Blog Services Outgrow Their Data Centers 153
miller60 writes "The growth of the blogosphere is straining the infrastructure at popular service providers. TypePad is having serious problems again today, the latest in a series of outages and malfunctions as it switches to a larger facility. Bloglines is also apologizing for performance problems, and says it too will move to a larger data center to accommodate growth. There's been no sign of a mass migration from either service. Are bloggers and blog readers willing to accept rocky performance from popular services?"
Problems accessing... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:5, Funny)
4:16PM up 4 days, 6:24, 2740 users, load averages: 8.44, 7.42, 3.38
Mood: Slashdotted.
Bah! (Score:2)
4:16PM up 2 minutes, 1 user, load averages: 0.1, 0.27, 0.51
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:2)
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:2)
Re:Problems accessing... (Score:2)
Aboslutely Not (Score:5, Insightful)
Absolutely not. They will all stop blogging en masse and the blogosphere will cease to exist. What a brilliant question.
Oh please God. (Score:1, Insightful)
I'm not saying the blogosphere is the most useless thing on the net, because I really favor slashdot.
I will say that at least we slashdotters don't think we're "journalists."
Re:Oh please God. (Score:4, Interesting)
Yet the word journalist is more apropos for a blogger than a media careerist. Going back to the dawn of the printing press, you see much more emotion and variety until fairly recent times.
The media now seems locked in with one another. It is all Reuters and UPI regurgitation.
Bloggers that focus on consistency float to the top. My favorite 5 bloggers offer 80% of the news I read -- some of them are ex-media writers. I also read some blogs just to get a sens of alternate opinions.
My 5 blogs (2 public, 3 private) replace my e-mail newsletter (2 years running) that replaced my print newsletter (3 years before the e-news). My readership is down 95% as I attempt to transition, but I'm getting a much better view on who is reading and who isn't.
I'm committed to writing 7 days a week. I already spend 2-3 hours reading links mailed to me, why not set those links up for others with similar ideas? Is my attached opinion wanted by the readers? Only time will tell.
Re:Oh please God. (Score:2)
I'm committed to writing 7 days a week.
Do you feel an urgent need to fill whitespace?
Re:Oh please God. (Score:2)
Yes, we call that "journalistic ethics" and "balanced reporting."
Sure, you could say that it was more interesting when newspapers were blatantly communist or uber capitalist, or blazingly socialist, but to say the least, it's NOT cool to go around lying to the public and whipping up a panic for your own personal gain.
Re:Oh please God. (Score:2)
There's a difference between "trying" and "succeeding". Trying is what MSM does (in no small part because I've never even heard of them, unless you mean MSN). Succeeding is what Hermann Goering and Benito Mussolini did when they were journalists. Although Fox does tend to do a decent job on occasion - for example their moon hoax show - generally they tend to look like kooks when they do the news. Geraldo, anyone?
try print for a week (Score:2)
I realize that this wasn't the point of your post, but you really shouldn't make blanket statements like that, especially with a Slashdot user number as low as yours that implies that you're not a idiot teenager.
Try this: for one week, get the print New York Times (available at newstands nationwide) and spend an hour reading it. Just start on section A page 1 and try to read every article. Don't just bounce around
Re:Oh please God. (Score:2)
I will say that at least we slashdotters don't think we're "journalists."
The people who have any ambition to call their own writing journalism probably have a streamlined posting system. This doesn't mean that everyone that has a streamlined posting system - call it a news page or a weblog or a journal or a column - thinks that they're journalists. If I had to make such an extremely sweeping generalization, I'd much rather assign them the label "casual writers". But I think that in reality, very few peo
Aboslutely Not-A successful retreat. (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Aboslutely Not (Score:3)
Actually, thats a pretty good question...DOES anybody know of a good way to transfer your blog between services? Especially if you want to retain your previous posts and comments?
Re:Aboslutely Not (Score:2)
Theres loads and loads of choice for webhosting out there, I don't see what Blogger etc offer over these for anyone but newbies. Maybe i'm wrong, I don't blog.
Spreading the blogger load across a thousand different webhosting companies would make sense, and hey it'd give them something else to blog abo
Re:Aboslutely Not (Score:2)
Are bloggers and blog readers willing to accept rocky performance from popular services?
I figured the answer was "clearly not, since the services have chosen to upgrade to stop the problems. Seems like if the bloggers were willing to accept it the service providers wouldn't feel any obligation to do that.
Rocky Performance, here I come! (Score:5, Funny)
Yes.
Please reference: the Microsoft product line
Re:Rocky Performance, here I come! (Score:3, Funny)
I think you meant Reference: Slashdot.org error 503 service not available
more relevant to the current discussion
What are the other choices? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yea, there is Google Blogspot ... but even the big "G" has had
performance issues in the past. An option for /. readers is to
host a blog on your own site ... but that's not realistic
for the average Joe. This stuff is all free, so I think most
people are willing to grin and bear and suffer through some outages.
