Zune has been all but dead for years, but Microsoft is finally — offically — putting its online service out to pasture.

Even though Microsoft ended production of its Zune MP3 players in 2011, it maintained Zune online services until Sunday, when it killed Zune for good. Microsoft is currently selling and streaming music and video as Groove Music and Movies and TV, respectively.

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Microsoft launched its first Zune-branded MP3 player in 2006, and while it was a fundamentally good product, it never managed to dethrone the iPod as the king of MP3 players. When Microsoft decided to kill Zune hardware in 2011, the MP3 player was already obsolete to the smartphone, by virtue of being one device that handled both functions.

Even though it offered Groove (née Xbox Music), Microsoft maintained a music streaming and download service under Zune branding. Microsoft announced that it would kill Zune services in September 2015, with its demise set for Nov. 15, 2015.

That day has come. Zune Music Pass subscriptions, which offered unlimited streaming and 10 downloads per month, will be converted to Groove Music Pass, which essentially offers the same thing, minus the free monthly downloads. Zune subscribers who don't want Groove Music Pass may be eligible for a prorated refund.

For the few out there who still have Zune players, good news: Microsoft hasn't completely resigned them to paperweight status. They'll still work as basic MP3 players, though they won't be able to stream music.

While it's easy to poke fun at the fact that Zune existed for as long as it did, it's impressive Microsoft continued supporting a years-old device that never even made a dent in the iPod's market share when it was new.

Rest in peace, Zune. We hardly knew ye.