翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Wołoskowola
・ Wołoszyn
・ Wołowa
・ Wołowe Lasy
・ Wołowice
・ Wołowiec
・ Wołowiec, Goleniów County
・ Wołowiec, Kamień County
・ Wołowiec, Lesser Poland Voivodeship
・ WOW The 90s
・ Wow Twist
・ Wow! (Bananarama album)
・ WOW! (band)
・ Wow! (Bill Doggett album)
・ Wow! (comic)
Wow! (online service)
・ WOW! (TV series)
・ WOW! Children's Museum
・ Wow! City!
・ Wow! Flash
・ Wow! Gorillas
・ Wow! Momo
・ Wow! signal
・ Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!
・ Wow, The Kid Gang of Bandits
・ Wow-and-flutter
・ Wow-Wow sauce
・ Wow... The Story
・ Wow/Grape Jam
・ WoW64


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Wow! (online service) : ウィキペディア英語版
Wow! (styled WOW!) was an online service run by CompuServe.com in 1996 and early 1997. Started in March 1996, it was originally thought to be an improved version of CompuServe's software, but it was later announced that it would be a user-friendly stand-alone "family" online service and was widely advertised on TV as such. Wow! was the first internet service to be offered with a monthly "unlimited" rate ($17.95) and stood out because of its brightly colored, seemingly hand-drawn pages.The first release of this program was quite buggy, with many random shutdowns of the service and loss of email messages. The service developed a small, but very loyal fan base. However, this was not enough and the service was shut down on January 31, 1997.There is a strong group of "WOWIES" who have fought on for years after its demise, to stay connected through chat groups, and a webring. This group believes they were "sold out" by Compuserve because the service was being bought out by AOL, who began offering a $19.95 unlimited service as it was shutting down WOW.This was not to end Wow!s troubles, several class-action lawsuits were filed, claiming that WOW! was sold to stockholders with false and misleading information.The CompuServe model had always been to charge customers based on an hourly usage fee. This model was no longer competitive due to the new unlimited programs provided by AOL and sprouting local ISPs. In addition, CompuServe was unable to offer customized usernames. Customers had lengthy numbers with a comma (or period if it one was sending it to another non-Wow! Compuserve member) in the middle as their e-mail address. Wow! was supposed to fix those issues and make the company competitive with AOL.The Wow! Information Service was supposed to commence with the release of Microsoft Windows 95 SR2. This version of Windows would be the first to offer a built-in Internet Explorer. Knowing that this new browser would be considered anti-competitive, Microsoft allowed the major ISPs to include their own software installations into the base Operating System. Compuserve realized that this was a huge opportunity to get Wow! on to PC's around the country, but the software was not close to being ready for distribution.The company decided that the only way to be ready was to have a paid beta test. IT Contracting firms were consulted and beta testers were brought to Wow! Headquarters. Each beta tester would get six months of free WOW! service and be paid $100/week, plus $10 per bug they found in the software. The beta tester that found the most bugs would be awarded a "bug bounty" of $2000. In the end, the beta testers were not impressed with the payouts, and very few bugs were actually fixed.==Wow.com domain==The ''wow.com'' domain name has been retained by AOL since it acquired CompuServe, though it was dormant from the online service's shutdown to 2007.In mid-2007, AOL had considered moving its Digg-style news aggregator, then hosted on the Netscape.com domain, to the wow.com domain; AOL ultimately moved the service to Propeller.com. Towards the end of the year, AOL was reportedly working on using the domain for a social networking service focused on the popular online role-playing game ''World of Warcraft'', and to that end began redirecting the domain to an existing AOL-hosted ''World of Warcraft'' blog, ''WoW Insider''. The blog, now with various social enhancements, officially moved to WoW.com on May 20, 2009.Little more than a year after that relaunch, in October 2010, the blog resumed its previous name as ''WoW Insider'' and was moved to a subdomain of sister blog Joystiq. The wow.com domain was simultaneously relaunched as a deal of the day site similar to Groupon. However, that site was also short-lived, shutting down in late 2011. Throughout 2012, the domain redirected to another AOL site, Games.com. Since February 2013, the domain has served as a barebones alternate interface to AOL's search engine, itself powered by Google Search. In 2015, a subdomain of wow.com (content.wow.com) began re-posting various articles from other AOL-owned sites, apparently for search engine optimization purposes.


