Editor’s note: Check out for all new developments about the .
You’ll have to bear with FedEX and UPS. It’s probably hard to coordinate deliveries when every computer simultaneously crashes because of a CrowdStrike bug.
That may not be a literal description of what happened to UPS and FedEx on Friday, but you get the point. Both of the major mail carriers issued statements (FedEx via and UPS via ) in the hours after a temporarily rendered most Windows PCs on the planet inoperable. According to both companies, packages might be a little delayed.
“The FedEx network is operating across the globe, but potential delays are possible for package deliveries with a commitment of July 19, 2024,” FedEx said. UPS, in a similar statement, said “there may be some service delays” but noted overall that its delivery fleet was functional.
A slightly delayed delivery is inconvenient, but far from the worst consequence of Friday’s computer kerfuffle. The dreaded “blue screen of death” came for . There is a that unfortunately requires manual human intervention (meaning it’ll take a bit before everything is back in order), but Friday’s outages may be a wake-up call for those who didn’t realize just how interconnected the world’s technological systems are.





