Dial-up connectivity stalwart AOL has set a date for cutting off the remainder of its old-tech internet holdouts. AOL, now a Yahoo! property, will end its dial-up internet service, the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)-based internet connectivity service, on September 30, 2025. Its dial-up service has been publicly available for 34 years, and has provided many an internet surfer’s first taste of the WWW. AOL will also end its AOL Dialer software and AOL Shield browser. RIP slowband.

AOL still advertising its dial-up

You can still subscribe. Phone up to order the AOL CD. (Image credit: AOL)

census data indicates approximately a quarter of a million remaining dial-up holdouts.

One of the natural successors for internet connectivity in hard-to-reach places is satellite, with around eight million subscribers in the U.S. Meanwhile, ten times more people use the current favorite, and price/performance internet connectivity sweet spot, delivered by the DLS/cable/fiber optic trinity.

We know some countries/regions have quite a range of competitive 5G offerings for home internet access, but that isn’t the U.S. at this time.

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