On Fri, 2006-12-08 at 10:32 -0500, Dave McGuire wrote:
Are you serious, a real-live old-school BBS? That
is fantastic!
I've often fantasized about putting one back up (I ran a very small
RCPM machine in New Jersey for a while back in the 1980s while I was
in high school) but have never gotten around to it. I'd love to
recapture some of that old "BBS feel". The World Wide Web is nice,
but there's a certain magic to a BBS that the WWW just hasn't managed
to duplicate.
Hey, Dave,
I ran an RBBS-PC BBS for a little over ten years, Data Basics. I
still find references to it, and its phone number, in various places.
I'll bet it's annoying for whoever currently has that phone number.
<Grin> I believe I still have the computer loaded with the software...
and I have been debating setting it up again, just to make inter-machine
transfers of data easier on myself.
I used it as advertising, sort of, for my consultancy business. I
would answer any technical computer question I got within 24 hours.
Fortunately, nobody ever asked a really tough question, so I never ended
up stumped. I *DID* have to research a small number of questions,
including one all-nighter with a LOT of reference books. THAT was
annoying. But, it worked: lots of people, all over town, though of me
as "the answer man," and there are lots worse rep's one can have as a
consultant. Lansing, Michigan, is a reasonably small town, and the odds
are, SOMEBODY in each IT department was subscribed to my board, and
would say they knew who to hire to solve a problem.
I shut The Data Basics RBBS System down after the Internet ISPs took
over the functions. The decision point was that one month I analyzed
the CALLERS log, and found that my system had ONLY had messages, and
private ones, at that, between two people who were carrying on an
extra-marital affair. Kinda took the fun out of it for me... a whole
MONTH with what amounts to nobody calling. *SIGH*
But, if there's interest, I could probably set it up again... Well,
I certainly COULD set it up again, and probably will; the salient point
is, is it worth it for a reasonable number of people for me to start
paying for another phone line to connect to the outside world, and
having one more computer running all the time? I could pretty much
guarantee that it would be running on genuine historic equipment.
<Grin> Comments? This would be a U.S. number in the Detroit area, mind
you. I can call anywhere in the U.S. for any length of time for a flat
fee. (THAT would have been wonderful in the age of FidoNet, the
inter-system e-mail protocol that involved calling central hubs to
exchange mail.) If you do NOT have this, or live, as many of you
apparently do, (as I gather from your OUTRAGEOUS spelling <*>) in
Blighty, the cost of a anything more than a quick nostalgia call could
be nasty.
Peace,
Warren E. Wolfe
wizard at
voyager.net