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AOL outages and service status in Thame, England

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Thame, including 0 direct reports.

AOL (America Online) is an internet portal as well as an internet service provider. As an ISP, AOL offers dial up internet through its AOL Advantage plans.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Thame, England

The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Thame, England and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

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Community Discussion

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AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • SandyEgoCali
    ☛Sir Fedupalot ☛relentless pogonotropher (@SandyEgoCali) reported

    @AndrewGupta @marklevinshow you noticed that too? I couldn't believe it the other day when he said he was having problems with his email and he revealed that it was AOL. He's also constantly complaining about pop-up ads. I mean seriously who even sees those anymore when they are so easily eliminated?

  • gulVasikova
    GUL (@gulVasikova) reported

    $ASTS 🚀 The biggest opportunity in space isn’t rockets. It’s the infrastructure being built around them. Think back to the early days of the internet. Most investors focused on companies people could see—Yahoo, AOL, Google. But behind every website was an invisible network of fiber optic cables, servers, networking equipment and data centers. Without that infrastructure, there would be no internet. Space is beginning to follow the same blueprint. Imagine a brand-new city. Nobody builds shopping malls first. Nobody opens restaurants before roads exist. First come the highways. Then electricity. Water pipes. Communication networks. Only after the foundation is complete do businesses move in. Space works the same way. Satellites are becoming the roads and communication networks above Earth. Every successful launch adds another piece of infrastructure that governments and businesses may depend on for the next 10-15 years. 🚀 Rocket Lab $RKLB builds the transportation system. Think of it like a construction company building highways before cars can drive on them. Without reliable launches, nothing else reaches orbit. Now, by acquiring Iridium, Rocket Lab isn’t just building the highway—it also owns part of the communication network already operating on it, creating recurring revenue beyond launches. 📡 AST SpaceMobile $ASTS is solving one of the biggest communication problems on Earth. Imagine you’re hiking on a mountain, sailing across the Pacific, or driving through the Australian Outback. Normally your phone becomes useless. AST wants your existing smartphone to connect directly to satellites without changing your phone or installing new equipment. If successful, billions of phones instantly become part of a global satellite network. 🌍 Planet Labs $PL doesn’t sell rockets or internet. It sells information. Imagine a farmer managing 100,000 acres. Instead of driving across every field, satellites tell him exactly where crops need water or fertilizer. Insurance companies can estimate hurricane damage within hours instead of weeks. Governments monitor borders. Military agencies track activity. The product isn’t the satellite. The product is the data. That’s recurring revenue. The exciting part isn’t today’s launches. It’s what those satellites unlock tomorrow. AI. Defense. Autonomous vehicles. Global internet. Weather forecasting. Navigation. Financial markets. Precision agriculture. Entire industries that don’t even exist yet. Twenty years ago, cloud computing looked expensive and unnecessary. Today almost every business runs on it. Tomorrow, satellites may quietly become just as essential. Sometimes the greatest investment isn’t the company everyone notices. It’s the company building the invisible infrastructure that everyone else eventually depends on. 🚀

  • stillnothawkize
    hawkize (@stillnothawkize) reported

    I have bad news about the number of athletes who’ve done the same thing regarding Morgan wallen she literally did the last sentence last week. do you have the Internet? I have an AOL CD I can send

  • TimPrime1
    TimPrime1 🇺🇸 (@TimPrime1) reported

    No kidding on that one. I still remember having dial up with #AOL. Also, the bottom one should say 'you don't know what slow is,' or 'you have much to learn'.

  • FloridaSueK
    Sue 🇺🇸🐊🌴🌺🦩✌🏼 (@FloridaSueK) reported

    @justinkallhoff @RonDeSantis Not anti AI, just cautious AI. Perhaps AI should not be widely available. Perhaps it should be geared toward business use, like the Adobe software suite or Microscoft Office suite of business software. Like any tool, it has potential for both good and bad. We don’t let 13 year olds drive cars and drink beer for a reason… perhaps AI should not be so readily available to young minds. They can learn to use AI under a teacher’s guidance ( to use in a later career- it’s an essential skill). And for the record, I would completely shove the Internet back in a box… life was so much more simple in the late 80s and early 90s before PCs and AOL brought the Internet to anyone who could afford it. Same with cell phones. And the irony is not lost on me I am discussing this with strangers on the Internet 🤓

  • Shuzagkii
    Shuzagki (@Shuzagkii) reported

    @itskinkerbellxo Lmaoo they using this **** like we back at AOL/blackberry times I fear 💀

  • mattst73
    matt stevens (@mattst73) reported

    @desthia2 This is the bottleneck problem AI is experiencing right now. It is like when AOL charge by the minute, then someone said unlimited internet. We need quantum computing to have a break though or enough data centers to handle. Selling compute capacity to other AI companies has screwed their own customers.

  • travis_nadine
    Nadine Travis (@travis_nadine) reported

    @keithapearson I’ve had an AOL account for over 30 years and never had any issues.

  • ucantcallmeVal
    Lisa Barlow Stan Account (@ucantcallmeVal) reported

    It’s true what they say that you care so much less ab **** in your 30’s than your 20’s bc 20’s Valerie would have bullied that pathetic little account into shutting down through pure shame until the only internet they felt safe using was a ******* AOL cd rom from 1996.

  • ardizor
    ardizor 🧙‍♂️ (@ardizor) reported

    SPACEX IS THE FINAL LIQUIDITY EVENT BEFORE IT ALL BREAKS The most overvalued market in 100 years and retail is still buying This pattern has appeared before every major crash in modern history. Not most of them. All of them. Dot-com: internet was real, Nasdaq lost 78% Housing: real estate was real, $8 trillion disappeared AI: technology is real just like the others were The technology being real has never stopped the bubble from bursting Now SpaceX enters at $2.35 trillion, 95% of shares still locked, insider supply hitting the market on a fixed schedule starting in August Every major bubble had one final moment where retail money got pulled into the most exciting trade imaginable right before everything collapsed Dot-com had AOL. Housing had mortgage-backed securities. AI has SpaceX. Same movie. Different cast. Final act. I've called every major top and bottom for 15 years, including the $16K bottom and the $126K top both publicly, both before they happened The next call will be even more important I'll post it here publicly like I always do Turn notifications on - if you're not following yet, you'll understand why that was a mistake later