Millions of Americans still use AOL’s dial-up service

TECHi's Author Carl Durrek
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Carl Durrek
Carl Durrek
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It’s hard to believe that it’s 2015, and in a nation as developed as the United States, there are still millions of people using dial-up. Yeah, that’s right, there are 2.1 million Americans that are still paying for AOL’s dial-up service. The reasons for this vary from household to household. Some people simply don’t have access to faster broadband while others simply don’t know that there’s a better option or don’t care enough to switch off of something they’re used to. 

Technobuffalo

Technobuffalo

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AOL on Friday revealed that 2.1 million people in the U.S. still subscribe to its dial-up service, an astonishing and surprising number in the year 2015. A large majority of Americans have ditched the comatose service as faster broadband has become more accessible. But, either through ignorance, stubbornness, or sheer unavailability in certain areas, people are still clinging to the good old days of the early Internet. Back in 2010, AOL revealed it had about 4.6 million dial-up users, so usage is on the decline, but it’s a slow, slow process, not unlike the service these people still get. CNN Money notes that over 70-percent of Americans are connected through faster broadband, with an average speed of 11.4 Mbps, which is lighting quick compared to AOL’s 56k speeds. Compared to what the Internet looked like 20 years ago, 56k connections probably wouldn’t even be able to load a modern day website, much less stream a video on YouTube or Netflix. Without fast Internet, online tech journalism just wouldn’t exist in the way it does today. And there would be no Twitch or Spotify. It would be a cruel, apocalyptic world.

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