Imperial Valley Press

Zoom glitches, briefly grinding US schools to a halt

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NEW YORK ( AP) — Teachers and parents got a brief glimpse of a new kind of pandemic-era nightmare Monday when Zoom — the video- conferenci­ng service that powers everything from distance learning to business meetings to casual, socially distant get-togethers — abruptly went dead.

For roughly two- anda- half hours Monday morning, many users were unable to load the Zoom website; others could neither host nor join scheduled meetings. Zoom fixed the problem by 11: 30 a. m. ET, the company reported on its status page.

The timing was less than ideal, since many schools across the U. S. were just starting online instructio­n after a summer surge in the coronaviru­s pandemic scotched many plans to reopen classes with students present in the flesh.

“Today was horrible,” said Jacqueline Donovan, a professor at Broward College in Broward County, Florida. Her 12- year- old daughter Michaela and 14-year-old son Jayden were trying to log onto Zoom classes, but unable to.

“They were both panic stricken and anxious,” she said. Meanwhile, Donovan herself was trying to hold her first class, an introducti­on to business, and getting frantic emails from her own students. Her class was eventually canceled.

“You become so accustomed to the software working, then ( when it doesn’t) you realize how dependent you are on the software and it’s a little scary,” she said.

Zoom did not disclose the cause of the problem, which appeared to hit both coasts of the U.S. especially hard. Its shares fell less than 3% during regular trading.

Grade schools, high schools and universiti­es are relying on Zoom and competing technologi­es like Microsoft Teams to teach remotely and reduce the chance of infection during the pandemic.

Schools began opening over the past month with a wide array of in- person, hybrid and online schooling plans. In 2019, during a normal school year, about 80 percent of elementary and secondary schools had opened by the last week of August, according to Pew Research.

Internet services from Facebook to Amazon go down all the time, but few have become so crucial to companies, government and schools that their absence can spur brief moments of panic. These days, when Zoom goes down, it’s more like a power outage or phones going dead, making it a modern sort of utility for a nation still enduring the ravages of COVID-19.

Zoom and similar services “have been elevated to what we call ‘ mission critical applicatio­ns,’” said technology analyst Tim Bajarin, president of consultanc­y Creative Strategies. “They’re no longer nice to have, they’re now must have.”

While Zoom has built up server farms and spent millions investing in its software, it was still a relatively nascent company when the coronaviru­s hit in March, Bajarin said. “The bottom line is, software glitches happen.”

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