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Is Google Down?
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techfan4 Offline
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SkunkworksCrappies
Post: #1
 
:eek: :eek: :eek:
05-07-2005 05:59 PM
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techfan4 Offline
One of the First
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Posts: 4,586
Joined: Feb 2002
Reputation: 23
I Root For: Georgia Tech
Location: Atlanta, GA

SkunkworksCrappies
Post: #2
 
Back up..but I've got a screen shot :D

GMail still down
05-07-2005 06:01 PM
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techfan4 Offline
One of the First
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Posts: 4,586
Joined: Feb 2002
Reputation: 23
I Root For: Georgia Tech
Location: Atlanta, GA

SkunkworksCrappies
Post: #3
 
[Image: googledown.jpg]
.................^ As you can see it's not a fake by the "Resolving host http://www.google.com"
05-07-2005 06:05 PM
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Laettners Legacy Offline
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Post: #4
 
sorry
05-07-2005 08:18 PM
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JoltinJacket Offline
The Resident Stat Machine
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Post: #5
 
Sign of the Apocalypse.
05-08-2005 10:29 PM
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Cajunman02 Offline
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CrappiesCrappies
Post: #6
 
everything is workin for me, except gmail notifier can't seem to find my mailbox. oh well.
05-08-2005 10:41 PM
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HerdZoned Offline
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Folding@NCAAbbsCrappiesCrappiesCrappies
Post: #7
 
Google Goes Down

By Rick Aristotle Munarriz (TMF Edible)
May 10, 2005

Where were you on Saturday when Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) had its temporary outage? Were you looking for something on its search engine? Composing a piece of Gmail? Were you an advertiser checking on your day's impressions and click-throughs on AdWords? Google's brief blackout affected a lot of users. The company insisted that the outage lasted for all of 15 minutes, though some sites claim that the lack of access spanned an hour or more.

Either way, Google's outage and the public's outcry at what turned out to be a simple DNS error is important. It's the last ritual in the initiation process. Welcome to the dot-com titan fraternity, Google! Here's your engraved paddle.

Yes, it seems like a cruel rite of passage. It's a shame that it takes something like a temporary knockout to make the public realize how much it needs you. However, Google isn't the first company forced to play hard-to-get.

In the 1990s, two of our real-money portfolio holdings -- eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) and Time Warner's (NYSE: TWX) America Online -- went through similar episodes. For AOL, that moment came in August 1996, when the young and rapidly growing online service suffered a 19-hour service outage. It made headlines. Users were outraged. Yet it was also a model-affirming move. Subscribers realized how important AOL, the Internet, and general connectivity mattered to them. A few months later, when the company switched to an all-you-can-eat pricing plan instead of the hourly plans that were typical at the time, the surge in usage created a frustrating string of busy signals. The end result, though, was just another confirmation that AOL mattered.

eBay's downtime comeuppance came on June 10, 1999. The 22-hour outage cost the company millions in auction refunds, but combined with the briefer blackouts that it suffered that summer, it helped its bidders and sellers fully appreciate what they had when eBay was up and running.

Google's blunder on Saturday wasn't nearly as serious as the eBay and AOL service failures. But because the Internet has grown substantially in that time, even a brief outage by a popular online destination can create a whole lot of displaced users.

Just for kicks, go through some of the consumer brands and services that you rely on that happen to be publicly traded. Would you survive for a day without them? I'm guessing that more than a few of you are hooked to your daily doses of Starbucks (Nasdaq: SBUX) or satellite-radio upstarts like Sirius (Nasdaq: SIRI) or XM (Nasdaq: XMSR). I'll toss cigarette purveyor Altria (NYSE: MO) into the list for the more obvious cold-turkey example. What other names can you think of? As long as their valuations are reasonable, the companies on that list might also represent some of the greatest growth stocks for the second half of this decade.

<a href='http://www.fool.com/News/mft/2005/mft05051001.htm?ref=foolwatch' target='_blank'>Google Goes Down</a>
05-10-2005 06:42 PM
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