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| From | Michael Black <et472@ncf.ca> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.misc |
| Subject | Re: The BBS era |
| Date | 2015-07-20 21:25 -0400 |
| Organization | National Capital Freenet, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
| Message-ID | <alpine.LNX.2.02.1507202106020.30028@darkstar.example.org> (permalink) |
| References | <d1504nFg6poU1@mid.individual.net> <874mky61sw.fsf@elektro.pacujo.net> <lb3rqahddr9ait64vdhshgbjignnhpjnui@4ax.com> |
On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Shadow wrote: > On Mon, 20 Jul 2015 22:56:24 +0300, Marko Rauhamaa <marko@pacujo.net> > wrote: > >> RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com>: >> >>> What a great article about what life was like at 2600 baud, and how >>> /exciting/ it was. Almost makes me want to fire up a DOS box just to >>> play around with it again. >> >> Interesting. For some reason, I managed to skip the whole BBS era even >> though I was active with computers since around 1980. Maybe it had to do >> with the fact that phone calls were metered in Finland (outside the >> Helsinki metropolitan area). I now read in Wikipedia that Finland had >> quite many active BBS's but I don't remember actively registering their >> existence. >> >> In college, it was always all about the Internet. > > Ah ... youngsters. I started off with a 1200 Zoltrix, and used > Bluewave and later Uniqwk (coded by my fellow Brazilians). I remember > how excited I got when I managed to download something .... > Oldsters will be telling us about their 300 baud modems and > Unix terminals. > ;) > []'s > You think you had it hard? The first modem I had was a 300baud, inside a Radio Shack Model 100 laptop. A nice ASCII keyboard, but 40 columns of 8 lines on the screen? something like that. All of 8K of RAM standard, I filled it up to the maximum of I think 32K, the first 8K module costing about fifty dollars, the later ones being cheaper. It was the one computer I never really used. I go it when it was on sale in the fall of 1985 (so I paid about $300 if I remember), and I thought I could make use of the portable feature. But I never had the nerve to take it out in public. I did it once, and everyone passing by stared at it. It wsa really cumbersome to transfer files to the main computer, and since it had such little memory, you needed those transfers. The screen was too small for much use on BBS's. Maybe if I'd gotten it after some BBS use I'd be fine, but BBSs were intimidating the first few times, so every so often (and this went on for almost a decade) I'd decide it was time to get online, call a BBS (I'd find the number somewhere, likely one that was desperate fro callers), go through the registration process (they never let you poke around before registering, so you had to register just to see if there was a reason to join up) and then basically disappear, the process too much, but also before they were networked (and I kept picking non-networked BBS's), most had relatively small user population. So I'd call one up, and have endless problems because the instructions would scroll off the 40 by 8 screen before I had a chance to take it in, which added to the problems. I eventually got a 1200 baud external modem, and did use it with a desktop computer, that was 1989. I bought that 1200baud as soon as the price kind of dipped below the $100 Canadian mark. And I still didn't stay online. Finally in 1994, a year after we had news of a group starting a 'freenet" here, I found some BBSs that were worth staying on. They were networked, which improved traffic and "diversity" of users, and one had all of three lines, which made it popular, but also made it easier to get on. That BBS actually kept a list of local BBSs, I guess that faded out in 1996, actually into the Internet era. By 1994, one could get email (not just Fidonet mail) and some newsgroups (well it wsa more a matter of what the users asked for, a BBS wasn't likely to bother with a newsgroup that nobody was asking for). About 1997, the local paper ran an article about BBSs, and it was interesting, someone was quoted as saying "it's easier to use, more intimate, and less porn" or something like that, compared to the internet. Yet at the very same time, I saw people on the internet dismiss BBSs for pretty