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  2. AOL Mail

    mail.aol.com

    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

  3. AOL

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    Sign in to your AOL account to access your email and other services.

  4. Fix problems signing into your AOL account - AOL Help

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    Click Sign in. If that doesn't fix the problem, try these steps and attempt to sign in after each one: Clear your browser's cookies. Quit and then restart your browser. Use a different supported web browser. Try signing into a different sign-in page, like our Aol.com sign-in page or the AOL Mail sign-in page.

  5. AOL Help

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    Get answers to your AOL Mail, login, Desktop Gold, AOL app, password and subscription questions. Find the support options to contact customer care by email, chat, or phone number.

  6. AOL Mail for Verizon Customers - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/products/aol-mail-verizon

    If you use a 3rd-party email app to access your AOL Mail account, you may need a special code to give that app permission to access your AOL account. Learn how to create and delete app passwords. Account Management · Apr 17, 2024

  7. PlayerScale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayerScale

    One of the Player.IO showcase projects was the maze-based platform game Everybody Edits. [8] During his lecture at the 2011 Flash Gaming Summit , PlayerScale chief product officer and Player.IO co-founder Benjaminsen revealed that the game, initially published on Flash game portal Newgrounds , had accumulated around 250 thousand registered ...

  8. ActiveMovie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ActiveMovie

    ActiveMovie Control running on Windows 2000. ActiveMovie was the immediate ancestor of Windows Media Player 6.x, and was a streaming media technology now known as DirectShow, developed by Microsoft to replace Video for Windows.

  9. Windows-1252 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1252

    Historically, the phrase "ANSI Code Page" was used in Windows to refer to non-DOS encodings; the intention was that most of these would be ANSI standards such as ISO-8859-1. Even though Windows-1252 was the first and by far most popular code page named so in Microsoft Windows parlance, the code page has never been an ANSI standard.