a slap around the chops for being such a cretinous mug as to believe all always available Cloud hype in the first place. Certainly anyone who continues to rely on MS cloud with no fallback option after the succession of cockups iis suffered deserves everything they get.

      1. tin 2

        yes, but said user will more often than not be some poor sod who's had it decreed upon them by some overinflated CIO that their company has gone cloud, and therefore they now have to keep all their files in the cloud, and that it has to be the MS flavour of it. Because cloud is good.

        Poor user ;(

        1. eldakka

          yes, but said user will more often than not be some poor sod who's had it decreed upon them by some overinflated CIO that their company has gone cloud, and therefore they now have to keep all their files in the cloud, and that it has to be the MS flavour of it. Because cloud is good.

          Poor user ;(

          In which case it wouldn't be "poor user", as it is no longer the individual user's problem, nothing for them to worry about. It is the corporations problem, and the individual user is perfectly entitled to sit at their desk twiddling their thumbs, reading the paper, browsing the web stress free, at their bosses expense, until the issue is sorted.

          1. Shadow Systems

            At eldakka, re: "Poor user".

            A friend of mine told me this evening that's *exactly* how her day went. Her employer mandated all their files be in the cloud, all their programs hosted there, & crowed happily about the money the company would save in doing so. Right up until they have *any* issue with said cloud provider that stops their work dead in its tracks. She couldn't get to their customer files thus she couldn't interact with said customers (lest they want said changes she was unable to make) & that left her with nothing to do all day but read her (physical) book.

            I asked if she was told to do make-work/busy-work in the mean time, to which she laughed "That would have required a connection to our host. I'll give you three guesses what we DIDN'T have all day and the first three don't count!"

            She got paid to sit on her ass & read a book today. And so did all her coworkers in their office. All because some CxO decided "the cloud" was the way to save gobs of money. I wonder if the idled employees got paid today out of said CxO's Golden Parachute to pound the lesson home, but I'm afraid the company will simply take it out on the innocent employees rather than the person that caused the situation to happen in the first place.

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      uh-oh Spaghettio!

      I work with a developer who insists on replacing every meaningful error message with one that just says "Ooops!". Every. Single. One. Apparently keeping it jovial avoids alarming users unnecessarily.

  2. katrinab Silver badge
    Happy

    My Synology File Station still works perfectly.

    1. Michael Habel

      As a Network Dirve? Or just a SMB Share?

      1. katrinab Silver badge

        As a network drive, an SMB share, a WebDAV share and via the Synology apps and the web interface.

        1. neilfs

          Until your power supply pops, then you can buy a complete new box. Great product but hardware support in my experience hasn't kept pace with the software side.

    2. DJV Silver badge

      Amazing, my kettle and wristwatch are still working as well. Thank you, Microsoft!

      </sarcasm>

      1. katrinab Silver badge

        I presume your kettle and wristwatch don't run on clouds; though your kettle might produce some clouds when working correctly.

    3. tin 2

      While I love Synology as a general concept, mine absolutely lost it's tiny mind when a disk failed. Made the data inaccessible by basically DOSing itself. Was not impressed.

  3. Pascal Monett Silver badge
    Stop

    "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

    Wrong. Those consequences have been repeatedly and frequently exposed, so that there is no one that works anywhere near IT who can claim that he didn't have a clue.

    What this is compares much better to a lesson in sheep herding, with major CEOs and "decision-makers" being the sheep, herded to this position bleating gleefully about how much money would be saved (and counting their additional bonuses on the way).

    Well, people, you can now take out your calculators and count the money lost, per hour, for all your employees who cannot do their jobs. You should at least return your bonuses in a token gesture to offset the cost of such short-sightedness.

    1. Missing Semicolon Silver badge
      FAIL

      Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

      Different budget. No consequence. Bonus intact. Your problem is?

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

      You should at least return your bonuses in a token gesture to offset the cost of such short-sightedness.

      The recipients would find that notion at best humorous, but not realistically entertain it as something worth considering. Personally I would agree, but only when augmented with mandatory tarring and feathering.

      1. Shadow Systems

        Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

        At the AC, re: tarring & feathering. Or perhaps a bungie plummet off the roof of The Tower into a shallow pool of Yorkies televised on live PayPerView? =-D

        1. Fred Flintstone Gold badge

          Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

          Or perhaps a bungie plummet off the roof of The Tower into a shallow pool of Yorkies televised on live PayPerView? =-D

          Exactly what cordless bungee jumping was invented for, methinks.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

      @Pascal Monett

      In modern management theory this is not correct. The CEO/Decision Maker still made the savings promised by the snake oil cloud vendors. This can be proved by looking at the invoices. They paid less for cloud services than they would for internal storage.

      The "failure" was made by the working level staff who should have been flexible and agile enough to cope with any failure.

      Consequently the CEO/Decision Maker bonuses will increase, working level pay/bonuses will be curtailed.

    4. King Jack
      Alert

      return your bonuses in a token gesture..

      Made me laugh. They'd rather quit and take a golden handshake as they move to another gullible company.

      1. Mad Jack

        Re: return your bonuses in a token gesture..

        The culprit will of course have already moved on to another role/company having got the job on the basis of achievements listed on their CV like "* reduced costs 2000% by moving storage to Microsoft Cloud (it cures cancer you know)"

        ;)

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "a lesson on the consequences of too much dependence on the cloud"

      As Pascal Monett said:

      "What this is compares much better to a lesson in sheep herding, with major CEOs and "decision-makers" being the sheep,..."

      THIS has been the main problem with corporate computing right from the start, and Microsoft essentially built their business on those with purchasing power having that mindset. The "You can't get fired for buying IBM" attitude was what made many businesses get desktop PC's in the first place, and that meant they ended up with an operating system made by a little outfit called Microsoft simply because that's what came with the boxes they'd just bought, not because there was any analysis of whether the OS that came with it was better than other options - the hardware and the software that came with it were generally viewed as a unit buy folk who generally didn't know any better.

      What has astonished me over the years is the willingness of businesses to put up with the blatant activities of Microsoft, Apple and others to try to actually force vendor lock-in on customers (rather than merely encourage it), and this despite (in MS's case, at least - I have zero experience of Apple products) software that has been shockingly bad and unreliable at times. Things like the file format wars and companies forcing GUI changes on users rather than offering them as new alternatives that people might enjoy...

      How in hell anyone could, with a straight face, laud Bill Gates and MS as having made computers easy to use (as I've seen stated on several occasions over the years) without intending to be sarcastic I do not know, unless they did so with a complete ignorance of the subject of IT. And there's the fundamental problem with IT in a nutshell - it tends to be people who don't understand IT who make the major purchasing decisions, both in businesses and in the home.

  4. Tom7

    The Register was keeping quite a useful count of Office365's actual availability in these articles, but that seems to have been abandoned, possibly due to the complexity of defining whether "Office365" as a whole is "available".

    By my rough count, we're somewhere down around Office352.

    1. Lee D Silver badge

      Office 352 - 360 depending on where you live, I think.

      Put it this way... it ain't five-nines:

      SLA level of 99.999 % uptime/availability gives the following periods of potential downtime/unavailability:

      Daily: 0.9s

      Weekly: 6.0s

      Monthly: 26.3s

      Yearly: 5m 15.6s

      It's closer to 2-nines or less:

      SLA level of 99 % uptime/availability gives the following periods of potential downtime/unavailability:

      Daily: 14m 24.0s

      Weekly: 1h 40m 48.0s

      Monthly: 7h 18m 17.5s

      Yearly: 3d 15h 39m 29.5s

      1. Hans 1
        Joke

        One moment ... is that "Yearly" ... because ... we have exceeded 3 days of downtime over the last 30 days....

        Office 365, Exchange, MFA and, what was the other, again ? For me, MFA outage lasted roughly 30 hours ... between 25 and 30 - not sure if my system was caching something, anyway ...

        Yes, it is funny, not really for the poor sods who rely on it ... I am forced to use it and no, never will I rely on it ... service is too flaky and they're too nosy.

      2. Soruk

        I think they're aiming for nine-fives.

    2. Hans 1

      By my rough count, we're somewhere down around Office352.

      Did you repost a comment from March ?

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Ah the Cloud

    If the answer is "the Cloud" it must have been a bloody silly question

    1. Roger Greenwood

      Re: Ah the Cloud

      Where does rain come from?

      1. Michael Habel

        Re: Ah the Cloud

        But, does it ever rain in Spain?!

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Ah the Cloud

          But, does it ever rain in Spain?!

          Constantly, if my recent off-season vacations are anything to go by.

        2. Tom 7

          Re: Ah the Cloud

          As we brummies say 'the rine in spine falls minely un the pline'.

      2. Lee D Silver badge

        Re: Ah the Cloud

        "Where does rain come from?"

        Nice try...

        ***A*** cloud, or clouds.

        Not ***THE*** cloud. Unless you live on Planet Cloud which just has a single blanket coverage.

        1. Ken Hagan Gold badge

          Re: Ah the Cloud

          "Not ***THE*** cloud. Unless you live on Planet Cloud which just has a single blanket coverage."

          Well I'm reading this on theregister.co.uk so ...

        2. Jamie Jones Silver badge

          Re: Ah the Cloud

          It's all cloud-cuckoo-land

      3. Pen-y-gors

        Re: Ah the Cloud

        Where does rain come from?

        $deityOfChoice is having a wee-wee

  6. Martin hepworth

    time to fess up...

    yup it take a couple of hours for the intern to alter the status in Frontpage... this time lag hasnt changed for years, no idea why they cant update their status update process

    1. Killfalcon Silver badge

      Re: time to fess up...

      I've got to be honest, I'm curious as to what goes wrong with this sort of thing, because it's the same pretty much everywhere.

      MMOs, ISPs, cloud providers, train companies, banks: the time lag between "customers notice en mass" and "the service desk are told/permitted to treat it as a major incident" is almost always achingly long.

      Almost all of them should have easily visible metrics that reveal the issue: your logins drop off a cliff. All the trains are behind on their routes. Transactions/minute have doubled or halved or whatever.

      So why don't they have a way for the poor grunts on the helldesk to be told "it's buggered, tell people we're working on it and will provide an update at 14:00 UTC"? Why are they left fielding angry customers armed only with "try rebooting" scripts? It's not just bad customer service, it's down-right unfair to your staff.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: time to fess up...

        Failure to properly instrument their datacenters so they have a clue when something falls over. Then again, looking at Server 2016 instrumentation here, a confusion mess by Microsoft design.

        1. Terry 6 Silver badge

          Re: time to fess up...

          "support orifice spent the early part of the outage in denial, asking users to clear their browser cache and cookies".

          Yep. It always seems to run like that. Any of these organisations. Customers knowing that something has gone wrong at the suppier end before front line staff are told. A week or so we had a problem with VM ( tbh pretty rare). The support guy started on the usual route, then halted and said something along the lines of "actually my colleagues are getting a lot of calls about this too, hold on". Then he went away for a couple of minutes and when he returned he's spoken to his boss, who'd checked....And you can guess..

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: time to fess up...

      "[...] this time lag hasnt changed for years, no idea why they cant update their status update process"

      UK. We recently had a power cut - seconds afterwards the wired phone on the master socket started ringing. A recorded message told me there was a known unscheduled outage. Further button pushes accessed more details. Neighbours with mobile numbers received text messages.

      Apparently their web site gave an estimated time window for power to be restored - and it was actually back before that.

      Now that is a useful advance in the use of technology - by Eon and/or the grid management.

      Hope they have planned what to do if the outage affects enough people to overload the phone systems.

      1. Anonymous Custard
        Headmaster

        Re: time to fess up...

        Likewise, a little while back. Albeit on only one of my landline phones - an old wired one which is kept in service for exactly that purpose.

        All of the other ones (DECT cordless jobs) were of course absolutely dead as the power cut had taken out the base station so no transmission to them, and of course the phone designers (BT, or at least the phones were branded as such) hadn't thought to include a back-up battery or capacitor cell in the base station for such eventualities.

