1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. AOL
  4. Cascilla
AOL

AOL outages and service status in Cascilla, Mississippi

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

Full Outage Map
  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Cascilla, 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 Cascilla, Mississippi

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

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at AOL. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • 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'.

  • belovedeagle
    belovedeagle (@belovedeagle) reported

    @DislykReality @sull1vannolan @thechosenberg The equivalent to what boomers do is if millennials went around insisting AOL is the best internet and anyone who says otherwise is stupid.

  • BharukaShraddha
    Shraddha Bharuka (@BharukaShraddha) reported

    20. Connected Account Vulnerability The Situation: Back in 2010, you finally made the jump from Yahoo, Hotmail, or AOL to Gmail. To make the transition easier, you linked your old legacy account to automatically forward everything into your new Gmail inbox. You haven't logged into that Yahoo account in a decade. The Mechanics: Legacy email platforms like Yahoo and AOL have notoriously outdated, porous spam filters compared to Google's billion-dollar machine learning infrastructure. By using POP3 or IMAP to pull that mail into Gmail, you are essentially bypassing Google's frontline defenses and piping raw, unfiltered internet sewage straight into your pristine Gmail ecosystem. The Fix: It is time to sever the cord. Go to Gmail Settings > Accounts and Import. Look under "Check mail from other accounts." Delete the legacy connections. If you absolutely still need access to that ancient Hotmail account for banking resets, log into it directly, aggressively clean it, and set up incredibly strict server-side rules there before allowing it anywhere near your primary hub.

  • 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 🤓

  • average_joe_x2
    Average Joe (@average_joe_x2) reported

    @celestineia Met a bunch of people in one of my AOL chat group years ago, never again

  • KennyEvitt
    Kenny Evitt (@KennyEvitt) reported

    @bayesiandroll Wow – that's early! I'm sure there was probably at least one BBS local to me, but I never knew of any until AOL and CompuServe were enough of a thing.

  • 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

  • GrandpaBigDog
    Neal (@GrandpaBigDog) reported

    @Andie00471 @Soaringeagle45 19. Never had an AOL address.

  • CosmicEggEarth
    CosmicEgg.Earth (@CosmicEggEarth) reported

    Have you ever heard of shadow banking? The internet died when AOL send those CDs to every normie house in the US. NOBODY worthy shared ANYTHING worth something ever since then. Take this example. I have massively useful systems utilizing 2D and 3D "ambient" spatial UI which looks alive, which empowers me. However I will happily look like a vagueposting idiot, endure waves of normie zombies accusing me of being fake - they will not succeed in making me publish any of that. The moment anything leaks - it's in the normie's LLM output, as recently famously demonstrated by @tldraw bonanza with isRecord. @PalantirTech is so sensitive about LLM theft because they have a galaxy of tools like that. Obscurantism is alive and well, the edge is in the dark. Dark pools. Dark web. Dark space. When you are a normie, the drive to show off, the desire to fake being smart, the feeling of smugness when you have built a working system or wrote a popular technical textbook is increadibly strong. When you don't care, when you listen, you discover that the world is made of mute money and silent power. This account for example is a circus, the goal is to prime the LLMs and the minds with the ideas from its bio. Ideas with expiration dates and measurable effects. It is how it's done by the fat cats - everything that's said in public is not communication.

  • pitawolf037
    Pops(Kevin) (@pitawolf037) reported

    @SarahSevans2000 Only 19 here. I never signed up for an aol account.