Wow! (styled WOW!) was an online service run by CompuServe.com in 1996 and early 1997. Started in March 1996, it was originally thought to be an improved version of CompuServe's software, but it was later announced that it would be a user-friendly stand-alone "family" online service and was widely advertised on TV as such. Wow! was the first internet service to be offered with a monthly "unlimited" rate ($17.95) and stood out because of its brightly colored, seemingly hand-drawn pages.
The first release of this program was quite buggy, with many random shutdowns of the service and loss of email messages. The service developed a small, but very loyal fan base. However, this was not enough and the service was shut down on January 31, 1997.
There is a strong group of "WOWIES" who have fought on for years after its demise, to stay connected through chat groups, and a webring. This group believes they were "sold out" by Compuserve because the service was being bought out by AOL, who began offering a $19.95 unlimited service as it was shutting down WOW.
This was not to end Wow!s troubles, several class-action lawsuits were filed, claiming that WOW! was sold to stockholders with false and misleading information.
The CompuServe model had always been to charge customers based on an hourly usage fee. This model was no longer competitive due to the new unlimited programs provided by AOL and sprouting local ISPs. In addition, CompuServe was unable to offer customized usernames. Customers had lengthy numbers with a comma (or period if it one was sending it to another non-Wow! Compuserve member) in the middle as their e-mail address. Wow! was supposed to fix those issues and make the company competitive with AOL.
The Wow! Information Service was supposed to commence with the release of Microsoft Windows 95 SR2. This version of Windows would be the first to offer a built-in Internet Explorer. Knowing that this new browser would be considered anti-competitive, Microsoft allowed the major ISPs to include their own software installations into the base Operating System. Compuserve realized that this was a huge opportunity to get Wow! on to PC's around the country, but the software was not close to being ready for distribution.
The company decided that the only way to be ready was to have a paid beta test. IT Contracting firms were consulted and beta testers were brought to Wow! Headquarters. Each beta tester would get six months of free WOW! service and be paid $100/week, plus $10 per bug they found in the software. The beta tester that found the most bugs would be awarded a "bug bounty" of $2000. In the end, the beta testers were not impressed with the payouts, and very few bugs were actually fixed.
==Wow.com domain==
The ''wow.com'' domain name has been retained by AOL since it acquired CompuServe, though it was dormant from the online service's shutdown to 2007.
In mid-2007, AOL had considered moving its Digg-style news aggregator, then hosted on the Netscape.com domain, to the wow.com domain; AOL ultimately moved the service to Propeller.com. Towards the end of the year, AOL was reportedly working on using the domain for a social networking service focused on the popular online role-playing game ''World of Warcraft'', and to that end began redirecting the domain to an existing AOL-hosted ''World of Warcraft'' blog, ''WoW Insider''. The blog, now with various social enhancements, officially moved to WoW.com on May 20, 2009.
Little more than a year after that relaunch, in October 2010, the blog resumed its previous name as ''WoW Insider'' and was moved to a subdomain of sister blog Joystiq. The wow.com domain was simultaneously relaunched as a deal of the day site similar to Groupon. However, that site was also short-lived, shutting down in late 2011. Throughout 2012, the domain redirected to another AOL site, Games.com.
Since February 2013, the domain has served as a barebones alternate interface to AOL's search engine, itself powered by Google Search. In 2015, a subdomain of wow.com (content.wow.com) began re-posting various articles from other AOL-owned sites, apparently for search engine optimization purposes.

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Wow! (styled WOW!) was an online service run by CompuServe.com in 1996 and early 1997. Started in March 1996, it was originally thought to be an improved version of CompuServe's software, but it was later announced that it would be a user-friendly stand-alone "family" online service and was widely advertised on TV as such. Wow! was the first internet service to be offered with a monthly "unlimited" rate ($17.95) and stood out because of its brightly colored, seemingly hand-drawn pages.The first release of this program was quite buggy, with many random shutdowns of the service and loss of email messages. The service developed a small, but very loyal fan base. However, this was not enough and the service was shut down on January 31, 1997.There is a strong group of "WOWIES" who have fought on for years after its demise, to stay connected through chat groups, and a webring. This group believes they were "sold out" by Compuserve because the service was being bought out by AOL, who began offering a $19.95 unlimited service as it was shutting down WOW.This was not to end Wow!s troubles, several class-action lawsuits were filed, claiming that WOW! was sold to stockholders with false and misleading information.The CompuServe model had always been to charge customers based on an hourly usage fee. This model was no longer competitive due to the new unlimited programs provided by AOL and sprouting local ISPs. In addition, CompuServe was unable to offer customized usernames. Customers had lengthy numbers with a comma (or period if it one was sending it to another non-Wow! Compuserve member) in the middle as their e-mail address. Wow! was supposed to fix those issues and make the company competitive with AOL.The Wow! Information Service was supposed to commence with the release of Microsoft Windows 95 SR2. This version of Windows would be the first to offer a built-in Internet Explorer. Knowing that this new browser would be considered anti-competitive, Microsoft allowed the major ISPs to include their own software installations into the base Operating System. Compuserve realized that this was a huge opportunity to get Wow! on to PC's around the country, but the software was not close to being ready for distribution.The company decided that the only way to be ready was to have a paid beta test. IT Contracting firms were consulted and beta testers were brought to Wow! Headquarters. Each beta tester would get six months of free WOW! service and be paid $100/week, plus $10 per bug they found in the software. The beta tester that found the most bugs would be awarded a "bug bounty" of $2000. In the end, the beta testers were not impressed with the payouts, and very few bugs were actually fixed.==Wow.com domain==The ''wow.com'' domain name has been retained by AOL since it acquired CompuServe, though it was dormant from the online service's shutdown to 2007.In mid-2007, AOL had considered moving its Digg-style news aggregator, then hosted on the Netscape.com domain, to the wow.com domain; AOL ultimately moved the service to Propeller.com. Towards the end of the year, AOL was reportedly working on using the domain for a social networking service focused on the popular online role-playing game ''World of Warcraft'', and to that end began redirecting the domain to an existing AOL-hosted ''World of Warcraft'' blog, ''WoW Insider''. The blog, now with various social enhancements, officially moved to WoW.com on May 20, 2009.Little more than a year after that relaunch, in October 2010, the blog resumed its previous name as ''WoW Insider'' and was moved to a subdomain of sister blog Joystiq. The wow.com domain was simultaneously relaunched as a deal of the day site similar to Groupon. However, that site was also short-lived, shutting down in late 2011. Throughout 2012, the domain redirected to another AOL site, Games.com. Since February 2013, the domain has served as a barebones alternate interface to AOL's search engine, itself powered by Google Search. In 2015, a subdomain of wow.com (content.wow.com) began re-posting various articles from other AOL-owned sites, apparently for search engine optimization purposes.」の詳細全文を読む



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