AOL Takes on Rivals with Free Web Mail

By David Worthington | Published December 23, 2004, 1:40 PM

America Online is currently beta testing a refresh of AOL Mail on the Web in preparation for a rollout of its own free Web mail service to the masses early next year. The Mail on the Web beta went live late Wednesday with a new user interface and several performance enhancements.

The new Web mail service features rich text, drag and drop capabilities between folders and automatically refreshes the inbox so users can view new mail in real time. Eventually, AOL will make the service presence aware with AOL Instant Messenger Integration.

At present, AOL Mail on the Web is only available to AOL subscribers and limits storage to 100MB per screen name. Competitors MSN and Google offer 250MB and 1GB, respectively.

Ultimately, AOL's goal is to ramp up its portal strategy. The AOL.com portal site has undergone a planned redesign that introduced content feeds placed prominently alongside Internet search and links to popular AOL.com destinations.

Recently, AOL debuted Search Snapshots, a new video service, as well as its SingingFish media search engine to a wider Internet audience outside of its walled garden of subscribers.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

AOL is still AOL...a bogus loser of an organization.

Score: 0

|

Yes, I assume that's why they have more paying subscribers than the population of most countries. Because after all... who cares, right?

AOL catching up to compete with hotmail yahoo and gmail is a great idea that will get them out to a new audience. Good plan in any (knowledgable) person's opinion when you consider the marketing and economic aspects of it.

Score: 0

|

AOL is just trying to catch onto the higher meg email services like yahoo and google. Yahoo offers 250 mgs free to anyone and gmail you have to have an invite. I never really liked gmail because of its lack of notification features. Now at least the aol web mail service is more palatable than in its previous incarnation.

Score: 0

|

Score: 0

|

I hate to add to flaming, but you guys are right. I am an AOL user, and I have never been happy with the service. Too bad they are losing me to broadband DSL in a matter of days... for half of the price, mind you. AOL software in the early days was meant to be intuitive for non-computer literate people to be able to use easily, but in recent days, this has changed greatly. With the addition of the latest build of AOL 9.0, the software has become quite counterintuitive in design and function, and ever more troublesome. Lest we forget the memory hog that the application itself is. Even those with AOL broadband service have to have the AOL client program loaded and signed on just to make use of the internet. What's the point? Go pay less, and get more from Bellsouth, Roadrunner, or just about any other provider. AOL is the most expensive service around. You say it gives you unique content, not otherwise available? Think again. Everything on AOL is based off of other sources, and is accessible from any internet connection, just do a Google search. That's all. Good-bye AOL.

Score: 0

|

I am wondering how the peope who say that aol is so great can argue them laying off over 1500 people in the past three months, and losing an average of about 1 million customers a quarter ???

The days of AOL are over. They suck, always have and always will ...

Score: 0

|

Report: Microsoft to randomize Europe's browser screen choices

The fact that "A" is for "Apple" was apparently at the heart of browser vendor objections to Microsoft's alternative to listing IE first.

Acer eclipses Dell for #2 spot in global PC shipments, says iSuppli data

It literally does look like a 360-degree turnaround in Dell's fortunes, as the bells of bad tidings now toll solely for Dell.

Microsoft, don't hang up on Windows Mobile, but do call for help

Only a Manhattan Project can save Microsoft's phone strategy now.

See ya later, WinMo: Microsoft's mobile strategy needs a reboot

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Hands up if you're considering upgrading to a Windows phone for the holidays...Anybody?

Playing catch-up in 2010: Windows Mobile, BlackBerry, and Symbian

Microsoft, RIM, and Nokia are each working on improved mobile operating systems. But could these efforts add up to too little, too late?

Will Nokia's plans further alienate American consumers?

A look at Nokia's plans for the coming years does little to shine up the company's increasingly dull image.

Bing bonked by service outage Thursday, Microsoft configured the wrong server

It's always nice to have a backup, but it's even nicer to remember which one is the backup. That's the lesson Bing's admins learned yesterday evening.

Survey reveals there are more women then men, including on social networks

If you think you can market your products and services online as though you're selling car batteries in the middle of halftime, think again. And again.

Android team updates 'Donut' and 'Eclair' SDKs

The Android SDK includes components which optimize app development for each version of the mobile operating system. Today, the 1.6 and 2.0 components got updates.

The Black Screen Syndrome, or, Tech news in search of the apocalypse

Scott Fulton On Point: This is a story about something that should not have been a story, about something that at one time was a story.

Online advertising evolves away from display, toward interactive software

Marketing departments and agencies are increasingly establishing positions for "creative technologists" who can steer designers and developers toward platforms that enable direct connections with consumers.