AOL ending dial-up internet September 30.

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I worked for a dial-up ISP from 1998 to 2007 when the business shut down (I pulled the plugs) due to the owner's bad health which ended his intentions/plans for moving it up to some sort of broadband service. I've been on a cable service since then. There's some fiber optic in town but it hasn't yet reached the outskirts. I lost awareness of the industry status, figured dial-up was already long-gone. I imagine the only reason it still exists is areas of sparse/distant population that makes broadband platforms financially untenable for the profit-driven providers.
 
Jeez!
I remember having a computer in the early 1991, with a 2400 baud modem and hearing that screaching noise booting up on the phone line.

Now? - a dual-core machine win10, and Fios fiber optic for phone and internet.
 
One friend has an Atari 800XL and another friend had a Commodore VIC-20 back in the 80's. I didn't get a computer at home until 1992. Can't remember exactly what it was now but it had a 486DX2-66 processor. Used Commodore PET's in elementary school from 1984-1988 when they phased to Apple IIG's in 1988. Also used IIG's through middle school and Windows 3.1 and 95 in high school. The changes that occurred from the mid 80's through the mid 90's was mind blowing.
 
I had AOL dial up for the first few years I had a computer. More often than not, the numbers that were flat rate local calls were busy. Therefore, I had to use numbers that were local measured service, which I could run up a bill of several dollars each time. Then I got Time-Warner Cable, which worked OK until the neighbor kid got home from school, and started playing video games. That slowed everything down substantially. Finally got tired of having TW, and switched to Frontier DSL, which worked OK. When I moved back to this house from the hovel (rental house) after the major construction was done, I didn't have phone or cable lines installed. AltaFiber Cincinnati Bell has been installing a fiber optic system in this area the last year or so, and I plan to connect to that when it's complete.
 
Well, don't forget that there was a need for a direct line for those battles over who's turn it was to need the line for the phone and who wanted to use the phone line for this new-found way to use their computer...

So much for waiting for its obsolescence, or least of all the Internet to have never been possible without just going ahead to using with its own dedicated line!



-- Dave
 

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