(1) An organization that provides an information service over the Internet. Examples are search engines, online backup services and application service providers.
(2) An organization that provides access to the Internet as well as proprietary content. Before the Internet became widely used by the general public, all online services were self-contained organizations known for their unique mix of databases and resources. If e-mail was provided, it was only within the same service.
After the Internet became popular, all the services either provided Web access to their specialized databases or added general-purpose Internet access such as AOL and CompuServe. Proprietary e-mail systems were either switched to Internet e-mail protocols (SMTP) or their formats were routinely converted back and forth to the Internet format. The following online services predate the Internet explosion of the mid-1990s and are here for historical purposes: See portal.
America Online, Inc. (AOL)
Internet access, variety of databases
www.aol.com
CompuServe Information Service, Inc.
Internet access, variety of databases
www.compuserve.com
DataTimes Corporation
(acquired by ProQuest)
Newspapers, magazines, financial
www.proquestcompany.com
DIALOG (a Thomson company)
Largest collection of databases
www.dialog.com
Dow Jones Interactive
(now Factiva.com)
Finance, daily news & news searching
www.factiva.com
Genie (now defunct)
Internet access, BBSs, roundtables
LexisNexis
Legal and news information
www.lexisnexis.com
National Library of Medicine
MEDLINE and MEDLARS databases
www.nlm.nih.gov
Prodigy (owned by SBC since 2001)
Internet access, variety of databases
www.prodigy.com
Questel - Orbit
Patent, trademark, scientific, chemical,
business and news information
www.questel.orbit.com
West Publishing/WESTLAW (a Thomson company)
Legal databases
www.westpub.com
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