Www.timewarnercablekidsonline.com

www.timewarnercablekidsonline.com is the web address and name of Time Warner Cable Kids' official website. It was launched on October 20, 1997 and is still standing to this day.

"T-Town" era (1997-1999)
On January 23, 1997, it was announced that Time Warner Cable Kids would be given its own website in January of the following year. This site would be the home of various games, activities, and a virtual tour of T-Town with the channel's then-mascots, the T-Town residents.

After the strong response from the last two pledge drives in June and September 1997, the launch date of the website was pushed to October 20. From this date to September 29, 1999, the website consisted of both games and activities (as the initial press release promised), information on each show, and an alternate guide made to look like a tour of Time Warner Cable Kids' T-Town interstitial segment world. Each week, a temporary game would be placed for the entire week, being replaced with another one the next week and so on.

In September 1998, the website launched a "revolutionary" video player, allowing users of the website to view clips of their favorite TWCK shows. This feature would later be modified in January 1999 after being deemed too complicated to load and play videos. At the same time, the "weekly game" program was discontinued after complaints about the limited availabilty of each game, and each game that was part of this were made permanent.

"TWCK2000"/Modern era (1999-2009)
From September 6, 1999 to January 2, 2000, Time Warner Cable Kids went through a major overhaul named TWCK2000. On September 30, 1999, the website was severely modified; the video player was made more easier to use (similar to YouTube from six years later), each website was given a mini-site of its own, new games and downloadable content were introduced, and a virtual point-earning sign-up/log-in service named myTWCK. On myTWCK, people could receive a random number of weekly or daily TWCKPoints by browsing the website, completing new games, and downloading content directed by the website. Designated myTWCK areas were also added, and using hints on the top-left corner of the screen, the user could earn new points by finding an area with the most TWCKPoints. After each user received points, they could trade them for show-specific virtual trading cards, which were often available as tie-ins to a new show or a promotion.