• Jo Miran
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    381 month ago

    uh oh

    I had a parrot at the time and she picked up on the uh oh and would repeat it, exactly like the system, all the time.

  • palordrolap
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    71 month ago

    Set one up when I used a different handle but literally never used it. Thought I had a short ID number but, for reasons I’m not sure of, the piddly scrap of paper I wrote the number down on has always been in a particular place (and has been there for well over a decade), and it was 9 digits.

    Must have been thinking of that handle’s Slashdot ID. That was 6 digits.

    … and technically still is. Wow. The account is apparently still there. Not sure I’m going back there any time soon, but took this opportunity to reset the password just in case.

    • jecxjo
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      31 month ago

      Still remember mine, 7 digits long. Now i gotta go install the app and see if i remember my password.

  • Resol van Lemmy
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    21 month ago

    And now I’m jealous of everyone who did experience it, because I have never heard of it until news of it shutting down reached my eyes.

    It was never popular where I’m from. Not even AIM was well known to us.

  • @Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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    21 month ago

    What a great app! I remember for a little while you could interact directly with AOL IM. Had a superiority complex using icq while other poor dweebs were on AOL default IM app.

  • @ruse8145@lemmy.sdf.org
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    129 days ago

    “ahead of its time”? Just because Google tries to reinvent text chat every 3 seconds doesn’t mean there are new things to add

  • Andi
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    11 month ago

    Though someone hacked it a few years ago and took it over. Demanded money from me and I told them to f off, as I hadn’t used it for years.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    11 month ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    But in the late 1990s and early 2000s, it simultaneously laid the groundwork for direct messaging and social networking as we came to know it in the post-Facebook era.

    In the wake of the Netscape IPO, which heralded a new era of tech-based money-making ventures, the four of them were looking for an idea to run with.

    The application didn’t have much marketing behind it, but it spread quickly by word of mouth—particularly in nascent online gaming communities around multi-user dungeons (MUDs), early deathmatches, and so on.

    ICQ was eventually purchased by AOL, and it lost ground to more heavily financially backed services like AIM and MSN.

    That company eventually morphed and changed its name to VK, and it has been keeping ICQ on life support as a sort of Russian Skype alternative since.

    I signed up because I was playing the online game Meridian 59, and its community largely used ICQ for out-of-game communication.


    The original article contains 571 words, the summary contains 155 words. Saved 73%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!