On Fri, 1 Jan 1999, Sean 'Captain Napalm' Conner wrote:
It was thus said that the Great Noel Fields once
stated:
BBS' are still out there :) I run a 10 line one myself still! :)
Interesting. And here I thought the days of BBSes were past [1]. What
does your BBS provide that keeps enough people calling it? Once you have
SMTP (email), FTP (file transfers), a private NNTP server (usenet or
bulletin boards), HTTP (web, combining FTP and NNTP with varrying degress of
success), IRC (chat mode) and MUDs (multi-user dungeons or multi-player
adventure games), what does a BBS provide that all that doesn't?
Not to put down BBSes, but I can't see what they would be good for
anymore.
-spc (Donning asbestos undies 8-)
No need for that, I think.
BBSes are, IMHO, a dying breed. However, they do still fulfill a niche
that the 'net does not. There are significant numbers of people who are
vastly inexperienced with use of computers, yet, they would like to get
on-line and, not incidentally, get some help. These folks are capable of
using - though intimidated by - a simple Telix (or such) DOS based
program to call up a local BBS, but windoze and Netscape are well beyond
their abilities. There is help to be found on most BBSes and it is
typically local so their may even be the possibility of on-site person to
person assistance.
There is also the local marketing aspect that the 'net can offer, but does
not do well. To my knowledge, there is not really any such thing as a
San Diego (or any other city) news group that contains only ads from that
city or immediate area. For some things, that narrow market can be a
real advantage.
- don
[1] I stopped calling BBSes in 1991 when I got onto
the Internet pretty
much full time. When the Internet hit mainstream in 1993-94, I saw
the handwriting on the wall for BBSes.
donm(a)cts.com
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Don Maslin - Keeper of the Dina-SIG CP/M System Disk Archives
Chairman, Dina-SIG of the San Diego Computer Society
Clinging tenaciously to the trailing edge of technology.
Sysop - Elephant's Graveyard (CP/M) Z-Node 9 - 619-454-8412
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see old system support at
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visit the "Unofficial" CP/M Web site at
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with Mirror at
http://www.mathcs.emory.edu/~cfs/cpm