What shut down 8,000 Starbucks Friday?

Starbucks returned to business early Saturday after a computer outage forced thousands of its stores to close Friday night.

A Starbucks store closes Friday, April 24, 2015, in Phoenix because of computer issues. Starbucks says a sales register computer glitch has disrupted sales at company-operated stores in the United States and Canada. The company apologized to customers for the inconvenience late Friday and said it was working to resolve the outage. Customers found some stores closed and others offering free coffee.

(AP Photo/Traci Carl)

April 25, 2015

Starbucks is back in business early Saturday after a computer outage forced thousands of its stores to close early the night before.

The company said the outage was resolved Friday night after several hours. The glitch affected registers at 7,000 company-operated stores in the U.S. and 1,000 in Canada, and prompted some stores to give away drinks.

"All Starbucks stores in the U.S. and Canada are expected to open for business as usual on Saturday," the company said in a statement late Friday. "We apologize to our customers for this inconvenience."

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Starbucks said the outage was caused by "a failure during a daily system refresh." Company spokesman Jim Olson stressed that the problem was an internal issue and no external breach was involved.

The problem began in the early evening Friday on the East Coast. Stores that had not already closed for the evening were closed early, the company said.

At a Starbucks store in Seattle's South Lake Union neighborhood, customers were told staff members couldn't process orders. They were, however, being offered coffee at no charge.

"I'm not going to complain about a free cup of coffee," said Suveer Sharma, who was getting a caffeine fix before he headed on a weekend trip to Idaho.

At a Starbucks in Phoenix, customers drove away angrily after seeing closed signs.

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"I have a sleeping baby in the back and I'm waiting for a prescription," said Claudia Larson, 40, of Scottsdale. "I wanted a coffee! I'm bummed!"

Starbucks is busiest in the mornings but has been trying to attract more customers later in the day.

In Williamsburg, Virginia, Tom Roberts was part of two couples who stopped by a Starbucks after dinner. He said they accepted the store manager's offer of free coffee or tea.

"They were super polite in coping with it," he said of Starbucks staff.

Some customers took the news harder than others.

"One guy had been driving all day, he was anxious for a nice fancy Starbucks — but she gave him a large coffee and he was cool," Roberts said. "I think he had a little craving going."

The company said the outage also affected four Evolution Fresh stores and six Teavana Tea Bar stores. Those stores will also reopen Saturday, Starbucks said.

The problem did not affect about 5,000 licensed stores in the U.S. or about 300 licensed stores in Canada, Olson said.

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Associated Press writer Traci Carl contributed from Phoenix.