You know MobileMe is a piece of junk when ... (Updated)

This one reads like a Jeff Foxworthy (of "you know you're a redneck when..." fame) joke. As in, you know MobileMe is a piece of @#$% when even Walter Mossberg, the world's most prominent support of Apple products, can't find anything good to say about it. I look back, smiling, on the weird emails I got a few days ago regarding my "MobileMe tirade" (which was nothing of the sort). But let's not beat around the bush. I expect you guys to email complaints to Walter as well. Go on, you can do it.

In the meantime, we can all enjoy the sight of the reality distortion field crashing down over at the Wall Street Journal. Doesn't the sun just feel nice on your face sometimes?

Apple's MobileMe Is Far Too Flawed To Be Reliable

After a week of intense testing of the service, I can't recommend Apple's MobileMe, at least not in its current state. It's a great idea, but, as of now, MobileMe has too many flaws to keep its promises.

The problems I am citing are systemic.

In my tests, using two Macs, two Dell computers and two iPhones, I ran into problem after problem. One big issue is that while changes made on the Web site or the iPhone are instantly pushed to the computers, changes made on computers are only synced every 15 minutes, at best. Apple has admitted that this is a problem, and says it is working on it.

But there's more. The Web site was sluggish, and occasionally calendar entries wouldn't load at all. Sometimes, you have to manually refresh the Web pages to see changes made on your devices. And when I tried to open my Web-based file-storage page directly from the MobileMe control panel on Windows, I got an error message on both Dells.

My MobileMe calendar, which originated on a Mac, didn't flow into the main Outlook calendar, but appeared as a separate calendar in Outlook, which was visible only by changing settings. My address-book groups on the Mac, which are simply distribution lists, didn't show up as distribution lists in Outlook, but as separate address books, and they also weren't immediately visible.

Other problems abounded.

If Apple does get MobileMe working smoothly, it could be a terrific service. But it's way too ragged now.

I guess that could be said of any product. For example, "if the Ford F150 just got 36 MPG, it would be a fine vehicle for today's world of high gas prices."

And ... "Intense testing"?  :) Come on.

But whatever. There's isn't a bit of Apple praise in this entire review, which has to be a first. (OK, he does note that Apple "patiently" explained why all of these errors were happening. Admitting you have a problem is, after all, the first step.)

So, good job, Mr. Mossberg. And good for you in actually using two Dells, and not the usual three-year-old/barely-working Sony laptop you always cite. Real people use Windows, all the time, really, in the real world. And unlike the "impressive magic" cited in David Pogue's Apple-centric MobileMe review, this one touches on the reality of how bad this thing really is. I'm curious, however, how the broken Photo Gallery Web app wasn't mentioned at all. If anything, that's the worst part of MobileMe. (And trust me, it's hard deciding which of the many broken parts of MobileMe are "worst".)

And speaking of Pogue: I would just point out that he's back to writing about digital cameras again. All I'm saying is, I called it.

UPDATE: He tries to point the finger of blame anywhere but at himself, but now even David Pogue is madly backtracking from his original review of MobileMe. Seriously, this is the right thing to do, but don't pretend it worked fine when you tested it, Mr. Pogue. MobileMe has never worked. But thanks to David for pointing that out. I'd never have seen it otherwise, and for what I hope are obvious reasons.

