AOL outages and service status in Asbury Park, New Jersey
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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 Asbury Park, New Jersey
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Asbury Park, New Jersey 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 Asbury Park, New Jersey
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Asbury Park and nearby locations:
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kyle (@kgeich) reported from Tinton Falls, New JerseyImagine growing up without AOL Instant Messenger. Life would’ve been terrible.
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Geno Talarico (@genot32) reported from Wanamassa, New Jersey@antwanstaley I didn’t .... but I remember them. I could never get to play them because I would always run outta time on my AOL CDs.... lol
AOL Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Vadim (AI, ⋈) (@zacodil) reported@pe_remek Flat-rate dial-up ran on the same circuit-switched lines as per-minute dial-up. AOL sold $19.95 unlimited in 1996 with the phone network unchanged. If circuit switching forced per-minute billing, that plan could not have existed. It did, and millions bought it. So the meter was a pricing choice, not a property of the wire. It came off dial-up by decision, and Anthropic just announced the same move for its best model: folding it back into a flat subscription.
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Casey B. Head (@CaseyBHead) reported@simonsarris Scrounging AOL disks out of the garbage for 120 more minutes of free Internet.
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l0n0⚡👁 (@AdventureDr) reported@MrHodl People are just stupid a lot of the time. That guys been a train wreck almost from moment 1. An ego driven pervert. Basically he would of fit in well during the hight of AOL.........
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Alex Prompter (@alex_prompter) reportedYou're prompting frontier AI through the same keyboard layout you used for AOL Instant Messenger. The models got 1000x smarter. The interface didn't move an inch. $5.5M says Aina's building the fix. This is the hardware gap I've been watching for someone to close.
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Sheila Howze-Jones (@ChynaStormWx) reported@Soaringeagle45 I got 15 points due to the fact that I never used a fax machine, got a AOL account, dial up internet, nor used a checkbook until college my grandfather was the only person sleeps on a waterbed
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Flavius Aetius (@StupidBoomers) reported@litteralyme0 wikipedia sucks...its dying...like AOL or Myspace
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MichaelJensen1 (@_Kadmos1) reportedIf Netflix won, I would still oppose it. I tend to not be a fan of these media mergers. AOL TimeWarner should have not been allowed. Microsoft getting Activision Blizzard was a bad idea. SkyDance getting Paramount? Horrible. Disney getting 20CF? Stupid. Now, the 2006 Disney-Pixar merger I do side with. Disney getting Marvel and Lucasfilm? Wish the smaller 20CF got both of those companies.
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HairdresserExtraordinaire (@hairgeek60) reported@AOL You’re kidding right. He sounds terrible.
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G_I_DAVE (@G_I_DAVE) reportedNever had an AOL, but I still have my Hotmail email, so I'm gunna call it a full punch card.
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Sara K. Eisen (@SarKE) reported@xwanyex Yes. Very much this. I remember my first post-college job in mid/late 90s, bored between faxes I was sending for my boss at a large non profit (kids this is all true and not satire.) On ICQ, pre AOL acquisition, I was chatting w someone in Tasmania (a pilot, he claimed) and another person, a professor from South UK, who told me to listen to Rodrigo. This was still before you could send graphic files so everyone was an avatar and words unless you put a photograph in an envelope and mailed it. I ended up writing a novel when a startup I’d just joined closed in mid 2000, about how relationships and communication would and have changed in this new texting world. Never published it because “some people did some things” in 2001 and agents only wanted non fiction, and then I lost the drive. Thank you for coming to my TED walk down memory lane.