| By Yakov Fain | Article Rating: |
|
| August 6, 2009 07:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
6,700 |
During the last half an hour Twitter is down. It's hit by a denial of service attack.
And when Twitter is down, there is no way to quickly say to the entire world that Twitter's down.
Actually, to put it properly, there is no way to broadcast (push) this message.
But the good news is the some nice fellow create a very simple and cute Web page that answers ( in three characters or less) just one question, "Is Twitter down?", which at this very moment shows a large red
Yes
In general, creating such a simple Yes/No site can save lots of money to the vendors of any other commercial software. Say, your firm runs an e-commerce Web site GreatOnlineStore.com. When your server is down, the phone lines of your customer support get swamped (and you pay for all these 800 numbers!). Frustrated customer keep banging your server getting errors back...What a mess....
You could have avoided this by running a simple Web site IsGreatOnlineStoreDown.com, which would put the minds of frustrated customers at ease - people can survive for an hour without your GreatOnlineStore, but what's most important, this red Yes will give them a feeling that everything is under control. They know what's going on!
Think about it. I'm not kidding.
Published August 6, 2009 Reads 6,700
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Yakov Fain
Yakov Fain is a Managing Director of Farata Systems, consulting, training and product company. He has authored several Java books, dozens of technical articles. SYS-CON Books released his latest co-authored book , Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex and Java: Secrets of the Masters in Spring 2007. Sun Microsystems has nominated and awarded Yakov with the title Java Champion. He leads the Princeton Java Users Group. He is an Adobe Certified Flex Instructor. Yakov co-athored the O'Reilly book "Enterprise Application Development with Flex". He twits at twitter.com/yfain.
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