From a Facebook posting:
So need the masses input.. If you updated to iOS 7... Wed I installed it, it was fine. Thursday fine as well. But today.. It just wants to keep resetting itself every 15-20 mins. It's just on my 4s... Any one else having this issue? Just wondering.
-- Requiescas in pace o email Two identifying characteristics of System Administrators: Ex turpi causa non oritur actio Infallibility, and the ability to learn from their mistakes. (Adapted from Stephen Pinker)
I've seen 4s with the panic.list problem after upgrade. Apple claims hardware issue. On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 8:13 PM, Larry Sheldon <LarrySheldon@cox.net> wrote:
From a Facebook posting:
So need the masses input.. If you updated to iOS 7... Wed I installed
it, it was fine. Thursday fine as well. But today.. It just wants to keep resetting itself every 15-20 mins. It's just on my 4s... Any one else having this issue? Just wondering.
-- Requiescas in pace o email Two identifying characteristics of System Administrators: Ex turpi causa non oritur actio Infallibility, and the ability to learn from their mistakes. (Adapted from Stephen Pinker)
http://www.electronista.com/articles/13/09/20/upgrading.spike.doubled.some.i... ## Upgrading spike doubled some ISP traffic; 12 percent worldwide Internet usage jump ... Analytics company Mixpanel estimates that more than 130 million users had updated their devices within the first 10 hours of availability, out of a potential iOS 7-eligible base of 415 million. ... The spikes, reported by The Guardian in the UK, focus on British ISP reports and show that demand hit its peak about 3.5 hours after the official release. This would have been around the time Apple servers began to recover from the initial wave of downloaders as users struggled in the first few hours to download the free iOS upgrade, which ranged in size from 750MB to 1.4GB depending on what device was being updated. ... At one point in the initial surge, a British Telecom (BT) spokesperson reported that the provider was seeing traffic of over 200 Gigabits per second, the highest the company has ever recorded. Lonap said that overall high-use traffic, which averages up to 30 Gigabits per second, spiked to just under 60Gb per second late Wednesday evening as the upgrade became available, and raised the daily peak time traffic to nearly 40Gb per second on Thursday. The paper also reported that Germany's Berlin Internet Exchange saw traffic rise precipitously -- more than 10Gb per second over normal traffic levels -- as iOS 7 came online. Data from Akamai, a company that distributes and manages Internet backbone traffic, suggested that overall worldwide usage jumped 12 percent above normal levels as the download became available. ##
participants (3)
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Jean-Francois Mezei
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Larry Sheldon
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Mikeal Clark