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AOL outages and service status in Asbury Park, New Jersey

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Asbury Park, 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 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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AOL Issues Reports Near Asbury Park, New Jersey

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Asbury Park and nearby locations:

  • genot32
    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

  • kgeich
    kyle (@kgeich) reported from Tinton Falls, New Jersey

    Imagine growing up without AOL Instant Messenger. Life would’ve been terrible.

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • twicemeles
    twicemeles (@twicemeles) reported

    @Owliellder Only one I never witnessed as AOL. I wasn't allowed. I am creaking.

  • BwieAktien
    Bernd (@BwieAktien) reported

    @Forbes Peak New Economy: AOL bought Time Warner in 2000/01 in an all-share deal, with a purchase price of about $147bn on the books, often announced as ~$165bn. In 2002, AOL Time Warner then took a $54.2bn goodwill impairment, followed by another $45.5bn write-down. Now AOL is back in the public-market story as part of Bending Spoons’ >$18bn IPO! $BSP

  • StillArQuez
    ArQuez (@StillArQuez) reported

    Now my @yahoo account never once has stated that I’m outta storage nor asked me to purchase extra data. And that’s the first account I’ve had since @aol and that was after you got that blue cd from Walmart to get a trial period on the internet.

  • pitsch
    Pit Schultz (@pitsch) reported

    If you follow the debates in France, Bavaria and the UK, institutions that still care about sovereignty in police and intelligence are struggling to justify their Palantir contracts. Karp applies the same rhetorical operation he once ran on the Frankfurt School to dismiss open-weight bare-metal local AI: autonomous, private, sovereign exactly at the nation-state layer - where Palantir instead builds a global empire on critical data, pushing proprietary “ontology” across military, police and surveillance with zero open source, weaponizing the arguments of the systemic opponent as travesty. The US hyperscaler bubble doubles down on proprietary monoliths defending their shrinking moats, while technology moves the other way. They all want to become the SGI, Sun, Digital or AOL of the AI age.

  • deputydogblitzn
    deputydog357 (@deputydogblitzn) reported

    @FOX13News Technology and computers have always led to fraud, the dark web has been around since the AOL days, unfortunately the govt keeps adding more technology to everything for the surveillance state, they will never stop it

  • Raptor_RUD
    Goebz (@Raptor_RUD) reported

    @SpaceX service is hands down a nerd's dream. At 37 years old, having gone from getting an AOL disk at the Grand Union to 300+ Mbps from space tickles me in a way my wife can’t.

  • hauntedhomesinc
    Matchalover (@hauntedhomesinc) reported

    @prisyum Don't even make me start to try to remember my AOL login

  • liberty91362
    liberty91362 (@liberty91362) reported

    @brivael I worked at Time Warner for 24 years, and lost hundreds of thousands of my 401k in the infamous AOL merger that killed off the greatest media company in the world—the worst merger in corporate history. I mostly blame Steve Case and his other AOL cronies, who dumped all their stock right at the merger, while all the TW Execs and employees kept their stock and lost billions. I remember McKinsey’s empty suits seemed to be everywhere at Time Warner drying its death throes, and it always seemed like McKinsey helped orchestrate its collapse.

  • Ckennedytvguy75
    Chris Kennedy (@Ckennedytvguy75) reported

    Trans Atlantic flights go from **** to entertainment hubs. From dial up aol to isdn to cable to satalites. From a phone on the kitchen wall to cordless to bulky to flip to IPhone pc in your pocket

  • dhruvakharia
    Dhruv (@dhruvakharia) reported

    The 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?