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trimbo | 6 months ago

Real miss by the NYT here in not finding and interviewing people who were still using it in 2025!

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jm4|6 months ago

I very briefly worked at an ISP long after the days of dial-up were over. We had some super old servers on the network. These things hadn't been patched in forever, the OS was unsupported, etc. I think they were old Sun machines and Sun wasn't in business anymore. I asked what they were for and I was told there were still people paying for dial-up and their accounts were on there. They weren't actually using it, but the credit card auto payments were still going through and that was higher than the cost of the electricity. Nobody wanted to mess with it as long as people were still paying.

ecshafer|6 months ago

I worked on a help desk from 2013-2016 for an MSP that served some rural telcos. A couple of the clients still offered dial-up internet, so there were a few hundred people with dial up at that point. They were largely people with very rural homes that they didn't even have DSL. They were largely older people. And they just made a steady profit, the equipment and lines basically just worked and they had a FAR lower rate of calls than the DSL, Cable, Fiber, etc customers.

paulorlando|6 months ago

Reminds me of how AT&T continued generating revenue from renting landline phones many years after it became legal to own and connect your own equipment to their network.

busterarm|6 months ago

I worked from 2011-2013 at a small regional ILEC that had some dialup customers.

Yeah it largely just worked.

smelendez|6 months ago

I’m curious what those customers do today. Are they still using those computers with antique web browsers?

Maybe email and Amazon are enough, though.

nerdjon|6 months ago

I have now seen multiple articles about this and none of them talked about how much use it was actually getting today, which I have found disappointing.

Not sure why none that I have seen have been any better.

smelendez|6 months ago

It sounds like AOL won’t disclose that information and the only national survey anyone has cited doesn’t distinguish by ISP.

pwenzel|6 months ago

I also want to hear from the people who still maintain AOL in 2025!

Workaccount2|6 months ago

Almost certainly older people living in remote areas who login to the AOL to check the email box for pictures of the grandkids.

WalterGR|6 months ago

Having very older parents, what an important use case!

Long gone are the days of writing a family update, including physical photos, and putting them in the post.

Fortunately, I’m able to guide my parents in their tech usage. I can’t imagine what it would be like to be their age and have nobody to do the same. The sheer isolation… It’s horrible to contemplate.

bityard|6 months ago

At this point, it would not surprise me if there was a very small but very enthusiastic community of retro computing enthusiasts with AOL accounts.

tharne|6 months ago

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unethical_ban|6 months ago

They also do a massive amount of credible, in-depth reporting and while they deserve criticism where it is due, I can't believe the eagerness that some display to throw the baby out with the bathwater.

cruffle_duffle|6 months ago

Don’t forget that for most than one or two years they pushed “4% kill rate” for covid despite it being multiple orders of magnitude lower. The amount of people that went insane as a result of that blatant misinformation is incredibly high.

They have zero credibility as far as I’m concerned. They are just a front for goverment propaganda.