Tag: oldschool
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2010 April 07
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Reviving my C64 history with a uIEC/SD
I've lived a very focused life. From very early on, I've been learning to make computers do things. And being as introspective as I am, I like spending time considering how I got here. I suppose this is nostalgia, but I like to think of it as recentering and recapitulation. Contemplating the story so far, as a means to consider the story yet to come. One huge benefit of this habit is that I've become ever more appreciative of today. It's easy to forget, but we're living in the future these days—at least, with respect to who I was in 1983. No flying cars yet, but for US$55 I was able to buy a tiny gadget called a uIED/SD that gives a Commodore 64 access to modern SD cards for storage. And, of course, I have Jason Scott's review of the more general-use FC5025 5.25? Floppy to USB Adapter to blame in getting me started on this current mini-obsession. You want to talk about a magical device? Screw the iPad—this is magic. This is what it looks like: [ ... 1086 words ... ]
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2006 August 31
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dialup ghost towns and amazon ec2
[ ... 210 words ... ]
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2005 October 20
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West of House
[ ... 287 words ... ]
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2004 December 16
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Synchronet BBS Software, Tidal Pools, and On-Ramps
Synchronet Bulletin Board System Software is a free software package that can turn your personal computer into your own custom online service supporting multiple simultaneous users with hierarchical message and file areas, multi-user chat, and the ever-popular BBS door games. ... In November of 1999, the author found a renewed interest in further developing Synchronet, specifically for the Internet community, embracing and integrating standard Internet protocols such as Telnet, FTP, SMTP, POP3, IRC, NNTP, and HTTP. Synchronet has since been substantially redesigned as an Internet-only BBS package for Win32 and Unix-x86 platforms and is an Open Source project under continuous development. Source: Synchronet BBS Software This software deserves so much more attention. It's like an old-school BBS, complete with ASCII/ANSI menu screens and everything, but it's been modernized: It offers a slew of Internet protocols integrated with the message bases and file areas. It's got an HTTP daemon with server-side JavaScript. It works on Win32 and various Unix platforms. Everything above is true. And it's open source. In the 90's, I would have expected software like this to be at the core of a startup company stuffed with superfluous and overpaid code monkeys. It would have turned into an Enterprise Application Server or Intranet Knowledge Management Solution-- a mini Domino or Lotus Notes. And, in fact, I seem to remember seeing a few old-school BBS packages get mutated and gigantified by the dot-com radiation in this way. I keep meaning to get a Synchronet BBS up and keep it up, and maybe get a few interested users logging in, if only for the retro-gaming experience for things like Trade Wars, Barrent Realms Elite, Legend of the Red Dragon, Global War, and anything else I can find. I really miss the tidal-pool effect BBSes had back in the day, when in my area they were the first and best gateways to the Internet. Direct SLIP and PPP access to the net were rare things still and, before the web took off, Usenet and IRC were some of the best things around. But, anyone who wanted to get the the net had to wander through the local BBS first. It was really neat to see the mish-mash of people all drawn together by geographic areas denoted by telco area codes. The degree of Aspergers affliction and just plain dysfunctional nerdity gradually decreased as sisters and friends-of-sisters were introduced to terminal programs and teleconference. It was sad to see all of this gradually die off as more and more callers came in via SLIP/PPP dialers and headed straight for the information superhighway on-ramps. All the gift shops closed up and no one showed up in the café anymore. Sigh. But, at least Finland isn't a long distance call these days. [ ... 622 words ... ]