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Comments on: AOL axes another 2,000 jobs

The days of AOL are over 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 19:59 GMT

Abandon ship, last one off the boat has to explain what the hell happened to The Stockholders.

The hilarious thing is that they actually were a good ISP, with good speeds, customer support, and crucially *no caps*, they would clean up.

The market could sure as hell use a decent ISP right now, certainly more than another ad broker.

AOfull... 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 20:04 GMT

Paris Hilton

I do feel sorry for the employees being laid off is crap.....but so are AOL

Really? 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 20:27 GMT

Interesting, I've never heard anyone else describe them as a good ISP. I'm just glad I don't get 5 or 6 floppys/CDs per month from them anymore. If I want costers or frisbees I can use one of the many bad or old burned discs I have lying around.

free floppies 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 20:39 GMT

back in the day they were a great source of free floppies

Hope 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 21:09 GMT

If AOL can fall, Microsoft and Google can too. There's hope for us yet!

A good provider?? 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 21:47 GMT

I've never heard anyone say that AOL was a good ISP, their insistence on you using their AOL software, while good for newbies, was entirely too limiting. The costs (at least in the UK) have never been competitive, apart from the ability to get a free months web access with them, which they would extend almost indefinitely as long as you rang up saying you weren't sure every month when the free month came to an end!

That was a good deal! I'll give them that!!

And the "Winner" is AOL 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 22:07 GMT

Unhappy

Will AOL be nominated in the Demotivate.org first Annual Award for the company that demotivate the most people.

http://www.demotivate.org/blogs/index.php

Pete

AOL a good ISP 

Posted Monday 15th October 2007 23:41 GMT

OK, I'll grant you that, but their software was nothing more than a virus that one had to play a monthly fee for the privlege to use. If I had $50 buck for every time I fixed a computer by uninstalling AOL and reinstalling it, oh wait... I do, and it bought me a new truck, digital camera, a couple of tv's and a whole bunch of rounds of pints down at the bar...

I hated AOL but they made me a reasonably wealthy man... Now the bastards have to go belly up... Figures...

Be fair.... 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 03:34 GMT

Black Helicopters

I'm not advocating AOL's service, but you've got to hand it to them - they made using the Internet easy for the masses. AOL was good at what it did and enjoyed unprecedented success as an ISP.

Now, if only they could figure out how to get people to pay $3 an hour again they might be able to rehire those terminated employees.

If I had $50... 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 03:38 GMT

Thumb Up

Me too... I made a lot of money uninstalling AOL and telling people "get a real ISP"

I remember the quote: "AOL has proven that they have the ability to send a CD or three to every chordate on the planet once a month"

AOL vs Net Tards 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 07:26 GMT

It used to be easy to spot an internet retard, you just looked for the @aol.* on their email address (I know of two sites which simply banned AOL users based on the proportion of stupid questions they used to get). It looks like it will be much harder in the future.

And I'm sorry, they were never a "good ISP", simply provided "internet for dummies".

Pay attention Orange 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 07:33 GMT

Happy

As an AOL customer for 3 years can't say I'm surprised. Their customer service ended up diabolical, the foriegn call centers refused point blank to contact supervisors when they could not resolve issue & the British side simply advised they MUST contact their supervisor upon request - call them again.

Good bye - its been a blast AOL (not)

I do feel for the staff though - no doubt the untrained staff which made life so difficult will now be compitent, at least they will hopefully get better jobs.

what a great loss . . . 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 07:48 GMT

Coat

if AOL disappear along with the "@aol.com" flag just how the heck do we identify all the computer numpties out there?

P.S. my best friend used to run a great service for our town . . .

somehow AOL had managed to set his unique business post code on the address of most of the people on their mailing list in our town - so he got ALL the CDs for the town on each mailshot - result!

(OK, he didn't laugh too much, especially after the first 6 months - no sense of humour really)

The business is dead 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 09:01 GMT

Unless you have an absolutely compelling offering the closed network is a dead-duck. You can even get Lexis-Nexis on the web these days. This is a classic case of the world changing and the company hasn't. My first domestic Internet connection was through AOL circa 1996 and for what they were, they weren't too bad but I can't help but feel they're still stuck in 1996. I just don't think there's any money in this business any more.

I was once a numpty 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 12:21 GMT

Thumb Down

Now Ex AOL, the reasons being.

Crap software, thankfully you didn't need to actually use it or even touch it after installing the router

Having sold off AOL in the UK to carphone warehouse (Talk Talk) they then gave "free" bandwidth to their customers for nothing, so the people subscribing to AOL in the UK were paying for someone else to use up bandwidth. Less bandwidth means instigating an un"fair use" policy to cap use. No limit given that you are not allowed to go over, no warnings that you are about to go over the limit that you aren't allowed to know what it is then 1 month of reduced bandwidth 4.5Mb down to 36K.....for a month during peak hours(7am-12pm) whilst still paying for 4.5Mb. they don't even tell their own support people they have done it, took me about 3 or 4 hours on the phone with tech support about my slow connection to find out I had been "fair used"

Now paying half as much for twice the speed and no poxy viruslike software, with a limit of 100Gb of bandwidth a month...sorted

Serves them right 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 12:37 GMT

I have no sympathy for people who choose to work for morally corrupt companies.

For the record 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 12:47 GMT

Stop

I meant IF THEY WERE A GOOD ISP!!

Not "they were a good ISP"!!

What a difference one word can make!

Someone have my coat ready... 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 13:47 GMT

Coat

Q: What do AOL and a scooter have in common?

A: It's impossible to look cool on either of 'em.

Ah yes, me coat...

The best predictor whether a company will lay off workers is... 

Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 14:51 GMT

"Has the company laid off workers recently?" Companies that perform poorly get hooked on layoffs as the way out of nonprofit status. It seldom works out that way.

they had their upsides 

Posted Thursday 18th October 2007 18:04 GMT

I have criticised AOL myself mainly due to the bloatware software but remember a few things.

AOL were just about the only dialup isp that had no cutoffs on their unmetered dialup package and still do I think.

On broadband they were also one of the last few to have unlimited with no traffic shaping on BTs ipstream network so they defenitly had their advantages.

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