Microsoft's Technical Glitches at CES Explained 428
Thomas Hawk writes "Sean Alexander is one of the guys on the Media Center Team at Microsoft who was involved in the CES presentation with Bill Gates. Sean also runs a very interesting blog called Addicted to Digital Media. Gates and Microsoft have taken a lot of heat over the course of the last two days for the technical glitches in Microsoft's presentation at CES. Sean offers us the rare glimpse on why the glitches happened and what it's like to be backstage at the big Microsoft presentation at CES. Very good follow up on Sean's part." Update: 01/08 19:03 GMT by T : Hawk writes with a static link to Alexander's story.
Same machine (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Same machine (Score:3, Funny)
"SERVICE UNAVAILABLE" is his report. Very good work. I wish we had people half as good as this guy at the company I work for.
Re:Same machine (Score:3, Informative)
The second poster was actually furthering the first posters joke.
First poster "ha ha...the webserver doesn't work either"
Second poster "he he...no, it's working...but the report only consists of the two words 'Service Unavailable', which sums up the problem"
So now I'm in the asshat category for trying to explain it...oh well.
Re:Same machine (Score:3, Funny)
Second poster "he he...no, it's working...but the report only consists of the two words 'Service Unavailable', which sums up the problem"
First microsoft guy i've ever "met" that hasn't used a tonne of buzzwords and actually makes sense
It's nice and concise... (Score:4, Funny)
"Service Unavailable"
That makes it all clear in just 2 short words! Great summary
Uh-oh (Score:5, Funny)
"Service Unavailable TM" is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. Copyright 2004-2005. Other registered marks that Slashdotters may not use without appropriate attribution include:
Please see the Microsoft Trademarks website [microsoft.com] for additional details.
Deja vu (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Deja vu (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Deja vu (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Deja vu (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Deja vu (Score:5, Insightful)
Ahhhh, that explains why Linux is so stable. Torvalds rules over the hardware manufacturers with an iron fist!
(if you hadn't noticed, linux runs on much more varied hardware than windows does, and is much more stable. MS has no excuse anymore)
Re:Deja vu (Score:3, Insightful)
So because you can't manage to install Linux or have hardware that for some reason is not supported by Linux (and I really would like to know if you are just trolling and what hw and problems you have had), you claim that the parent poster is wrong. Amazing!
I have used Linux since kernel 0.91 and as my main OS since 1995. I have installed it on a wide varity of hardware. Problems, sure... Not been able to install it? Never. And in the past few years close to zero problems. Currently running Gentoo
Re:Deja vu (Score:2)
"UntstramanaBillGates! Mah mit pullon!" *smack in the face with a pie* (crowd gasps)
(Hold off on moderation until seeing the video yourself - and if at all possible, could someone translate what that guy's saying in it?)
Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:4, Informative)
Wow, things have been so busy here at CES that I'm just getting around to blogging, starting with my promised behind the scenes of the Bill Gates CES 2005 Keynote. I've done a short version and a long version for those who have been emailing, asking me to follow up on my earlier post.
Summary
Wednesday night, Bill Gates hosted the 2005 CES Opening Keynote along with his surprise guest, Late Night's Conan O'Brien. Overall I think things went well, but as can happen with live events with so many variables, there were a couple of technical issues noted by sites like Engadget. The key thing for me that I could have done a better job on-stage pointing out is that despitea small glitch with a remotecontrol (IR) receiver, a single Media Center ran all theMedia Center demos andwe kept rolling despitethe hiccup. According to the postmortem, it appears a 2nd IR receiverrun over to Bill's seat failed, so the Media Center never got the signal. It could have been all the IR interference in the venue- cameras and plasma displays and lights, or the powered USB booster - a piece of equipment that gets a USB signal over a long-stretch. The production team also handled a small power outage exceptionally well in the minutes leading up which might have contributed. These things happen and the team pulled it out despite some obstacles out of their control.