Plus I don't think the world is going to end if we are unable
to blog for a short while ... ;-)
P.S. Per my /. username, I did get a chuckle out of this quote from Bloglines - "Bloglines has been busting at the seams like the Incredible Hulk"
and yea, getting angry and transforming into a
Big Green Monster [komar.org] can really
wreck your clothing budget.
Re:What are the other choices? (Score:1)
Re:What are the other choices? (Score:2)
Re:What are the other choices? (Score:1)
Re:What are the other choices? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What are the other choices? (Score:3, Informative)
submitter, you suck (Score:5, Informative)
Re:submitter, you suck (Score:5, Funny)
Somebody really should invent some method of making a single disk failure a non-issue; perhaps, by using a redundant array of independant drives...
Re:submitter, you suck (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe there should be different types, or versions optimized for speed, reliability, redundancy, hot swapping, etc.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:submitter, you suck (Score:3, Interesting)
Which is why when *I* do RAID for production systems, I run RAID 1+0, with one stripe per enclosure, one enclosure per host bus adapter, and separate hot spare pools for each stripe (co-located within the same enclosure). If I'm running something like Sun A5x00 arrays, I sometimes go even further and use two HBAs per loop and split the array down the middle (which eliminates most single points of failure within the array -- "split loop mode"). The ex
Mod Parent REDUNDANT! (Score:2)
Expression (Score:3, Interesting)
Are we really surprised? How many people use the Internet on atleast a quasi-regular basis? I'm willing to bet that currently a large percentage either writes or reads a blog (likely both), and that those numbers are going to continue to increase.
-Da3vid-
Re:Expression (Score:2)
Oh no teh 870905p43r3 i5 b0rk3d! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What's the "Btogosphere"? (Score:3, Funny)
As longtime readers of Slashdot know... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:As longtime readers of Slashdot know... (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:2, Funny)
I'm sure xXxDragonTearsQTxXx, however, is quite pissed.
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Anyways, the vast vast majority of blog/journal nonsense is hosted by a very limited number of sites (compared to the vastness which is the internet)
From my experience, once you take away the sites with stupid simple interfaces, you have a very limited number of people with technical knowledge, and their friends.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Wow.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
It becomes complex when you push out 100 Mb/s or more around the world and suddenly you get complaints about slow connectivity to Poland.
It becomes complex when you start getting targeted by 13-year old hackers with a bevy of compromised Windoze boxes at their disposal.
It becomes complex when you have to figure out how to conserve state information across a few dozen web servers and a dozen or so app serve
Yes. (Score:1)
if they believe the rocky performance is temporary
then Yes
else No
Re:Yes. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yes. (Score:2)
then Yes
else No"
I'd say thatmost bloggers will be pretty resistant to changing providers. Like changing email addresses, or telephone numbers, it's a pain -- especially if you have an established blog.
Bloggers identify with their blog, and moving to a different site, with a different mechanism and layout, just doesn't feel 'right.' So they will choose to believe it's temporary... only prolonged crappy service will make them move.
who cares about the bloggers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:who cares about the bloggers? (Score:2)
ad supported services have better incentive to keep performance up because when the system is annoyingly slow people visit fewer pages and see fewer ads before they leave to do something else
Re:who cares about the bloggers? (Score:2)
But of course, LJ is only used by pseudo-emo and -goth teenagers who post about how dark and tortured they are, right? I kinda anticipate responses of this kind, so let me just say that it ai
Um... if the system's down they're not paying... (Score:2)
Will Bloggers Accept This? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Will Bloggers Accept This? (Score:2)
The main difference is that a PAID account should (but doesn't) have some sort of better performance compared to a free "you get what you pay for" account that loses posts, fails to update friend's posts, hoards emails, etc.
In other words, I had a free LJ account. I tried paying for it for a few
Keep in mind .... (Score:2)
Finally, I'm sure Bush or someone will cockup and give the bloggers something more substantial to complain about other than the speed and performance of typepad.
I don't (Score:1)
Yes they will (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yes they will (Score:3, Insightful)
Ever tried using a LiveJournal account to comment on a Myspace blog? Not gonna wo
Re:Yes they will (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know if this has been done already or not, but I imagine that one of the big providers could steal a lot of dissatisfied users from the competition if they made a stupid simple transitioning tool.
E.G. Type in your username and password, select your old blog/journal and hit enter. Ideally, it'd backdate old entries so it looks
Singularity? (Score:2, Interesting)
Is that a sign of this?:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singula rity [wikipedia.org]
well if that isn't, maybe this is?:
http://www.quantumbiocommunication.com/computer/fi rst-mass-producible-quantum-computer-chip.html [quantumbio...cation.com]
Heh (Score:2)
Re:Heh (Score:2, Funny)
Good for them! (Score:3, Insightful)
All things may be equal. (Score:3, Insightful)
The current situation with blogs looks about the same.
