
Right. And I have a question about that. To wit: When AWS posts outages, like the one around this time last year that affected to AZs, they named them by letter (b and d if memory serves). But I was viewing that page from a friend's computer who doesn't use AWS, and I wasn't signed in. So how do we know which "B" is "B" and which "D" is "D" when they give AZ outage reports? Anyone have any insight into this? On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 9:32 AM, Aditya Patawari <aditya@adityapatawari.com>wrote:
Hi Blair,
I am not observing any issues in US East. FYI your 1a, may not be 1a for others.
-- Aditya Patawari http://blog.adityapatawari.com/ India
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 9:42 PM, Blair Trosper <blair.trosper@gmail.com> wrote:
I've had major network connectivity issues with about 10 to 15% of my instances in zone "A" at Amazon's US-EAST-1 region this morning.
The instances are trucking away, but the networking is down/flapping/unreliable like crazy on that minority percentage.
Anyone else seeing anything like this?
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