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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() wrote in message ... On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 22:54:38 -0500, BAR wrote: Why did anyone ever pay for AOL? There was a time when it was only Prodigy and AOL, before there really was an internet, from the consumer standpoint. It was all proprietary software and captive content. Other than that you just had local BBS services. If you traveled you wanted something with national coverage. It still is about the most stable ISP. The rest came and went with too much frequency to actually give anyone your Email address and have it be useful a year later. Even now I can still use my 15 year old AOL address but my Mediaone address is dead, as is the successor Roadrunner (ended up Comcast), Sprint then Earthlink, ended up Embarq. and a half dozen other places that I had accounts with. (RIP) The software stopped being stable when they incorporated Internet Explorer as the browser and W/9x. Prior to that it was rock solid. I used to use the W/3.1 version to test communication on machines that had suspected software problems since it didn't have to be "installed" and it would run straight from a diskette. Before Prodigy and AOL there was Compuserve and GEnie. Same stuff, just earlier. --Mike |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 22:54:38 -0500, BAR wrote: Why did anyone ever pay for AOL? There was a time when it was only Prodigy and AOL, before there really was an internet, from the consumer standpoint. It was all proprietary software and captive content. Other than that you just had local BBS services. If you traveled you wanted something with national coverage. It still is about the most stable ISP. The rest came and went with too much frequency to actually give anyone your Email address and have it be useful a year later. Even now I can still use my 15 year old AOL address but my Mediaone address is dead, as is the successor Roadrunner (ended up Comcast), Sprint then Earthlink, ended up Embarq. and a half dozen other places that I had accounts with. (RIP) The software stopped being stable when they incorporated Internet Explorer as the browser and W/9x. Prior to that it was rock solid. I used to use the W/3.1 version to test communication on machines that had suspected software problems since it didn't have to be "installed" and it would run straight from a diskette. Before Prodigy and AOL there was Compuserve and GEnie. Same stuff, just earlier. --Mike Actually there was ARPA net for a lot of us. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Dec 12, 3:01*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Mike" wrote in message ... wrote in message .. . On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 22:54:38 -0500, BAR wrote: Why did anyone ever pay for AOL? There was a time when it was only Prodigy and AOL, before there really was an internet, from the consumer standpoint. It was all proprietary software and captive content. Other than that you just had local BBS services. If you traveled you wanted something with national coverage. It still is about the most stable ISP. The rest came and went with too much frequency to actually give anyone your Email address and have it be useful a year later. Even now I can still use my 15 year old AOL address but my Mediaone address is dead, as is the successor Roadrunner (ended up Comcast), Sprint then Earthlink, ended up Embarq. and a half dozen other places that I had accounts with. *(RIP) The software stopped being stable when they incorporated Internet Explorer as the browser and W/9x. Prior to that it was rock solid. *I used to use the W/3.1 version to test communication on machines that had suspected software problems since it didn't have to be "installed" and it would run straight from a diskette. Before Prodigy and AOL there was Compuserve and GEnie. Same stuff, just earlier. --Mike Actually there was ARPA net for a lot of us.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - That ran off of heated rocks and bronze, didn't it?!!!!! |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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Calif Bill wrote:
"Mike" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 22:54:38 -0500, BAR wrote: Why did anyone ever pay for AOL? There was a time when it was only Prodigy and AOL, before there really was an internet, from the consumer standpoint. It was all proprietary software and captive content. Other than that you just had local BBS services. If you traveled you wanted something with national coverage. It still is about the most stable ISP. The rest came and went with too much frequency to actually give anyone your Email address and have it be useful a year later. Even now I can still use my 15 year old AOL address but my Mediaone address is dead, as is the successor Roadrunner (ended up Comcast), Sprint then Earthlink, ended up Embarq. and a half dozen other places that I had accounts with. (RIP) The software stopped being stable when they incorporated Internet Explorer as the browser and W/9x. Prior to that it was rock solid. I used to use the W/3.1 version to test communication on machines that had suspected software problems since it didn't have to be "installed" and it would run straight from a diskette. Before Prodigy and AOL there was Compuserve and GEnie. Same stuff, just earlier. --Mike Actually there was ARPA net for a lot of us. Which host were you? |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 12:01:17 -0800, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Mike" wrote in message . .. wrote in message ... On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 22:54:38 -0500, BAR wrote: Why did anyone ever pay for AOL? There was a time when it was only Prodigy and AOL, before there really was an internet, from the consumer standpoint. It was all proprietary software and captive content. Other than that you just had local BBS services. If you traveled you wanted something with national coverage. It still is about the most stable ISP. The rest came and went with too much frequency to actually give anyone your Email address and have it be useful a year later. Even now I can still use my 15 year old AOL address but my Mediaone address is dead, as is the successor Roadrunner (ended up Comcast), Sprint then Earthlink, ended up Embarq. and a half dozen other places that I had accounts with. (RIP) The software stopped being stable when they incorporated Internet Explorer as the browser and W/9x. Prior to that it was rock solid. I used to use the W/3.1 version to test communication on machines that had suspected software problems since it didn't have to be "installed" and it would run straight from a diskette. Before Prodigy and AOL there was Compuserve and GEnie. Same stuff, just earlier. Actually there was ARPA net for a lot of us. Heh - In '78, I was at BBN working on a joint project for the US Navy (which is how I met Admn. Grace Hooper who was there consulting with BBN on a DEC implementation) and as it happened, Ray Tomlinson was involved in our project. I asked him point blank if he really didn't know what he sent as the first remote email message and he grinned and said he didn't have a clue. I was told later on by somebody who was, in theory "in the know", that it was a very naughty joke. :) |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 11 Dec 2008 19:30:27 -0800, "Mike" wrote:
Do people still pay for AOL? --Mike Only idiots who don't know any better. |
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