Dial-up Internet to be discontinued

62 Kye 18 8/9/2025, 1:37:30 AM help.aol.com ↗

Comments (18)

dlivingston · 30m ago
I'm surprised it's still being offered period! My parents live in a remote area outside of a rural town in one of the USA's smaller states, and even they haven't had dial-up in ~15 years. We grew up with dial-up until about 2010, when they switched over to (absolutely terrible) satellite internet. HughsNet, I think it was called. Two-ish years ago they switched over to Starlink and it's been working well (when it does work, anyway).
nosioptar · 7m ago
I know people just a couple hours from Seattle that still use dial up.

Most are older and don't want to spend the obscene prices for satellite, cellular signal isn't good enough out there.

chrisco255 · 58s ago
I don't know how anyone can use the modern internet with dial up. It's got to be useless for all but email.
dzhiurgis · 2m ago
Is dial up still at 56kbps?
ack_complete · 19m ago
Apparently they just shut it down in 2024, but a couple of years ago I tested an Atari 1030 modem by dialing out to Earthlink, and it still worked -- successfully connected at 300 baud.
neilpomerleau · 36m ago
maxbond · 32m ago
Thanks for making that! Boy is that more annoying than I remembered.
twilightzone · 3m ago
That's subjective! I made a song with that sound in 1998. It was called "Net Pet" and it did pretty well on mp3.com.
loose-cannon · 38m ago
I wonder how quickly you can load some of the modern, popular, websites on a dial up connection.
sugarpimpdorsey · 1m ago
We have a whole generation of programmers that will justify 12MB of JavaScript bundles to output "Hello world".
derwiki · 31m ago
This orange site is fine but I wouldn’t hold my breath on any others
donio · 11m ago
Easy to see for yourself using the throttling option in the developer tools of popular browsers.
BobbyTables2 · 30m ago
Page loading times would probably be measurable with a sundial or calendar.
freitasm · 21m ago
Some time ago there were estimates on the number of people still paying AOL but using a broadband service.

I wonder if AOL will stop charging people on dial-up only, or if they will later claim "oops, sorry..."

JoshTriplett · 25m ago
Are there any sources indicating how many users dial-up still had?
orthecreedence · 9m ago
When I worked at AOL in 2010, dialup was their biggest source of revenue still. It'd be interesting to see the drop-off since then. I imagine it's trending down pretty quick as the generation using it kicks the bucket.
Kye · 18m ago
There's some good discussion on this recurring submission about the legendary dial-up process: https://hn.algolia.com/?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.windytan.com%2F20...

And a video version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpMrTxMV6E4

smitty1e · 37m ago
On the topic of technology life cycles, can anyone suggest important writers/references?