Below is my account of what was happening back stage.
Rehearsals
Setup and runthroughs went great the day before and day of.We did about a half-dozen individual runthroughs and 3-4 end to end runthroughs. Everything was running great except for an intermittent Internet bandwidth issue. We replaced a router and that appeared to solve part of the problem but bandwidth continued to be intermittent as I noted in my previous entry.
15 Minutes Till Showtime: Makeup
Yes, we had to wear makeup. I sat in a chair next to Conan and we discussed our Irish roots and he was cracking jokes. The night before, I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to have dinner with Conan and a few folks from his Late Night team at Nobu in the Hard Rock Hotel. What a great guy, a great storyteller and super-funny. I can see why he's been announced as the next host of The Tonight Show when Jay steps down.
Showtime!
For the account below, here are my own thoughts and the timing is approximate thanks to Engadget
6:30pm - Everyone is charged up and ready to go. Gary Shapiro, President of the CEA (host of CES)is getting ready to go on-stage. But firsta little background - in order to drive the slides and overall production coordination, a sort of "Mission Control" is set up backstage to drive the technical systems - slides, prompters, timers etc. We're settling in for Conan's monologue when two electrical engineerswalk behind themain operations tables to check a piece of equipment. From my vantage point, one the UPSes (Uninterruptable Power Supplies) has been triggered and they're troubleshooting.
6:31pm - Everything is still running- troubleshootingis going onin the dark with flashlights, more engineers and members of the production crew are working methodically, as the UPS is running down, tracing connections, circuits. I'm standing clear w/ my team going over what I want to say. I find out later the presentation systems are all on the same UPS- slides moved to backup and systems are being powered down.
6:40pm - The UPS is going. The Xboxes for the Forza Racing game sneak preview demos (which we had back stage due to space restrictions on stage) lost power. It appears the main demo systems on-stage weren't affected except for Xbox from what I can tell. Their bringing their demosback up.
6:41pm - Keynote starts. We're looking good- the power circuit is back but the production team decidesto continue on backup PPT cuing systems as best I can tell. The show must go on.
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:5, Funny)
Next time, Microsoft had better attendees frisked for rogue remote controls! Damn GNU hippies! :-)
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:2, Troll)
That's GNU/Hippies, GNU/dammit!
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:2)
Thanks
Re:Not IR remotes... (Score:3, Interesting)
What happens is that the IR sensor signal is analysed for changes in amplitude (delta) rather than absolute signal level. If bright light saturates the dynamic range of the sensor then delta changes become smaller and smaller in absolute size and a delta falls below detection threshold.
Putting something over the IR sensor to cast a shadow would probably have
Slides located "here"? (Score:5, Informative)
fwiw: I got into the page after 15 tries, myself.
cheers...ank
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:4, Interesting)
Random note...this same thing happened when Microsoft was going to demo the Xbox on The Apprentice...the xbox must suck some serious juice, or these road show teams just don't understand how much power one circuit can handle!
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote (Score:3, Interesting)
IR interference and a bridge to sell you (Score:4, Interesting)
My Myth box has a PS/2 keyboard connector, as well as several USB ports. I can easily connect a keyboard to it. If my remote control were to stop working for any reason, I'd still be able to control the system. I notice that the Alienware Media Center systems all have USB ports, too.
Given that they had set up a USB-based IR receiver with a powered USB booster, surely they were aware of the fact that relying on IR could be tricky. It's very difficult to believe that no one thought it might be a good idea to have some kind of backup input device that someone off stage could have used to kick off the damn slide show.
From the FA: "Sure, we could have had two Media Centers, but we wanted to show it all running off the same Media Center as a hub." This strikes me as classic misdirection. Like it would be utterly impossible to have one Media Center with two different input devices.
As I see it, either something more went wrong and this story was concocted to cover it up, or the whole team behind the presentation deserves to be fired for missing something so pitifully obvious.
