Angelfire

Angelfire is an Internet service that offers website services. It is owned by Lycos, which also owns Tripod.com. Angelfire operates separately from Tripod.com and includes features such as blog building and a photo gallery builder. Free webpages are no longer available and have been replaced by paid services.

Angelfire
A screenshot of Angelfire
Type of site
Paid web hosting service
OwnerLycos
URLhttp://www.angelfire.lycos.com
Alexa rank 11'135 (As of 5 February 2020)[1]
CommercialNo
Launched1996 (1996)

History

Angelfire was founded in 1996 and was originally a combination Web site building and medical transcription service.[2] Eventually the site dropped the transcription service and focused solely on Web site hosting, offering only paid memberships.[2] The site was bought by Mountain View, California–based WhoWhere in 1997, which, in turn, was subsequently purchased by the search engine company Lycos in 1998.[2] Since Lycos already offered free website hosting with advertising through its acquisition of Tripod.com, Angelfire's offering was modified to also have parity with Tripod, including the addition of an increased amount of advertising, but also by offering more disk space.

Until May 2004, Angelfire offered paid email (as a cobrand of Mailcity) at the @angelfire.com domain, but this feature has been replaced by webmail through Lycos Domains for premium users only.

Angelfire received a major redesign in September 2010. It was completely re-coded using HTML5 mark-up and now promotes the Angelfire site builder as its main Web publishing tool. The classic Web Shell tool is still active but is only available to members with paid plans.

gollark: If you actually could get energy from water and nothing else (easily), the technology would be everywhere.
gollark: https://github.com/martinmarinov/TempestSDR
gollark: Apparently monitors (or monitor cables?) leak information a bit as radio, which you can pick up with SDRs and such.
gollark: Also, they can't emit IR and cook me, *or* emit (much) RF and probably somewhat break electronic stuff.
gollark: Obviously we need monitors which can properly represent laser videos, by blinding oyu.

References

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