By Harry McCracken | Tuesday, December 21, 2010 at 1:33 am
Progress–to swipe an ancient General Electric slogan–is the technology industry’s most important product. Its second-most important product? That’s easy: blunders. In fact, you could argue that the two are inextricably intertwined. An industry that was more uptight about making mistakes might be more cautious and therefore less inventive.
It’s also sometimes difficult to tell where progress ends and blunder begins, or vice versa. If you believe that Google Wave was a bad idea in the first place, you might think it was smart of Google to kill it this year–but if you thought Wave had promise, then it’s Google’s early cancellation that’s the gaffe.
All of which is a roundabout way of saying that while the industry’s lame moments are…well, lame, they can also be important. Last year, I summed up a decade’s worth of tech screw-ups and came up with 87 examples. This time around, I’m covering only a single year–but I found 57 items worth commemorating. No, tech companies aren’t getting more error prone; I was just more diligent. And as usual, there was plenty of ground to cover.
Thanks once again to Business 2.0’s 101 Dumbest Moments in Business and, of course, to Esquire’s Dubious Achievement Awards for inspiring this. Here we go…
Three weeks before Steve Jobs unveils the iPad, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer pre-emptively shows off “Slate PCs” running Windows 7 at his CES keynote. He declares them “perfect–perfect–for reading, for surfing the Web, and for taking entertainment on the go,” but fumbles with the HP model he demos. The tablets fail to overcome the long-standing curse that has doomed countless Microsoft products announced during CES keynotes to oblivion.
At CES, one-time consumer-electronics powerhouse and current mousepad kingpin Polaroid announces that it’s named Lady Gaga as creative director.
Buyers of the Nexus One phone (manufactured by HTC, sold by Google) who opt for a T-Mobile subsidy but cancel service after a 14-day trial but before their two-year contract ends must pay $200 to T-Mobile and $350 to Google. On top of the $179 price they paid for the phone, that leaves them out a total of $729–or $200 more than they would have paid for an unsubsidized Nexus One in the first place. (Google later lowers its fee to $150.)
Kodak sues Apple and RIM over imaging patents.
Two days after Christmas, young reprobates in Wilsonville, Oregon steal a bunch of electronics, including two Motorola Android phones. One of the delinquents snaps some pictures of himself with one of the phones–apparently unaware that it’s running Lookout, an application that silently backs up all images to the cloud. Using the photographic evidence, the Wilsonville police make an arrest in mid-January.
Google launches Buzz, a Twitter-like service whose defining feature is that it’s built into Gmail, thereby turning Gmail users’ contact lists into social networks. It runs into immediate flack from users who don’t want their contacts to be made social or public. The company moves quickly but it takes several passes of fixes before the controversy dies down. And even then, Buzz never quite seems to catch on.
At Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Microsoft announces a radically new version of Windows Mobile. It’s impressive, but its name–“Windows Phone 7 Series“–doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue. After nearly everybody who writes about the new version mocks its moniker, the company shortens the name to the more harmonious “Windows Phone 7” months before the phones ship.
Rabble-rousing InfoWorld blogger Randall Kennedy–who frequently cites data from Windows performance research company Devil Mountain Software–admits that he has a second identity: Craig Barth, CTO of Devil Mountain Software.
The makers of VoIP gizmo MagicJack lose their lawsuit against Boing Boing, which had published a post criticizing the product’s end-user license agreement (EULA) and pointing out that its Web site pretends to detect MagicJacks installed on PCs and automatically increments a counter that supposedly shows how many people have come to the site for a free trial. MagicJack, which had charged that the post had exposed it to “hate, ridicule and obloquy,” is ordered by a judge to pay Boing Boing more than $50,000 to cover the blog’s legal costs.
Apple sues HTC over mobile patents.
Apple engineer Gray Powell visits a biergarten in Redwood City, California. He enjoys some fine German brews. Then he departs–and leaves an iPhone behind. An unreleased prototype next-generation iPhone.
An Apple App Store policy against iPhone software that ridicules public figures briefly results in the rejection of a satirical app by Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Mark Fiore.
E-reader maker Plastic Logic pushes the ship date for its much-anticipated Que ProReader–which looked pretty nifty when it was unveiled in January, three weeks before the iPad–from April to June.
Microsoft announces the Kin One and Kin Two, two phones with built-in social networking features. Reviewers question the decision to release Windows phones based neither on Windows Mobile 6.5 nor Windows Phone 7, squawk about the lack of an app store, and say that the need to commit to a Verizon smartphone plan is inappropriate given the phones’ limited capabilities. Microsoft executives counter that the phones are aimed at highly social twentysomethings and are therefore difficult for the typical jaded tech pundit to appreciate.
In certain circumstances, McAfee security software misidentifies a core Windows XP component as malware and deletes it, causing PCs to reboot over and over and over. The company’s initial response to the crisis strikes some customers as a tad blithe; later updates are more apologetic and less defensive.
At Facebook’s F8 conference, founder Mark Zuckerberg announces an array of new features, including a Like button that can appear on any site and integration with third-party services such as Pandora. Controversy over the changes’ effect on privacy rages for weeks, and proves hard to extinguish even after the site adds additional controls.
Fusion Garage, maker of the ill-fated, poorly-reviewed JooJoo (née CrunchPad) sends out an e-mail to JooJoo buyers seeking their feedback on the device. The company puts all their addresses in the to: field rather than blind-carbon-copying them, so anyone who gets the e-mail can see who else received it. There are sixty-four recipients.
