AOL Hometown
AOL Hometown was a web hosting service offered by AOL. It offered 12 megabytes of server space for AOL subscribers to publish their own websites, and included a 10-step form-driven page creator called 1-2-3 Publish[1][2] and a WYSIWYG online website builder called Easy Designer,[3] neither of which required knowledge of HTML (AOLpress had been AOL's website builder before the introduction of AOL Hometown). In 2001, AOL Hometown estimatedly had 11 million websites[4] and a new website was added to it every eight seconds.[5] By 2002, AOL Hometown had grown to 14 million websites.[6] It was shut down on 31 October 2008.
Its shutdown led to the creation of Archive Team by one angered Jason Scott Sadofsky[7][8][9] (commonly known as Jason Scott) which, with the help of the Internet Archive and other activist websites, saved as much of GeoCities as possible when it became the next "critical part of online history"[7] and "important outlet for personal expression on the Web"[10] to be shut down with short notice in October 2009.
History
Start date
The site initially launched as "Hometown AOL" in October, 1998. Within the first year, in 1999, the site was redesigned and rebranded as "AOL Hometown" to align the name with the rest of the AOL properties' names (AOL + property name).
Official online information as to when AOL Hometown started out are scarce. whois.pho.to gives a register date of "before Aug-1996" for the domain of hometown.aol.co.uk, however that probably relates rather to the basic AOL domain itself since the "domain name" to the registration is given as "aol.co.uk".[11] First mention of AOL Hometown in a Google Scholar publication dates from 2000, which is Quick Guide to You'Ve Got Pictures, Aol Exclusive Version by D. Peal.[12] Prior to that, AOL Hometown was mentioned in a Deseret News article on September 30, 1999.[13]
Two tools for AOL Hometown on the internet suggest a start date of 1999 or before. The copyright notice to the AOL Hometown StatCounter reads "Copyright 1999-2011".[14] The imprint to the download page of James S. Huggins's AOL Hometown easyDesigner says that it was "created: before Thu, 01.Nov.2001", and its copyright notice reads "© 1997-2011"[15]
Legacy sites
Over the time of its existence, AOL Hometown incorporated websites of formerly independent services acquired by or merged with AOL,[7] including, but not limited to Ancestry.com,[13] MyFamily.com, Netscape,[13] CompuServe,[16] eAccess[17][18] AcmeCity[19] and others.
Thus, it contained an unknown number of websites that had been online for longer than the existence of AOL Hometown itself. On the German forum antispam.de, one poster complained in 2008 that with the shutdown of AOL Hometown, AOL had deleted his website that had remained on the internet "for more than 17 years" (since at least 1991).[20]
See also
References
- ↑ Hogan, Lynn (1995). Creating a Web Page Using AOL Hometown, Appendix C to the online book Practical Computing, published on Pearson Education
- ↑ Internet Baby Steps - Lesson 19: Creating a Simple AOL Home Page, Alexander Magazine, 2001
- ↑ Willett, Edward (2000). Your Official America Online Guide to Creating Cool Web Pages, 2nd Edition
- ↑ Schau, Hope Jensen; Gilly, Mary C. (2003). We are what we post? Self-presentation in personal web space, Journal of Consumer Research, December 1, 2003
- ↑ Musgrove, Mike (2001). Free, easy site-hosting services tap into the urge to post, The Washington Post, January 28, 2001
- ↑ Hu, Jim (2002). AOL home page glitches irk users, CNET News, February 1, 2002
- 1 2 3 Scott, Jason (2008). Eviction, or the Coming Datapocalypse, December 21st, 2008
- ↑ Scott, Jason (2009). Datapocalypso!, January 5th, 2009
- ↑ Scott, Jason (2009). STAND BACK, WE’RE ARCHIVISTS, January 9th, 2009
- ↑ Internet Archive (2009).GeoCities Special Collection 2009: Saving a Historical Record of GeoCities
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20120321143818/http://whois.pho.to/hometown.aol.co.uk. Archived from the original on March 21, 2012. Retrieved August 21, 2011. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ Google Scholar search result for "AOL Hometown"
- 1 2 3 Nii, Jenifer K. (1999). Family history Web site joins AOL, Deseret News, September 30, 1999
- ↑ StatCounter provides free customisable hit counters, visitor tracking and website stats for AOL Hometown Archived June 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Huggins, James S. (1997?). Using AOL Hometown easyDesigner
- ↑ "AOL-CompuServe deal cleared". CNET. 1997-11-10. Retrieved 2008-04-15.
- ↑ AOL Japan to transfer Net business to eAccess, The Japan Times, May 18, 2004,
- ↑ Matsuoka, Ken (2008). AOL Announcement: "AOL Hometown/FTP is closing 31st October 2008", 5 December 2008
- ↑ AcmeCity and AOL Hometown Collaboration, 2001
- ↑ "Immerhin hat AOL im Gegensatz zu manchen anderen Providern oder Gratisangeboten immerhin eine 'Haltbarkeit' von über 17 Jahren gehabt." ("Different from what other providers or free services would have given me, AOL gave my site a 'durability' of more than 17 years.") Chactory, thread Google warnt vor der gesamten AOL-Domain ("Google advises against all AOL domains"), 2 October 2008
External links
- Dillard, David (2008). "Meet the Googles" Visits the Grave Site of AOL Hometown to Ponder Its Past All to Short Life, Temple University, posted on Yahoo Groups, 18 November 2008
- Scott, Jason (2008). Eviction, or the Coming Datapocalypse, December 21, 2008
- Dr. Jitter (2008). AOL hometown shut down. Finding old sites., House of Jitters, November 12, 2008
- How To Retrieve Your AOL Files, November 11, 2008
- AOL Hometown Users: Your files are *not* deleted yet – grab’m while you can!, November 24, 2008
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