In the ‘90s, America Online helped carry the masses into a burgeoning digital utopia known as cyberspace.
In 2025, AOL is somehow still around — even as it’s been completely outclassed by modern web browsers and email providers.
YouTuber Michael MJD recently provided a tour of what AOL’s desktop web browser looks like in 2025:
The target audience seems to be people who learned how to use the internet with AOL in the ‘90s or early 2000s and refuse to adapt.
AOL had 18m+ subscribers in 1999.
The company was once the nation’s biggest internet provider, but as broadband internet (and free browsers) replaced dial-up, AOL was left in the past.
AOL email addresses have been free since 2004, but even without the barrier, it still pales in comparison to Gmail — the Coca-Cola, the McDonald’s, and the Ford F-150 of email — which boasts 1.8B+ users.
And yet, AOL Desktop Gold still gets regular updates, so there is an audience there. Who knows, maybe having an AOL email address will soon become a status symbol? (It won’t.)