can’t say i remember much from using winME. maybe i blocked it out, haha.

    • WhiteOakBayou@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It depends on where you live. I lived in a rural area so the nearest local isp was far enough away that it cost. The cds and floppies that constantly came in the mail didn’t charge though. There were a bunch of those free services and ad supported isps. I had dial up for a long time and watched the business model go from portal style sandbox like AOL to literal "all internet is free if you keep this ad open. " towards the end before I left for college.

        • danA
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          Depends on region. In Australia, local calls (within the same state) were a flat $0.20 or $0.25, while interstate and mobile calls were billed by the minute.

          I’ve heard that some Americans were billed for incoming calls too?? Crazy.

          • Zachariah@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Yeah, definitely depends on year and location. But phone calls are never free. Maybe unlimited, but you still face a monthly bill at the very least.

    • Psythik@lemmy.world
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      AOL used a combination of local and 1-800 numbers. The only additional fee you had to pay was the AOL subscription.

    • bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      I’m pretty sure you still had to pay your phone provider who may have charged $0.10/call unless AOL was using 1-800 numbers to dial to?

    • jqubed@lemmy.world
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      You would’ve had to pay for the call itself, but probably only if you had to make a long-distance call. I think by that time local numbers were pretty universally unlimited minutes, but long distance was 25¢/minute or more. I was too young to be buying phone service myself, then, but remember TV ads promoting 25¢ or 10¢ or something like that as a good deal. Around 2003 when I was first living on my own I used to buy prepaid calling cards to call home and those got me as low as 3¢/minute, and that was a bargain.

    • Nay@feddit.nl
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      It was free, but iirc, you had to sign up for a monthly subscription, and the 700 hours was just your first month free.