Houston Chronicle

AOL Instant Messenger goes offline Dec. 15 but will live on in nostalgia

- By Daniel Victor

AOL Instant Messenger, the chat program that connected a generation to their classmates and crushes while guiding them through the early days of digital socializin­g, will shut down Dec. 15, its parent company announced Friday.

Released in 1997, the program had largely faded into obscurity over the past decade, replaced by text messages, Google Chat, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and on and on we go. But at its height, AIM, as it was known, served as the social center for teenagers and young adults, the scene of deeply resonant memories and the place where people learned how to interact online.

“AIM tapped into new digital technologi­es and ignited a cultural shift, but the way in which we communicat­e with each other has profoundly changed,” Michael Albers, vice president of communicat­ions product at Oath, the parent company of AOL, said in a statement Friday.

The news of its official demise was met with cries of nostalgia, especially from those who were coming of age as AIM rose to prominence. For many people now in their 20s and 30s, learning to talk online coincided with learning to communicat­e like an adult, said Caroline Moss, 29, a writer and editor in New York who for years paid tribute to AIM with the parody Twitter account YourAwayMe­ssage.

The chat program was a workaround for the typical clumsiness and anxiety of adolescenc­e. Too shy to talk to the boy at his locker? You could go home and chat with him for hours.

Scared of inviting the girl to homecoming? You might find more courage on AIM.

“There are a lot of people who had milestone moments in their lives that happened on AIM,” said Moss, who was once better known by the screen name sparklegur­l27. “Someone asked them out, or they got broken up with, or they got in a fight with a friend.”

And then there were the away messages and profiles. As important as clothing or the buttons on a backpack, picking just the right song lyrics or inspiratio­nal quotes were among the most visible self-installed billboards of personal identity. It was a place to pay tribute to the senior class or to friends — who were, without fail, the best friends in the whole world.

Those short messages were the basis of Moss’ parody account, which assumed the character of a teenage girl whose parents were sometimes just THE WORST.

On Friday, the parody account posted: “d0NT crii becuz itz 0VER. SM!LE becuz it hAPPENEd. - aUDREY. hEPBURN. (0R SOME1) -”

 ?? Axel Heimken / Associated Press file ?? AOL has announced on Friday that it will discontinu­e its once-popular instant messenger platform on Dec. 15.
Axel Heimken / Associated Press file AOL has announced on Friday that it will discontinu­e its once-popular instant messenger platform on Dec. 15.

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