I rather suspect the former.
I did enjoy watching Bill sit there all hunched over in his big cushy chair pecking away at the remote control. His plastic smile unwavering, even through Conan's "who's in charge of Mircosoft" comment. And then that weird comment about only having one remote control? No, Bill, it wouldn't be worse to have serveral remote controls, if they were for devices that actually *worked*.
Blooper Video (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Blooper Video (Score:2)
Re:Blooper Video (Score:3, Insightful)
I would like to know if there was any testing done? I didn't think the remote not working was a big deal, remotes break, batteries die, etc.
What I thought looked bad was the big BSOD on the XBox in the middle of a game.
Mirror here: (Score:2, Informative)
IIS - that explains it! (Score:3, Informative)
But Netcraft (and "What's that site running?") goes a long way to explaining why!
blog.seanalexander.com Windows 2000
some folks never learn (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, try again and I don't:
mdchaney@fractal:~/taxi$ telnet blog.seanalexander.com 80
Trying 66.226.14.131...
Connected to blog.seanalexander.com.
Escape character is '^]'.
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: blog.seanalexander.com
HTTP/1.1 503 Service Unavailable
Content-Type: text/html
Date: Sat, 08 Jan 2005 14:49:42 GMT
Connection: close
Content-Length: 28
Service UnavailableConnection closed by foreign host.
Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmmmm.
Good excuses are still just good excuses.
JsD
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:2, Insightful)
i don't have any difficulty finding several cars that meet my needs. getting the combination of good hardware and software seems darn near impossible.
i don't thin
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, keep in mind that he gives demos all the time, and more so than Gates, so it's bound to happen now and then..
How about YOU RT(entire)FA! (Score:2)
Re:RTFA you moron! (Score:2)
"This is not what happened."
So the complete version of the paragraph you quoted reads:
"The most disturbing report was that Steve Jobs, after his Mac OS X Server demonstration went awry, was obviously angry, cut his speech short, and left the stage so abruptly, that when the demo began working, he was long gone. This is not what happened."
In other words, Mac Observer wrote that Mr. Jobs didn't storm off the stage and that they don't understand
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:2)
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:2)
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:5, Interesting)
As far as I know, Steve Jobs has resorted to trickery for most of us presentations. The original iBook that had Airport used a custom external wireless video interface to display on the main screen (it cost more than the iBook itself). Steve claims he's used "Keynote" for most of his presentations (even before it was released), but the fact that it caused kernel panics on ATI hardware makes me question that. That's why he referred to as a "master showman" and not a "master presenter".
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:2)
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, that's good, make up some bitter anti-Apple FUD when your own platform gets some bad publicity. So defensive! When Microsoft already dominates computing into the high nineties percentage, in ways both good (broad market for those who create software, peripherals), and bad (poor security, rampant virii/trojans, many exploits), why is it so hard to accept criticism?
When a figurehead from MS has a very public failure, everybody focuses on
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:3, Insightful)
M$ has always been inferior, yet they are still on top. Hopefully it will change soon with the uprising of linux and osx.
Re:Never seen Steve Jobs in this situation (Score:2)
Re:Unrelated (Score:2)
Yes because ADB, META Files, HPFS, IWM, just to name a few. were all ripped off from someone else.
Enjoy,
Re:Unrelated (Score:2)
Re:Unrelated (Score:2)
I didn't. Firewire should be considered a descendant of ADB.
Enjoy,
Re:Unrelated (Score:2)
The only thing i can think of was the apple newton - but even then there were others with similar products.
Re:Unrelated (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple was the early adopter in the GUI/mouse controlled interface, 32-bit systems, 24-bit color displays, laser printing, powered serial bus, CD-ROM in every system, the sacking of the floppy, Combo driver (DVD read/CD writer) in every system, network capability in every system, 64-bit systems...