        Given that those DECT phones seem to be about all that many retailers sell these days, one has to wonder in the case of such events how many people are actually effectively cut off from landline phones as well. Not that it matters so much in this age of mobiles I guess, but it's certainly a though.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: time to fess up...

          Possibly mobiles as a backup to non DECT phones. But that of cause requires all the base stations/towers/masts to have the same backup the exchange has.

          Cost savings I guess. :/

        2. eldakka

          Re: time to fess up...

          and of course the phone designers (BT, or at least the phones were branded as such) hadn't thought to include a back-up battery or capacitor cell in the base station for such eventualities.

          Adding such a feature would increase the cost of the phone to the 90% of people who don't need this feature.

          For anyone who does need/want that feature, there is an decades-old (possibly even century+ old) industry standard for that facility, an external battery/UPS/generator backup (pick whichever is suitable for your use case) that anyone is able to install and use across multiple devices, not limited to just the phone.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: time to fess up...

        UK Power Networks do this with great efficiency and granularity- right down to texting a mobile no. for a local manager out-of-hours if there’s an extended delay to a notified repair. Credit to then and why tf can’t the rest of the corporate world (especially the corporates who *specialise* in comms) do as well?

      3. Jamie Jones Silver badge
        Joke

        Re: time to fess up...

        "UK. We recently had a power cut - seconds afterwards the wired phone on the master socket started ringing. A recorded message told me there was a known unscheduled outage."

        Great. So, no sooner are you plunged into darkness, but the phone rings, causing you to stumble when going to answer it :-)

        And oy, my glass is still half-empty!

  7. Mike 125

    Could it be...

    It's like they *want* us to hate them. Or... they've started hooking us on the dependency, and then occasionally must remind us how impossible life is without them. It's just like the IoT Ts, which require a connection to work *at all*.

    Crazy stuff.

  8. Michael Habel

    Gee

    At this point, you gotta ask how much longer does M$ have? I think I'm starting to miss Steve now.

  9. qwertyuiop
    WTF?

    Working fine for me here (in London)...

  10. Simon Harris
    FAIL

    OneDrive: Failure is not an option...

    ... it's a graphic design opportunity.

  11. Dwarf

    Daily dose

    Of Microsoft’s cloud failure

    I thought the marketing line is that’s it’s more reliable than us doing it ourself ?

    This is the 5th failure of a ms cloud service this week.

    I wonder how many other internally visible services have amber monitoring right now ???

    1. Kobus Botes
      FAIL

      Re: Daily dose

      @Dwarf

      I wonder how many other internally visible services have amber monitoring right now ???

      All's green (externally, at least).

      But then again, on Tuesday when Azure MFA fell over and servers were rebooted left, right and centre, Azure status reports were all green as well.

      Boy, am I glad I am retired now!

      1. katrinab Silver badge
        Flame

        Re: Daily dose

        "I wonder how many other internally visible services have amber monitoring right now ???"

        None, because the monitoring thingy that changes is down, so it is stuck on green.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Daily dose

      none because they are all using Scom Cloud, sorry OMS, sorry Azure Log Analytics, sorry Azure Monitoring.

      So they'll tell you next week that there may be a problem coming up....

    3. David 132 Silver badge

      Re: Daily dose

      Dwarf "I wonder how many other internally visible services have amber monitoring right now ???"

      "More services are down. Go to red alert."

      "Are you sure sir? It will mean changing the bulb..."

      (with apologies to Red Dwarf)

  12. NanoMeter

    Just waiting for the first bankruptcy

    because of sky connection problems and the coming lawsuits.

    1. Dwarf

      Re: Just waiting for the first bankruptcy

      My guess is that it’s quite challenging to fund a lawsuit if you are bankrupt.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Just waiting for the first bankruptcy

        Were I in a state with UCC, a lawyer might take a stab at it on contingency. Maybe.

  13. The Real Tony Smith

    WTF?

    'Hi! Let's team up in getting this issue resolved'

    No let's not team up, your problem, you fix it

    1. Dan 55 Silver badge

      Re: WTF?

      Unfortunately they're your files so it becomes your problem.

      1. Tom 7

        Re: WTF?

