Top 10 Tech Train Wrecks of 2007

Tue Nov 20, 2007 5:55PM EST

See Comments (528)

From MVNO meltdowns to gaming-console flameouts, the wide world of tech had its fair share of fiascos this year. Check out 2007's most spectacular consumer-tech train wrecks.

Without further ado, I present this year's hall of shame (in no particular order):

Xbox 360 hardware woes
Microsoft really hit it out of the park when it came to the Xbox 360's software—consider the slick Dashboard, the persistent Achievements and Gamertags, and the top-notch Xbox Video Marketplace. But the actual 360 hardware is a disaster: chronically glitchy, prone to overheating, and all too susceptible to the "Red Ring of Death," which signals a critical hardware failure. Indeed, I'm already on my second Xbox 360 in barely a year, and just about every 360 owner I know has had to send their console back to Redmond for repair. In June, Microsoft finally did the right thing and owned up to the shoddy state of its hardware, extending the Xbox 360's warranty to a full three years and taking a $1 billion charge in the process.

BlackBerry service goes dark
Corporate road warriors love, love, love their BlackBerrys—so much so that they freaked when the service ground to a halt for about 12 hours back in April. Luckily, the outage—later blamed on a "software upgrade"—occurred mainly during the wee hours in North America (not so lucky for the rest of the planet, of course), but frantic users had to deal with a sputtering backlog of e-mail the next day. RIM CEO Jim Basillie pledged that the same problem wouldn't happen twice—although BlackBerry users were hit with another (smaller) outage in September. Which leads us to...

Skype conks out
For many Net users and businesses across the globe, Skype isn't just a favorite VoIP provider; it's also become their instant messenger of choice. So imagine the chaos that ensued on August 16, when a "software issue" (yep, another one) struck down Skype for millions of chatters. The outage ended up lasting for a full two days, during which time desperate Skypers were left to scrounge for VoIP alternatives. Once the service was up and running again, Skype reps apologized, blaming a "perfect storm" of conditions for the meltdown: namely, a Windows software update that caused a mass reboot of PCs around the world.

Fading picture for Apple TV
The launch of Apple's long-awaited TV set-top box came amid enormous hype; we were told that Apple TV would be nothing less than the iPod of the living room. But when it finally hit store shelves, Apple TV landed with a thud. Users complained about poor picture quality, a puny selection of movies (only a few hundred movies from a handful of studios are available), and worst of all, no way to browse the iTunes Store from the Apple TV itself. Forbes reports that only 250,000 units were sold in six month, and Apple seems to have lost interest in the device; short of introducing a 160GB model and YouTube support in May, Cupertino has fallen more or less silent about its half-baked foray into home theater. Not so much a train wreck as a slow fade into obscurity. And speaking of slow, sad fades...

Sony shutters Connect
You'd think Sony—the maker of the original PMP, the Walkman—would have been all over digital music, yet it ceded the music downloading market to Apple years ago. Still, in 2005, Sony prepped its answer to iTunes: Sony Connect, a joint venture with a Silicon Valley start-up called Kinoma. But the project was a debacle from the get-go, with corporate in-fighting and botched software releases essentially dooming Connect before it got off the ground (check out this CNET News.com story for the inside scoop), not to mention Sony's stubborn allegiance to its proprietary (and soon-to-be-defunct) ATRAC file format. In late August, Sony finally put Connect out of its misery, announcing that the service (save for its eBook offerings) would shut down sometime after March 2008.

Palm gives Foleo the heave-ho
The makers of the first smartphone promised us a "new category" in mobile devices back in May, and what we got was...well, something, anyway. Palm execs called the Foleo a smartphone "companion": a little, 2.5-pound laptop that connects to your Treo via Bluetooth, giving you a bigger screen and a full keypad for checking email, Web browsing, editing documents, and so on. Despite the ensuing cackles, I think Palm was on to something—after all, in 10 years, our phones may well be more powerful than today's desktops, and all you'll need is a thin-client laptop to go with your powerhouse of a handset. But for now, the Foleo looks—or rather, looked—like little more than an underpowered, $500 subnotebook, which you'd have to lug around with your actual notebook. The Foleo never saw the light of day; Palm wisely killed it off in September.

Vonage: stuck in the mud
Talk about a slow-motion train wreck. Vonage, the once high-flying VoIP provider with all those clever TV commercials, is facing a mountain of debt, while customers—most of them frustrated by poor customer service—have been steadily defecting. At the center of it all: a pair of court rulings from late 2006 that held Vonage responsible infringing patents owned by Sprint Nextel and Verizon Communications. Vonage has settled all of the infringement charges, including a new set of charges brought by AT&T, but it's still in debt to the tune of $250 million and climbing, according to BusinessWeek, along with more than $200 million in payments now due to Sprint, Verizon, and AT&T. That's pretty bad news when you've only got about $355 million left in your bank account. Whether Vonage survives, gets bought out, or declares bankruptcy is still an open question. Meanwhile, long-suffering Vonage customers are left hanging in the balance (although service is reportedly improving).

Amp'd Mobile goes dark
It wasn't that long ago that MVNOs (short for Mobile Virtual Network Operators) were absolutely red-hot—and Amp'd Mobile, a hip, youth-oriented MVNO featuring edgy TV commercials and 3G handsets—was one of the brightest stars. But Amp'd tumbled to earth in June, filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; by July, it notified subscribers that it was shutting down for good. What happened? Turns out that while Amp'd was signing up new subscribers left and right, only about half of them were paying their bills. D'oh!

