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Topic: Happy 10th Birthday to the AIM Buddy List

  1. #1
    Jeff's Avatar
    Jeff is offline Administrator
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    Happy 10th Birthday to the AIM Buddy List

    AOL is celebrating the 10th anniversary of the AIM buddy list, touting it as "the original social network." To commemorate the event, they've produced a slick Flash timeline that illustrates the evolution of AIM from 1989 to today.

    Here's the Evolution of AIM (according to AOL):
    • 1989 - The Advent of Consumer Instant Messaging
      AOL introduces consumer instant messaging (IM), pioneering a trend that would change the face of online communications. In addition to email, consumers can now send and receive real time text communications, previously available only on private networks.
    • 1996 - The Buddy List Feature is Born
      The Buddy List feature launches on the AOL 3.0 service. This AOL innovation revolutionized IM by letting AOL members organize their "buddies" and see who was online and able to receive messages, jump-starting America's most powerful online community. While aspects of the feature have been copied by others, AOL's Buddy List network supports the nation's largest IM community.
    • 1997 - The AIMŪ Service Launches
      The free and public AIMŪ service launches, bringing the benefits of IM and the Buddy List feature to a Web-wide audience.
    • 1998 - AOL’s Buddy ListŪ Feature Joins Smithsonian Institution
      The Smithsonian recognizes AOL’s Buddy List network as a remarkable social achievement. AOL’s Buddy List network enters the Smithsonian Institution’s permanent research collection on Information Technology Innovation at the National Museum of American History.
    • 1998 - AOL Acquires ICQ
      AOL purchases the pioneering ICQŪ service, the first free IM service on the Web, which debuted in November 1996.
    • 1999 - Enter Buddy Icons
      By this time, AIM had already spawned its own language and emoticons. The launch of Buddy icons marks the first generation of self-expression features for personalizing IMs. The first Buddy icons are cartoon characters, symbols, drawings and graphical images.
    • 1999 - AIMŪ Directory Launches
      Bringing in the second wave of IM-based social networking features (after the Buddy List feature), the AIMŪ Community Directory makes it possible for users to create a personal profile and search by topic to find other people with common interests.
    • 2000 - AIMŪ Service Talks it Up
      The AIM service debuts a host of new features, including “AIMŪTalk,” the first means of voice communications between AIM users (PC-to-PC), and “Instant Images,” the first easy way for users to exchange photos and images via IM.
    • 2000 - AIMŪ Service Goes Mobile
      AOL launches the mobile AIM service on the Sprint cellular network and introduces the AOLŪ Mobile Communicator, a wireless handheld device that enables on-the-go access to the AIM and AOLŪ Mail services. It is instantly embraced by the deaf and hard of hearing community.
    • 2001 - Mobile AIMŪ Goes Mainstream
      The mobile AIM service becomes a “killer app” on T-Mobile’s popular new SidekickŪ phone. It also rolls out across major wireless networks nationwide and is embedded on popular new phones.
    • 2002 - AIMŪ expands to AMBER Alerts
      Through a joint effort with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and law enforcement agencies, AOL expands AMBER Alerts to AIM users to help in rescuing abducted children.
    • 2003 - SuperBuddy™ Icons Debut
      Animated 3-D SuperBuddy™ icons launch for AOL members.
    • 2003 - A Truly Global Community
      AOL brings the AIM and ICQ services together, forming one of the largest online communities in the world and transferring two billion IMs every day. The ICQ service appears in CNET’s Hall of Fame as one of the most popular, high quality, and time tested Internet applications in history.
    • 2004 - Reaching Out to the Hearing Disabled
      The AIMŪ Relay Service launches, enabling AIM users who are deaf, hard of hearing and speech disabled to access live relay operators directly from the buddy List feature. The 3GSM Association names the new service the “Best Use of Mobile for Special Needs & Accessibility.”
    • 2004 - You Gotta See it to Believe it
      The AIM service delivers live video IM, enabling AIM users to engage in live streaming audio and video conversations with other AIM users, as well as Apple iChat AV users on Macintosh computers.
    • 2004 - That’s Entertainment
      AOLŪ Radio and AIMŪ Games debut on the Buddy List feature, bringing content and a new level of interactivity to IM.
    • 2005 - Free AIMŪ Mail
      The free AIMŪ Mail service launches, giving AIM users the ability to use their AIMŪ Screen Name as their email address. Leveraging one of the most popular brands on the Web, AIM Mail offers AOL’s industry-leading spam and virus protection as well as 2 GB storage.
    • 2005 - AIMŪ Fight!
      AIMŪ Fight launches at www.aimfight.com to let users compare the reach of their primary social network, the AIM Buddy List feature.
    • 2005 - AIMŪ Triton Arrives
      The new AIMŪ Triton service launches as a complete communications suite, with IM, email and SMS as well as voice and video chat services. An industry first, it features a Plaxo-enabled AIMŪ Address Book and offers one-click access to the AOLŪ Mail, AIM Mail and AOL Radio services, making the AIM service the new ‘front door’ to digital communications.
    • 2006 - AIMŪ Platform Opens Up
      AOL launches the Open AIMŪ initiative, enabling developers, online communities and sites and services of every kind to build new plug-ins and custom communications clients on the popular AIM platform.
    • 2006 - Real Time Video on Demand
      In another industry first, AOL tests a version of the AIM Triton service that features an AOLŪ Video module at the base of the Buddy List feature. The nodule offers video on demand categories like Weird & Wacky and What’s Hot on TV.
    • 2006 - AIMŪ Pages Takes Off
      AOL begins to roll-out its new AIMŪ Pages community by inviting users to build personal Web pages that display their favorite music, videos, blogs, photos and more. Users can integrate Buddy List features and “subscribe” to others with shared interests.
    • 2006 - AIMŪ Phoneline Rings
      AOL launches AIMŪ Phoneline to give AIM users a free local phone number, unlimited inbound calling and an “always on” answering service. AOL also offers Unlimited AIM Phoneline, giving AIM users access to an inbound and outbound calling service that is e911 compliant and offers advanced call management.
    For those hard core AIM fans, there's a PDF version of the timeline available for download.
    Last edited by Jeff; 05-16-2006 at 02:20 PM.

