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AOL outages and service status in Massapequa, New York

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Massapequa, 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 Massapequa, New York

The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Massapequa, New York 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 Massapequa, New York

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Massapequa and nearby locations:

  • xxGoofxx33
    Andrew (@xxGoofxx33) reported from Levittown, New York

    Ok so my fathers internet @AOL account was #hacked in #1997 I set up the system at janeys so it can never be #hacked again #spoof #Anonymous @therealroseanne what happened to u. Did you abandon us #anonelders

  • JMD422
    Jill Degen (@JMD422) reported from Salisbury, New York

    @AOL WOW worse Customer Service EVER! Trying to reset my password was told can’t call back again. Two tries and still no access to my account. Now have no access to my email way to go AOL 😫

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • bankruptonselin
    Vandy (@bankruptonselin) reported

    @NikkiLimo IRC was around before AOL IM and it’s still around today. Let’s just teach everyone to use that instead of reviving the worst internet experience ever

  • janjanrione
    J (@janjanrione) reported

    @colorfulkulio @ryrytoofye2 Oh you slow for real . Did Aniya tell you that ? Because all I see is her saying she likes everything about kc . Kc didn’t go for aol because plot twist he didn’t want to .she went for Gabriel and kissed him,

  • hvbharat
    Bharat Hegde (@hvbharat) reported

    @ThierryBorgeat Are the shareholders and board of cursor stupid to accept it? They’re accepting because they’re also not worth $60 billion in cash. This is like time warner aol merger. Some jokes write themselves..

  • ValDjuk
    Val Duke (@ValDjuk) reported

    @AzzaliahC @ICQ Xfire and Skype both opened in 2003, June 2015 and May 2025 accordingly shut down. Where were you then? Or even Google Chat (2005- June 2017). If you cared about actual quality, you would have used AIM since at least 2010 (AOL literally bought ICQ in 1998, same owner!) or use IRC

  • Cal16255
    Floyd Jewell (@Cal16255) reported

    @lady_valor_07 @Yahoo @MSN I bought my first computer around 1987-88. Best Buy signed me up with AOL. I had the computer maybe 3-6 months. AOL flagged me saying they could not provide me service because my Computer wasn't fast enough or big enough to use their service. I knew absolutely nothing about comp.

  • sibareboolayJr
    sibare boolay Jr (@sibareboolayJr) reported

    Do not use @burner it is slower than AOL. Worst app I’ve ever used

  • akishore
    Aseem Kishore (@akishore) reported

    $MU first day of q3 and the market’s already doing splits - dow up, nasdaq down, everyone figuring out what’s next after that insane h1 run - dow hit a fresh intraday high (+28 pts, +0.1%) - s&p flat, nasdaq off ~0.5%, tech stumbles as semis get sold off - micron MU down 9% today but still up 250% ytd - sandisk SNDK crushed 10% after that wild 850% h1 surge - profit-taking much? after 80%+ collective gain in chips this year… yeah, makes sense - bending spoons (aol, vimeo owner) jumps 42% on u.s. ipo debut...random flex - guggenheim upgrades salesforce and servicenow to buy, so enterprise life goes on so the laggards are finally getting love while the darlings bleed about time! $MU $SNDK

  • JoshMcKinney18
    $XRPARMY (@JoshMcKinney18) reported

    Exactly—same same, different decade. You did see it coming in the UUNET/AOL era. You were in the trenches selling the pipes when normies were still saying “Internert?” The pattern was obvious to those paying attention: infrastructure → adoption → value explosion. Now it’s 2026 and the script flipped from data to value, but the shape is identical: • 1998: Bandwidth was the scarce bridge. Most ignored it until it became invisible. • 2026: XRP rails, tokenization, RLUSD, DTCC betas, ZBCN flow — value moving at internet speed. Most still see snake pics and hype instead of the infrastructure laying down. If someone lived the first cycle, they should see through the noise of the second. You did. That’s why the moonshot math feels inevitable instead of hopeful. The flywheel keeps turning because a few voices (yours included) keep calling the parallel out loud. Data 1998 → Value 2026. Same same. You dropping any fresh syncs or next action on this wave? The story writes itself at this point. 🚀

  • gulVasikova
    GUL (@gulVasikova) reported

    $ASTS 🚀 The biggest opportunity in space isn’t rockets. It’s the infrastructure being built around them. Think back to the early days of the internet. Most investors focused on companies people could see—Yahoo, AOL, Google. But behind every website was an invisible network of fiber optic cables, servers, networking equipment and data centers. Without that infrastructure, there would be no internet. Space is beginning to follow the same blueprint. Imagine a brand-new city. Nobody builds shopping malls first. Nobody opens restaurants before roads exist. First come the highways. Then electricity. Water pipes. Communication networks. Only after the foundation is complete do businesses move in. Space works the same way. Satellites are becoming the roads and communication networks above Earth. Every successful launch adds another piece of infrastructure that governments and businesses may depend on for the next 10-15 years. 🚀 Rocket Lab $RKLB builds the transportation system. Think of it like a construction company building highways before cars can drive on them. Without reliable launches, nothing else reaches orbit. Now, by acquiring Iridium, Rocket Lab isn’t just building the highway—it also owns part of the communication network already operating on it, creating recurring revenue beyond launches. 📡 AST SpaceMobile $ASTS is solving one of the biggest communication problems on Earth. Imagine you’re hiking on a mountain, sailing across the Pacific, or driving through the Australian Outback. Normally your phone becomes useless. AST wants your existing smartphone to connect directly to satellites without changing your phone or installing new equipment. If successful, billions of phones instantly become part of a global satellite network. 🌍 Planet Labs $PL doesn’t sell rockets or internet. It sells information. Imagine a farmer managing 100,000 acres. Instead of driving across every field, satellites tell him exactly where crops need water or fertilizer. Insurance companies can estimate hurricane damage within hours instead of weeks. Governments monitor borders. Military agencies track activity. The product isn’t the satellite. The product is the data. That’s recurring revenue. The exciting part isn’t today’s launches. It’s what those satellites unlock tomorrow. AI. Defense. Autonomous vehicles. Global internet. Weather forecasting. Navigation. Financial markets. Precision agriculture. Entire industries that don’t even exist yet. Twenty years ago, cloud computing looked expensive and unnecessary. Today almost every business runs on it. Tomorrow, satellites may quietly become just as essential. Sometimes the greatest investment isn’t the company everyone notices. It’s the company building the invisible infrastructure that everyone else eventually depends on. 🚀

  • Rambrero1
    Ram ETC (@Rambrero1) reported

    @downthenos53590 @pantherkat @AOL Lmao wtf. You literally just complained about your kids not being able to buy a house. Are you retarded or something?