Forum: pol
Page 3041
Subject: Can someone give me a hand


  Posted by: nerveclinic - [105222] Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 14:26



I have been trying for over an hour to get onto the Fidelity site and it is down.

You don't have to have an account to chaeck I can't even get into Fidelity.com main site.

Can someone verify it's the site and not something on my end?

 
1DWetzel from work
      ID: 3316412
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 14:27
I was able to get on just now. (sorry)
 
2RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 14:28
I can get to http://www.Fidelity.com
 
3nerveclinic
      ID: 105222
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 14:38

Thanks

Must be this internet cable that was cut in the mid east but it worked all night until the last hour.

 
4nerveclinic
      ID: 105222
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 14:52

So I thought I would give them a call to see what's up but low and behold the VOIP phone isn't working either.

Dern Technology...wonder if Aunt Bee baked an Apple pie today?

All other sites working fine.

 
5nerveclinic
      ID: 105222
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 15:13

Well now I can't even sign into hotmail.

I guess my computer is telling me I should be out at a club drinking absinthe at 12AM on a weekend night instead of home watching the stock market...
 
6Tree
      ID: 3533298
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 15:20
NC - could this have something to do with it, from cnn.com?

Internet failure hits two continents

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (CNN) -- High-technology services across large tracts of Asia, the Middle East and North Africa were crippled Thursday following a widespread Internet failure which brought many businesses to a standstill and left others struggling to cope.

Hi-tech Dubai has been hit hard by an Internet outage apparently caused by a cut undersea cable.

Industry experts are blaming damage to two undersea cables but it is not known what caused the damage.

Reports say that Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain Pakistan and India, are all experiencing severe problems.

Nations that have been spared the chaos include Israel -- whose traffic uses a different route -- and Lebanon and Iraq. Many Middle East governments have backup satellite systems in case of cable failure.

Stephan Beckert, an analyst with TeleGeography, a research company that consults on global Internet issues, said the damaged cables collectively account for the majority of international communications between Europe and the Middle East.

Du, a state-owned Dubai telecom provider, attributed the outage to an undersea cable cut between Alexandria, Egypt and Palermo, Italy, according to an internal memo obtained by CNN.

In India, Spectranet and Telecomasia.net, two large Internet service providers. Reliance were experiencing problems but a third major Indian Internet provider, said it was not affected.

An official at Egypt's Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, speaking on condition of anonymity told AP it was believed that a boat's anchor may have caused the problems, although this was unconfirmed. Beckert agreed that was a likely cause.

The head of an Egyptian Internet service provider called the situation a "wake-up call" for the region, which he said is too dependent on underground lines and does not have a strong enough back-up system. Mohammed Amir, head of Quantum, an ISP in Cairo, described the situation as "a major problem," but expressed hope that the worst of it is over.

The two cables damaged are FLAG Telecom's FLAG Europe-Asia cable and SeaMeWe-4, a cable owned by a consortium of more than a dozen telecommunications companies, Beckert said.

He added the options while those cables are repaired were re-routing traffic around the globe or using an older undamaged cable that has less capacity -- both of which would cause usage delays.

Kuwait's Ministry of Communications said the problem could take two weeks to solve, according to a statement carried by the state news agency, KUNA.

There were concerns in India that an Internet slowdown could affect trading patterns at the country's two major exchanges, the National Stock Exchange (NSE) in Delhi and the SENSEX exchange in Bombay.

Rajesh Chharia, president of India's Internet Service Providers' Association, explained that some firms were trying to reroute via Pacific cables and that companies serving the eastern US and the UK were worst affected, AP added.

Besides the Internet, the outage caused major disruption to television and phone services, creating chaos for the UAE's public and private sectors.

The Du internal memo called the situation in Dubai "critical" and stated that the cable's operators did not know when services would be restored.

"This will have a major impact on our voice and Internet service for all the customers," the memo stated. "The network operation team are working with our suppliers overseas to resolve this as soon as possible."

The outage led to a rapid collapse of a wide range of public services in a country which proudly promotes itself as technological pioneer.

Sources from Emirates Airlines confirmed to CNN Arabic that the outage did not affect its flight schedules -- a statement which assured hundreds of travelers worried after rumors about the possibility of rescheduled flights due to the faults.

However, Dnata, a government group in charge of providing air travel services in the Middle East and ground handling services at Dubai International Airport, acknowledged facing problems because of the outage, sources from its technical department confirmed to CNN Arabic.

The outage heavily crippled Dubai's business section, which is heavily reliant on electronic means for billions of dollars' worth of transactions daily.

Wadah Tahah, the business strategies and development manager for state-owned construction company EMAAR, told CNN Arabic that it was fortunate the outage started Wednesday, when there had been only moderate activity in the UAE markets. He said that softened the blow to business interests.

But Tahah warned that if the outage continued, "such a situation could create problems between brokers, companies, and investors due to loss of control." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend
 
7nerveclinic
      ID: 105222
      Thu, Jan 31, 2008, 15:24

Yeah that's what I meant in post 3 but the cable was cut yesterday and Fidelity was fine until a couple of hours ago.

The overall internet has been at 1/3rd speed though...and now the VOIP is down.