Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by janrinok on Sunday December 04 2022, @07:31PM   Printer-friendly

Revisiting the wonder and betrayal of online life circa 1992:

I suppose that some of you, like me, will remember the very early days when logging in to a BBS was the only way to connect to other people on the internet. But how many of you actually ran a BBS? Here is one such story:

Thirty years ago last week—on November 25, 1992—my BBS came online for the first time. I was only 11 years old, working from my dad's Tandy 1800HD laptop and a 2400 baud modem. The Cave BBS soon grew into a bustling 24-hour system with over 1,000 users. After a seven-year pause between 1998 and 2005, I've been running it again ever since. Here's the story of how it started and the challenges I faced along the way.

In January 1992, my dad brought home a gateway to a parallel world: a small black plexiglass box labeled "ZOOM" that hooked to a PC's serial port. This modem granted the power to connect to other computers and share data over the dial-up telephone network.

While commercial online services like CompuServe and Prodigy existed then, many hobbyists ran their own miniature online services called bulletin board systems, or BBSes for short. The Internet existed, but it was not yet widely known outside academic circles.

Whereas the Internet is a huge connected web of systems with billions of users, most BBSes were small hobbyist fiefdoms with a single phone line, and only one person could call in and use it at a time. Although BBS-to-BBS message networks were common, each system still felt like its own island culture with a tin-pot dictator (the system operator—or "sysop" for short) who lorded over anyone who visited.

Not long after my dad brought home the modem, he handed off a photocopied list that included hundreds of BBS numbers from our 919 area code in North Carolina. Back then, the phone company charged significantly for long-distance calls (which could also sneakily include parts of your area code), so we'd be sticking to BBSes in our region. This made BBSes a mostly local phenomenon around the US.

With modem in hand, my older brother—about five years older than me—embraced calling BBSes first (we called it "BBSing"). He filled up his Procomm Plus dialing directory with local favorite BBSes such as The Octopus's Garden, The Body Shop, and Chalkboard. Each system gained its own flavor from its sysop, who decorated it with ANSI graphics or special menus and also acted as an emcee and moderator for the board's conversations.

I have a distinct memory of the first time I realized what a BBS was. One day while I looked over my brother's shoulder, he showed me the file section of one of those BBSes—a list of available files that you could download to your local computer. Pages of free-to-download shareware games scrolled by. My eyes widened, and something clicked.

"You can download games for free?" I remember thinking. I noticed one file labeled "RAMPAGE.ZIP" that was one hundred kilobytes—or "100K," as listed. Thinking of Rampage on the NES, which was one of my favorite games at the time, I asked my brother to download it. He declined because it would have taken over five minutes to transfer on our 2400 BPS modem. Any file around one megabyte would take about an hour to download.

Online time was precious back then. Since most BBSes only had one phone line, you didn't want to hog the line for too long or the sysop might boot you. And there was extra jeopardy involved. Since we were using our regular house telephone line to connect, the odds that my mom would pick up and try to dial out—thus ruining the transfer process—remained very high. But whatever the risks, the thrill of remote projection by computer sunk into me that day and never left.

Follow the link for the full story - and he is still active today but not on a BBS....


Original Submission

 
This discussion was created by janrinok (52) for logged-in users only, but now has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by stormreaver on Monday December 05 2022, @03:32PM (1 child)

    by stormreaver (5101) on Monday December 05 2022, @03:32PM (#1281265)

    I was a teenager in Hawaii when I first started using the precursor to BBS's in 1985. One of my first experiences was dialing into the University of Hawaii's* public timesharing system, chatting with other people, and playing games like Star Trek. It wasn't a BBS, as messages couldn't be posted and read**. But it was the first real-time chat system I ever used. I discovered real BBS's around that time, and spent a LOT of time on them. I was always sure to stay within the local calling distance, as I didn't want my parents to be mad at me. I didn't have the financial resources to host my own for several more years.

    I was happy to have been in the middle of my degree program when the Internet started making BBS's obsolete.

    * It might have had a different name, but University of Hawaii is how I remember it.
    ** If the capability existed, I didn't have access to it.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Monday December 05 2022, @03:58PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Monday December 05 2022, @03:58PM (#1281275)

    The BBSs I used in 1984 were storing their messages on floppy disks (quite limited space, even when streaming text at 120 characters per second), and they tended to have many layers of access - some open, some advertised as limited access apply here to join, and some invisible unless you knew who to ask to upgrade your account.

    It it was University of Hawaii hosted (and not just some guy at UH running his own thing) it may not have had any message storage or secret rooms, but most BBSs I interacted with around that time had some number of "secret rooms" in them.

    --
    🌻🌻 [google.com]