Print

Print


-----------------------------------------------------------------------
AOL users suffer another outage outrage
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK (November 18, 1997 5:53 p.m. EST) -- America Online lost e-mail
service for nearly five hours Tuesday during the third brownout in less
than a month for the nation's largest online service.

AOL, which is still installing new equipment because of chronic busy
signals earlier this year, said the problem causing the three brownouts
should be eliminated after the company installs new hardware next month.

"The good news about that is we've identified this recurring problem and
identified a fix for it," said AOL spokesman Tom Ziemba. AOL is testing the
device before installing it, he added, because "we want to solve this
problem and not make it worse."

Ziemba said Tuesday's problem started about 9 a.m. EST. Subscribers already
using e-mail were blocked from all e-mail functions but still could use
other AOL services such as access to the Internet. However, those not
logged onto AOL could not use any functions.

By 11 a.m., the log-on capacity was fully restored but there still were
problems with e-mail. By noon, subscribers could generate directories of
their e-mail and read previous messages but could not send new messages.

By 1:40 p.m., AOL said, service was completely restored, no e-mail was
lost, and AOL claimed to have a solution to its predicament.

"It's a problem caused by a product made by a particular company," Ziemba
said, declining to further identify the technical problem or the company
involved.

If so, AOL has solved one of its biggest flaws.

On Oct. 30, AOL members couldn't access AOL for about 90 minutes and e-mail
was disrupted for several hours. On Nov. 3, millions of subscribers lost
their e-mailing ability for several hours.

But AOL's biggest headache occurred as an onslaught of new customers, after
AOL radically changed its pricing structure, overloaded the company's
modems in the first months of the year. AOL has been installing 25,000
modems a month to overcome this problem.

Ziemba said these problems have not hurt AOL's credibility.

"I would say downtime is still less than one percent of overall time,
including scheduled system maintenance," said the spokesman from the
company's Dulles, Va., headquarters. "While we take these problems very
seriously and work to prevent them as soon as possible, it's still a
relatively small amount of time."

AOL, which announced Monday that it had topped 10 million subscribers, has
an estimated 20 percent of the world's online population and half of the
wired households in the United States.


By PETER ALAN HARPER, The Associated Press
Copyright 1997 Nando.net
Copyright 1997 The Associated Press
<http://www.nando.net/newsroom/ntn/info/111897/info19_28206_noframes.html>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

janet [log in to unmask]