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AOL outages and service status in Medford, Massachusetts

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Medford, 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 Medford, Massachusetts

The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Medford, Massachusetts 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 Medford, Massachusetts

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

  • JoesGonnaTweetU
    Joe Edwards ⚡️ ジョ・エドワルドス (@JoesGonnaTweetU) reported from Medford, Massachusetts

    Damn this aged the shit outta me...AOL/AIM ain’t even on here 😭

  • MrTomCatt
    Tom Cattaneo (@MrTomCatt) reported from Somerville, Massachusetts

    @NESN your video feed for the Bruins game is awful. Choppy and looks like I'm streaming it from my AOL account in 1999. Which is actually an upgrade for you guys good work tonight

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • JennyWilliamshe
    Shellz (@JennyWilliamshe) reported

    @DougWahl1 When I worked at AOL in Northern VA, that had that. I thought it was fair. Support.

  • WeAreNotGTM
    WeAreNotGoingToMars (@WeAreNotGTM) reported

    I'm going to call about this in the morning... The man survived the attack, but it doesn't feel like they're doing enough to find out who committed this crime. Instead, they are already painting a picture with unconfirmed sources saying that he said something inappropriate to someone's girlfriend. When I asked AI to tell me where this information came from, it could only refer to an AOL article, and then the replication of this unconfirmed sources narrative with subsequent publications... Basically, it's a bunch of bullshit that people kept replicating. It's wild to see the level of trauma this man experienced, and for the immediate narrative to be spun that he is the perpetrator. That is what is disturbing me the most about this case... Both of his eyes begin to swell shut, and blood was squirting out the side of his neck. That is an extremely violent beating in the middle of broad daylight... It is literally an attempted murder. Anytime a weapon is used to impale a location such as the neck, it is a felony offense and the person's image needs to be shared immediately. Hundreds of people witnessed this in broad daylight. There should have already been a press conference to calm the public. Why is no one trying to reassure the public that they're safe? How can they be safe if no one knows the identity of a crazy murderous maniac roaming the streets? These are just some of the thoughts that are probably going through some of the people's heads that were traumatized by this event. I genuinely feel for them. I'm happy this man survived and didn't bleed out... It was the awareness of applying the pressure that probably saved his life. Had he been unconscious and without help, he probably would have died from bleeding out right there on the ground. I'll definitely be following up on this story...

  • no1zesaime
    11ways🕷️ (@no1zesaime) reported

    @americadotfun Damn I need to buy some aol

  • RealTmDaddy
    Nameless G (@RealTmDaddy) reported

    So on the advice from some on here, I have decided to get a "side piece". A quick search on AOL. com for codeword "maid services" and a woman will come to your house and do all the things your woman isn't there to do. For an extra fee, you can even get a *********. My wife has mentioned getting a "maid service" before, but I thought she had experimented with that in college & outgrew it. I've hired this side piece to come do her thing while I am at the airport picking my wife up. I hope my wife doesnt have some intuition that I cheated (on the house cleaning)

  • inthepixels
    Brian Cohen (@inthepixels) reported

    23. **Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (2008)** — Lost over $18.5 billion nominally, equivalent to over **$20.0 billion** today due to global credit declines and equity write-downs. 24. **Alcatel (2001)** — Suffered massive merger-related write-downs and market destruction during the telecom equipment collapse, crossing the **$20.0 billion** inflation-adjusted threshold. 25. **Swiss Re (2008)** — Incurred tens of billions in asset impairments and structured credit losses during the financial crisis, placing its real-loss event at the **$20.0 billion** inflation-adjusted mark. The Three Eras of Corporate Destruction What stands out is how concentrated these losses are. The Dot-Com and Telecom Collapse (2000–2002) The telecom bubble produced the single greatest concentration of corporate losses ever observed. AOL Time Warner, JDS Uniphase, Qwest, Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone, Vivendi, Alcatel, and NTT all appear on the list. Trillions of dollars in market value evaporated as companies wrote down acquisitions, fiber networks, wireless licenses, and internet-related assets purchased at bubble-era valuations. The Global Financial Crisis (2008–2009) AIG, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Citigroup, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, Credit Suisse, Swiss Re, and Mitsubishi UFJ all suffered enormous losses as mortgage securities, derivatives, and structured credit markets collapsed. Unlike many dot-com write-downs, these losses reflected real capital destruction that threatened the stability of the global financial system. Industry-Specific Collapses General Motors appears three separate times on the list, highlighting decades of structural challenges within the auto industry. United Airlines reflects the severe financial strain associated with bankruptcy and restructuring. Nakheel demonstrates how quickly even seemingly unstoppable real-estate booms can reverse. The Half-Trillion-Dollar Club The four largest losses alone account for nearly $470 billion in inflation-adjusted value destruction: * **AOL Time Warner (2002):** ~$143 billion * **AIG (2008):** ~$128 billion * **JDS Uniphase (2001):** ~$104 billion * **Fannie Mae (2009):** ~$94 billion Combined, these four annual losses destroyed more value than the current market capitalization of many of the world's largest public companies. The lesson from this ranking is simple: the biggest corporate losses rarely occur because a company has a bad quarter or even a bad year. They happen when an entire narrative breaks—whether it is internet mania, telecom euphoria, housing prices that supposedly never fall, or financial engineering that appears risk-free until suddenly it isn't.

  • PrayerWarriorF1
    Carol Ann 🇺🇸🇬🇧💂‍♀️🗽 (@PrayerWarriorF1) reported

    @Demeter_Erinia No, it was a CompuServe (Aol). It was a weird name after a squirrel with no tail that used to hang out in our garden.

  • watsondci
    WATSONDCI (@watsondci) reported

    @AvatarTyler Holy ****, you all have the internet in Indiana now and this is the trash you use your AOL minutes on?

  • mccovid20
    McCovid | fakevirus.eth (@mccovid20) reported

    Historically IPO allocations went to institutions. retail buyers got whatever was left after the +30%. @wallet_tg just flipped that. Two listings, two times people got in at the actual price Bending spoons owns vimeo, wetransfer, evernote, eventbrite, aol. $1.3B revenue, 95% growth last year If you missed second IPO don't miss the next one, based on the facts price is never going under the IPO price which means you can't be in red

  • akishore
    Aseem Kishore (@akishore) reported

    $MU first day of q3 and the market’s already doing splits — dow up, nasdaq down, everyone figuring out what’s next after that insane h1 run - dow hit a fresh intraday high (+28 pts, +0.1%) - s&p flat, nasdaq off ~0.5% — tech stumbles as semis get sold off - micron MU down 9% today but still up 250% ytd — sandisk SNDK crushed 10% after that wild 850% h1 surge - profit-taking much? after 80%+ collective gain in chips this year… yeah, makes sense - bending spoons (aol, vimeo owner) jumps 42% on u.s. ipo debut — random flex - guggenheim upgrades salesforce and servicenow to buy — enterprise life goes on so the laggards are finally getting love while the darlings bleed — what a world. MU SNDK

  • reopenpa
    ReOpenPa (@reopenpa) reported

    @dr_bouchard @mediainfluence9 @JuddLegum AI isn't a traditional bubble. AI is in its infancy - like looking at AOL and saying you'll never shop on the internet.