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View Full Version : The Elsmar Cove forum is Technically a BBS - A History


Marc
7th October 2001, 05:48 PM
I doubt many of you folks know I ran a "BBS" from 1987 through 1990. While I was connected to a Fidonet node, it was in the days of the switch from 1200 baud to 2400 baud modems. I ended up with a US Robotics 9600 baud modem in 1989 - the 'sysops modem'. Problem is - back then a 9600 baud modem cost about US$1200! And - the caller also had to have an identical modem or it would default to 2400 baud (I think I still have that old modem in my garage somewhere. It was (is) huge! I got it on the cheap through what they called their 'Sysop' program.

My BBS ran on an Amiga 1000 running BBS-PC - a port of a peecee BBS program. It had a whopping 1 meg of RAM and 2 880K floppy drives!!! I did some work for Iomega back then and got a trade for a double drive 20 meg per drive for a whopping 40 megs of disk space in late 1988. It was like heaven - all that disk space!

Wildcat was one popular program for peecees at the time.

Anyway, to a large degree the old BBS was a lot like this system - although navigation was a bit more 'interesting. But then - so was Compuserve and Delphi - the two 'key services' at the time (they had modem banks - and 2400 baud was it. It was entirely a command line interface. You were given options, but no 'point and click'.

When AOL started it was an entirely Mac 'site'. It evolved when Windows finally came on the scene, but it was the early days of Point-and-Click.

If anyone here was there early in the game, or even if you weren't - there's a gread documentary on the History of BBS's at:

http://www.bbsdocumentary.com/index.html

Marc
4th January 2006, 07:26 AM
Anniversary - This site has been online *almost* continuously for 10 Years since 5 January 1996... :cake: :rar: :thedeal:

AndyN
4th January 2006, 08:23 AM
and here's to another 10.........:applause:

(man, 9600 baud was quick, wasn't it......??:lol: )

Andy

JRKH
4th January 2006, 08:33 AM
And thanks.........:thanx: :applause: :thanx: :applause: :thanx:

Atul Khandekar
4th January 2006, 08:46 AM
Where were YOU in January 1996?I had just started dabbling with computers:caution: ...No internet:nope: ...
Glad to have found you in 2000...:agree1:

Marc,

Hearty Congratulations and best wishes for many more years to come!
:applause: :applause:

Regards,

-Atul

Don Palmer
4th January 2006, 09:16 AM
and thanks!:applause: :thanx: :thanks: :applause: :thanx: :thanks: :beerdive: :cake: :rar:

Claes Gefvenberg
4th January 2006, 11:01 AM
In january 1996...

I had beeen tinkering with computers for 15 years, and worked with quality related matters of one kind or another for almost as long. I believe I was running an Atari ST 1040 at the time, having decided that the 256-powered PC's of the era were woefully poor performers as well as hideously expensive.

Wildcat was one popular program for peecees at the time.I used it too, but I never really got serious with it. I was quite happy tinkering with it, and using it to communicate with a few select friends (I had no mail account in 1996).

You know... having been online for 10 years is a big deal. As far as the www is concerned, that is practically forever. It truly is an amazing achievement.
:applause:
Let's work together to make it even more so in the years to come.

/Claes

Jim Wynne
4th January 2006, 11:02 AM
In january 1996...

I had beeen tinkering with computers for 15 years, and worked with quality related matters of one kind or another for almost as long. I believe I was running an Atari ST 1040 at the time, having decided that the 256-powered PC's of the era were woefully poor performers as well as hideously expensive.

I used it too, but I never really got serious with it. I was quite happy tinkering with it, and using it to communicate with a few select friends (I had no mail account in 1996).

You know... having been online for 10 years is a big deal. As far as the www is concerned, that is practically forever. It truly is an amazing achievement.
:applause:
Let's work together to make it even more so in the years to come.

/Clae

What he said. :agree1: :applause:

JerryStem
4th January 2006, 05:31 PM
Amigas, 2400 baud, Compuserve, BBS's..... Man some memories!

I had an Amiga 500 (after Vic20 & C64), my friend started a BBS on an Amiga but switched it to an IBM clone sometime during the late 80's. The Fishin Hole was the name, pirated (yes, bad people) games was the game! After I got out of the Navy & moved back here to Cincy I bought an Amiga 500 used & got TONS of free games from him... That helped sell it back around '96 when I got my first 100Mhz Pentium.

I actually met my wife on a BBS in 1993. A few local boards would link up & have an ancient version of IMing. We met in person a few months later and we've been married about 11.5 years now!

Jerry

Ron Rompen
4th January 2006, 09:04 PM
Aah.....the good old BBS days. We ran a C=64 BBS 16 yrs ago (Bonfire BBS, running on CMBBS, then DMBBS, starting out with a 300 bps pocket modem), and moved up to an IBM for a few years, till the BBS scene sort of died out.

Still run into a few friends from back in the day......

Congrats on keeping the Cove up and running so well, for so long.

Marc
4th January 2006, 09:22 PM
....till the BBS scene sort of died out.Yeah - I had a dedicated phone line and it was always busy. Problem was - One person at a time....

A lot of people don't know AOL started out as a commercial Mac BBS. I'm trying to remember the different commercial boards. There was GE's biggie, Compuserve and Delphi(?). Anyone remember any of the others?

My Amiga running the BBS-PC port was called "The Cheech Wizard Memorial Disk Preserve". One thing I am really, really sorry I did was sell that Amiga and all those games. That was a really neat machine.

Jim Wynne
5th January 2006, 09:33 AM
Yeah - I had a dedicated phone line and it was always busy. Problem was - One person at a time....

A lot of people don't know AOL started out as a commercial Mac BBS. I'm trying to remember the different commercial boards. There was GE's biggie, Compuserve and Delphi(?). Anyone remember any of the others?

My Amiga running the BBS-PC port was called "The Cheech Wizard Memorial Disk Preserve". One thing I am really, really sorry I did was sell that Amiga and all those games. That was a really neat machine.

Prodigy was another of the early services, although not as early as Compuserve. It's interesting that AOL, when it decided to branch out from Mac exclusivity, worked with a developer of a neat little DOS GUI called GeoWorks Ensemble. There were a few PC OEMS who bundled it with their machines, AOL used the same GUI setup as GeoWorks, which was eventually stomped into obilivion by Windows and Microsoft's licensing practices.

JerryStem
5th January 2006, 03:50 PM
A lot of people don't know AOL started out as a commercial Mac BBS. I'm trying to remember the different commercial boards. There was GE's biggie, Compuserve and Delphi(?). Anyone remember any of the others?

One thing I am really, really sorry I did was sell that Amiga and all those games. That was a really neat machine.

:topic: I just recently sold my Workbench 1.2 disks on eBay and made someone very happy.....

I'll look thru my junk bin & see if I still have any old commercial BBS disks laying about.

Jerry