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| From | Dr. What <usenet@vk3heg.net> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.sys.cbm |
| Subject | Re: Commodore 64 Ultimate |
| Date | 2026-04-29 00:00 -0600 |
| Organization | Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate |
| Message-ID | <dbf8dfad.1.342.201@vk3heg.net> (permalink) |
-=> Mortar M. wrote to Dr. What <=- MM> Well, that's pretty true of anything, right? Yup. But it acted as a filter to keep out the abrasive morons. MM> What a mess that was. Although there were other services offering MM> Internet access, none had the marketing power that AOL had. Marketing was only part. Compu$serve was still there - but priced out of reach of most people. Then you had things like Bix, (my memory is failing, but there were a few more) that offered text-based mainframe-like interfaces. But it wasn't a point-and-drool interface. So it still acted like a gate. MM> Suddenly you had a flood of online noobs causing (unintended) havoc. "The September That Never Ended." MM> I remember MM> thinking that it would be a good idea to have people take some kind of MM> test, something like Hams have to do, to grant access to the Net. MM> Nothing difficult, just the basic questions showing they had at least a MM> working knowledge of how things worked. If they'd done that, I think MM> we'd have a better class of users today. Yes, but by that time that idea came to be, it was too late. The number of users had reached a critical mass and the companies that offered stuff to them didn't want to reduce the number of eyeballs they got. ... Mistress: something between a mister and a matteress ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52
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Re: Commodore 64 Ultimate Dr. What <usenet@vk3heg.net> - 2026-04-29 00:00 -0600
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