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  1. Prodigy Communications, L.P. Prodigy Communications Corporation was an online service from 1984 to 2001 that offered its subscribers access to a broad range of networked services. It was one of the major internet service providers of the 1990s. The company claimed it was the first consumer online service, citing its graphical user interface and ...

    • February 13, 1984; 39 years ago (as Trintex)
  2. Mar 7, 2024 · The price increases prompted an increase of "underground IDs" by which multiple users would share a single account and manipulate the email service to act as private bulletin boards. This was accomplished by sending emails to intentionally invalid addresses containing the name of the intended recipients.

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  4. Dec 18, 2008 · In 1997 Prodigy became an ISP, while still maintaining the online service aspect, much like AOL does today. Even more like present-day AOL, it tried to develop its own Web browser, but that flopped.

  5. Price increases. Two of Prodigy's most popular services were its message boards and email. Because Prodigy's business model depended on rapidly growing advertising and online shopping revenue, email was initially developed primarily to aid shopping. However, it later found much greater usage as a means of general communication between users.

  6. Nov 6, 2017 · Prodigy: You gotta get this thing. This was what the Prodigy signin page looked like in 1991, running under MS-DOS. Prodigy was successful for a while but what happened was it had to reinvent itself several times, including as an Internet provider. Prodigy started as a joint venture online service in the late 1980s between IBM and Sears.

  7. The monthly fee did increase, to $14.95, in November 1992. Prophetically, Mossberg described much-smaller America Online Inc. as 'the sophisticated wave of the future among such services.' Prodigy could boast some improvements in 1993; during the fall of the year it introduced Windows-based software and e-mail gateway to the Internet.

  8. Prodigy was described by the New York Times as "family-oriented" and one of "the Big Three information services" in 1994. By 1990, it was the second-largest online service provider with 465,000 subscribers, trailing only CompuServe 's 600,000. In 1993 it was the largest. In 2001, it was acquired by SBC Communications, which in 2005 became the ...

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