 |
|
|
Netflix, the largest online
video rental service in the United States, suffered a glitch on Monday morning,
as their web site went down for several hours before it started working again. According
to Steve Swasey, the company spokesman, the technical issue began around 7 a.m.
PDT and lasted until afternoon.
Customers who tried to access
the web site received the “web site is temporarily unavailable” message. Swasey
said: “Our engineers have been feverishly working on repairing the problem all
morning” and that “It was an unanticipated, unplanned outage, and we apologize to
our customers,” CNET News reports.
Swasey said this is a very rare
situation and such an outage hasn’t happened to the company in a very long
time, but he avoided discussing the source of the problem. This situation will
reflect, however, in the way customers get their shipments. According to Swasey,
some of the customers who were supposed to receive their shipments on Monday
won’t get them until Tuesday.
Netflix’s spokesman did say this
hasn’t happened to the company in a long time, but by that he probably meant
July 2007, when the outage lasted approximately 18 hours. The difference now is
that, unlike in July last year, the company’s DVD shipments were affected this
time, but the exact number of customers that will have to wait another day for
their shipments was not made public.
What the company should be more
concerned about at this time is the possible customer dissatisfaction. The technical
glitch came as the number of Netflix customers rises every day and the share value
is up again, after the downfall in July last year.
With an average of 1.6 million
shipments a day, Netflix is the largest online video rental service in the
United States and has over 7 million subscribers. The company was founded in
1997 and the web site was officially launched in April 1998.
© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia