Juno Online Services
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Juno is an Internet service provider based in the United States. It is a subsidiary of United Online, which also owns NetZero and Bluelight Internet Services.
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[edit] History
Juno was founded in May 1996 by Charles Ardai, with equity capital provided by the D.E. Shaw Group. In August 1996, it began a free e-mail service–a customer would install the proprietary Juno client which would allow them to send and receive email of about 35 kilobytes in size. Version 1 did not offer attachments or other features. The user could write emails with the Juno client and would periodically sign in by dial-up. Upon doing so, the Juno client would upload any emails the user had written, download any new incoming emails in the online mailbox, and download targeted advertisements, which were displayed in the client. "QWK" and similar less automated offline readers had been used for years by BBSes to save phone line connect time.
In June 1998, Juno expanded its service to offer premium support for paying subscribers, and added the ability to not only use email, but browse the web. In December 1999, Juno began to offer the same service (minus technical support) for free, provided the user ran the Juno client, which displayed a bar containing advertisements for the majority of the time that the user was online. Juno later placed limits on how much its free internet service could be used in a month. Free service is currently limited to a maximum of 10 hours per month.[1]
With the collapse of the turn of the century Dot-com bubble, advertising revenues declined and the company shifted emphasis to offering discount Web and mail services similar to large ISPs, but at half the price.
Juno stock began trading on NASDAQ in May 1999, under the symbol JWEB. In June 2001, Juno and NetZero announced a merger. By September 2001, the two companies were merged into United Online and both JWEB and NZRO were delisted.
[edit] Proprietary client
The client software was updated many times in the late 1990s. Version 1.49 was final for Windows 3.1, except for a date problem that was fixed in version 1.51. Versions 4.0.11 and 5.0 were final for Windows 95 and later. Version 4 had attachments and a spell checker, and displayed fonts and colors. For old messages, it had storage folders, each stored in a separate file containing up to 1000 messages.
Version 5 added an ineffective integral twit/spam filter and the ability to write messages in chosen fonts and colors with inline images. It stored its old messages in a different format, with one large file for all messages. When disk free space was not several times larger than the message file, it often suffered "folder collapse" in which all messages returned to the "Inbox" or disappeared.
No version was made to use third party utilities to scan for viruses, clean out E-mail spam, etc, and few third party utilities were made that could do anything with the proprietary message storage format. The company opened a spamdesk to help screen spam at the servers.
As of December 1, 2004, use of an e-mail client such as the Juno client, Microsoft Outlook Express, or Mozilla Thunderbird is no longer free. If a user wishes to use an e-mail client instead of Juno's web-based e-mail interface, they must either pay for Juno Platinum or Juno Megamail.[2]
The Juno client software version 5.0 build 33 would not work with Internet Explorer 7.[3] However, by the time Microsoft released the final version of IE7, Juno had released Juno 5.0 build 51, which resolves the issues with IE7 and makes it compatible with Windows Vista.[4]
[edit] Juno Turbo
Juno has released (along with NetZero) a service that purports to make the internet faster. The only noticeable change is the ablilty to display pictures at lower resolutions, thereby speeding up page loads.
[edit] Complaints
Juno's offline mail reader version 5.0 is designed in such a way as to make it impossible for one to weed out spam after downloading it. Downloaded email can only be weeded out individually by exact email address matches; there are no wildcards, boolean exclusion-filters or routing features.[citation needed] This means that Juno and their affiliates can freely spam their customers regardless of what their customers do, making the service utterly useless once spammers find the victims' email addresses, except for those who use the Spamdesk feature or otherwise use the program in the ordinary way and thus do not download spam.[citation needed] Earlier versions of the proprietary client have no internal anti-spam feature at all, and work as well in this regard.
[edit] Exporting e-mails
While the Juno client software can back up e-mails, it does not support exporting e-mails to other clients. However, a free utility known as juno5bdb is available to export e-mails from Juno.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Juno
- Independent wiki about E-mail
- juno5bdb - Juno 5.0 Berkeley Database Extraction Utility - Export standard mbox .mbx files from Juno mailboxes
[edit] References
- ^ Product Information. Juno. Retrieved on January 15, 2007.
- ^ FAQ - Email Policy Changes. Juno Support. Retrieved on January 15, 2007.
- ^ Juno Member Services (2006-02-03). Juno and Internet Explorer 7 Beta - Potential Issues. Retrieved on January 15, 2007.
- ^ Download the software. Juno. Retrieved on January 15, 2007.