Re: RE: Good reason not to run a BBS at home...
By: Mike to Mro on Fri Oct 04 2024 03:41 am
---
doorgames. hell, we don't even have users anymore.
I like running my BBS(es) at home. Been doing it since 1984. Of course they are very different now than they were then. Then, I only ran 1
Atari 8-bit BBS on several floppy drives (and eventually a 5 mb hard
disk (wow)).
Mickey wrote to Bf2k+ <=-
Warms my heart. I had the same kind of setup although a Commodore 64
with 3 X 1541 drives (floppies) :-) The difference was that back then, mostly people within your personal areacode called you, and today,
you're available to the whole world and nobody calls. <grin>
Warms my heart. I had the same kind of setup although a Commodore 64 with 3 X 1541 drives (floppies) :-)
The difference was that back then, mostly people within your personal areacode called you, and today, you're available to the whole world and nobody calls. <grin>
I saw Pure Nihilism BBS running on an Apple II, and was watching the screen as someone entered a message. I noticed that when the caller
saved a message, it automatically deleted a message to make room. I
think he had something like 300 messages on the board at the time.
i think a lot of people have forgotten that the local aspect is what made bbsing great. a lot of sysops in today's age are blind to that.
---
i think a lot of people have forgotten that the local aspect is what made bbsing great. a lot of sysops in today's age are blind to that.
On 08 Oct 2024, poindexter FORTRAN exclaimed the following...
I saw Pure Nihilism BBS running on an Apple II, and was watching the screen as someone entered a message. I noticed that when the caller saved a message, it automatically deleted a message to make room. I think he had something like 300 messages on the board at the time.
So the first message got Nihilated? :-) Go Figure.
Mick Manning
i think a lot of people have forgotten that the local aspect is what made bbsing great. a lot of sysops in today's age are blind to that. ---
The last few years that I ran a BBS was on an Amiga 2500 that had a 20 meg HD inside. Fairly distant locals became real locals. It was a big deal. I was invited out to Commodore meetings to discuss BBS's with everyone.
Strangely enough... when I was running the Atari 8bit BBS (1984-87), I
had about 75% callers from long distance. I know why but refuse to comment on the grounds... etc etc.
Atari software treasure I'd imagine or . . . porn. :-)
kk4qbn wrote to Mickey <=-
Gotta love those 8 bit square boobies that took 12 hours to download.
I worked at the company that developed Tomb Raider. It was odd working for a company where you could have scantilly-clad women on your PC background, as long as it was Lara Croft. PS1 era Lara was pretty polygon sparse, if you know what I'm saying.
I was so pissed that they couldn't get it together enough to tie the game into the movie and get a release out to coincide with the movie release.
On 08 Oct 2024, Bf2k+ exclaimed the following...
Strangely enough... when I was running the Atari 8bit BBS (1984-87), I had about 75% callers from long distance. I know why but refuse to comment on the grounds... etc etc.
Atari software treasure I'd imagine or . . . porn. :-)
Gotta love those 8 bit square boobie
that took 12 hours to download.
Sysop: | fluid |
---|---|
Location: | wickliffe, ohio |
Users: | 5 |
Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
Uptime: | 200:52:43 |
Calls: | 50 |
Files: | 15,838 |
Messages: | 50,733 |