A cloud outage by a service owned by Microsoft has caused T-Mobile users to lose data stored on both devices and in the cloud. The service is run by Danger Inc., a Microsoft subsidiary that provides ...
Microsoft's Pink smartphone project was supposed to give Microsoft much-needed cachet in the mobile market and provide some semblance of a challenge to the iPhone. Instead, Pink is starting to look ...
Those waiting on word from Microsoft to find out if the company can restore the data lost from T-Mobile Sidekick devices, thanks to a massive cloud outage, got frustrating news. Microsoft says it is ...
Microsoft says it's sorry for the outage, but to a still-seething base of about one million Sidekick users, some of whom have already filed class action suits against the company, the apology isn't ...
Although Microsoft inherited Danger's service, this week's massive failure could call into question the broader reliability of depending on keeping data in Redmond's cloud. During her years at CNET ...
It's nearly Wednesday, and the question of what happened to the Sidekick service remains unanswered. At one level, it's obvious. T-Mobile US's Sidekick service, run by Danger and thus Danger's owners ...
Microsoft said Thursday that it believes it has recovered most of the Sidekick data that it initially feared might have been permanently lost. "We are pleased to report that we have recovered most, if ...
Microsoft late Monday held out a glimmer of hope to Sidekick users, saying that it may be able to recover some data previously believed lost in a massive server failure. “Recent efforts indicate the ...
Editor’s Note: The following article is reprinted from the Today @ PC World blog at PCWorld.com. Microsoft has good news for most Sidekick users: the company says it has recovered most of the data for ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results