The AOL experience is still kicking in 2025

AOL is alive and well.

Decades after its heyday, AOL offers a subscription-based browser called AOL Desktop Gold, priced at $6.99 per month. While no longer tied to dial-up internet, it retains much of the charm of its late-’90s and early-2000s predecessor. 

In a recent YouTube &t=2s">video, Michael MJD takes viewers on a tour of AOL Desktop Gold. Upon launching the app, Michael is greeted with AOL’s classic icons and the original welcome sound. “OMG, that’s still in here,” he exclaims in the video. “We have to have ‘You’ve got mail!’ in here.” Sure enough, he sends himself an email and the iconic voice pops up. “That blast from the past that somehow refuses to die!,” one commenter calls it. “Even Internet Explorer went the way of the dodo and made way for Microsoft Edge.”

AOL Desktop Gold’s intended demographic is obvious. “Target audience is 100% old people that are on AOL probably since before 2000,” one commenter suggests. “I imagine most people using AOL Desktop Gold have been paying for it for years, thinking they need the subscription to get online,” Michael says. Many users, he adds, may not even realize they’re still being charged and, despite the $6.99 monthly subscription fee, the interface is littered with ads. “They’re just selling you more stuff in a service you’re already paying for,” says Michael.

In terms of functionality, the app offers little beyond what any standard web browser can already do. “It’s bizarre that this still exists and gets updates,” Michael says. “I imagine it’s just two senior developers who can’t stand each other but have been stuck maintaining this relic for the past 20 years in some forgotten corner,” one commenter suggests. 

While a free version exists, Michael ultimately concludes that the paid version isn’t worth the price tag, except perhaps for the nostalgia of hearing, “You’ve got mail.” “Without the egregious ads it would honestly be really cool for it to just offer an old school experience if someone just wanted some nostalgia,” one comment reads. “Well, not for $6.99 a month, but you get the idea.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91259797/the-aol-experience-is-still-kicking-in-2025?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 7mo | 14 janv. 2025, 19:10:01


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Google did the math on AI’s energy footprint

Ever wonder how much energy it takes when you ask an AI to draft an em

21 août 2025, 14:10:08 | Fast company - tech
Sweetgreen’s sour summer

It’s one of the great questions of our modern age: How does Sweetgreen lose money selling $14 (and up!) fast casual salads and bowls? And not just a little money but $442 million in the last three

21 août 2025, 14:10:06 | Fast company - tech
Biden-era AI safety promises aren’t holding up, and Apple’s the weakest link

Throughout 2023, the Biden administration persuaded a group of AI comp

21 août 2025, 11:40:22 | Fast company - tech
AI is already shaping the future . So why do so few of us get to decide what that future will be?

In Silicon Valley boardrooms, a small group of executives is quietly making decisions that will shape the lives of billions. And most of us won’t know what those decisions are until it’s too late

21 août 2025, 11:40:21 | Fast company - tech
Where on the moon NASA places its nuclear reactor isn’t simple

In a bold, strategic move for the U.S., acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy

21 août 2025, 11:40:19 | Fast company - tech
Tech debt isn’t an ‘IT issue.’ It’s a business strategy

Every CEO knows the feeling of promised features taking months longer than expected, simple changes breaking unrelated systems, and top engineers fighting fires more than they build the future. We

21 août 2025, 11:40:17 | Fast company - tech
How cuts to NASA could hurt everyday Americans

Daniel P. Johnson, a geographer at Indiana University at Indianapolis, works with a team of researchers who spend a lot of time catching blowflies, dissecting their iridescent blue-green abdomens,

21 août 2025, 11:40:16 | Fast company - tech