MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

The Wall/ Dead Companies/ CompuServe
The later CompuServe logo.

CompuServe, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

Dead Companies

CompuServe

CompuServe Information Service · CIS
1969 CE 1998 CE

It connected millions to the online world a decade before the web — then lost the consumer market to AOL and was quietly absorbed in 1998.

Born
1969 CE
Died
1998 CE
Lived
29 years
Dead for
28 yrs
At its peak
about 3 million subscribers worldwide in 1995
Cause of death
Conquest · Replaced
Replaced by
AOL absorbed and eventually shut the service; the open World Wide Web made closed online services obsolete
The Obituary

CompuServe was the first major consumer online service in the world. Started in 1969 as a corporate time-sharing business in Columbus, Ohio, it turned to consumers when it launched its information service in 1979. Through the 1980s it offered email, chat, file downloads, stock quotes and forums — capabilities that would define the internet two decades before most people had heard the word. By 1995 it had around 3 million subscribers and was the dominant service for business and professional users.

AOL undercut it on price, then moved to flat-rate unlimited access in 1996, a model CompuServe could not match without restructuring. The open World Wide Web, where anyone could publish and browse without a proprietary gatekeeper, made the walled-garden model obsolete. AOL acquired CompuServe’s consumer information service in 1998. New development tailed off, and the original CompuServe Classic service was finally shut down in 2009.

Worth remembering

  • CompuServe introduced the GIF image format in 1987, a file standard still in everyday use long after the company was gone.
  • Its 1980s CB Simulator was one of the first real-time online chat services, drawing people who had never before interacted through a computer.

Sources

  1. CompuServe was founded in 1969, launched its consumer service in 1979, was acquired by AOL in 1998, and shut down CompuServe Classic in 2009. Wikipedia
  2. CompuServe reached about 3 million subscribers in 1995 and introduced email, forums and stock quotes to consumers years before the web. WOSU Public Media
  3. AOL undercut CompuServe on price and moved to flat-rate unlimited access, a shift CompuServe could not match competitively. Wikipedia

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby