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fergablu2 t1_j9g3161 wrote

I could’ve roofed my house with the free ones they sent in the mail.

13

MorsesTheHorse t1_j9g36fp wrote

That's seems low. Figured it would have been high 90s.

−1

HPmoni t1_j9g593o wrote

CDs were shiny discs with information on them.

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HarlanCulpepper t1_j9gaif2 wrote

They were EVERYWHERE - unsolicited mailings, inserted into magazines, stacks of them for free in every store checkout lane from supermarkets to Blockbuster VIdeo. You couldn't avoid them if you tried. We used them as drink coasters and ninja frisbees.

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Jeraimee t1_j9gaogy wrote

I keep my Office Space DVD in an AOL case. Also, I have an Office Space DVD.

9

gefmayhem t1_j9gax6f wrote

I still use my aol account as my main email address.

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nomoregroundhogs t1_j9gdb79 wrote

I’m sure there’s no way to know, but I wish I knew what percentage of those CDs were ever actually used. Seems like it can’t possibly have been worth it.

2

Skip1six t1_j9gjz2m wrote

And I delivered them to your door. Week after week

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k-laz t1_j9gsvac wrote

. . . . And two-tenths of one percent of CD's actually used.

3

PM_ur_boobies_pleez t1_j9gtbd5 wrote

I think around 10% of those showed up in my mailbox.

Kidding aside, there were people who actually collected those CDs like baseball cards or coins.

3

PM_ur_boobies_pleez t1_j9gu9l1 wrote

Even if they only made one new subscription out of 100, they probably made a lot of money, especially when you factor in how hard it was to cancel an AOL subscription once you had one.

It was harder to cancel than Columbia House Records and Tapes.

5

happyklam t1_j9guscf wrote

My friends and I used to AOL CD people's yards in high school. You could snag a whole stack of them at the grocery store and then arrange them to spell out things on the lawn.

Sorry Zach.

2

milkysway1 t1_j9gxja9 wrote

I remember when they sent out floppy disks. For a few years, I didn't need to buy disks or pay for internet access. Just cancel after the free month, and they would ask if you wanted just one more free month trial. Rinse and repeat. Perfect, because I was a teen with no money.

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paul-d9 t1_j9h2f9r wrote

Yeesh it sounds like such a massive waste from an environmental standpoint.

4

bothunter t1_j9h3zkg wrote

Except those disks were absolute trash. You could only write to them a few times before they started flaking out. But as long as you didn't need reliability, they were a nice cheap alternative to the store bought disks. Just needed a piece of scotch tape to cover the write protect tab.

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monkeypox_69 t1_j9hi6w4 wrote

I believe it. Those things were everywhere.

1

TheDefected t1_j9hos3b wrote

Also responsible for 80% of the plastic burning smell from the microwave.

1

Eroe777 t1_j9i88ia wrote

I wonder if those guys who were trying to collect a million AOL CDs ever came anywhere near their goal.

1

Kusanagi-2501 t1_j9ijpfp wrote

I used them and still don’t understand how they worked. Was AOL the ISP? Did the telephone company I got home phone through, get paid at all? How did AOL even make money?

1

snakesoup88 t1_j9iv9qf wrote

I still have a stack of AOL discs in tin can. Still looking for a purpose for them.

1

clc1992 t1_j9k2yp1 wrote

I used them as ninja stars as a child

1

IBeTrippin t1_j9kc7ry wrote

The tins they sometimes came in were pretty cool.

1