PSA.
Now everyone don't panic at once.
Now everyone don't panic at once.
FTAco07 said:
The only thing I've heard is it could be a 24-48 hour problem, but AT&T apparently doesn't feel the need to respond with anything beyond "as soon as possible".
I don't understand how there could be a single point of failure that would impact this many people. That just doesn't fly in today's world.
FTAco07 said:
The only thing I've heard is it could be a 24-48 hour problem, but AT&T apparently doesn't feel the need to respond with anything beyond "as soon as possible".
I don't understand how there could be a single point of failure that would impact this many people. That just doesn't fly in today's world.
FTAco07 said:
That's still a single point of failure for the vast majority of your DFW customers. Not acceptable, and if any commercial customers had a data center setup like this they wouldn't be a customer tomorrow.
FTAco07 said:
The only thing I've heard is it could be a 24-48 hour problem, but AT&T apparently doesn't feel the need to respond with anything beyond "as soon as possible".
I don't understand how there could be a single point of failure that would impact this many people. That just doesn't fly in today's world.
If you think that this is bad, you should have experienced Frontier DSL (FiOS was not available at our location) after the takeover from Verizon. Our company's internet would drop out multiple times almost every day with substandard speed when the connection was up (around 1-2 Mbps, when we had previously been receiving 15 consistently under Verizon). Thankfully, we were eventually able to get our local tech and his supervisor's numbers on speed dial (who actually knew what was going on) to hold over until our contract was up and we could switch to Spectrum. Their tech support center was useless at the time. Good riddance.YouBet said:FTAco07 said:
The only thing I've heard is it could be a 24-48 hour problem, but AT&T apparently doesn't feel the need to respond with anything beyond "as soon as possible".
I don't understand how there could be a single point of failure that would impact this many people. That just doesn't fly in today's world.
You would be surprised. We had multiple branch offices go down earlier this year for over a day all due to one bad router at a Verizon data center.