Posted on 12/01/2001 5:52:05 AM PST by Lazamataz
I'm an @home customer, AT&T to be exact. At 8:15 CST, I no longer could access any pages. Not google.com, not cnn.com, none of the old standbys that ALWAYS work.
I've heard a lot about the poaaibility of @Home pulling the plug on 4.1 million customers. Did it happen? The only reason I can connect at all is that my lovely and gracious fiance also has a dialup account for when she is on the road, and I am calling in here using that. I am presently on hold on the AT&T@Home help line. I'll have more information.
Technically, the light is on but no pages are being connected. My Cable Modem is up and connected but nothing loads.
Go there and run the test then post your results. We'll see about this!
OTOH, I'm noticing that after a time all the led's go out except for the power which continues to flash. Then the pc link begins to flash with the power led, and then the cable led begins to flash as well.
Could this be AT&T uploading new software or reprograming the cable modem?
prisoner6
Darkness Map |
AT&T, Chicago, IL |
AT&T, Denver, CO |
AT&T, Grand Rapids, MI |
AT&T, Dallas, TX |
AT&T, Pittsburgh, PA |
AT&T, Olympia, WA |
Same here. I have always carried an extra phone line dedicated to a dial-up, along with a 5 hour/month dial-up backup just in case my cable modem went down, which it does, of course from time to time. I really lucked out last night when a friend told me it was going down. My dial-up account locks in at midnight on the first of the month, so last night I went in and switched from 5 hours to unlimited connect JUST IN TIME!
Results test run: 10:10CST Dec 1, 2001
your ISP: @Home Network
Your raw speed was 1870249.06 bits per second. There are 3 meaningful ways we can interpret this number:
Communications context 1.9 megabits per second This is how communication devices are rated. Kilo means 1,000 and mega means 1,000,000. Examples of this context include 56k modem, 384/128 DSL, and 10Mbit Ethernet
Storage context 228.3 kilobytes per second This is how data is measured on your hard drive and how FTP programs measure transfer speeds. Kilo is 1,024 and mega is 1,048,576.
1MB file download 4.5 seconds The time it would take you to download a 1 megabyte file at this speed.
AT&T previously stated that the problems with Excite would not interfere with their continued service. I guess they were wrong.
Darkness Map |
AT&T, Chicago, IL |
AT&T, Denver, CO |
AT&T, Grand Rapids, MI |
AT&T, Dallas, TX |
AT&T, Pittsburgh, PA |
AT&T, Olympia, WA |
AT&T, Vancouver, WA |
Regarding AT&T from a former AT&T perspective -- everybody views Big T as we call it, as "Deep Pockets", people go after their money all the time. Excite screwed up -- their problems are their own making. AT&T shouldn't bail out Exite by raising their offer. Big T already invested hundred of millions into the business. -- That would be akin to asking people to buy out Enron for 8 billion just so it could get away with all the fraud they perpetrated ---- Last comment, THANKS a MILLION for running this thread.!!!
That's what has me ticked.
prisoner6
From what I've read, it is the cable providers who have the choice to turn off their customer's internet connection. So if it happens to you, go DSL for internet, and satellite for TV. Don't give your provider another penny. I sent Cox an email letting them know that was how we would respond to any action on their part to discontinue our service.
I think it makes a big difference where you start out, because the competition is so fierce the "other" company will offer you a real deal to gain market share.
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