In none of these cases did Apple invent the technology, nor w
The Problem... They used Windows (Score:3, Funny)
It's encouraging... (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately for me, I don't have anyone to fire.
come together (Score:4, Insightful)
The other most interesting part of this whole story is that the rest of us don't have Alexander, the MS Media Center Team, or the Windows source code. So when we get the BSoD, we're left scratching our heads. That's why we use Linux: with Open Source, we're as privileged as Bill Gates, to whom Windows is Open Source, because he's got the keys to the vault. His CES debacle should open everyone's eyes to the difference. Especially the "communists" in the global IT community who'd rather not spend more on Gates' closed source, and get less - and get hung out to dry with a crashed Windows app thousands of times a day, around the world.
Re:come together (Score:2)
Re:come together (Score:2)
Is there a scummier human being on the planet then Bill Gates? Well maybe the guy who raped a tsunami survivor but even then it's close.
Re:come together (Score:2)
Re:come together (Score:3, Insightful)
So your vested interest lies in fixing the buggy nightmare that is Windows. You make your living off BSoD crashes. If it worked, you'd have to get a lot more creative than installing a patch rebooting 'til it kinda works. The OS shouldn't crash when running a USB repeater and/or a flaky Internet connection - that's a crappy OS at work.
Your Windows bias lets you excuse that prison in which we all work, while complaining that a specific Linux dis
Re:come together (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know what to tell you here, due to lack of info. I use Linux to connect my cisco 802.11b card and the ipw2100 card to connect to my AP without issue; my guess is that you're missing a configu
Re:Config (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Grow a brain before typing! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:When did you last run Windows, anyway? (Score:2)
Get some proportion before squawking. (Score:2)
You'll get beat up some day, you know... :) (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't recall hiding it. I'm happy to tell anyone who asks about Microsoft and how little basis there is for bashing it.
> Who knew that you actually produced that crappy software?
Excuse me, but I did not produce any "crappy software". In fact, it was all pretty damn good, considering what it had to do. I don't know how long it's been since you've actually used any Microsoft software, but it must have been decades, since everything made by Microso
Re:come together (Score:2)
Bill Gates (Score:5, Funny)
Here we go again... (Score:2)
The only good thing is the fun granted by future worms spilling true amateur porn over the
Torrent (Score:2)
Torrent of the entire show on my blog [nordstrom.fi].
Post Mortems of the demo miss the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft products have problems with crashing. Everyone who uses them knows that. Conan knows that. Bill knows that.
The amusement factor is that even the leader of the company knows that and experiences it in the most sensitive moments.
If you need software to run critical proceses in a nuke plant or an airplane, would you use Microsoft products?
Re:Post Mortems of the demo miss the point (Score:2)
I believe the the EULA specifically rules out the use of MS software in those sorts of situations. But it's for exactly the reason you specified: everyone including MS knows that their software is unreliable.
Re:Post Mortems of the demo miss the point (Score:2)
Re:Post Mortems of the demo miss the point (Score:2)
Re:Post Mortems of the demo miss the point (Score:2)
CES keynote, a bad infomercial at 2am? (Score:3, Insightful)
All year I read about how Bill Gates is the wealthiest, most successful businessman in the world. I don't want to hear about internet access challenges when you are showing off technology that uses the internet. At that point in the keynote I began to wonder why is Microsoft even at the show (nevermind the keynote address)? Shouldn't the keynote be given by a person from Sony/Apple or some other vender that can deliver reliable hardware and software?
The Forza Motorsport demo should have been a slam dunk. Who wants their console gaming experience to be more like a pc experience? With the Xbox Microsoft is introducing unreliability in the gaming console market. Bravo.
They should only have a small booth in the back of CES in my opinion.
I doubt... (Score:2)
That's live theatre, folks (Score:5, Insightful)
In my other life I do tech for a local community theatre group. Folks, anything can happen during a live performance. No matter how much you might prepare, stuff happens, and it happens in front of everybody. Power can fail, body mikes can break, lamps burn out, RFI can wreak havoc. You can't prepare for every eventuality, but you can handle the situation with grace.
