AOL outages and service status in Lawrence, New Jersey
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- AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Lawrence, 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 Lawrence, New Jersey
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Lawrence, 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
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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GodfearingCitizen 🍊 (@halfawake11114) reported@ThrillaRilla369 Darn it mine was and still is an AOL one, thought that was the worst age wise
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Nancy (@nanlogo_nancy) reported@JonKatz79 We just cancel it. Make up a new email and start over. Or we stop using the internet all together. I write checks. Don’t ever give out my phone number and use an aol email address I check once a month and delete 15,000 emails. I win.
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Yui Nakamura (@YuiNoirX) reportedYou know CT is bad when your web3 identity is just a wallet address and a mid-90s AOL username.
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Resident Evil Wiki (@RE_Wiki) reportedSomething more lighthearted. How did Claire know Leon’s email to message him in OG CV? When he made her leave at the end of RE2, was he shouting his AOL address? Did he spend his free time in the Army barracks tracking down which university she attended? #REBHfun
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John DeMetropolis (@jdemet) reported@AOL What's wrong with your service right now? I cannot be "redirected" on sign in.
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Don (@domainpad) reported@cultra I will take ICP over anything. Can build an entire site onchain. Bitcoin will be like AOL it will still hang around for years because you can't do anything with it.
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The Tall Traveler (@TallTraveler1) reportedAOL sports and music message boards was my ****
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Big Country (@FunDreXO) reported@miumiuf1y Umm... Just eat a whole pizza. What's up with aol the sweet ****?
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Patrick Boyuk (@patri83268) reported@GoldLoverXo I personally think history simply repeats itself. Just like in the .com bubble most of the early investors sold as they drop the price down through many different levels of manipulation. The big boys loaded up cheap as retail panic sold. Before the utility like Google, Yahoo,AOL.
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🔻agitprop + absurdity🔻 (@agtprpnabsrdty) reportedDifferent decade, same math: half the S&P 500 is priced at levels that a dot-com CEO called proof of investor insanity while watching his company crater 90%. The rotation at the top: In early 2000, the ten most valuable S&P 500 companies read like a monument to permanent dominance: Microsoft, General Electric, Cisco, Walmart, ExxonMobil, Intel, Lucent, IBM, Citigroup, AOL. A generation later, only Microsoft remains. GE was carved into three separate companies. Lucent was absorbed by Nokia. AOL became the cautionary tale attached to the worst merger in corporate history. Cisco and Intel spent 25 years climbing back to their dot-com peaks. Citigroup, IBM, Walmart, and ExxonMobil still exist, but none crack the top ten. The new top ten is Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and the AI infrastructure complex. Investors in 2000 were also certain they were buying the future's permanent giants. The data says most of today's winners won't be in the top ten a generation from now either, and there is no mechanism by which you find out which ones survive in advance. The valuation problem: In 2002, after Sun Microsystems collapsed 90%, CEO Scott McNealy explained to investors exactly what a 10x sales multiple actually demands: 100% of revenues paid as dividends for ten consecutive years, with zero costs, zero R&D, zero taxes, and zero employees. He was describing the math of the price investors had paid for his stock as a form of collective psychosis. Today, 51% of the S&P 500 by market cap trades above 10x sales. Half the index. The AI narrative is functioning as the dot-com narrative functioned: a story compelling enough to make the math feel optional. The math has never been optional.