once one of the most popular media players
on the market, will be officially discontinued on December 20, 2013,
due to yet to be disclosed reasons.
AOL announced the decision in a brief statement on the official Winamp.com website, saying that the webpage and the downloadable media player will be removed on December 20.
“Winamp.com
and associated web services will no longer be available past December
20, 2013. Additionally, Winamp Media players will no longer be available
for download. Please download the latest version before that date. See
release notes for latest improvements to this last release. Thanks for
supporting the Winamp community for over 15 years,” the notification
reads.
While nobody can tell for sure what the reason behind this
surprising decision actually is, it appears that it’s all because the
bad management that took over app development after the AOL acquisition.
Winamp,
which was developed by Justin Frankel and Dmitry Boldyrev for Nullsoft,
was purchased by AOL in June 1999 for no less than $80 million (€59.4
million) in stock.
In June 2000, Winamp reached a record 25 million registered users, but started a dramatic decline soon after that.
Even
though development of new versions continued, and both Winamp 3 and
Windows 5 reached the market in the next years, some users decided to
stick to the original WInamp 2.95 version thanks to the impressive audio
quality and its reduced footprint on system resources.
In the
last few years, Winamp launched several new versions, including a Mac
port and an Android version that’s experiencing quite a terrific success
among smartphone owners. Unfortunately, the desktop business continued
its drop as more users turned to other media players such as foobar2000 and Clementine.
Making
Winamp open-source and allowing the dev community to continue improving
it would indeed be a great idea, but we really doubt that AOL would
come down to such a decision.
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