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December 21st, 2010 at 2:15 am
"there are still eleven days left in 2011"
Well, no, we haven't even begun to use them up yet. 🙂
Great blog and great post!
December 21st, 2010 at 2:23 am
Thanks for the catch–corrected…
December 21st, 2010 at 7:10 am
Hey, what about the Gawker password leak?
December 21st, 2010 at 7:24 am
Ping, anyone?
December 21st, 2010 at 7:29 am
Great list except for the Sarah Palin comment… If stupid tweets are truly tech related then you could just say "twitter" because its full of them.
December 21st, 2010 at 7:33 am
What about the iPhone 4 antena problem?
Its pretty obvious whoever wrote this likes to suck apple flavored cock with all the MS hate.
December 21st, 2010 at 7:35 am
It was mentioned on the first page I think. How about reading the article instead of throwing around vulgar insults.
December 21st, 2010 at 8:38 am
It was mentioned on the second page, but adopts the Apple lie that it was a software problem.
December 21st, 2010 at 9:16 am
Leaving out "You're holding it wrong" is a grave oversight.
December 21st, 2010 at 9:32 am
Also leaving out the "Every phone dorps signal if you grip it like you're Koko the Gorilla" gimmick and the "Rubber baby ip4 bumpers" ploy is criminal.
As well as ignoring the "half a percent" lie.
Annnnnnnnnnnnnnd the "iPhone upgrade versus Android upgrade" b***s***.
Also, don't forget… Steve Jobs just lies worse than a cat on a cactus….
December 21st, 2010 at 9:27 am
Vs you, sucking on MS or Google. One of the two. Your just as lame and have no space to talk.
December 21st, 2010 at 7:48 am
what about AVG pushing an update to its users that caused computers to fail loading windows on restart. It happened to every user with a 64 bit OS forcing them to revert to previous settings or delete files via safe mode.
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1929949/…
December 21st, 2010 at 8:03 am
That's just like the McAfee snafu and I think it's only fair they were mentioned first since AVG clearly just wants to share the limelight with the big boys…
December 21st, 2010 at 7:59 am
Sprint Pushes 4G – oh, you won't see 4G for years except in certain metro areas, but buy the phone anyway!
December 21st, 2010 at 8:13 am
Great biergarten photo!
For geezers:
"This is my Sister"
What is her name?
"Sue"
Sue?
"Si"
What does she do?
"Sue"
Sue?
Si
December 21st, 2010 at 8:13 am
How about the Yahoo!/Delicious "sunset" flap, and Yahoo's subsequent blaming of news outlets for its lack of communication?
December 21st, 2010 at 8:27 am
This was an awesome read. I'm surprised that Meg Whitman's reference was simply that she lost her primary. I was anticipating mention of her campaign's tweet that accidentally linked to a youtube video of a japanese guy in a pink tutu playing bass guitar in his bedroom.
December 23rd, 2010 at 8:10 pm
She didn't lose in the primary. She lost the general election to Governor Elect Jerry Brown.
I suspect the two losing candidates warranted mention here because their tech backgrounds garnered them the millions to make their runs. But you're right, there were technical gaffes on both sides of the governor's race.
December 21st, 2010 at 8:33 am
Nice list. I’d drop one of the many “sue” items in favor of Sony removing OtherOS from the PS3.
December 21st, 2010 at 9:26 am
I would have combined all of the lawsuit items instead of peppering them in the article. They are making the same point and usually involved the same parties.
December 21st, 2010 at 8:44 am
A Palin typo is a 'Lame Tech moment'?
Harry, do you have Palin derangement syndrome?
Other than that brain fart, good list.
December 21st, 2010 at 9:27 am
Speaking of 11 days left. FCC just pushed out a really watered down and useless Net Neutrality thing.
December 21st, 2010 at 9:27 am
Good list-except for the political drop-in.
Or a bad list…full of bad things that seem to keep happening year after year.
It's almost so bad that you could just do a list of bad *lawsuits* all by themselves.
and as others have mentioned, it's a bit early to wrap up the list. The Gawker crack is a good "bad" one, as well as the AV glitches…and there's still two weeks remaining of 2010-plenty of time for another lawsuit! 😛
here's to hoping that for 2011, it becomes very hard to compile a list of stupid tech mistakes!
December 21st, 2010 at 12:30 pm
Causal and casual are two different words. Although the 'causal' comment was kinda funny, I wouldn't call it some kind of tech blunder.
Also, rather mobile tech-centric Heinz 57, aren't we?
December 21st, 2010 at 1:20 pm
what about digg V4 ?
December 22nd, 2010 at 5:15 pm
and how would it not be one of the first things mentioned. certainly the first thing that comes to mid when i think of tech flops this past year. horrible, horrible horrible crap.
December 21st, 2010 at 11:33 pm
TWOm rhymes with "Tomb"
December 22nd, 2010 at 2:12 am
57 is such a lame number
December 22nd, 2010 at 2:39 pm
You left of on the Paul Allen suing everyone, that it was later dismissed because they never identified what patents were infringed, or what products were infringing.
Or does that belong on a bad lawyer-ing blog?
December 23rd, 2010 at 11:03 pm
Has anyone done a best and worst of Vaporware list yet. Or is that idea also Vaperware?
January 12th, 2011 at 9:18 am
InfoWorld blogger Randall Kennedy Check out his blogs for last year at this time. You couldn't be more wrong about pretty much everything. Very Funny!