dlivingston 8 hours ago

I'm surprised it's still being offered period! My parents live in a remote area outside of a rural town in one of the USA's smaller states, and even they haven't had dial-up in ~15 years. We grew up with dial-up until about 2010, when they switched over to (absolutely terrible) satellite internet. HughsNet, I think it was called. Two-ish years ago they switched over to Starlink and it's been working well (when it does work, anyway).

  • ack_complete 7 hours ago

    Apparently they just shut it down in 2024, but a couple of years ago I tested an Atari 1030 modem by dialing out to Earthlink, and it still worked -- successfully connected at 300 baud.

  • bobmcnamara 7 hours ago

    I worked somewhere with a small office run over Hughesnet. Some sort of upload-over-dial-up, broadband-download-over-satellite, with 1500ms latency for everything.

  • nosioptar 7 hours ago

    I know people just a couple hours from Seattle that still use dial up.

    Most are older and don't want to spend the obscene prices for satellite, cellular signal isn't good enough out there.

    • nemomarx 7 hours ago

      The telecom hasn't tried to get them on DSL? There's subsidized low income programs for it (or where, idk what the status is now) so I can't imagine the cost was much higher. And if I were an ISP I might eat the cost of the upgrade just to avoid support complications for a small set of customers.

      • dylan604 4 hours ago

        DSL is expensive to install and has a limit on distance from a central office. Any new construction today would be fiber instead of copper anyways. I've seen fiber being strung in remote mountain valley where DSL/cable were unavailable. The area was just too far for DSL and the equipment in the CO wasn't up to snuff for it, and cable just never felt enough customers were there to justify running the cable. Everyone in the valley had the old school large satellite dishes. MaBell finally decided to run fiber instead, and there was much rejoicing.

      • toast0 6 hours ago

        Around me, near Seattle, some of the DSLAMs are port limited. If you want DSL, you've got to wait for a port to open up.

      • nosioptar 6 hours ago

        DSL isn't available at all to them. The phone infrastructure in their neighborhood is ancient, there's zero cable.

        Comcast and/or Century Link would be willing to set the neighborhood up, for a pretty sizable fee.

        • TimTheTinker 6 hours ago

          Here is an excellent use case for SPA web apps. See - a lot of low bandwidth connections still exist in the US.

          (Sorry to slightly hijack the thread. It's been an ongoing debate on HN)

          • jtbaker 6 hours ago

            How does this make sense? SPAs have notoriously large bundles shipped to the client. Maybe in a PWA where the service worker gets saved for offline use.

            Traditional server-rendered HTML should be orders of magnitude faster than most SPA bundles though.

            • wtallis 5 hours ago

              With a dial-up connection, you really want a native app that only hits the network for functionality that fundamentally needs to be done over the network. And you want the app to be hitting stable APIs, rather than requiring weekly updates to keep it in lockstep with a front-end server's constant development churn.

              Or a terminal UI, since that usually worked well back when dial-up was common.

            • TimTheTinker 5 hours ago

              For content-driven sites - absolutely.

              I'm talking about long-lived apps where work is being accomplished. An SPA allows downloading and caching al or most of the frontend, then further communication can proceed using minimal bandwidth as the user works.

              With traditional SSR, every page/form the user navigates to requires downloading all markup, styles, and client-side behaviors for that route.

              • jraph 3 hours ago

                Each time I was on a limited connection, regular pages would load, slowly. Anything SPA would fail to load.

                I'm willing to believe SPAs with everything handwritten, containing just the necessary code, could work but that's not how SPAs are usually written.

                Not only this but very simple HTML with POST forms, in addition to being lightweight, benefit from a very robust handling, where you can retry stuff and all. SPA are usually bad at this.

                All markup needs to be downloaded but it might be very light, and styles are hopefully cached, so it's an issue on first load only and SPAs don't solve this.

    • chrisco255 7 hours ago

      I don't know how anyone can use the modern internet with dial up. It's got to be useless for all but email.

      • mortenjorck 5 hours ago

        I recently got throttled to ~1Mb/s for going over my mobile data allotment (which incidentally got me to finally switch to an MVNO), and I was amazed at how insufficient a speed that was once considered “broadband” was in 2025. It was basically unusable; sites took 20-30 seconds to load and scrolling a timeline was an exercise in futility.

        I literally cannot imagine 56K on the modern web.

      • grishka 7 hours ago

        I'm sure HN is perfectly usable over dial-up as well.