It sounds to me like the Microsofties did fine.
Re:That's live theatre, folks (Score:3, Insightful)
You can also write software that doesn't suck. You can write programs that don't crash. You can make things that are secure. These are things you can control.
Things like mics breaking, lamps burning out, and other physical things happen, yes. Physical things break down, and you can swap them out during a presentation. But software is not one of these things.
Everyone who is making excuses needs to face it: t
Re:That's live theatre, folks (Score:2)
Well, in my other life I write software and I tell you, nothing must happen when we go life. There are two reasons, why you don't select Microsoft products for anything mission critical. They will go down and there is nothing you can do about it.
Sean's Post (Score:5, Insightful)
Rigged demos? (Score:3, Insightful)
I know a salesman that tells a story of running a rigged demo every 45 minutes for 2 days straight during a trade show in order to sell pharmacists on the idea of getting a computer system. It's not all that uncommon a thing to do.
Sure, media center is a little complicated to rig a demo for, but it's a lot easier than putting up with the aftermath of 3 BSoDs. I'd rather have something approaching a slide show than have Conan O'Brien make fun of me. (too bad they don't have any rich-media slideshow software to write this in, like Hypercard or something)
But that's their problem. I really don't care. Any "media" PC that has DRM is something I don't care to buy. If it comes to not being able to buy some movie or whatever that won't run without DRM telling on me when I do so, I'll just pop in a VHS tape or a commercial-stripped DVD and enjoy myself anyway.
No surprise (Score:2, Interesting)
But what I want to know is why you can walk around the show floor at LinuxWorld in the morning, before it's open to the public, and see so many Windows logos on the big projection screens they use for presentations. This always boggles my mind.
I'm just going to say... wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
So it is due to a hardware problem? (Score:2, Funny)
It's unwise to use IR or RF in presentations (Score:3, Insightful)
Infrared and bluetooth and wifi are great for use at home where the environment is stable and controlled, but in a major international event like CES, the conditions are exactly the opposite. If one could see in the IR band, I bet the CES stage would have appeared swamped in a blizzard of unwanted IR confetti from numerous sources.
Are we even slightly surprised it's down? (Score:3, Interesting)
Trying 66.226.14.131...
Connected to blog.seanalexander.com.
Escape character is '^]'.
220 dedi312 Microsoft ESMTP MAIL Service, Version: 6.0.3790.211 ready at Sat, 8 Jan 2005 08:00:47 -0800
(I didn't feel like checking to see if it was also an open relay, that would just have completely topped it)
Re:Are we even slightly surprised it's down? (Score:2)
Obviously the operating system's fault! (Score:2)
Should have made Bill do pushups (Score:4, Funny)
The best demo ever, though, was when the QuickTime crew was demoing some new stuff on Mac OS 7. They're going along, and suddenly the screen jumps into MacsBug (the old low-level debugger - this was what you got instead of the bomb screen if you had MacsBug installed). We all start yelling "push-ups, push-ups" and the presenter goes "Well, let's see if we can look a little deeper into this" and clicks the mouse. The MacsBug screen peels off and we get this video of guys banging around with hammers inside the machine. What a great setup.
3 simple words (Score:2)
Need a longer explanation? we build overpriced crap.
auf deutsche? wir machen sheize.
Translated by Microsoft's marketing spin doctors? Our asses innovate.
BSOD (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:BSOD (Score:3, Informative)
The XBox was running an unreleased preview of a game due out in April. I think it was a debug build because the error that appeared was an Assertion.
The screen read:
Assertion Failure
Out of System Memory. If you are loading, try decreasing your...
File: \mainHeap.cpp
Function: SimpleHeap::Alloc
Line: 355
Version 1.04.12.14.47..
