They solve the telephone problem that AT&T had at the national level

They solve the telephone problem that AT&T had at the national level
They solve the telephone problem that AT&T had at the national level

Houston Texas.- A telephone problem on the part of AT&T caused some customers in the country to be unable to make calls between various telephone companies, but the problem could be solved, the company said in a statement.

AT&T also reported that they worked together with Verizon to find out what the technical issue was.

They also highlighted that this was a nationwide blackout or system downtime, and that calls between the same AT&T phones were not affected.

Calls to 911 were also not impacted, according to the statement.

Just in February 2023, there was a massive outage with AT&T

Tens of thousands of US users of this telephone company were left with interrupted service.

This was due to an AT&T coding error, but no specific details were given.

The most affected cities had been Houston, Chicago, Dallas, San Antonio, New York, Atlanta, Austin, Miami, Indianapolis and Charlotte.

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The start of the Mexican elections in the United States was marred by long lines, complaints of disorganization and dissatisfied voters. In Washington DC, one voter criticized the lack of organization at the Mexican Embassy, ​​while another praised the process.

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Election day at the Mexican Consulate in Dallas and Houston began at 9am, however hundreds of people were queuing since early morning.

Credit: Avelino Meza.

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At the moment, no problems with the number of ballots issued have been recorded in either of the two consulates. In addition, the day is expected to go until 7pm in both cities.

Credit: Observers.

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However, at the Mexican Consulate in Houston and Dallas there have been “endless lines.”

Credit: Observers.

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“It’s chaos,” said a woman who did not want to be identified and who has been waiting in line for three hours to vote at the Mexican Consulate in Houston. “This is serious, I’ve been there for 3 hours and there’s still not enough.”

Credit: Observers.

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The Dallas Consulate is located at 1210 River Bend Dr, Dallas, TX 75247; while the Houston consulate is at 3200 Rogerdale Rd, Houston, TX 77042.

Credit: Observers.

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If you have not registered, but have a valid voter ID card, you can vote. However, there will only be 1,500 ballots at each consulate. “That day they can go to the consulate very early and cast their vote,” says Avelino Meza, Secretary of the Migrant Force.

Credit: Observers.

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It is expected that 16,000 people who previously registered will go to vote in person at the 23 consular offices this June 2.

Credit: Observers.

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Furthermore, according to what INE officials told presenter Raul Peimbert, a statement on the presidential election could be made between 10:00 p.m. or 11:00 p.m. on June 2.

Credit: Observers.

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“Long live our beloved homeland,” mentioned a man in line at the Mexican Consulate in Houston.

Credit: David Herrera

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Dallas and Houston are the only cities in Texas that are offering in-person voting at their consulates for the Mexican elections on June 2.

 
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