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Lundi, 25 Avril 2011 14:01

Saurik’s Comments On Cydia’s Outage, And Recovery Efforts

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Just yesterday, Jay “Saurik” Freeman posted a crimson enclosed notice on the front page of Cydia acknowledging an unfortunate problem plaguing a shortage of prominent digital domains. Many sites such as FourSquare, Hootsuite, the New York Times, ProPublica, Reddit, Quora, and unfortunately Cydia are enduring a significant outage, for obvious reasons, which is raising serious questions about the reliability of Amazon Web Services and all things cloud-related. On Thursday, Saurik posted an update on his Twitter regarding the widespread dilemma. “Amazon EC2 (which does host the primary Cydia website, purchasing, etc.) is currently experiencing severe issues: nothing I can do but wait,” he tweeted. Since then he updated with the following message: Amazon EC2, which hosts Cydia’s internal website, has been having extreme issues for – 40 hours. This outage affects the ability to purchase paid products, the Theme Center, and Manage Account. I (saurik) have been sleeping in hour-and-a-half shifts since this outage began in order to keep a dialog open with Amazon “Premium Support” regarding this issue. Recently, enough access was recovered in order for me to modify the home page to add this message. Unfortunately, Amazon’s status and ETAs have been confusingly vague and highly optimistic throughout the experience, causing me to be unable to make good decisions about disaster recovery choices. At this time, the latest news from Amazon AWS (as of two hours ago) was “that this will take 3-4 hours until full access is restored.” Meanwhile, Premium Support has asked engineering to prioritize recovering Cydia’s infrastructure. (For those interested in this sort of thing: this is the same Amazon EC2 outage that has been affecting other sites like reddit and foursquare.) During CNN Money’s ongoing coverage of the digital disaster, Amazon “touts the way it links together many different data centers to protect customers from isolated failures.” In fact, it promises to keep customers’ sites up and running 99.95% of the year, “or it will shave 10% off customers’ monthly bills.” We’ll have to wait and see how Amazon handles the situation and keeps the business of its customers. As usual, you can stay posted on the latest news about the topic by following us on Facebook, Twitter and/or by subscribing to our RSS Feed. Authors:

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