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originally posted by: RoScoLaz4
wow the WWW is 25 years old. i only got online in 2008. i'm a net-noob but the first computer i had was a sinclair zx81, a beast of a machine.
originally posted by: Gothmog
originally posted by: reldra
originally posted by: Gothmog
But , we had BBS servers that served the same purpose (yes even conspiracy sites) long before that . Since we had very narrow local call ranges , anyone here remember how we got around the tremendous long distance charges for downloading that 2k file ?
I remember a BBS that talked about Dungeons and Dragons, it was ran by TSR. My name on it was Reldra. I used that name as a player in the game. Later, more than one D&D novel had the name reldra as a minor character. I posted that on a modern TSR website. I could have sued. I didn't.
LOL, I don't remember how one got around that. I was using other people's computers though.
First , yes I remember . That server was actually located in Seattle. And dont get me started with D&D . I have a still shrink-wrapped copy of Chainmail , Swords and Spells , and Eldritch Wizardry.
We got around it by asking the person still in our local distance , but yet far enough to dial the next area without charges. Then they would ask the next person. This would go on for 25 hops with each person in line having to download the file in their turn. It would take weeks for me to get a file from that server.
originally posted by: Flyingclaydisk(....)
Computers had been around for a couple decades by the time terms like "The Internet" and "World Wide Web" became part of our vocabulary. Heck, mankind had been to the Moon already (...although this is debatable here on ATS!), but prior to that moment digital interaction across electronic media remained for rarified crowd. Things would be different alright.
I remember MS Windows 3.0, and I remember how Windows 3.11 was supposed to be such a dramatic 'upgrade' to 3.0. Heh, I remember figuring out what 'File', 'Edit' and so forth did.
Oh the memories!
Thanks for the mental walk down memory lane.
originally posted by: ghostrager
A mere 25 years and we now live in a world where you can't take a walk in the park without your phone vibrating, or beeping, or ringing. Your on call 24/7 and the excuse of "I didn't check my phone" completely died just a few short years ago.
originally posted by: Krakatoa
originally posted by: Gothmog
originally posted by: reldra
originally posted by: Gothmog
But , we had BBS servers that served the same purpose (yes even conspiracy sites) long before that . Since we had very narrow local call ranges , anyone here remember how we got around the tremendous long distance charges for downloading that 2k file ?
I remember a BBS that talked about Dungeons and Dragons, it was ran by TSR. My name on it was Reldra. I used that name as a player in the game. Later, more than one D&D novel had the name reldra as a minor character. I posted that on a modern TSR website. I could have sued. I didn't.
LOL, I don't remember how one got around that. I was using other people's computers though.
First , yes I remember . That server was actually located in Seattle. And dont get me started with D&D . I have a still shrink-wrapped copy of Chainmail , Swords and Spells , and Eldritch Wizardry.
We got around it by asking the person still in our local distance , but yet far enough to dial the next area without charges. Then they would ask the next person. This would go on for 25 hops with each person in line having to download the file in their turn. It would take weeks for me to get a file from that server.
I was a co-sysop at that time. A better alternative we used was to arrange the same type of deal, but to install an extra telephone line in their home we would pay for monthly. We would configure that line as a relay, so our signal would travel long distances for free via multiple hops of local connections. We built a physical "web" of connections across the entire state and 3 adjacent states. For non-local folks we charged a minimal fee covering the expenses for the connections.
We were in the process of connecting local parents of college students via Internet email (we were the cheapest access point) when the WWW arrived on the scene.
It was a true wild-west, with ZERO censorship at the time.