much the same thing, "too had to use, blah blah blah and it's got porn". It was an interesting period, since the internet only became local as the masses arrived. Previously, the chances of bumping into someone you knew, or was local, was very unlikely, unless you went to a University. So there was all kinds of talk about getting people online, and all kinds of talk about making things local, which hadn't been an issue just a few years earlier. BBSs would have helped take up the slack right during that period, but right on that cusp, the BBSs were dismissed. One local alt weekly bought an existing BBS in the fall of 1994 (they'd done a story about the "online world" six or 12 months previously, featuring that BBS) which right at that point made sense. They could be online, but by providing phone lines, allowed users access without having to pay for an ISP which was still kind of expensive (and limited hours) at the time. They helped sustain it by selling more extensive access, and it kept going for years, people willing to stay with their system. But it was a failure as an online newspaper, a couple of years later, people expected them to be on the web. I have no idea how things skew now. I suspect there are still plenty of people who don't have internet access due to the cost, but I'm not certain. Going to the library, or using wifi at McDonalds only works if you have a portable device. But all of that has been forgotten. The great revolution failed. Usenet was layed out around topics because if it was by region you weren't likely to find many in your region. But that set the tone, so people congregated around topics even as the local masses arrived, rather than building up the local. I'm not sure I'm better informed about local things than before the internet, indeed it may be worse, since old media has dried up. Sure, if I want to know about this or that, I can find those spaces, but I have to know about them first. Lots of things no longer cross my path, unless I'm willing to go to those dedicated spaces, while just about anything I've become interested in, including amateur radio when I was about nine years old, was a result of coming across it in some shared space like the newspaper or a general magazine. Michael
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The BBS era RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> - 2015-07-20 22:23 +0300
Re: The BBS era Stephen Thomas Cole <usenet@stephenthomascole.com> - 2015-07-20 19:29 +0000
Re: The BBS era Marko Rauhamaa <marko@pacujo.net> - 2015-07-20 22:56 +0300
Re: The BBS era Hils <hils@saynotospam.net> - 2015-07-20 21:32 +0100
Re: The BBS era Shadow <Sh@dow.br> - 2015-07-20 21:19 -0300
Re: The BBS era Michael Black <et472@ncf.ca> - 2015-07-20 21:25 -0400
Re: The BBS era RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> - 2015-07-21 10:25 +0300
Re: The BBS era Marko Rauhamaa <marko@pacujo.net> - 2015-07-21 10:38 +0300
Re: The BBS era "voyager529" <voyager529@live.com> - 2015-07-22 17:16 -0400
Re: The BBS era Marko Rauhamaa <marko@pacujo.net> - 2015-07-23 01:16 +0300
Re: The BBS era "voyager529" <voyager529@live.com> - 2015-07-23 17:36 -0400
Re: The BBS era Marko Rauhamaa <marko@pacujo.net> - 2015-07-24 00:56 +0300
Re: The BBS era Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> - 2015-07-21 00:58 -0300
Re: The BBS era Paul Sture <nospam@sture.ch> - 2015-07-21 10:04 +0200
Re: The BBS era Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> - 2015-07-21 03:15 -0700
Re: The BBS era Michael Black <et472@ncf.ca> - 2015-07-21 14:43 -0400
Re: The BBS era Nyssa <Nyssa@flawlesslogic.com> - 2015-07-21 15:23 -0400
Re: The BBS era Hils <hils@saynotospam.net> - 2015-07-21 22:59 +0100
Re: The BBS era Andy Burns <usenet.feb2014@adslpipe.co.uk> - 2015-07-22 08:20 +0100
Re: The BBS era Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> - 2015-07-23 21:34 -0700
Re: The BBS era scott@alfter.diespammersdie.us (Scott Alfter) - 2015-07-22 16:58 +0000
Re: The BBS era Nyssa <Nyssa@flawlesslogic.com> - 2015-07-22 15:42 -0400
Re: The BBS era Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> - 2015-07-22 17:54 -0300
Re: The BBS era Rich <rich@example.invalid> - 2015-07-23 10:08 +0000
Re: The BBS era Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> - 2015-07-23 21:33 -0700
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