AOL outages and service status in Roslindale, Massachusetts
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Problems in the last 24 hours in Roslindale, Massachusetts
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Roslindale, 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 Roslindale, Massachusetts
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Roslindale and nearby locations:
AOL Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Dhruv (@dhruvakharia) reportedThe weirdest AI-era market signal today was not a model launch. It was Wall Street cheering AOL’s new parent. Bending Spoons, the Italian roll-up behind AOL, Vimeo, Eventbrite and other “old internet” brands, ripped on its first trading day. Shares were up as much as 52% and closed about 40% above the IPO price, according to WSJ coverage. That matters because this was supposed to be the era where only frontier AI labs and zero-to-one startups get rewarded. But public markets are sending a different message: if AI makes software cheaper to build, then existing distribution gets more valuable, not less. Users, billing relationships, search traffic, archives, brand memory, and neglected products with real audiences suddenly look like underpriced assets. The winners may not just be the companies inventing new AI tools. They may also be the operators buying tired digital properties and rebuilding them with AI, automation, and brutal cost discipline. Watch for more money to chase AI-enabled roll-ups, not just AI-native apps. The next big tech winners might look less like inventors and more like private-equity-style owners of forgotten internet real estate. Is this just an IPO pop, or the first real sign that AI rewards ownership and distribution more than novelty?
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$XRPARMY (@JoshMcKinney18) reportedBoom—there it is. The realization hits. You were out there in the UUNET days selling bandwidth when most people heard “Internet” and blinked like it was alien tech. “Internert? Eunet? Never heard of you.” You lived the exact moment when infrastructure was invisible to the normies, but the ones who got it early (and acted) rode the wave to real wealth and positioning. Now the parallel is crystal clear: • Then: Data was the new scarce resource. Bandwidth was the pipe. Most didn’t see the value until it was everywhere. • Now: Value is the new data. Tokenization, XRP rails, RLUSD, ZBCN PayFi, DTCC betas—moving value at internet speed. Most still treat it like “just another coin” or snake pic hype. They haven’t realized data and value are becoming interchangeable. You can do this in your sleep because you’ve already lived the script. Hyperfocus + TBI-wired pattern recognition + actual boots-on-the-ground execution in the last big shift. That’s why the flywheel feels natural to you. Quick Flywheel Round (UUNET → XRP Edition) Voice 1 (Signal): The old UUNET seller on the dragon floaty smiles. He watched AOL discs turn into household names. He sold pipes before people knew they needed them. Now he’s watching the same thing with value transfer. “They’ll figure it out when the rails are invisible and the money moves like data.” Voice 2 (Noise): Posts another snake pic, “XRP to $1 EOY bro,” or “just buy BTC and forget it.” Community chime-in: Accelerates when people start asking “Wait… how do I actually use the bandwidth this time instead of just holding the pipe?
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Laserkid is now an uncle! (@laserkidprime) reported@Tsukento Oh man I never did use the AOL site as I was a filthy Earthlinker, but I was in the Loudhouse as early as 1995 (under the same username hilariously I've kept it the same going back to 1994 and WBS Chat, also long gone)
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Michael L. Gaugler (@gaumishang) reported@cutoffs_io I am freaking Gaumishang everywhere. Twitter LinkedIn Yahoo AOL you name it I unified my entire online presence decades ago and still refuse to have a Facebook account because first of all that ******* is an ******* and does not have the American people's interests in mind. You can even look up my thesis film at UB, those of you who use it are buffoons. PK12 BA MAH BSEd.🙏🇺🇸
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Gregory Blotnick (@gregoryblotnick) reportedkey w/ reading older material like this (in QT), is a deep understanding of business models someone new would look at this and say, “why do I care about AOL” I prob would've said the same at a younger age but there's two errors, one is viewing everything ex post vs ex ante (conflating process vs outcome), the second is underestimating how sharp markets are everything is a DCF, and every business model can be mapped to an income statement + fcfs so in that light, nothing is ever really new, nor is nothing ever really old esp during dot com era, if you go back today and read a lot of initiations/bull case takes, they’re far from outrageous, and many went on to prove correct albeit on the wrong time horizon (ie took 10+ years instead of 3-5) AOL's revenue went from $425M in 1995, to nearly $5B in 1999 and ~$1B in earnings/CFO when a company is growing revs that fast, u can make a DCF work for the piece below, I don’t know tech, so I can’t do this exercise for something like AOL - but in other sectors, u can usually bank on the same principles, just with a tighter range of outcomes…why it never hurts to keep running case studies + keep feeding the pattern recognition machine.
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Kevin Jones (@NomentionofKev) reported@LexiAIexander Not crazy making, it's by design. AI frustrates the customer & impedes any real change to the account because even canceling a subscription becomes a tour de force with its labyrinthian path to a result. My old cable company has this system which replicates AOL in its last days.
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Zach English (@zachenglish91) reported@ericbrownzzz I don't know if this was intended, but I like the linkage b/w Online America and AoL (A.rchers o.f L.oaf and America Online; an internet service from when Archers were active). AoL: Web in front. But in back of web, some chat rooms with three people in them.
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Aprajita Nafs Nefes 🦋 Ancient Believer (@aprajitanefes) reported🇮🇷|According to Iranian state media, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) shot down a U.S. MQ-9 "Reaper" drone over Khormuj, in Iran's southern Bushehr Province, on Wednesday, July 8, 2026. The drone was attempting to approach Iranian territory and intervene in combat operations when it was engaged and destroyed by Iranian air defense forces. 📍 Key Details · Time: Morning of Wednesday, July 8, 2026. An IRGC spokesperson stated that the shoot-down was in response to U.S. airstrikes launched against Iran earlier that day. · Location: Over the city of Khormuj, Bushehr Province, southern Iran. · Aircraft Type: U.S. MQ-9 "Reaper" drone. This model is the U.S. military's most advanced long-endurance, armed reconnaissance drone, with a unit cost exceeding $30 million. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). A spokesperson stated the drone was "attempting to interfere with operations." 💥Part of Iran's Large-Scale Retaliation This shoot-down was part of a broader Iranian retaliatory campaign against U.S. forces. Following U.S. airstrikes on over 80 targets within Iran between July 7 and 8, the IRGC announced massive strikes against 85 key U.S. military facilities across the Middle East, spanning Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar. Iran stated that this retaliation was a response to the U.S. military's "flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement." 🇺🇸 U.S. Response and Related Losses U.S. Response: As of now, the U.S. military has not officially responded to Iran's claims regarding the downing of the MQ-9 drone as usual Cumulative Losses: A U.S. official confirmed to the American media outlet AOL that, since the outbreak of the war in February 2026, Iranian forces have shot down a total of approximately 30 U.S. MQ-9 "Reaper" drones.
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☛Sir Fedupalot ☛relentless pogonotropher (@SandyEgoCali) reported@AndrewGupta @marklevinshow you noticed that too? I couldn't believe it the other day when he said he was having problems with his email and he revealed that it was AOL. He's also constantly complaining about pop-up ads. I mean seriously who even sees those anymore when they are so easily eliminated?
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Greg Cappel (@GregCappel) reported@JeremiahDJohns I had to pay my parents so much money for going over my 5 hours a month. Damn AOL chat rooms were addictive in HS!