AOL outages and service status in Shefford, England
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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 Shefford, England
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Shefford, 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:
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Triple R Productions -podcast host (@TripleRProduct) reportedHey @AOL You want to charge $70 to get back someone's account that has been hacked. And you're customer service is horrendous as well.
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oh_well (@confirm__email) reported@MarinaMedvin All this is aol Ed by simply leaving nato and let the eurozone deal with their own problems. I hear France can sortie a flotilla with carrier at least for a few weeks. And the UK only needs a couple of months to get one destroyer ready for sea. win win. Imagine all the lolz
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Boni Blackstone (@BoniLBlackstone) reported@90sWWE 1997 "The year of the goose" Grey Goose for Tammy unfortunately. She's rotting in an Ocalla Florida prison for DUI vehicular homicide. 7th offense. No liscence, no insurance, boyfriends car. Sad story in this biz. Most DL'd AOL star to orange jumpsuit. -**** poster
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Reinhold Thomas Mueller (@Reinhold2108) reported@ohhanxiety Never used AOL
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John (@HeyJSay) reported@SarahSevans2000 19! I never had an AOL address. I was Yahoo! from Day 1. Now if that was AIM, guilty as charged.
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Jacob Navok (@JNavok) reported1.) Buy company 2.) Leadership, strategy and priorities change based on market changes because market is not static 3.) Have bad takes about this written on twitter WB went from independent studio to Time Warner to AOL Time Warner to ATT to Discovery to the Ellisons. These things happen in business because the market changes.
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Novel Ninja | Catholic Geek (@thenovelninja) reportedMel misses the point, perhaps even by sincere error. It's not nostalgia for limited programs. I'm sure there are some people who want to go back to AOL, but that's not the point. It's that we have come to recognize that being parked in front of a screen for most of the day is bad for even an adult, much less a child. So many of us are nostalgic for a day when we weren't online all the time. Personally, I'm also old enough to remember when I was called socially deficient for reading all the time, just because my books were more interesting than my peers. I was in eighth grade before I found friends who liked even some of what I enjoyed. Being online isn't automatically bad, but if you don't exercise self-control you'll find it controls you. That's being terminally online -- when it defines you, more than anything else.
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R.L.Kelly (@ladymoirra) reported@babybeginner @Scada_Hacker There is a problem with your Bruiser logic. This was Ladybird, formerly know as Damsel, formerly known as cat with cat shaped markings.. Ear tipped, but shouldn’t have been TNRED. She wasn’t feral, probably never was but she had the tipped ear of a tnred cat, and I swear I once saw her on AOL as a cat with interesting markings, yet I found her dumped in a Walmart parking lot, late winter on a cold drizzly morning. How this chunky lady ended up under a car, begging for help is probably something I will never know, but once I was able to pick her up, she was that heavy.. I put her in my cargo van so that she was out of the drizzle.. I ended up taking her home with me that cold not friendly cat morning and she lived with me for at least 8 years. I didn’t get a scanner, I probably should’ve gotten one by now, but those microchips have been known to travel Ladybird lived a long not always beautiful life but it was a long one. I picked her up in 2012 and she lived into the 2020’s and was pretty Active up until the last few weeks of her life. She passed quietly next to me in our bed.
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Sandy Kory (@sandykory) reportedI haven’t been buying the "SaaSpocalypse," but Q1’s nosediving SaaS valuations gave me pause. After a week in SF last month sampling the AI zeitgeist, I have a better feel for where the software sector is heading. It’s the SaaS-to-inference transition, and it’s good. My long-standing view has been that AI is a net positive for the software industry. It radically raises the ceiling for what software products can do. It should dramatically expand the market opportunity for software, just like the on-prem-to-cloud transition did back in the day. Yet many have been freaking out. After all, haven’t SaaS switching costs come down dramatically in SaaS, threatening one of the pillars of the business model? Yes, there’s no doubt that the “cement around the ankles” of legacy SaaS has weakened. At the same time, most legacy SaaS companies have barely scratched the surface of AI innovation while maintaining their historically high retention. This is how it played out in the last major transition: on-prem-to-cloud. Many legacy players (pathetically) ignored cloud innovation for 5-10 years (or longer) and still kept their customers. It turns out that technology is stickier than most in the tech industry believe. Take a look at Bending Spoons, which IPO’d off the back of buying crappy legacy products and jacking up prices because users didn’t want to give up their AOL email or Evernote notes. Tech industry people are not like this. They tend to be part of the very small minority of early adopters. Most people aren’t like this. Neither are most organizations. Legacy software isn’t going to disappear. But if pre-AI software companies don’t embrace AI innovation, their customers will be much less forgiving than on-prem customers 10-20 years ago. AI capabilities are too potent and obviously beneficial. What does embracing AI innovation look like? It means layering intelligent actions into all software. Historically, great software has helped users follow the right workflow. Now, great software must do the workflow by triggering agents to take actions. In other words, inference. The great news for everyone is that this opens the door to consumption-based pricing models that can scale exponentially. For legacy players and startups alike, delivering amazing AI-powered, agentic features is the way to get on the vertical-growth train. Remarkably, the door is still open for legacy players. Intercom’s 3.6b exit to Salesforce is a great example. Of course, new pricing models mean new margin structures. Just as SaaS had lower gross margins than legacy on-prem, expect consumption-priced inference to have lower gross margins. This is OK! We’ve already seen massive wins for inference-selling startups with negative gross margins, like Cursor. Legacy SaaS companies need to find religion on this. Dropping margins is never easy. Lock up the finance team if you have to. The priority is delivering AI-powered value for customers. Everything else is just details.
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alty (@altyalternative) reported@Forsakencov one good thing about the older emotes is that they were something i never heard off i never knew about sinister minds, redseas nobody until i saw those emotes in forsaken nor did i know what the AOL Guy was i think more emotes should be very ver yniche