By Vamien McKalin, | March 23, 2016
Things are not looking great for Version after service provider experienced outages in several areas throughout Southern California
Things are not looking great for Version after service provider experienced outages in several areas throughout Southern California. We understand that it stretched from Santa Barbara to the Mexican border, and that is not a good sign.
Customers were attempting to find answers as to why they were unable to make calls. Up to this point, no one has no idea what was the cause of the outage and Verizon is not being forthcoming with information. The good thing is, the outage did not go on for most of the day, and from what we have come to understand, everyone should be abl to make calls right now.
Like Us on Facebook
The website, DownDetector.com, posted a map of the affected areas. These areas included San Diego, including Los Angeles, Orange and Ventura counties, along with parts of the Inland Empire
Spokeswoman of Verizon made a statement the Los Angeles Times.
"Earlier today, Verizon Wireless experienced a service disruption affecting voice service in parts of Los Angeles and San Diego and surrounding communities," company spokeswoman Heidi Flato said in an emailed statement to the Los Angeles Times.
"Technicians worked quickly to resolve the issue and service was fully restored at 5:38 p.m. this evening. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused."
While this was no doubt bad for Verizon, it shouldn't cause the company to lose subscribers. It is not as if the issue went on for days, just a few hours and subscribers are back online to be able to chit-chat with loved ones a friends.
When it comes down to the number of affected subscribers, Flato did not specify the amount. We're sure not everyone in Southern California experienced issues with the downing of the network, but having a number to go by would have been a great thing to have.
To make things even better for Verizon, there weren't much complaining on social media about the outage, and we find that odd. Usually, subscribers would have taken to social media in a bid to have the world know that something has went wrong, but this time, it didn't happen.
-
Use of Coronavirus Pandemic Drones Raises Privacy Concerns: Drones Spread Fear, Local Officials Say
-
Coronavirus Hampers The Delivery Of Lockheed Martin F-35 Stealth Fighters For 2020
-
Instagram Speeds Up Plans to Add Account Memorialization Feature Due to COVID-19 Deaths
-
NASA: Perseverance Plans to Bring 'Mars Rock' to Earth in 2031
-
600 Dead And 3,000 In The Hospital as Iranians Believed Drinking High-Concentrations of Alcohol Can Cure The Coronavirus
-
600 Dead And 3,000 In The Hospital as Iranians Believed Drinking High-Concentrations of Alcohol Can Cure The Coronavirus
-
COVID-19: Doctors, Nurses Use Virtual Reality to Learn New Skills in Treating Coronavirus Patients