-=> Rick Christian wrote to Tony Langdon <=-
RC> Like I said things have been lost in time on exactly why, but a lot of
RC> had to do with FD just making sense to me.
I think in my case, it was a case of Bink being the first one I got going.
From memory, it was free (as in beer), wasn't FD shareware? Secondly, I
started playing with Bink and it made sense to me, so I kept using it. And
today, it's all come back to me with binkd. :)
TL>> especially in the earlier days, when I was running 2400 bps. Was
TL>> interesting seeing bot RxD and Txd lights on continuously. :)
RC> My biggest issue back in the day was HST and HST+ crap. I never had any
RC> success
RC> with HST/+ nodes ever negotiating down, and personally I think they
RC> were set that way.
I don't remember that issue.
RC> I had a V.Evertyhing eventually when I got it cheapo... but I think it
RC> got lost
RC> in one of the many moves later after modems were not in need, other
RC> than ICLID
RC> or fax.
When I had the BBS, I only got up to 2400, but when a friend took over hosting
it, he did eventually upgrade to Courier V.Everything modems. Had no issues.
RC> If I ever get the chance I might dig through the shed and toes.. there
RC> should be some Telebits in there too!
RC> Wasn't there something that allowed for that, like Hydra??? Or
RC> something. I remember having some bidirectional protocols available for
RC> things, but maybe that was stuff I added to Terminate, Telemat, and
RC> ProComm...
Hydra rins a bell. In any case, it was a cool feature of Bink, especially at
slower modem speeds or for large volumes of mail.
TL> My transfers were local, but they were fairly large for the day, so
TL> the bidirectional protocol was a huge time saver. I'v be like "Cool,
TL> this system runs Bink, or "Damn, it's FD, slower transfers! :D
RC> My reaction was like that for HST nodes, as per above, I really thing
RC> they were
RC> intentionaly misconfigured to block the V.34 etc stuff at the time.
I'm not sure how much that was an issue over here.
RC> I used NetMGR too! Had it to do all kinds of things, and one of those
RC> was to take the stuff that came in for some things like ML's I was
RC> operating that went
RC> in/out via private FTN's. I think I saw a Linux port of this in
RC> collecting old
RC> things for Fido for Linux.
Hmm, a Linux port of NetMgr. Might have to look for that. :)
RC> Me either, C just didn't work for me. Considering I started on COBOL,
RC> Fortran, and assembler for a PDP8/e and later 6502, 68HC11's, and some
RC> other stuff.
I programmed in BASIC, Pascal (generally Turbo Pascal), and various assembly
languages, including 8080, 8086, 6809, and even PIC16F84.
RC> GIGO really would need to be able to work with a standard UseNet
RC> account now to
RC> gate UseNet vesus uucp. There are not too many if any uucp places
RC> around. I susppose some the ancicent "freenet" things that are still
RC> around might offer it.
I know it was possible to use an SMTP server under OS/2 (there was one that
worked with GIGO), and I even managed to get GIGO to work with an old version
of MDaemon under 32 bit Windows (I was running NT 4 at the time). I can't
recall if I was still gating Usenet at the time, or if it was just email
(including gated maiing lists). I know I had to convert from UUCP to SPTP (and
NNTP?) when my ISP stopped offering UUCP.
TL> Sounds like all of my todo lists. :D
RC> The ones at work shrink, but just keep filling up. The ones for my
RC> personal stuff never seem to shrink, but only grow and grow and grow.
RC> Hmmmm....
Know that feeling. ;)
... People forget how fast you did a job just how well you did it.
=== MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
--- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
* Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
|