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AOL mail: OK for others, not itself
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ^ | March 22 | Matthew Rose and Martin Peers

Posted on 03/22/2002 8:10:20 AM PST by Bush2000

Company’s attempt to use own software brings headaches

NEW YORK, March 22 — America Online is the world’s most successful Internet service provider — except, apparently, in its own house.



IN A humbling reversal, AOL Time Warner Inc. is retreating from a top-level directive that required the divisions of the old Time Warner to convert to an e-mail system based on AOL software and run by America Online’s giant public server computers in Virginia.

The drive to get all the company’s 82,000 employees to use AOL e-mail was an attempt to give symbolic resonance to the marriage of AOL and Time Warner, the largest corporate merger in U.S. history and perhaps the most-scrutinized litmus test for the marriage of the old and new economies.

Instead, management got months of complaints from both senior and junior executives in the divisions involved, who said the e-mail system, initially designed for consumers, wasn’t appropriate for business use. Among the problems cited: The e-mail software frequently crashed, staffers weren’t able to send messages with large attachments, they were often kicked offline without warning, and if they tried to send messages to large groups of users they were labeled as spammers and locked out of the system. Sometimes, e-mails were just plain lost in the AOL etherworld and never found. And if there was an out-of-office reply function, most people couldn’t find it.

The various types of e-mail software used by employees aren’t the same as those used by America Online subscribers at home. Instead, the divisions customized AOL products, such as those from its Netscape unit.



WORST-HIT: TIME INC.
Time Inc., the U.S.’s largest magazine publisher and a heavy e-mail user, was the company’s worst-hit division. Late last year, ad sales executives in Entertainment Weekly’s Chicago office were trying to e-mail a presentation to a major advertising agency. Because the system has trouble handling large attachments, the e-mail didn’t arrive. At the last minute the office had to send a staff member in a cab with a printed version.

Norman Pearlstine, Time Inc.’s editor in chief, recalls that e-mails containing final page proofs of some magazines never made it to his computer because they were routed to an old e-mail address. He also inadvertently offended then-People magazine Managing Editor Carol Wallace by failing to reply to her e-mails. He just hadn’t received them.

“The system didn’t work well for heavy data and graphics users,” says Edward Adler, an AOL Time Warner senior vice president and corporate spokesman.

2 PERCENT OF E-MAIL LOST
But there was more. Staffers groused they had to log onto their office computers using a portable electronic number tag that sometimes broke; and they grumbled they were no longer able to use portable e-mail devices, such as BlackBerries, because they weren’t compatible with AOL. In late January, executives at Warner Music tried to alert employees to problems with the new system. “2% of e-mail is being lost,” the internal e-mail read. “If you are expecting critical e-mail, you may want to follow up with the sender.”



Apparently weary of the complaints, at a regular meeting of top executives Wednesday, the company decided to allow divisions to use any e-mail system they want, including those from International Business Machines Corp. and archrival Microsoft Corp. (MSNBC is a Microsoft-NBC joint venture.) If the divisions choose outside products, their e-mail systems likely won’t be housed on America Online’s servers in Dulles, Va. Some members of the company’s tech staff have dubbed the reclamation plan “Project Phoenix.”

Divisions will now be able to pick “the system that better suits their individual business needs,” says Mr. Adler.

The company spent almost a year trying to make the system work. At Warner Bros., for instance, studio chief Barry Meyer put a stop to AOL Mail last year after the rollout began at the studio. Mr. Meyer decided to wait for a better version of Netscape software, which became available earlier this year. But a technical glitch suspended rollout of that version last week.

AN AWKWARD REVERSAL

The reversal is particularly awkward for Robert Pittman, AOL Time Warner’s co-chief operating officer, who had pushed through the move to use AOL’s e-mail. Mr. Pittman wasn’t available for an interview, but Mr. Adler, the spokesman, says that divisional CEOs had agreed with Mr. Pittman’s decision.

The initial idea for communal e-mail was driven in part by cost. By using its own products, such as AOL Mail or Netscape’s software, the company could save millions of dollars because it no longer would have to pay license fees to other software companies and could reduce staff. Then there was the matter of corporate pride: “It’s true that it was a policy decision by the AOL Time Warner leadership that we should set a good example by using our own products,” says a top information-technology executive at one of the divisions.