        • chrisco255 6 hours ago

          For comments, yeah but to read any of the links would probably take a while.

          • _moof 6 hours ago

            You guys are reading the links?

      • nosioptar 7 hours ago

        I think that's basically what they use it for.

        Sites that work well with lynx are OK on dial up.

      • dylan604 4 hours ago

        Only if the email client is set to not download images.

    • dzhiurgis 7 hours ago

      Is dial up still at 56kbps?

      • chrisco255 7 hours ago

        Yes. It's a hard limit for old phone lines because they're limited to something like 3.1 khz.

        • tptacek 5 hours ago

          The channels themselves are limited to 64k (like, that's what they are digitally) and then the signaling over analog channels steals a bit, bringing you to 56k.

          • Telaneo 3 hours ago

            And that assumes you have damn near a perfect phone line. Any interference along the line is probably going to knock you down to 33.6. I wonder if they keep stats on that.

      • esseph 7 hours ago

        Still over the phone lines, so yep. Extremely lucky if you get that on old copper though.

      • nosioptar 7 hours ago

        As far as I know.

        (I haven't personally had dial up in about 20 tears.)

      • dylan604 4 hours ago

        In some neighborhoods, the equipment wasn't able to support 56kbps so 33.6 was the best available. That's how my parent's house was. Too far away to get DSL. Lines were too noisy for 56.6. My parents tried HughesNet at one point, but it was shite. Starlink would have been a good option, but they eventually strung fiber to the area before Starlink was still an idea on paper.

neilpomerleau 8 hours ago
rerdavies 5 hours ago

Intense nostalgia. It brings me back to a point in time where the world suddenly turned and the possibilities seemed limitless. And all of those possibilities looked a little more idealistic, and a little less mercenary than what we actually got.

Not that I'm really complaining. I do like what we got.

And curiously different from the AI revolution, where there are no pretensions of idealism at at all, and everyone clearly understands that whoever wins this time will quite literally own the entire world, if the plan succeeds. And that it won't be a pleasant or pretty world for the rest of us, and that all of the leading candidates for King of the Universe don't care at all that the rest of us will be discarded. The complete opposite, in that regard.

I shall have to break out my set of AOL CD drink coasters, and put songs from Camelot on permanent repeat in order to mark the passing of an age with the solemnity it deserves.

  • paulryanrogers 5 hours ago

    I wish we had gotten municipal fiber. Back when telecoms had to lease their lines the competition was great. Cable companies growing fat on outdated cable lines has held many of us back for too long.

tombert 7 hours ago

My parents didn't have AOL when I was a kid; we had Prodigy, I think because they had promotions to get a cheap or free computer if you signed up for N years of Prodigy internet.

I was always kind of jealous of my friends who had AOL because I wanted the "You've Got Mail!" greeting, and I would see promotions that talk about "AOL Keywords" and I couldn't use those with Prodigy.

Amazing to think that AOL still offered dial-up service.

apetresc 7 hours ago

I didn't even know AOL was still around, let alone AOL dial-up.

  • 800xl 7 hours ago

    I thought they were just a web portal and email service. It is amazing they still offered ISP services this long.

    They had some pretty unscrupulous business practices back in the day with their free trial CD mailers. My cousin worked in their call center ages ago and would sometimes convince even people who didn't have a computer to pay for the service.

  • LeoPanthera 4 hours ago

    They offer a “tech support for old people” service which is actually really good.

  • benchly 7 hours ago

    Do they still offer the floppies with the free hours? I need a new set of drink coasters.

    • derwiki an hour ago

      No no—the CDs were coasters, the floppies you could put a piece of tape over the protection window and reuse

loose-cannon 8 hours ago

I wonder how quickly you can load some of the modern, popular, websites on a dial up connection.

  • sugarpimpdorsey 7 hours ago

    We have a whole generation of programmers that will justify 12MB of JavaScript bundles to output "Hello world".

  • donio 7 hours ago

    Easy to see for yourself using the throttling option in the developer tools of popular browsers.

  • derwiki 8 hours ago

    This orange site is fine but I wouldn’t hold my breath on any others

    • benchly 7 hours ago

      Something low-resource demand (like my blog) would probably be okay, save for a few large pics on some pages. Most people who run in the smolweb circles also like vintage computing, so creating webspaces using only HTML & CSS is common practice, which should do fine over a 56k connection.

  • BobbyTables2 8 hours ago

    Page loading times would probably be measurable with a sundial or calendar.

  • grishka 7 hours ago

    No need to wonder, just end up in an old building with thick brick walls that are only penetrated by a weak 2G signal and try to load something on your phone.

    • wtallis 6 hours ago

      Not possible anymore is many areas, where 2G and 3G networks have been shutdown to re-use spectrum for newer standards. The last time I was in a rural area with minimal signal strength, my phone was alternating between satellite-only messaging or 5G with 5-10 MB/s. I was actually able to download a movie in a quite reasonable amount of time, presumably because there wasn't anyone else doing much with the cell tower I was barely in range of.

  • smelendez 7 hours ago

    I’d bet a lot of them are using old computers too, with who knows what browser and OS. It’s probably hard to tell loading issues from rendering issues

  • philistine 7 hours ago

    You can test it yourself in the comfort of your gigabit connection. I wanted to test my barrage of very small images using lazy loading on a crappy connection. I learned that Chrome can easily pretend to suck. On Safari you somehow need to download a special tool but it works just as well.

    Or as worse I guess.

  • duskwuff 7 hours ago

    Google homepage: two or three minutes

    A Google SERP with rich content: about 20 minutes

    A typical Facebook post: ten minutes

    CNN home page: half an hour

    YouTube: forget it

    • dylan604 4 hours ago

      RealMedia: buffering

  • bawolff 6 hours ago

    I think chrome dev tools has a button to simulate different internet speeds.

    But im pretty sure the answer is really damn slow.

    • Telaneo 3 hours ago

      I know Firefox has it, since I used it to test my own website. Once you go past text and really small images, it starts taking minutes to load.

danans 7 hours ago

One wonders what the dial up ops department/team at AOL even looks like now. I wonder if it's anyone's full time job, or just something that occupies a fraction of their time.

kylehotchkiss 6 hours ago

3 million CD frisbee salute for our old friend (which pissed off our parents because we held up the phone like loading dynamic drive so they couldn’t call their sister)

can16358p 5 hours ago

More surprised that there was still dial up service in existence in 2025. I'd expect it to have vanished in about 2010 at latest.

crmi 5 hours ago

Could it be, AOL ending dialup – marks the official end of the dotcom bubble? Which means the next one, whatever that may be... starts now?

freitasm 7 hours ago

Some time ago there were estimates on the number of people still paying AOL but using a broadband service.

I wonder if AOL will stop charging people on dial-up only, or if they will later claim "oops, sorry..."

  • ricree 7 hours ago

    >This change will not affect any other benefits in your AOL plan, which you can access any time on your AOL plan dashboard. To manage or cancel your account, visit MyAccount

    Sounds like everyone keeps getting charged, since this is technically part of their "AOL plan", whatever that actually includes.

    • 0xy 7 hours ago

      Benefits such as virus protection for email that you don't use, and a free AOL Toolbar with shopping offers you don't have installed. Thank you for your $10 a month you forgot we were charging you for 15 years.

JoshTriplett 7 hours ago

Are there any sources indicating how many users dial-up still had?

  • orthecreedence 7 hours ago

    When I worked at AOL in 2010, dialup was their biggest source of revenue still. It'd be interesting to see the drop-off since then. I imagine it's trending down pretty quick as the generation using it kicks the bucket.

    • firesteelrain 7 hours ago

      There are older generations with aol.com email addresses including my MIL who despite being given multiple gmail addresses over the years still refuses to change and stop paying for it

      • wmf 4 hours ago

        AOL mail has been free for a long time BTW. You can stop paying and keep the email account.

reify an hour ago

I love that sound

I always create an alias to make that sound and another for the matrix phone sound when I connect to the internet.

the sound files are available here: https://www.soundjay.com/dial-up-modem-sound-effect.html

for the matrix:

alias wifion="nmcli dev wifi connect 'wifi-name'" && paplay /path/to/soundfile/matrix-phone.wav

for the old dial up tones:

alias wifioff="nmcli d disconnect wlp3s0" && /path/to/soundfile/dial-up-modem-02.wav

linux has loads of these sounds in /usr/share/sounds/freedesktop/stereo

t1234s 6 hours ago

I didn't know AOL was still an ISP

alex1138 7 hours ago

brrrrrrrrrrr

weeeeeeeeeee

kzzzzzzzzzzz

MaintenanceMode 5 hours ago

Wow. What a run. Has there been another slow networking technology that's lasted for so long?

  • ajb 4 minutes ago

    Telegraph

smitty1e 8 hours ago

On the topic of technology life cycles, can anyone suggest important writers/references?