Caporegime
According to these here .
LoadsaMoney said:Im in the middle of migrating to em.
FatRakoon said:Well, I for one can honestly say that if AOL were no more, then I would be a happier man.
Lets hope bloody Norton goes the same way, then we can have faster internet and faster systems, cos they wont be bogged down by this crud.
I've recently migrated from themLoadsaMoney said:Im in the middle of migrating to em.
They certainly dominated the distribution of free CDs...HEADRAT said:The report says they "dominated UK internet access in the late 1990s", that must have passed me by
If they want to close down any call centre it should be the Indian one not the Irish one as when I did manage to get through to them the one time, they were generally helpful and actually managed to resolve my problem unlike the Indian call centre which generally didn't have a clueMajorPart said:As i said before the CSR i spoke to said they were closing the irish call centre
The slow rollout of Max DSL was the main reason why I migrated as I would have had to wait around 4 months!MajorPart said:and also were receiving migration requests at a higher rate than sales.. they are struggling to hold on and the ages it's taking to move customers to 8mb just fueling the fire.
With offerings such as instant messaging, chat rooms and unique content they were certainly a big player in the market. Then there was the unlimited dial-up which, if I remember correctly, was a pioneering business move.HEADRAT said:The report says they "dominated UK internet access in the late 1990s", that must have passed me by
I thought the likes of Demon, PIPEX and Freeserve did that!
I didn't know thatAl Vallario said:AOL haven't offered internet access in the United States for quite some time now