Blog services are sticky when they form a community of sorts. If you like the people you know through those services, you stick around. And if your web address is based on their site (i.e. xxx.blogspot.com), well, moving will cause you to lose all your readers, too.
So I would say the answer is yes, that people will stick to the services they enjoy, because they know that if they move, they'll get about the same level of service.
D
Re:All things may be equal. (Score:2)
Re:All things may be equal. (Score:2)
They also know that's where the hot girls [namb.la] and buff guys are.
So it remains popular even though its software engineering is truly abysmal.
D
Re:All things may be equal. (Score:2)
Re:All things may be equal. (Score:2)
He said that he joined Myspace to look at the pictures of cute girls, thus the link.
D
Just get hosting (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Just get hosting (Score:2, Informative)
One problem with hosting is that some companies, especially those in the budget range, frown upon CPU-intensive processes. Movable Type, Six Apart's blog publishing system for servers, was known to be CPU-intensive until recently, and several hosts banned MT (along with message boards like YaBB). While there might be roughly equivalent uptime, you might be limited in your options -- the hosting company might only provide a crappy version of blog software, or disallow them entirely.
Cruel (Score:4, Funny)
A free soap box is good for most... (Score:2)
*cough* (Score:2)
People who use these popular services probably aren't smart enough to set up their own blogs, like 'professional' bloggers do. 'Pro' bloggers host their own blogs, and consequently aren't going to max out their webhosts data center.
And let's not forget, it's only temporarily 'rocky'.
Re:*cough* (Score:2)
Re:*cough* (Score:2)
Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in
Re:*cough* (Score:2)
Money Money Money (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure they have ads and stuff.. but do ppl really click those ads? Very rarely do I ever click ads.
The Other Six-Apart Hosted Service Is OK (Score:1)
Of Course We Stay (Score:3, Informative)
Plus it is not like users are getting shafted. LiveJournal has had problems come up once in a while and they compensate thier users for it with things like an extra month of service free and stuff like that.
Outages happen and it are a fact of life on the Internet.
Re:Of Course We Stay (Score:2)
Kind of a stretch... (Score:2)
Re:Kind of a stretch... (Score:3, Funny)
They still call all that stuff between the genes "DNA"
Re:Kind of a stretch... (Score:2)
The Upside (Score:2)
If self hosting, what to use? (Score:3, Interesting)
I see several comments here about paying the $5/month and hosting the site yourself. Makes since to me, and I've been doing that for quite a while now. I've recently starting using blogging software from blogger.com [blogger.com] for my personal site [orner.net] instead of writing my pages from scratch because it makes it really easy to put up new pictures of the kids. However, I'm not sure how I feel about committing to a particular site like Blogger, even if I do host the site myself, as the blogging community shifts and twists as it grows.
What software is out there that's easy to set up that's more of a homegrown solution? I know of Moveable Type, but is there something else that the Slashdot crowd uses?
BTW: Am I the only one who thinks the term "blog" grates on his nerves much like "information superhighway" does?
--Lance
Re:If self hosting, what to use? (Score:2)
WordPress [wordpress.org] (PHP) is an amazing piece of software. I used to use Movable Type, and their respective pros and cons tend to cancel each other out, so it's really a matter of taste and priorities. There are tons of other solutions - TextPattern [textpattern.com] (PHP) and Typo [leetsoft.com] (Ruby on Rails) are also popular and widely supported, and if neither will do, check your favorite search engine's index.
And yes, the word "blog" is an amazing eyesore, and it's just a contraction for the hell of it. "Weblog" or even the accepted ancestr
Re:If self hosting, what to use? (Score:2)
Re:If self hosting, what to use? (Score:2)
Re:If self hosting, what to use? (Score:2)
Of course all these are GPLd
Re:If self hosting, what to use? (Score:2)
Thanks!
--Lance
Blah Blah Blog! (Score:2)
Perhaps this is their chance.... (Score:2)
What are they talking about?? (Score:2)
TypePad blogs are up, but are missing... (Score:2)
Ah well, at least my fascinating StringBuffer.append() [blogs.com] post is safe!
Blogosphere...more like Borosphere! (Score:2, Funny)
Blogging is a passing fad... (Score:2)
Self Hosting (Score:3, Informative)
My setup:
Setting up taught me things I didn't know about MySQL, Apache and Ubuntu and I don't have to rely on a third party provider.
Profit???
Re:Self Hosting (Score:2, Insightful)
One solution: euthanasia (Score:2)
Re:BLOG???? (Score:2)
Definitely not. CEOs and high-ranking executives of some of the world's biggest companies blog. Blogging is very popular with software developers, who post all sorts of interesting observations, solutions to problems, etc. For example, I was recently struggling to work out how to share a Spring ApplicationContext across web applications in an app server. My first instinct was to store it in JNDI, but it turns out the class isn't Serializable, so you