Mr. Pearlstine of Time Inc. says he agreed with the idea because the unit’s existing e-mail system was out of date and because he thought it would be better served through its corporate sibling. But he says problems arose as soon as he started using it. He began to lobby against the system, and he wasn’t alone: Time Inc. Executive Vice President Ann Moore buttonholed AOL Time Warner Chief Executive Gerald Levin after a meeting in the Time Inc. building to complain about the system, according to two people Ms. Moore later told. Ms. Moore couldn’t be reached for comment. A spokesman for Mr. Levin declined to comment.

Employees of the old Time Warner, already resentful of their corporate bosses at AOL, saw the imposition of AOL’s e-mail as corporate arrogance. When computers crashed in the Washington bureau of Time magazine due to the e-mail software, staffers sometimes sung out, “So easy to use, no wonder it’s number one,” an ironic reference to America Online’s ad slogan.

The e-mail problems have led many staffers to resume pre-Internet habits. Employees say they are faxing and using Federal Express more than before. They also are picking up the phone or wandering down the corridors in search of human contact. “If all goes well, we’ll never have to use e-mail and we’ll have to start talking to each other again,” says one magazine writer.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: aolsux; techindex
What a bunch of incompetents. These are the folks that you want to control the future of the Internet?
1 posted on 03/22/2002 8:10:20 AM PST by Bush2000
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To: tech_index
bump
2 posted on 03/22/2002 8:10:39 AM PST by Bush2000
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To: Bush2000
AOL e-mail is the worst. AOL sucks just as bad for consumers as it does for businesses. It had it's place before everything went web, but now all it does is clutter up the Internet interface with a lot of useless software that slows everything down, is crash-prone and has limited functionality.

Glad these bozos finally got some hands on user experience with AOL. Maybe it will wake 'em up.

3 posted on 03/22/2002 8:17:57 AM PST by Maceman
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To: Bush2000
I couldn't agree more.

The tech-challenged family members of mine who rely on AOL for their e-mail can never seem to view photo attachments to e-mail, especially if there are more than one.

Is AOL e-mail still automatically UUencoding those files without providing a way to UNencode them? Sheesh.

4 posted on 03/22/2002 8:19:28 AM PST by martin_fierro
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To: Bush2000
wasn’t appropriate for business use. Among the problems cited: The e-mail software frequently crashed, staffers weren’t able to send messages with large attachments, they were often kicked offline without warning, and if they tried to send messages to large groups of users they were labeled as spammers and locked out of the system.

Of course, like every terminally arrogant bas****, they will argue that all that is (or should be) perfectly acceptable to the common peons, but not for their lordships?

5 posted on 03/22/2002 8:23:54 AM PST by Publius6961
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To: Bush2000
ALSO HERE.
6 posted on 03/22/2002 8:24:24 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Bush2000
There's no excuse for that screw-up, especially since they could have migrated their mail servers to proven, free Unix mail managers. Seems like the managers who made the decision weren't listening to their IT people.
7 posted on 03/22/2002 8:46:34 AM PST by kezekiel
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To: Bush2000
"You Got Mail!" --- Not
8 posted on 03/22/2002 8:54:19 AM PST by Semper Paratus
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To: kezekiel
Seems like the managers who made the decision weren't listening to their IT people.

Amazing. You never hear of that happening in business. /sarcasm>

9 posted on 03/22/2002 8:57:25 AM PST by danneskjold
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To: Maceman
AOL = "Access of evil"
10 posted on 03/22/2002 9:01:19 AM PST by Risky Schemer
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To: Bush2000
I love the part about guys who have to send to groups getting ID'd as spammers.

I get a fair number of reports vital to my daily work in group emails...

11 posted on 03/22/2002 9:12:14 AM PST by Poohbah
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To: Bush2000
At least when AOL is complaining about Microsoft, Microsoft uses its own software for mail.
12 posted on 03/22/2002 9:31:09 AM PST by PatrioticAmerican
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To: PatrioticAmerican
At least when AOL is complaining about Microsoft, Microsoft uses its own software for mail.

I believe that Microsoft refers to this practice as "eating your own dogfood" or "dogfooding". ;-)
13 posted on 03/22/2002 9:33:54 AM PST by Bush2000
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To: Bush2000
yep. Even BETAs. Of course, when AOL produces crap instead of dog food, what dog would eat it?
14 posted on 03/22/2002 9:46:34 AM PST by PatrioticAmerican
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To: Bush2000
For some anti-MS folks to say MS can't go enterprise, they have never seen Microsoft's data centers. I have seen a number of data centers, and Microsoft actually uses less support personnel than any other I have seen. Most are crawling with people fixing things.
15 posted on 03/22/2002 9:49:08 AM PST by PatrioticAmerican
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