(Worthy Satire) – In a tearful press conference attended by exactly three journalists still using Netscape Navigator, AOL announced it will finally pull the plug on its dial-up internet service—officially ending the era of screeching modems and mysterious static that sounded like R2-D2 choking on a kazoo.
“It’s time,” said AOL spokesperson Brenda Longwave, holding up a coiled phone cord like a folded flag at a military funeral. “The beeps, the hisses, the random bursts of alien Morse code—they were the soundtrack of a simpler time. But now… AI-generated elevator music will take their place.”
Tech experts warned the transition could leave many nostalgic Americans disoriented. “It’s not just about connecting to the internet,” said Dr. Hal Klink, professor of Obsolete Technology at DeVry University. “It was about the ritual: waiting two minutes to check your email, finding out you had one message, and realizing it was from AOL itself telling you about its exciting new features.”
In the coming months, subscribers will receive an “AI Music Starter Kit” to help them transition from static to soothing algorithmic jazz. The package includes a playlist titled ‘Beep Dreams: Neural Network Edition’ so users can cry themselves to sleep in comfort.
Still, not everyone is happy. “AI music?” scoffed 74-year-old Harold Frommeyer, a dial-up holdout since 1994. “I don’t want a robot composing my connection noises. I want the real thing. The sound of a fax machine dying at 14.4 kbps. That was life.”
When asked how AOL would remember its loyal customers, the company announced plans to erect a digital memorial: a looping .wav file of the original connection tone, to play forever on YouTube—unless your broadband drops, in which case you’ll still feel right at home.
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