        Do you think they are going to let me into the cloud to fix it then?

        'Team up' is MS speak for 'fuck off and leave me alone, customer support makes me angry'.

  14. Craig 2

    I wonder what the aggregate uptime for all Microsoft services combined is... It just seems pretty much every week there's some part not working.

    1. Dan 55 Silver badge

      As has been shown before, everything is connected to everything worldwide for some unfathomable reason. They're lucky they managed to fix it before the US woke up.

  15. Steve Davies 3 Silver badge
    Facepalm

    Sigh!

    Another Day

    Another MS Outage

    How long will it last?

    As we fondly remember the past

    When rebooting the fileserver

    took only a minute or two

    but now oh, what are we to do?

    while we wait and wait

    to learn our fate

    while MS just laughs

    all the way to the bank.

  16. DaLo

    I just don't understand the idea that it must be a single user's problem when there is an outage like this. Surely they have network monitoring systems that flag up within milliseconds that there is a significant problem and should let them know it isn't a user problem before the first call/tweet/letter comes in.

  17. steviebuk Silver badge

    I wonder if this is why....

    ...Mark Russinovich didn't do a Case of the Unexplained at Ignite in September? To busy with all the Azure & Cloud issues, maybe.

  18. N2
    Trollface

    Microsoft again...

    Its coming to a point, where it would be easier to report on whats working as opposed to what isn't.

  19. Chris Miller

    Weirdly, while my OneDrive was stuck on 'Signing on' most of the morning (now back to normal), downstairs the missus (using the same public IP, obvs) was fine.

  20. DRue2514

    It came back a couple of hours ago but has failed for me again just now. Crashed paper airplane.

  21. johnnyblaze

    It does make me laugh. People falling over themselves to get locked into these 'broken' clouds, being sold it as the best thing ever. If sysadmins had this much downtime on their on-prem networks, they'd be hauled infront of the boss, yet once you're locked into the cloud, your stuck with it. How much money must companies be losing?

    1. Jay Lenovo
      Angel

      Modern Milli Vanilli CEO's

      Go on and blame it on the cloud...

      'Cause the cloud don't mind

      And the cloud don't care

      You can't blame me with nothing

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Modern Milli Vanilli CEO's

        Jim Morrison had it right.

        This is the end

        Beautiful friend

        This is the end

        My only friend, the end

        A long time before MS was even thought of.

        Time to Junk MS people before you go bust relying on their (or any off premises cloud for that matter) [insert swearword of choice here]

        Just where are the countless class action lawsuits eh?

        We all know that there would be lawyers crawling all over this if this was an Apple service.

    2. imanidiot Silver badge
      Facepalm

      But somebody saved the cost of the hardware, support and running cost of doing it on-prem. So someone is getting a bonus anyway.

      Somehow failures are suddenly acceptable if you can blame an outside company for it. Outsource failure, insource succes...

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Thumb Up

      That's a brilliant idea!

      So that's why they go over to The Cloud...

      CEO: "7 days now, and we still don't have anything back up and running!"

      [Sysadmin looks up from their sunglasses, BBQ'd sausages, puts down their beer]: "Oh, the Cloud service provider is right on it, they will have a status update to me by tomorrow..." [Pours another glass]...

      You can't fire someone for incompetence if they don't even work for you! XD

  22. MJI Silver badge

    Damn, One One One

    Now got the theme to the One Show stuck in my head.

  23. mark l 2 Silver badge

    It does annoy me how the recent trend by web developers to change useful error messages to something akin to 'Ooops something went wrong!'

    I had an issue while trying to do something on ebay and it kept reporting one of these useless error messages, I had already tried it from different PCs and browsers and even a different ISP and always got the same messages. Yet ebay support claimed their was nothing wrong with the site and it must be a problem at my end.

    1. Ken Hagan Gold badge

      "It does annoy me how the recent trend by web developers to change useful error messages to something akin to 'Ooops something went wrong!'"

