Teachers And Parents Get A Glimpse Of A New Kind Of Pandemic-Era Nightmare Monday

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

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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-and-a-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 ended many plans to reopen classes with students present in the flesh.