  2. #2
    sarahtowny's Avatar
    sarahtowny is offline Senior Member
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    That was a great video showing the changes over the years. These days I think the competition keeps them on their toes! Never used AIM but still all credit to them 10 years of IM so yep I will say a Happy Birthday .. just wonder what we will be able to do in the next 10 years?

  3. #3
    angrykeys's Avatar
    angrykeys is offline Junior Member
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    Typical AOL......

    What's really sad is that they suck as they do, yet everyone oohs and aahs over them and despite the fact that the competition offers better service they are still #1.

    I just don't get it.

    But then VHS did win out over the superior Betamax didn't it?

    There's no accounting for taste I suppose.

    And I found this rather interesting...

    1989 - The Advent of Consumer Instant Messaging
    AOL introduces consumer instant messaging (IM), pioneering a trend that would change the face of online communications. In addition to email, consumers can now send and receive real time text communications, previously available only on private networks.
    Last I checked ICQ (which AOL bought later on, as their timeline even states) was "The Advent of Consumer instant Messaging", and not AIM.

    What's odd is they contradict themselves later on when they say...
    1998 - AOL Acquires ICQ
    AOL purchases the pioneering ICQŪ service, the first free IM service on the Web, which debuted in November 1996.
    Perhaps their PR department needs to do better proofreading?


    Now what I've always found interesting is that despite the fact that ICQ was not only the first IM service, but also offered message logging from the beginning (or close to it).

    It took AOL (who has owned ICQ for most of it's existence) till late 2005 (or was it early this year) with AIM "Triton" to finally offer the ability to log Instant messages.

    Meanwhile Yahoo!, MSN and their own ICQ had been offering this for years.

    However, AOL kind of spoiled the party by throwing in all kinds of other crap like that AOL branded/tweaked Internet Explorer which you had no choice but to install if you wanted AIM Triton (I've heard that may have changed, I installed AIM some time ago).

    And be it AIM or ICQ you also have the extra added bonus of "Join AOL" Icons being put wherever they felt you'd be most annoyed with them (e.g. desktop, start menu, and then some).

    I really dislike AOL and it's products and am saddened by it's popularity, especially that of AIM.

    The best Instant Messaging Programs out there are from Yahoo! and MSN (in that order). They are vastly superior to AIM.

    It's too bad I'm one of the minority who realizes that.

  4. #4
    handydandy101 is offline Junior Member
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    Whatever happened to AIM fight? Used to be popular for a while. I guess people have found other ways to feed their online ego. I recently read about AIM fight at aimfights.com

  5. #5
    bhaberle is offline Junior Member
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    angrykeys

    Angrykeys... read that a little clearer... its says the first FREE IM SERVICE. Free is the key word.

    Looks like forum posters need to work on their reading. Aim is still a great chat program. If you don't like the newer versions than use an older version or even better, don't use it!

    Cheers Mate!

  6. #6
    Hoppus is offline Member
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    yay go AIM.

    referring to angrykeys, last i checked Yahoo! does the same thing that AOL does with AIM. Just more for it's entire network, rather AOL's paid service. Basically what I'm saying is Yahoo! advertises massively all it's network sites and services over it's IM service. games, email, even stock marketing.

    go AIM!

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