      It is annoying, but it is not surprising. As you fling more and more parts of your system outside your control, there comes a point where it is impossible for the software itself to figure out even whether something has gone wrong, let alone what. All that each part of the software can possibly know is that it farmed the task out to somebody else and it seems to be taking longer than expected. Worse, the only part of the software that can report back to the user is the front end, so the only reasonable message is some variation on "I sent your top-level request off to be processed and it is somewhere along a chain of handlers longer than I'd like to admit (and quite possibly longer than I'm aware of) so ... um ... fingers crossed then!".

  24. steelpillow Silver badge
    Thumb Up

    Classic!

    "The fact that Microsoft has a wide variety of images to illustrate failure..."

    ROTFL

    I wonder if any of them is compered by Clippy?

    1. Anonymous Custard
      Mushroom

      Re: Classic!

      Reminds me of the discussion that happened when the film "Broken Arrow" came out, and what the military term means.

      The point being that it's rather scary how often it must happen (or nearly happen) that the military has made up a term for it...

      1. A.P. Veening Silver badge

        Re: Broken Arrow

        The current military hasn't made up a term for it, they inherited it from the Roman military who in their turn inherited it from even further back. It can reliably be traced back to Thermopylae (300).

      2. Ken Hagan Gold badge

        Re: Classic!

        From https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Broken%20Arrow:

        "When you're aiming for a clean break/no splash, and instead, whether by distraction or an imminent sneeze, your log breaks off and sends the staff crawling back inside, only to disturb you for the rest of the day and cause immense discomfort and multiple re-wipes."

        Microsoft in a nutshell, then.

  25. Potemkine! Silver badge

    Office 361

    and counting...

  26. MrKrotos

    Its NOT just OneDrive

    Exchange Online - EX165763 - Can't access email

    Status: Restoring service

    User impact: Users may be unable to connect to the Exchange Online service via multiple protocols.

    Updated: 2018-11-29 10:17 (UTC)

    Start time: 2018-11-26 10:10 (UTC)

    Office 365 Portal - MO165899 - Admin usage report content delays

    Status: Service degradation

    User impact: Admins may notice that newly created mailboxes don't show in the Exchange usage report.

    Updated: 2018-11-28 06:29 (UTC)

    Start time: 2018-11-09 00:00 (UTC)

  27. Sil

    Strange, no problems from me on 3 different accounts including 2 OneDrive for Enterprise and 1 OneDrive for Noobs.

    1. Ben1892

      Again, most of the posts coming from those that don't use O365. I'm in the same as above; OneDrive for Business has been working fine for me all day since I started work at 7:30, Email was fine all week (and last week too for that matter) maybe we're using a different cloud?

  28. Aqua Marina

    OneDrive doesn't work even when it's working. When it can replicate a windows directory character for character exactly just like DropBox can, then I'll say otherwise. As it stands now there are too many windows file-system compliant characters in file names that OneDrive can't accept, and simply refuses to back up. Come on MS, it's an MS product, at least make it character compliant with your other MS products.

  29. SVV

    Microsoft has a wide variety of images to illustrate failure

    Well, that is probably because they have a wide variety of failures in their cloud every day. Perhaps they should make their images suitable for the type of failure instead of this cute slapstick approach which is really just rubbing salt into the wound.

    So, if you can't access Word files, a burning piece of A4. For Excel, some money on fire. OneDrive : a car with no wheels. Active Directory : a phone book with a padlocked chain round it. Azure : an IT manager getting sacked.

  30. dizwell
    Linux

    Working for me...

    As one who has been uploading 1TB for the past three weeks on a slightly dodgy Vodafone broadband connection from darkest Nottingham, I have to confess that my uploads have been progressing steadily all morning with no apparent interruption of service at all. Much to my relief!

    Then again, I'm running on Linux and using the onedrive utility from github.com/abraunegg/onedrive as my onedrive client. Maybe that makes all the difference?

  31. Highway Mike

    Just another reason why redundant services on site are still the best option

  32. AlexMac

    MY EXCHANGE E-MAIL STILL SEEMS UNABLE TO SEND. IT KEEPS TELLING ME IT CANNOT SEND:

    "Your mailbox quota on the Exchange server has been exceeded. If the problem persists, contact your Exchange server administrator. Select a different outgoing mail server from the list below or click Try Later to leave the message in your Outbox until it can be sent."

