kengr: (Default)
kengr ([personal profile] kengr) wrote2005-02-23 06:42 pm

Ten things meme

(stolen from almost everyone)
Ten things I don't think anyone else on my flist has done

1. gone skinny dipping in the snow. (Yes, walk thru snow on ground to natural body of water, jump in. swim for a bit get out, walk back to clothes)
2. dressed as a Buddhist monk, complete with shaved head.
3. Worn a dress while sporting a full beard.
4. taken 550 V AC across the chest (from one hand to the other, stupid accident)
5. reported a ROM BIOS error and later noted that the error was corrected on the new machines in stores.
6.fed cake to a hunky porn star.
7. keypunched my own FORTRAN IV programs
8. written a login/password harvester
9. installed illegal phone extensions
10. helped hack a mainframe
bonus
11. Own (not owned) a TRS-80 Model I
12. Been BBS sysop
13. Am a member of Fidonet

[identity profile] badriya.livejournal.com 2005-02-24 08:54 am (UTC)(link)
13. Is that the bbs newsgroups we used before This Internet Thang? I used bbs and the UK nationwide system, Prestel. The bbs carried newsgroups from the UK and US too. The one I used regularly was The Templar's Rest, which took US groups, but there was also The Animation Station, Drealm, and a few more.

seawasp: (Default)

Right assertion, wrong numbers.

[personal profile] seawasp 2005-02-24 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
The Internet began as ARPANET in the 60s. The first BBS's were on mainframes in the 70s; I ought to know, as I was ON some of those.
seawasp: (Default)

Re: Right assertion, wrong numbers.

[personal profile] seawasp 2005-02-24 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Guess it depends on how you define it; the name comes from "Bulletin-Board System" which describes the way "Talk", the program I used to use on the PDP-11 VAX from 1976 on, worked; multiple users could post to various subjects, visible to all users, just like on a bulletin board, etc. We wrote our own Email programs (the sysop considered such things to be games; "Electronic mail will never have any practical use") and our own real-time instant-messaging program (called "Phone"), all of which we used long before 1980.

[identity profile] badriya.livejournal.com 2005-02-24 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, but www and most newsgroups got going a bit later, didn't they? Although I think we had newsgroups around 93, when I came to the internet.