AOL outages and service status in Exeter, New Hampshire
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- AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Exeter, 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 Exeter, New Hampshire
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Exeter, New Hampshire 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
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Gordy_BD (@BrentGD) reported@TheMaineWire Jones and Migley are RCV buddies. Same with Bush and Wessels. Bobby was AOL... again. This narrows down my picks.
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JWH (@faithisnobile) reported@GeniusGTX I recall the early www before commerce mostly hijacked it for profit. People were sharing their knowledge freely, which at worst would have evolved to an everything “freely bartered” since this reciprocity would have scaled all on its own. 🤔 I laughed at AOL, the middleman.
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@Nobody (@NobodysRebel) reportedAllegedly this is common knowledge but @nodqdotcom don't research **** after aol sold Teds braves and WCW he sold all of his stock and stepped away in 2002
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Manuel Milliery (@mamilliery) reportedEveryone is laughing at Ryan Cohen's math. They shouldn't be. He just proved he understands the market better than anyone on Wall Street. January 2021: A Reddit user called DeepF*ckingValue posts a $53,000 GameStop position. The math says the stock is worth $4. It goes to $483 in two weeks. Melvin Capital, a hedge fund that bet on math, loses everything. Robinhood shuts down the buy button. Congress holds hearings. The system breaks. Nobody fixes it. 2026: Ryan Cohen, who became GameStop's CEO after walking into that rubble, offers $56 billion to buy eBay. His company is worth $11 billion. eBay is worth $46 billion. On CNBC, the host, Sorkin, asks where the money comes from. Cohen says "half cash, half stock." Sorkin says the math doesn't work. Cohen says he doesn't understand the question. The whole sequence becomes a meme, an icon of finance TV right away. 1999: AOL buys Time Warner for $164 billion. Steve Case calls it "the most important deal in history." It destroys both companies within two years. The man who got lucky once always starts believing luck is a business model. What is true is that in the attention economy, a good story beats a good balance sheet. Cohen knows this.
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BadWolf (@IdiotGodThing) reported@ohhanxiety 18 never had waterbed, and I think I didn't have my own aol address
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Joseph Kirkland (@thebrothaj) reported@headnavy damn, i miss aol sessions! it was like the “tiny desk” of the 2010’s!
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Terry Phillips (@HiFourPac) reported@lady_valor_07 19 - AOL was crap...
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Jared Drury (@JaredWDrury) reported@MensHumor 19 but only because I never had AOL.
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Rogerramjet (@Rogerramjet64) reported@Irina_exh 19, never had aol account
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TomT (@Crashmak3r) reportedJournalists are warning us that we're in a tech bubble - as they share their message across multiple tech platforms - saying right now is akin to the 2001 tech crash in which the biggest tech company was AOL, who needed you to install a physical CD before using their AIM service.