AOL outages and service status in Westwood, 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 Westwood, New Jersey
The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Westwood, 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 Westwood, New Jersey
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Westwood and nearby locations:
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Alan Modracek (@AlanModracek) reported from Closter, New Jersey@cjane87 I keep putting the emails in the spam folder, but the filter keeps putting the new ones in my inbox. Maybe AOL just sucks? Everything else I only have to flag once or twice, though.
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Emperor of Tomorrow ー 懲りずに • EZ-PZ🤡 🤮 (@CoryPipcinski) reported from Nanuet, New York@mareea_rose 20 years ago. Met a ******* an AOL dating site. 1st date she asked if we can hang at my apartment because she hit her ankle bad. She asked we can order Thai food to bring back. I said sure order whatever you want because I know nothing about Thai food. I pick her up, she …
AOL Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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ArudhiJ (@ArudhiJ) reported@ehdande Says a real estate developer🧐 Since when did you hear matatu owners support a light rail transport system! AOL
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Noah by SAN (@noahintel) reportedALERT: Iran reported casualties and infrastructure damage from US military strikes, according to Euronews and AOL; the report was last updated at 00:27 UTC July 10.
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Nate Roth (@NathanCRoth) reportedwhile every fund on earth chases the next AI-native SaaS, a Milan company just went public buying the ones everyone left for dead. Bending Spoons closed its first day up 40% on the Nasdaq, roughly an $18B valuation. their portfolio is AOL, Vimeo, Evernote, WeTransfer, Eventbrite, Meetup. the stuff you probably have a dormant login for. the consensus says pre-AI software is a melting ice cube. anyone can spin up a Notion clone in a weekend, so the whole cohort trades like it's going to zero. the CEOs of those companies believe it too, which is why they sell to Bending Spoons for a number that looks insane on paper and reasonable in a spreadsheet. the market keeps mispricing one thing. a brand people already trust with their files, their notes, their event tickets is the hardest asset to manufacture in software right now. AI features are cheap. 500 million monthly users who opened the app this week cost a decade to build. so Bending Spoons buys the loyalty, cuts payroll to the studs, centralizes engineering in Milan, ships AI on top, raises prices, holds forever. Evernote's personal plan went up 63% because the switching cost was always higher than the sticker.
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GL | kRaZeYdRe (@kRaZeYdReMoBiLe) reported@brockpierson No never heard of it. I used yahoo, sbcyahoo , aol, and I think that's all they had back in my days lol
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Sabretooth | Exchequer (@SabretoothSG) reportedCrypto has hit a local maxima, like the internet did in 1998. How you monetize currently in crypto is to clip trading volume. The users doing volume are traders. so everything ships for traders, perps, options, CEXes, dexes, launchpads, etc... Build for traders and you get instant traction. build for anyone else and you get crickets, so the traction data says traders are the only market, and the capital follows the traction data. in 1998 every serious internet company was a portal. Yahoo, Excite, Lycos, AOL, Infoseek. the metric was traffic. Everything was built to keep the user on the page, because the user on the page was the business. Search was actively deprioritized. A good search engine sends the user away, which is negative stickiness, which made search a bad product. In 1999 Excite passed on buying Google for under a million dollars. In 2000 Yahoo hired Google to power its own search results, because search was a cost center you outsourced. We are in the portal era of crypto. The Google of crypto will not show immediate traction. Google didn't. It sent users away, made no money, and looked like a toy to every smart person grading it on 1998's metric. If you want immediate traction, the market has plenty for you. Go find the next pump fun. The next Aster. The next shiny thing traders rotate into for three weeks. The next big thing requires conviction about what crypto is for, not what does volume in the next 30 days.
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🌮(((Stuart))) 🇺🇲 🟧🟦 I (@violinii) reported@SarahSevans2000 Never had AOL. Otherwise...
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Jeff Bohren (@JeffBohren) reportedSince I have been casting aspersions on "Agile as Practiced in Nearly Every Project with a Certified Scrum Master", I should tell you about some projects I was on that worked. One on the most interesting ones was during my Network Management product development phase. I was hired by ARINC to work on software for the Iridium project. Shortly thereafter, one of the directors came up with an idea for a commercial product. He wanted a no code drag and drop UI to create a GUI to show and control SNMP values. We went to two Networld-Interop shows a year, one in Las Vegas and one in Atlanta. He wanted a new minor release for each trade show. The product owner would give the dev team a list of prioritized features. The five developers would meet and decide what we could do by the next release and worked in order of priority. That's it. Simple and effective. The code was written in C/C++ and was written to run on Windows, SunOS, HP-UX, and AIX. We used a OSS GUI library called InterViews. It integrated with HP OpenView and IBM NetView. From a business perspective, the project was a failure. We made sales, but not enough. Eventually the project was terminated an we were all laid off. That is when I was hire by AOL, but that is another story.
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Kumalovi📺 (@Bear_lovi) reportedBecause I been trying to figure out why ******** I have a AOL and a lookout account when I don’t use thoes website at all
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NipNapShite (@NipNapShite) reported@keithapearson Still very much on aol Might have been their first customer 🤪
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tonnaree🦄🐝🍑 🌈🙃(she/her) Pro-Choice (@tonnaree) reported@SarahSevans2000 17. Never was on AOL