The Internet
Join host Daniel Cole on a nostalgic journey back to the 1990s internet era, when AOL reigned supreme and dial-up connections ruled the digital landscape. This episode explores the fascinating history of America Online, from its origins as Control Video Corporation to becoming the world's largest internet service provider with over 26 million subscribers. Discover how AOL's walled garden approach introduced millions to the internet through keywords, chat rooms, and that iconic 'You've Got Mail' notification. Learn about the technical challenges of 56k dial-up modems, the cultural phenomenon of AOL's billion CD-ROM marketing campaign, and how instant messaging revolutionized digital communication. We examine the social dynamics of early chat rooms, the birth of online communities, and how bandwidth limitations shaped 1990s web design. The episode also covers the transition from dial-up to broadband and AOL's eventual decline as internet users demanded more speed and freedom. Whether you lived through the era of busy signals and connection sounds or you're curious about internet history, this episode captures the magic and frustration of going online in the 1990s. Perfect for technology enthusiasts, digital culture historians, and anyone interested in how the modern internet evolved from those early dial-up days.
8 episodios
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