AOL Quietly Returns to Life on Its Own
New York Times - 26 minutes agoThe long, chaotic and star-crossed relationship between AOL and Time Warner finally ended in divorce.
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The long, chaotic and star-crossed relationship between AOL and Time Warner finally ended in divorce.
The long, chaotic and star-crossed relationship between AOL and Time Warner has finally ended in divorce, The New York Times’s Tim Arango reports.
AOL begins a new chapter Thursday, a day after it completes its spinoff from one of the worst mergers of all time. The question on everyone's mind is: What will the newly single AOL look like?
Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- AOL Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Armstrong said he expects to talk to Google Inc. and other companies about a new deal to operate AOL’s search business.
AOL is about to cut ties to Time Warner and CEO Tim Armstrong has been making his case to current and potential investors. Here's one last pitch, delivered to the crowd at the annual UBS Media and Communications conference in New York.
Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- AOL Inc. may report declining profit for years after its spinoff from Time Warner Inc. today, said analysts at Barclays Capital Inc. and RBC Capital Markets.
NEW YORK, Dec. 9 (UPI) -- U.S. Internet innovator AOL begins a new chapter Wednesday with its disconnect from Time Warner, which is spinning off its $164 billion purchase.
Before it was AOL, it was America Online, and before it was America Online it was Quantum Computer Services, and before that it was Control Video Corp., selling online services for the Atari. Remember the Atari? Pac-Man? In Internet time, that was basically 10,000 years ago.
BoomTown is winging across the country right now to New York City to attend, among other things, the analog version of the AOL spin off from Time Warner . Videos to come, of course!
AOL chairman and CEO Tim Armstrong touted his company's consumer brand and content strength once again on Wednesday.
NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- AOL Inc. Chief Executive Tim Armstrong on Wednesday disputed the widespread perception that audience traffic on the company's sites comes largely from its dial-up access business.