PERF Build
P
Re:BSOD (Score:3, Interesting)
A console typically allow much closer access to the hardware for performance reasons. So code running on a console does not have the same protections as code on a general purpose computer.
Second, this is not a kernel faliure, it is an Assertion caused by a low memory condition. The console OS is still running and is still accepting user input, hence "mini-dump", "continue", or "break".
An xbox doesn't have a general purpose windowing system unde
A Wedding Story (Score:4, Interesting)
I had the various wedding songs in mp3 format on my Dell notebook. I'd been given the cue that the bride was ready to make her entrance, so as soon as I started the Bridal March she would enter. I was just about to click Play on my notebook when it gives a siren-like sound (not out of the soundcard / line out, but out of some internal speaker) and turns itself off.
Now fortunately (extremely) for me I had copied the songs onto a CF card, so I popped it into my Pocket PC, plugged it into the soundboard, and the wedding began. There was maybe a 20-30 second delay which no-one even noticed.
After the wedding I found the problem. The HDD was somehow not well seated, and the alarm was the BIOS saying the HDD had failed. I popped it out and re-seated it and everything was fine.
I had used that notebook at least 8 hours a day, every day, for 3 years and it had never done that before.
Dan East
Re:Up and running Win XP 64 build 1289 (Score:4, Informative)
1) There IS 64 bit Linux. (e.g. RedHat Enterprise 3 64 bit version)
2) The analog to a start menu was in the first Apple Mac GUIs, WAY before Windows.
3) Popup blockers have been around a LONG time in mozilla/firefox etc. IE has just finally got a very poor implementation of it.
4) 3 button mice were on many Unix Workstations as standard at least 15 years ago, At that time you couldn't even buy a 3 button windows mouse. Middle mouse button usage is stil far better integrated into the X window/Unix/Linux world than Windows.
Re:Up and running Win XP 64 build 1289 (Score:2)
a) Good observation
Do you even check your 'facts'?
b) Did you check your first sentence?
Re:Up and running Win XP 64 build 1289 (Score:3, Informative)
Linux has been 64 bit for ten years. Before many *proprietary* OSes!
(NT for Alpha was not 64 bit, it was a 32bit port.).
Re:Actually, WinXP 64bit runs like crap... (Score:2)
The beta recognised my graphics card, but the RC1 doesn't any more, so I was left running in 800x600. Still no network drivers so no network.
At the moment it's little more than a toy, but I'm sure they'll get there before the release (they'll have to, otherwise it'll be the first MS OS to actually fail utterly).
Re:Up and running Win XP 64 build 1289 (Score:2)
Left behind, eh? http://www.windows-longhorn.org/ for details on being left behind. [ Reply to This ]
Interesting to see netcraft.com says the site is running...
"http://www.windows-longhorn.org was running Apache on Linux when last queried at 8-Jan-2005 16:15:53 GMT "
Re:Billy G as Donny T (Score:2)
You'd think they'd be higher rollers since they just released Doom 3.
Re:But did the demos actually work? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Short-term memories (Score:2)
Yeah, I remember. I used a Mac at home and Unix at work in the late 1980's. I still use Macs at home and Unix / Linux at work. What, exactly, did Windows do for me ? I do not see it as a technology source, rather as a sink.
I do, however, appreciate the perverse nature of live demo's. My favorite peeve here are the software / hardware faults that only happen to the CEO. This has happened often enough to me that I think it should be an addition to Murphy's Law.
Re:Teleprompter? (Score:3, Funny)
http://books.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=71358&c i d=6647090 [slashdot.org]
Q: How can you tell an extroverted computer geek from an introverted computer geek?
A: The introverted computer geek will look at his shoes while he talks to you. The extroverted computer geek will look at your shoes while he talks to you.
Q: How do you tell if an Extroverted computer geek is Russian?
A: His shoes look at you while he is talking.
I about died