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・ Aoki's Pizza
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・ AOL
・ AOL (disambiguation)
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AOL Hometown
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・ AOL Radio
・ AOL RED
・ AOL search data leak
・ AOL Seed
・ AOL Sessions (My Chemical Romance album)
・ AOL Sessions Undercover (The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus EP)
・ AOL Sessions Undercover (Thirty Seconds to Mars EP)
・ AOL Toolbar
・ AOL TV
・ Aola Star


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AOL Hometown : ウィキペディア英語版
AOL Hometown
AOL Hometown was a web hosting service offered by AOL. It offered 12 megabytes of server space for AOL subscribers to publish their own websites, and included a 10-step form-driven page creator called ''1-2-3 Publish''〔Hogan, Lynn (1995). (''Creating a Web Page Using AOL Hometown'' ), Appendix C to the online book (''Practical Computing'' ), published on ''Pearson Education''〕〔(''Internet Baby Steps - Lesson 19: Creating a Simple AOL Home Page'' ), Alexander Magazine, 2001〕 and a WYSIWYG online website builder called ''Easy Designer'',〔Willett, Edward (2000). (''Your Official America Online Guide to Creating Cool Web Pages, 2nd Edition'' )〕 neither of which required knowledge of HTML (''AOLpress'' had been AOL's website builder before the introduction of AOL Hometown). In 2001, AOL Hometown estimatedly had 11 million websites〔Schau, Hope Jensen; Gilly, Mary C. (2003). (''We are what we post? Self-presentation in personal web space'' ), Journal of Consumer Research, December 1, 2003〕 and a new website was added to it every eight seconds.〔Musgrove, Mike (2001). (''Free, easy site-hosting services tap into the urge to post'' ), The Washington Post, January 28, 2001〕 By 2002, AOL Hometown had grown to 14 million websites.〔Hu, Jim (2002). (''AOL home page glitches irk users'' ), CNET News, February 1, 2002〕 It was shut down on 31 October 2008.
Its shutdown led to the creation of ''Archive Team'' by one angered Jason Scott Sadofsky〔Scott, Jason (2008). (''Eviction, or the Coming Datapocalypse'' ), December 21st, 2008
〕〔Scott, Jason (2009). (''Datapocalypso!'' ), January 5th, 2009〕〔Scott, Jason (2009). (STAND BACK, WE’RE ARCHIVISTS ), January 9th, 2009〕 (commonly known as Jason Scott) which, with the help of the Internet Archive and other activist websites, saved as much of GeoCities as possible when it became the next "critical part of online history"〔 and "important outlet for personal expression on the Web"〔Internet Archive (2009).(''GeoCities Special Collection 2009: Saving a Historical Record of GeoCities'' )〕 to be shut down with short notice in October 2009.
== History ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「AOL Hometown」の詳細全文を読む



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