    Now I can only reply to people via my iPhone or iPad and AOL :-) Thank god I kept that dear old AOL relic, although that doesn't work with my Mac in recent years, for some reason..

  33. jaffa99

    The work I did at home last night was done again this morning when I got to the office. I just love it when I have to do something again because someone else screwed up.

  34. Chika

    So now you know why...

    ...I always said that I didn't trust cloud technology like this. The problem is the single point of failure; Microsoft.

    1. ma1010
      Paris Hilton

      Re: So now you know why...

      ...I always said that I didn't trust cloud technology like this. The problem is the single point of failure; Microsoft.

      MS is not merely a single point of failure, it's a single point of so many failures these days! I remember when they used to make good stuff. I was amazed at MS Office when it first came out. I was an evangelist for Windows and MS Office back in those days.

      But now I use Linux and avoid MS as much as possible. MS seems to be the death of anything it touches nowadays. Their cloud services seem to be down more and more. Their untested, buggy OS is pretty much total crap, and why, in the name of $DEITY do they insist on a short life cycle which seems to be just shoving out more bugs faster than what they used to do. They seem to destroy whatever they touch - look at Nokia and Skype. Don't know what happened internally there, but nowadays they seem to be driving off a cliff.

      Maybe if they'd fire their current leadership and go back to what they used to do - produce stuff that worked - they'd be useful again.

      Paris because I don't understand why MS seems to be set on committing suicide.

  35. Jeff 11
    Angel

    "Hi! Let's team up in getting this issue resolved. To start, can you tell us since when did the issue start? Have you tried clearing your mobile browser's cache and cookies? We'll be waiting for your response."

    ...code for:

    "We don't have adequate monitoring, we're putting obstacles in your path to make you think it's anything but our fault, and we won't update you until you update us."

  36. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Maybe Microsoft should think about moving their services to the cloud, they wouldn't have so many outages.

  37. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    One day

    Microsoft are going to fall offline and when they come back, all their customers will have gone to another supplier. Prepare for that day. Champagne on ice

  38. Carl D

    My OneDrive has been 'broken' for some time now... it was deleted along with 99% of the other useless bloat that comes with every Windows 10 installation.

  39. gomose

    Not for me

    Just accessed one drive no problem all files loading and opening flawlessly

  40. EthelAardvaark

    How can they get it so wrong?

    As someone who has used Google drive at home and OneDrive at work, it's always amazed me how poor OneDrive really is. It has far more difficulty synchronising and avoiding conflicts than Google, it has repeatedly lost updates to some files (possibly a symptom of the same issue).

    And now it appears that network resilience is a manual process.

    If i was the corporate budget holder, I know where my money wouldn't be going...

  41. angelo c

    Try Lucidlink to S3

  42. nextenso

    Msoft bashing again

    There you go again, sarky reporting of an Msoft problem making a meal of it instead of making a proper journalistic report of the issue.

    I have heavily used 365 and OneDrive and its predecessor SkyDrive almost since its inception and rely upon it, very cautiously at first. Over many years I have rarely had service interruption and those that arose were shortlived, apart from 3.

    In comparison, I have worked for a number of large companies with own server rooms/farms. Collectively I lost count of the many times server glitches and crashes brought those companies grinding to a halt, often for long periods while techies slaved trying to coax machines that were end of life back into service.

    The cost of running own servers is formidable with technology and software advances making installations redundant so quickly.

    In my own business I had a £4m set of Sun servers, Jukebox, storage etc. It kept chuntering on with ever increasing costly innovative care and downtime, so slow compared to new machines which we could not afford to upgrade to. Changing to Msoft 365 breathed new life into everyone's work, such a relief.

    No software/hardware provision cloud or otherwise is ever going to give 100% availability, as cloud provisions get larger and larger and stress points make themselves known, new problems are discovered. For providers its still a learning game especially as ever advancing user software loads unexpected conflicts.

