AOL outages and service status in Hatfield, England
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- AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Hatfield, 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 Hatfield, England
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Hatfield, 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 Near Hatfield, England
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Hatfield and nearby locations:
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8/10 (@8outof10blog) reported from Barnet, England@reece_dinsdale The other two are "Welcome to AOL: you're connected!" and "Goodbye...th-that's it." Damn I need to put these on my new laptop!
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Niamh Grimes (@NiamhGrimes4) reported from Goffs Oak, England@AOL unable to sign into email for last week. No response from customer services. No one to talk to either😡😡Absolute joke. Important emails that I cannot access. AOL can you please get on to this. Beyond frustrating.
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Alan Walker (@ahwpgapro) reported from Loughton, England@AOLSupportHelp We have been going around in circles and the reason I’ve tweeted my issue is I can’t get anywhere because we’ve done all the security Q’s and still 0 - I need to speak with a human being.....
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Alan Walker (@ahwpgapro) reported from Loughton, England@aolmail I’ve been attempting to retrieve my wife’s AOL password for the past 10 or more emails with your supposed email support. Its merry go round getting nowhere. Please assist.
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Angela Casey (@ElfinchickCasey) reported from Enfield Lock, England@sky_waller I scored one. I never knowingly had an AOL account. Don't you feel sorry for today's kids.
AOL Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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WhyisTheRumGone (@Michael04253892) reported@TimOnPoint Ill never understand why the post office, back in the days of AOL, Hotmail, and Yahoo... Didn't create an email system
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Big Cat Sports (@bsports1234) reported@Xfinity resorting to the old AOl tactics of their web site not working and constantly logging you out or "technical issues" when trying to pull up your bill.
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RichardJK (@RichardJKPE) reported@girdley The worst was Time Warner's purchase of AOL.
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Balldo Bull (@BalldoBull) reported@NexGenGuy people saying stupid **** in dsp chat is amusing but this is straight up retarded. why is this idiot typing like it's 1997 and hes in an aol chat room?
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elle 🤍 (@curethesmiths) reported1 - AOL messages didn't save back then (actually they never saved), so we don't have to worry about maggie finding those!
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Zero6th!rth££n (@nininini79) reported@mils_tk Too big to be doing iheart radio? dvmb fans like u are the reasons kpoppies shxt on bts. The grp doesn’t have an issue with it but a fckin shipper on twter is cryin? Man, go read some aol and drink water.
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green p1 phosphor screen (@LazyPipe) reported@FellerYeller The last chatroom I joined was on AOL in like 1999. It's never been more over.
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Business Nerd (@Business_Nerd_) reportedMarc Andreessen on the exact moment the Internet changed forever: "There are two Internets," Marc explains. "There's the Internet that existed before 1993 and the Internet that existed after 1993." Before 1993, the Internet was funded by the National Science Foundation as an academic and research network. Commercial activity was strictly prohibited under what was called the acceptable use policy. The result was something the people who lived through it still describe in utopian terms. @pmarca describes it like this: "People who were on the Internet before 1993 often describe it in utopian terms because it literally was like you take the whatever million smartest people in the world and you put them on a network together with like no commercial activity, no advertising, no nothing, just the million smartest people in the world. And you just like let them talk to each other. And it's just like amazing." He singles out Usenet, the old messaging system, as the centerpiece of that world: "The discussions on Usenet were just like absolutely spectacular… It was like the most pure, clean intellectual, like vibrant space sense, like, I don't know, Athens in 500 BC. It was just like this amazing phenomenon." Then AOL connected. In September 1993, AOL plugged its million or two million subscribers. Normal people into the Internet for the first time. That moment got a name: eternal September. It was the day the Internet stopped being an ivory tower and became a mainstream consumer thing. The "eternal" part is its own joke. Marc explains: "Concept of eternal September literally was, it was like when every new wave of college graduates graduated and got their first job and then went online. So September is when the new crop of Internet users showed up… So the September effect didn't just happen once. It like happened over and over and over and over and over again. And every cycle of Internet user would basically be like, oh my God, this is great. But like, it's all going to get ruined in September." The Internet we live in today is the result of roughly 30 of those Septembers stacked on top of each other. Marc is careful to say he's pro that shift. He was on the side of opening it up, allowing commerce, allowing advertising, connecting everyone. But he doesn't pretend the trade-off wasn't real. You can't take a network of the smartest million people on earth, connect it to everyone, and expect the texture of the conversation to survive. The lesson sits underneath the story. Every great network has a pre-commercial phase that the early users remember as paradise, and a post-commercial phase that actually changes the world. Both are real. You don't get the second without giving up the first.
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John (@JohnFindsYouJew) reported@weebtrash2021v4 @Todney_Ruxedo AOL baby. "Holly ****, John has a computer with the internet!"
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Donald Shelton (@PrplGld) reported@hthieblot That AOL home page was a virtual prison cell. Looked at it once, never went back.