Yeah, I guess if they would have framed it as one month free it wouldn’t sound as good. I remember using it and completely ignoring everything but the actual Internet. Trolling on AIM back in the day was pretty fun.
Comment on came across some family heirlooms today, hahaha!
Stillwater@sh.itjust.works 6 days agoIt started small and they kept growing in how many free hours. It didn’t stop at 700. I’m not sure where it stopped, but I’m sure it was in 4 digits.
700 hours is around a month if connected nonstop, but back then it was more likely that many people connected a few hours a day at most, so that could probably last the better part of a year. Not a bad offer from AOL’s perspective, if you rolled into a subscription lasting years.
bulwark@lemmy.world 6 days ago
InvalidName2@lemmy.zip 6 days ago
And I’m guessing enough boomers DID subscribe for years to make it worth it, if my anecdotal experience is anything close to normal.
Stillwater@sh.itjust.works 6 days ago
I used to work for/with AOL in the 2010s. They still had a lot of grannies subbed to dial-up plans.
Psythik@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Can concur. My baby boomer dad was an AOL subscriber up until his death in 2021. He ditched dialup in 2002 but just never stopped paying for AOL.
jqubed@lemmy.world 6 days ago
I seem to remember our first disks/discs coming in with 5 free hours. That might’ve even been included with a Packard Bell we bought.