Discuss this Article 64

subzerohitman721
on Jul 24, 2008
Since I don't use mobile me, I can't really comment. However, from the reviews that I've read, the perception isn't very nice.
DRWAM
on Jul 24, 2008
Snakester, I would bet that you're right. But I think that this has more potential to harm sales of fence-sitters, the ones that don't have a lot of knowledge of Apple's consumer rating and stuff. They may see the bad news and walk away. People tend to remember the 1 % bad deeds, rather than the 99% good deeds. That's what I've seen it at work as well as in the public eye. I hate to sound like a pessimist, as I am not, but this has been my experience.
DRWAM
on Jul 24, 2008
Wow, there are so many places where this story is printed that it's unreal. Apple is getting a pass here, that's for sure.
DRWAM
on Jul 24, 2008
oops, that's a typo that was meant to read "Apple isn't getting a pass here, that's for sure." Sorry, my bad.
DRWAM
on Jul 24, 2008
OK gang, I can sync Exchange with Entourage, but it created a Identity and of course a new calender with it. Anyone know how to merge calenders [of my two Entourage identities] or get my Treo to sync with the Exchange identity. My only choice to sync Entourage with the Treo is 'Main Identity', which is not the Exchange identity. Should I change the 'default' identity to the Exchange identity to get it to sync with the Treo? Thanks, Doc
DRWAM
on Jul 24, 2008
Nevermind. I switched the default identity to the Exchange identity and the Treo was able to sync with the Exchange calender identity in Entourage, which now looks as if it's updating with the Exchange service. Do I get my "Geek" badge name tag/pocket protector now?
cesjr
on Jul 24, 2008
"@cesjr - Everybody is biased...after all, my daughter was the prettiest girl at her graduation. --tayme" that's fine, but then do you go around excoriating other parents for thinking their daughter is the prettiest? Paul is not remotely objective - he can't be. He makes his living from windows, for christ's sake. For someone like that to accuse Walt Mossberg of extreme bias in favor of apple is not only unprofesssional, it's hypocritical and frankly, reflects a complete lack of self awareness of the obvious fact that he's far more beholden to MS than Walt is to anybody.
tayme
on Jul 24, 2008
@cesjr - "Paul is not remotely objective - he can't be. " Thank you. That is what I have been saying. And to my knowledge, Paul has never claimed to be objective on this blog or Windows IT Pro. You haven't shown me otherwise, so we have to assume that he hasn't. --tayme
RobertC
on Jul 24, 2008
@cesjr: "While Walt - an independent journalist that makes probably a million bucks a year -- is supposedly kowtowing to apple for some reason. " So, what are you trying to say? That making a million dollars a year is proof of independence and journalistic integrity? Give me a break.
Mum
on Jul 24, 2008
"you know MobileMe is a piece of @#$% when even Walter Mossberg, the world's most prominent support of Apple products, can't find anything good to say about it." "And ... "Intense testing"? :) Come on." Heh. Paul's own testing is usually quite superficial, since he doesn't seem to do any work on his computers besides writing. He plays games, shares photos and surfs the net, from what I can see. What I'd love to see is OS reviews from people who actually know something about image retouching, graphic design, video, audio, 3D etc. "The Greatest OS ever" suddenly becomes useless when no work can get done on it.
lotsamystuff
on Jul 25, 2008
"I was a professional photographer hired to take pics at the graduation and thought that my daughter was the prettiest...would that mean that I couldn't comment on the other girls and guys and how they looked?" If you started making public smarmy comments about them, you'd never get hired again. Or if you, say, posted photos of them on a blog called "graduationphotosupersite" and gave them tacky captions and headlines like, "Mary's face is a mess", you'd likely be hung from the highest tree. And rightly so.
tayme
on Jul 25, 2008
@Mum - "What I'd love to see is OS reviews from people who actually know something about image retouching, graphic design, video, audio, 3D etc." Those things, along with running a multi terabyte database, or an OLTP facility would be good tests on the server end as well...On the client, how about managing those 2 things from the desktop, or doing lights out monitoring of an entire datacenter...including client/server, mainframe, and midrange systems. Those would be real tests...and I know that the company that I work for does them and more before rolling out any new OS to the enterprise. --tayme
Dipsh t Admin
on Jul 25, 2008
"Paul's own testing is usually quite superficial, since he doesn't seem to do any work on his computers besides writing. He plays games, shares photos and surfs the net, from what I can see." I 100% disagree with that statement. Rather, it is the Pogue's and Mossberg's of the world that have a quite superficial review, using the product for about a week until they move on to the next product. For certain products, that is fine, but for more complex things, that is not OK. Paul does not have a review of MobileMe yet, although he is enlightening us to the problems that he and many others are experiencing. And neither does he have a iPhone 3G review up, and his original iPhone review was out much later than others, showing that he was actually using the product for some time. While some may complain about his blog here and the comments that he makes, I would have to say that Paul is one of the fairer reviewers out there, and doesn't do the wham, bam, thank you mam reviews that others do.
halesgarcia
on Jul 25, 2008
Thurrott writes: "MobileMe has never worked." That statement is patently untrue. It's worked for me, and people I know as well as for others who post comments on forums that I read.

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