Apple riles iPhone owners with price cut, hack-busting updates
Steve Jobs never saw it coming. In September, along with announcements of a new family of iPods, Jobs dropped a bombshell: Apple was cutting the price of the 8GB iPhone to $399 (from $599). How generous, right? But early adopters were outraged: just weeks before, they'd paid more than $600 for their precious iPhones, and now here's Sir Steve, essentially telling them they'd wasted a couple of C-notes. Jobs ultimately bowed to the howls of protest, offering a $100 store credit for everyone who had bought an iPhone before the price cut. Then, another stumble: Apple released an iPhone update in October that re-locked (and in some cases, bricked) hacked iPhones, sparking another wave of anger. Jobs has since announced that the iPhone will support third-party apps (which must now be hacked onto the iPhone) starting next year, but the damage is done. All those warm fuzzies for Apple upon the original release of the iPhone? Buh-bye.

HD format war drags on, begins to feel pointless

The back-and-forth battle between the Blu-ray and HD DVD camps continues to rage, with no end in sight. Blu-ray backers were telling us back in January that they had it all wrapped up, especially with the release of Blu-ray-packing PlayStation 3 consoles. But then something funny happened: the PS3 didn't sell nearly as well as expected (although sales are on the uptick thanks to recent price cuts). Meanwhile, prices for HD DVD decks fell steadily, while stand-alone Blu-ray price tags stayed stubbornly in the $400 to $500 range. Then, in August, HD DVD delivered a brutal sucker punch when Paramount and DreamWorks pulled their support for Blu-ray, choosing instead to go with HD DVD exclusively (word is the two studios were paid handsomely for crossing the street). As it stands now, the HD format war is at (in the words of Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer himself) a "stalemate." What's the punchline to this sad tale? By the time this slugfest is over, we'll probably be downloading all our HD movies anyway.

Comments on Top 10 Tech Train Wrecks of 2007

Post a Comment

Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

  • 6 Posted by gdorsey09 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am on my 4th XBox 360 and it just burned out! I am done with it!

  • 7 Posted by gdorsey09 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    that iphone looks and sounds pretty ----- ty if you ask me.

  • 9 Posted by little_wicki on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Lets wait for the porn industry to decide this one,as they made for the VHS/Betamax, and the DVD/LaserDisc.

  • 10 Posted by mischesh on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    yea my friend is on his 3rd xbox so before u say the ps3 is a flop look at x box, and i love blue ray, but i cant say much because ive never owned an hd dvd player so i wouldnt know which one is better.

  • 11 Posted by mischesh on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    Isn't Sony's refusal to license Blu-Ray reminiscent of it's refusal to license BetaMax to others as well??? I'm guessing Blu-Ray is gonna be as successful as BetaMax and mini discs. Tards.

  • 12 Posted by gdorsey09 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    i think tht the last comment sais it all

  • 13 Posted by floydadcock@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    How dare Apple and ATT concern themselves with the potential dangers of hacked applications on a mobile communications device! There have never been any problems on the internet with this sort of thing.

  • 14 Posted by eddy_665 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    i want to get a iphone! so bad! but i dont know about the ups and down can anyone tell me about it?! plz let me know

  • 15 Posted by xanthan8 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    You would think that Sony, of all people, would understand the importance of wining the format war. Hey, Sony, can you say, "BetaMax"? Wake up! $500 for a Blue Ray player? Not me.

  • 16 Posted by little_wicki on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Yet another Yahoo attack on Apple. Every chance they get, Yahoo takes a hack. The iPhone was a train wreck? Please. Everyone I know who owns one tells me that it is 110% their favorite phone ever. Taken a look at Apple's profits lately? And they haven't even released the iPhone in Asia yet.

  • 17 Posted by mischesh on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't know that I'd call the iPhone price cut a "train wreck". Sure, it wasn't the best way to thank early adopters, but train wreck??? C'mon...

  • 18 Posted by christinawwalker on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:24PM EDT Report Abuse

    Where's the train wreck that is Vista? How could anyone miss the completely bloated DRM infested tech stack that is windows?

  • 19 Posted by yasspike on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    You still need to go to the Apple store in order to work the i phone correctly. Also getting there before noon is a must.

  • 20 Posted by annafinn on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    why not fix it !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • 22 Posted by binabulman on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    about ----- in time they lower the price on iphone cuz i kno i wasnt gon pay 600 for a phone now its just right i can go get one now

  • 24 Posted by optic_cs on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:46PM EDT Report Abuse

    So, Apple should support hackers? I'm confused.

  • 25 Posted by hollismcdonald on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    You're way off base re the iPhone. PopSci has it has their tech gadget of the year, and it's won many other accolades and awards. The price cut fiasco was a lesson for Apple in customer service, which it learned from, and as for the "bricking"? Almost every knowledgeable person agrees that the stupid owners have themselves to blame - they were warned in advance not to install the update. I'm not really sure how or why this story makes for a "train wreck"

Post a Comment


My Tech

Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.

Also on Yahoo! Tech

Computers Home Office Wi-Fi & Networking Phones & PDAs Cameras & Camcorders TV & Home Theater Portable Audio
 

Question and Answer content at Yahoo! Tech is written by Yahoo! users at Yahoo! Answers. Yahoo! does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any Yahoo! Answers content. For more information, read the Full Disclaimer.

Opinions expressed by the Advisors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! receives no compensation from any manufacturer or distributor nor does it compensate any Advisor for the coverage of any product or service in any Advisor's content.