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It's the entire service, not a bunch of files. When Netflix went down due to AWS outage, could you image them just "restoring a backup" on rackspace and running just like that?


The core service, sure. The problem is that Netflix accounts for something like a 3rd of US bandwidth consumption. Not many services can sustain that. Netflix also has to manipulate a giant library of assets. Doesn't sound like this is part of their service. A normal company should be able to fail-over.

I have been experimenting a lot with Google App Engine. Failing over from a PaaS like that is not easy because your app typically relies on a bunch of proprietary APIs. However, it is possible, provided you keep right replication and architect the application accordingly.

You also don't need to fail over 100% of your app. I don't have a very clear understanding of what Soluto actually does (sounds like a GotToAssist competitor), ability to fail over the part of the system that facilitates the remote desktop experience would be more important than administration or creation of new accounts. (This is a crude example.)


I've got several services (both consumer and commerical) running on Azure and right now I just see some issues with storage in the south. Web/Worker, VMs, Sql, etc. are running just fine it appears. Any pointers on where I should be looking for potential issues?


When was it? We actually have great experience and great uptime with Azure. It's a very unique case for us.


Are you running Linux or Windows? This was June/July.


We're running on their table storage from web roles and worker roles (their platform-as-a-service)


It's a very different web service now.


Hi, Roee from Soluto here, please see my full comment: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4793863


Hi, please the detailed comment here: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4793863


Hi all, Roee from Soluto here (providers of the W8 data). I'll try to respond to the questions and comments here.

But first, a bit of background to the size and quality of our userbase. I warn you this is going to sound defensive, but it's important to establish that we're not a bunch of kids who sampled 50 Win8 VMs. So - Soluto's agent has been downloaded on over 3M machines in over 150 countries. We had one of the first applications running on the developer preview of Windows 8 over a year ago, and our first metro app was in the first batch released to the public in February together with the launch of the first consumer preview. We are a 2012 Microsoft Partners of the Year (in the startups category), we share investors with the likes of Skype, Dropbox & LinkedIn and most importantly - we're building a service that helps techie folks to provide tech support for their friends and family remotely without the need for remote desktop (free for supporting up to 5 PCs). Our hundreds of servers now deal with over 50 million data points every day, and we're big data junkies. Use Google to verify all that :)

And now a couple of points I hope will answer some of the questions-

1. The data used for the Windows 8 part is only based on RTM versions and later, i.e. it does not include developer preview or consumer preview.

2. Our users are outright techies, but on the other hand the machines we manage are a mix, since our users support their friends, parents and grandmas, leading to some really non-techie level usage types (IE6, 5 toolbars, etc). That being said, Windows 8 is more prominent on the supporter side in our userbase (i.e. we see more techies using it then non-techies).

3. The sample size for Windows 8 is still way smaller than that of Windows 7, naturally. But that page is automatically updating, so check it out once in a while, and with time the data will become more accurate, as big numbers tend to become. We still think it's valuable that way, even if not everything is perfectly significant. iTunes crashes more and Google Drive crashes less, that probably won't change without an update from these vendors.

4. To those who say there are no BSODs in the world since Win7 - I'm sorry but you are just plain wrong. I see the data on a daily basis. The situation is much better then XP and Vista, but part of the population still suffers from BSODs, mostly because of 3rd party drivers. I personally had a BSOD on W8 (the sad smiley modern BSOD, but still a BSOD).

5. I'm not the OP of this post and I don't know vinothshankaran.

6. As our page gets refreshed with data, we'll also be adding more components and clarifications.

If there's anything specific you'd like to see added to the page, by all means please share it here. As the lead product manager at Soluto and a long time HN enthusiast, crowdsourcing our requirements to this community sounds like a dream :)

And if you have specific questions or comments do feel free to contact me at roee@soluto.com

One last point- if you're the kind of person who receives phone calls for PC tech support from your friends and family members - give Soluto a try :)

Roee


Fantastic sample size. You should really mention it on linked page since a lot of people are skeptical about these sorts of surveys because of small sample sizes.


> we're building a service that helps techie folks to provide tech support for their friends and family remotely without the need for remote desktop

What is the thinking behind that? The appeal of remote desktops is that "show me" is orders of magnitude more efficient than "tell me". I would take the remote desktop every time.

The usual problem with remote desktops is they are a pain to setup. This is somewhat alleviated by Skype doing screen sharing, but sadly doesn't allow remote interaction.

Chrome's remote desktop has worked really for me, and does allow remote interaction. It does require Chrome to be installed on the supportee's system and one extension installed, but I haven't found that to be a problem. https://chrome.google.com/remotedesktop for anyone who is interested.

So do you have something in mind that is even more efficient than "show me" and remote desktops?


Hi, Roee from Soluto here. When you deal with big numbers you see lots of BSODs, both in W7 and W8. The people surrounding you may be taking better care of their machines then the average. I personally encountered one BSOD on my shiny W8 machine.


"The people surrounding you may be taking better care of their machines then the average."

Selection bias works both ways, people who install such "utility" software may be taking worse care of their systems and installing more bloatware.


Just to clarify, the vast majority of our audience currently arrives through sites like LifeHacker, MakeUseOf and HowToGeek. "Bloatware" is uncalled for in this case, it usually refers to shit that's trying to make money of you without providing value. Please read my full comment that includes our bias analysis: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4793863


Will do! For the record, I was referring to the sort of user who installs "tuning" software in general, I was not referring to your product specifically. No insult was intended.


What is the distribution of BSODs? Are they evenly spread over the population or are some users/machines responsible for the majority of cases?


We will improve the visibility of this, thanks.


And that's exactly the type of positive marketing that works! Give something, and people will like you.


Exactly! By the way, when I talk about "sleep", I didn't mean clicking the lock button, but rather "closing the lid" of my iPad cover. And you're absolutely right I didn't mentally treat my iPad as a smartphone but rather as a laptop. What right and what's wrong? I'm not sure. Just shared my thoughts and immediate insights, and as always - open for criticism.


I waited all my life for someone to think I'm famous :) But seriously - as part of my job I get hundreds of emails every day that I need to review or respond to. It's a reasonable usage scenario I think.


I'm not saying it's unreasonable. But you have very easy fixes:

1) mute your iPad,

2) Don't sleep in the same room as your iPad.

In addition to more complicated ones being offered elsewhere in this thread.

I was just posting to point out that it isn't necessarily a design flaw just because it doesn't fit your use case as, to the contrary, I would be very upset if my device didn't notify me of something just because it was sleeping.


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