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AOL outages and service status in Markyate, England

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Markyate, 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 Markyate, England

The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Markyate, 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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AOL Issues Reports Near Markyate, England

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Markyate and nearby locations:

  • Cha_Minvielle
    Charlotte Minvielle (@Cha_Minvielle) reported from London Colney, England

    🛑 Important: pour le vote par internet des Français•es de l’étranger, il y a un problème avec les messages adressés aux boîtes électroniques du domaine Yahoo & AOL pour le code de validation envoyé pendant le vote. C’est en cours d'analyse & devrait être résolu aujourd’hui.

  • Cha_Minvielle
    Charlotte Minvielle (@Cha_Minvielle) reported from London Colney, England

    @Fabien_UX @francediplo Oui il y a un problème on l’a notifié, il y a un problème avec les messages adressés aux boîtes électroniques du domaine « Yahoo » / « AOL », par exemple pour le code de validation envoyé pendant votre vote. C'est en cours d'analyse.

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Mawuko
    𝙴𝚖𝚖𝚊𝚗𝚞𝚎𝚕 🇬🇭🦉(PropAMM dealer) (@Mawuko) reported

    @mariorz > That works for the top 50 assets. It cannot serve permissionless asset creation. Skill issue. There are many market-making firms that currently have and actively generate the strategies needed to service even long tail assets. I directly engage with MMs pretty much every other day and the host of them will outright disprove your entire post with what they have. Not sure why this misconception about long-tail assets being unviable for PropAMMs seems to have legs in the minds of some but anyone who knows ball knows that's naïve at best. Being of the opinion that the future and security of permissionless asset creation in DeFi lies on the shoulders x*y=k is like thinking the future of travel will always be horses or that AOL is the future of the web in 2002.

  • EYEGOTL0CKEDOUT
    DKLM 🔞 (@EYEGOTL0CKEDOUT) reported

    This is why I cant hate the roman soldier girl comic cause like how many girls online have been victims of grooming like that at a young age even if some raggedy *** ***** is like "actually we all used aol chat and put poop up our noses" idgaf this sucks infinitely more

  • AverageSizeAndy
    Andrew Long, MD, ESQ (@AverageSizeAndy) reported

    @Joshua_Graham50 @1982VintageNut The email this account uses is an AOL email. Sit down child.

  • grotmaster
    Grotmaster (@grotmaster) reported

    @Kohonos234 @AislingOLoughl1 I don't think so, Jhonner. AOL is a friend of ours and has an incisive mind. Poor ole Steo had some rough times, by the sound of it. These riots are exactly what the ZOG want, unfortunately, all part of the plan. It's all ******

  • EvanKirstel
    Evan Kirstel #B2B #TechFluencer (@EvanKirstel) reported

    Before Broadband, There Was 3Com and U.S. Robotics On June 12, 1997, 3Com completed its $6.6 billion merger with U.S. Robotics, the largest deal the data networking industry had ever seen. At the time, it made obvious sense. 3Com was a major force in Ethernet cards, hubs, switches, and enterprise networking. U.S. Robotics was the great modem brand, helping millions of people get online through phone lines, patience, and that unforgettable dial-up screech that sounded like a fax machine losing an argument. The deal was also a snapshot of the internet before broadband became normal. Offices were being wired with Ethernet. Homes were dialing into the web. Remote workers connected through access servers. Getting online was still something you did deliberately, not something that surrounded you. U.S. Robotics was in the middle of the 56K modem wars, pushing its x2 technology against the Rockwell and Lucent K56flex camp before the V.90 standard settled the fight in 1998. Line quality, compression, compatibility, and a few extra kilobits decided whether the web felt useful or miserable. 3Com brought the LAN side. Ethernet cards in PCs. Hubs and switches in offices. Networks that turned standalone computers into connected organizations. Cisco was becoming the giant in the room, and the market was shifting from selling components to controlling the connectivity stack. The two halves of the deal aged very differently. The modem business was massive, then faded fast as dial-up gave way to cable, DSL, Wi-Fi, fiber, and mobile data. U.S. Robotics became a nostalgia trigger for anyone who remembers waiting for AOL to connect. Ethernet never went away. It moved from office LANs into data centers, carrier networks, industrial systems, cloud infrastructure, cars, and now AI clusters. Speeds, cables, and workloads all changed, and the core idea kept scaling. That is rare in tech. Most technologies age into museums. Ethernet aged into the backbone. Its future still looks strong, because AI data centers, cloud platforms, telecom networks, and edge computing all need more bandwidth, lower latency, and cheaper scale. The merger itself did not age as well. Dial-up was already on borrowed time. Palm, which came along with U.S. Robotics, was spun off in 2000 and briefly worth more than its parent. By that same year, 3Com had spun U.S. Robotics back out as an independent company. The biggest networking merger in history unwound in three years. Still, the deal marks a real turning point. Before broadband, before Wi-Fi everywhere, before smartphones and cloud and AI factories, the internet had to be stitched together one modem, one Ethernet card, and one phone line at a time. For a brief moment, 3Com and U.S. Robotics sat at the center of that transition.

  • mmni99inc
    Adam Charles Maxwell (@mmni99inc) reported

    @SMB_Attorney Are you going to take away AOL accounts from every eight and nine figure smug dummy in Kañsas too 🤔 Because that could fix a lot of problems for the earth

  • XKillerxYouthX
    stuck in america (@XKillerxYouthX) reported

    @pharmacykitty Gmail ******* sucks let's go back to aol

  • flight2q3211
    The Great Gazoo (@flight2q3211) reported

    @firstadopter The deal makes total sense to me. Arbitrageurs putting deal likelihood above 50% of going through. Can only make sense to compare to AOL X Time Warner if you think one of FOX or Roku has a bad destiny coming. FOX pays about 6% interest on debt.

  • legallyging
    ginger spice (@legallyging) reported

    @Boblhead truly!! was at a restaurant today and someone's ringtone was the AOL dial-up tone. ended up going down a rabbithole bc of that

  • altxslayer
    Arran 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (@altxslayer) reported

    I would never join BlueSky, it would be much much better to put a second sim card in my phone and have my followers have this new phone number. I was tech-social before AOL, MSN and BBM and it was just fine.