I was thinking more in terms of the "dealing with upset retail customers" crisis! I can only imagine what it must have been like to be in the sales personnel's shoes.
Ahh... I see. Perhaps it's a bad thing to say this, but the average Best Buy customer being angry about naughty stuff on all the TV's would probably just make me laugh. Whether or not I could allow the grin to sneak out to my face, would be more of how the bosses were reacting to the situation than anything.
What a great story to tell over beers later! "So... there was this one lady who was about to have a conniption fit... she apparently didn't know that if you don't want to look at something, you can turn around..."
They did get the unwanted pictures off. "Several minutes" does not sound like an inordinate amount of time to me, given that the sales personnel were probably not trained to deal with this kind of problem.
Something I read said upwards of 30 minutes, but I don't have the link now. I'm sure Best Buy's PR said "several minutes" to the press. LOL!
Unless I knew for sure that I knew how to reboot any equipment that was on those breakers, *I* would be reluctant to turn off the breaker, and I'm an EE. I wouldn't want to do it if there was any chance of shutting down sales for the rest of the day, or even a couple of hours.
Understood, again... situational. If customers are apoplectic and someone felt they had to act "now, now, now"... kill it. If the Point-of-Sale system in that area is hanging off the breaker the TVs are on, that shouldn't be a big deal.
If someone was stupid enough to put the PoS SERVER or other critical stuff on a breaker that's feeding displays on the floor... that's just god-awful design and probably needs to be fixed anyway.
Labeling the breaker might also be in their future...
But there's something else I don't understand about your comments: If you feel that the "dreaded human boobies" are not that big a deal in the grand scheme of things (and I agree), why the criticism that they didn't get them taken down fast enough?
See 30 minute note above.
True, but I'm just trying to imagine what it must be like for a person working in retail to be confronted with something that is upsetting customers.
Just by working in retail and walking up to me asking if I "need something" you're upsetting me... but that's me... I'll come find ya if I need ya... and I'm not exactly going to expect you know the answers.
Best Buy is kinda like Radio Shack... "You've got questions, we've got blank stares."
"Don't panic" is easy to say when you're not the one who is confronted with upset customers.
Ahh... it's not that bad. I've had a customer's EVP yell at me (well, really just yell at anything on the conference call) in a mini-panic...
What they always want is an ETRS time that's at least something based in reality.
(That particular customer is umm... listed as the Fortune 100's 12th position right now...)
So, you learn it's not personal. But, it does take a while and a tad bit of confidence to figure that out the first few times.
I will admit, it's easier when they're that high up the food chain, because if they want you fired, you're going to be fired... your only hope is just to remain calm and fix the problem at that point.
Most retail customers don't have the power to make a phone call to another EVP and have you terminated instantly -- a few do -- but then again, front-line Retail managers aren't exactly known for their leadership skills and understanding, or for creating a true team environment where they have your back... so it could be a lot more intimidating to have Joe Sixpack or his Wife yelling at you in a Best Buy store, than some guy making $500K+ a year yelling on a conference call.
(He was actually a really nice guy in person, super driven, smart... but man you didn't want to tick him off. He didn't suffer fools well. He also knew his tech well enough to tell when a vendor was BSing him. I never even thought about trying to make up things around him or sugar-coat it... he could handle the truth and also knew what it meant. "The database is in a recovery mode, so the cluster is down and the tool says it'll come out of recovery in approximately 12 minutes." - he was the semi-rare EVP that didn't hear that as "Blah, blah... blah, blah, blah... Database... Blah, Blah... Broken... Blah, Blah... Lost Revenue... Blah.")
It's quite possible, as Palmpilot alluded to, that the same network that runs the register also handles the video to the display televisions. Is it that big a stretch to postulate that the "hackers" used the boobies as a diversion while they downloaded the data they really wanted?
In a properly designed network... no. But at Best Buy? Perhaps.
All bets are off when you start mixing Production Financial and Product Demo networks.
Haven't seen any PoS systems since PCI really got rolling that were allowed to mix that traffic, though.
Who knows... there's so many holes in most networks, the only thing saving anyone is encryption technology, and some folks here on PoA believe strongly that the most widely used encryption tech (SSL) is completely compromised, or nearly so... (from discussions in other threads).
Pick your paranoia level. It's a Choose Your Own Adventure book/game at this point.