    Please just report without all this sacasm that is almost like a vendetta against Msoft - with whom I have no connection other than being a customer grateful for a service that saved us so much cost.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Msoft bashing again

      But not all of us run a carwash

    2. JohnFen

      Re: Msoft bashing again

      "almost like a vendetta against Msoft"

      It's not a vendetta against Microsoft, or at least not against Microsoft in particular. El Reg treats all companies this way. I would be unhappy if they gave Microsoft a pass.

  43. russmichaels

    backup your cloud storage

    If you do not want to be caught out by such problems, then I suggest backing up your cloud storage to a second location.

    I have GoogleDrive as well, and I sync my onedrive and googledrive storage, so if one goes down for any reason, I can still access all my data on the other one.

    1. Hargrove

      Re: backup your cloud storage

      There is a practical issue with redundant cloud storage as a solution, from a system standpoint.

      The 'net is an integrated end-to-end system comprising the sum of connected users, hardware, software, and information connected at any given instant. Its size, configuration and complexity, and functional state change continuously at intervals measured in nanoseconds. It is intrinsically indeterminate and interminable.

      The system is unbounded. But it is not infinite. Its performance, although incomprehensibly vast, is finite. And it is often limited by local subsystem performance, the unintended consequences of which can have catastrophic effects over large parts of the overall system.

      Such a system cannot be reliably operated or maintained. The constant string of reports and the discussion in El Reg are concrete evidence of that.

      A brief excursion into reality to support my assertions. From an end user perspective the system has no specifications. Not many years ago IT users demanded and equipment and service providers guaranteed to deliver a minimum level of performance with a specified reliability. Rliability was commonly expressed in terms of "availability" (basically the percentage of the time that the system was guaranteed to work as specified over a given period, typically a year) and contracts provided for adjustment in cost for if they couldn't restore service in a timely manner to meet the threshold.

      In this era 99% was considered poor, four 9's (99.99%) was considered reasonably achievable.

      From my narrow perspective, this all changed around 2010, as federally-mandated initiatives for automatic security patches and updates and cloud computing were implemented. I saw the specified system availability in an annually-renewed service level agreement for a web hosting service I was involved with go from 99% to 90% and then disappear completely.

      This was NOT due to any lack of diligence, competence, or desire on the part of the service provider. The simple fact is that dependence on third party software and services, and the unintended consequences of continuing patching and updates from a myriad of software vendors and third party service providers make it impossible to guarantee anything.

      The Achilles heel of the system is bandwidth. Marketing hype notwithstanding "unlimited data" and its more egregious step-sister "infinite bandwidth" are myths. They are exercises in metaphysics, valid only with the presumption that we have all eternity to download our data.

      For a few individual with a few tens of gigabytes of data, who need to retrieve specific files, redundant cloud storage and local back up may be a practical solution at the moment. On any kind of scale, however, the bandwidth simply isn't there. We are already seeing this in the massive marketing push to get users to accept "unlimited data" plans, advertising "speeds up to" under terms and conditions that do not actually guarantee ANY level of performance.

      This is not going to end well for anyone.

    2. Terry 6 Silver badge

      Re: backup your cloud storage

      I would suggest, if budget supports it,( SOHO for example, not too much data for an external HDD or two) you use the cloud account as the second/third backup. But back everything up locally first. Cloud for when the building can't be accessed/burns down as a business continuity measure. YMMV of course.

  44. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    What could go wrong? They said.

    I feel absolutely vindicated.

    I initiated a system of backing up 'One drive' on HDD's I own off-line because I was forced to use a system that I didn't trust. Everyone laughed at me for being a Luddite.

    Now the boot is on the other foot. They have all come crawling to access my archives and I have been refunded my costs of the drives by the boss (No apology though).

    I don't trust the 'Cloud' and I don't trust 'virtual' money because all you need to do to conquer a country is take it off-line - and we KNOW that can be done.

    All I need now is a nuclear bunker - on expenses naturally...

  45. MatsSvensson

    Cloudy the cloud says:

    Looks like you're trying to get to your shit?

    No dice today, cowboy =(

    Anything else I can help you with?

  46. karlkarl Silver badge

    You use amateur solutions, you are an amateur and you will run into amateur problems.

    Enjoy your amateur problems you amateurs ;)

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