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368 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
The BBS Universe from the Perspective of a Simple Pleb
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- by Chickenhead
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Ah, the good old days of the BBS. The memories make me smile even today in
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this web-enabled world. Back then we really had something didn't we? Or so
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it seemed--we were part of a strange aristocracy, a techno-elite of sorts.
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But I get ahead of myself--first, I should introduce myself a bit. I call
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myself Chickenhead these days, but back "in the day" I had a different name I
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can't even remember. I was a BBS addict, but I didn't use the same name on
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each BBS. I wasn't a hacker, I wasn't a "phreak". Hell, I didn't trade
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codes or attack Ma Bell's phone network in any way--I was one of a throng of
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people eagerly tying up my folk's phone line in the wee small hours,
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exchanging digital barbs with others doing the exact same thing.
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I had my first encounter with a computer back in 1982 or so...I had
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a paltry Atari 2600, and a voracious appetite for anything computer related.
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I was in Grade Six in my elementary school--in September, something pivotal
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happened. My next-door neighbour's dad was a teacher, and one day
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he brought home a most wondrous thing--a Commodore PET.
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He called me over and I had my first taste of home computing.
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My folks, recognising my newfound hunger, purchased me a ZX-81 computer for
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Christmas that year. The ZX-81 was probably about as powerful as a pocket
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calculator--you couldn't do much with it (in my opinion). It wasn't long
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before I began to bug my parents for some REAL meat...a Commodore 64. That
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summer, my dreams became reality as a C-64 entered my life--along with a 300
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baud Commodore VIC modem.
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In retrospect, this modem was probably about as cheap and
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bottom-of-the-barrel as you can get. The thing wasn't an acoustically
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coupled modem--it plugged right into the C-64, and the phone line ran right
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into the cartridge. It wasn't capable of dialling on it's own, so you had to
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call the number you wanted and then flick the switch on the back of the modem
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the second the carrier signal was heard on the phone. High-tech at it's best!
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But still--this slow, archaic piece of technology was my gateway into a new
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world. My first BBS was CompuServe itself. It was a very costly journey to
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put it mildly, but worth every penny (of my folk's money, of course).
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In those days, the only way to access CompuServe was through DataPac,
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Canada's X.25 network. I had to call the local PAD, and then connect to
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CompuServe over that. The local PAD had connection charges on TOP of
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CompuServe so as you can imagine it got to be pretty damned expensive! But I
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was 14 year old so I didn't care...my folks were generously footing the
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bill.
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I first heard of CompuServe through a television program broadcast on our
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local public access channel (TV Ontario) called "Bits & Bytes". The show was
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hosted by Billy Van (of the "Hilarious House of Frightenstein" fame, and also
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the "Bizarre Show"), and Luba Goy (of the "Royal Canadian Air Farce"). My
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God how I loved this show! As an impressionable youngster I tuned in every
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week to see the latest episode--Billy struggling to learn the latest bit of
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technobabble, guided by Luba in her cozy office, looking down on Billy from
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her projection screen.
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One episode involved Billy's voyage into the world of the BBS--he contacted
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CompuServe, and the long-departed and forgotten service called "The Source".
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I was addicted instantly--I had to get "online" somehow. I found my way onto
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CompuServe using the 5 1/4" floppies that came with my 300-baud VIC modem,
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using a truly horrible Commodore terminal program.
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CompuServe was a hive of activity back in those days. It was
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dizzying--there was so much to see, so much to read. Commodore had their own
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SIG that was rarely updated--but for me, it was damn cool to have this
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conduit to Commodore Central. I would go there just to see the big ugly
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ASCII "CBM" logo come up on my screen.
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CompuServe's file archives were a wealth of information. I managed to find a
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chat log of a live chat with Richard "Lord British" Garriott about the
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upcoming "Ultima IV", which I devoured religiously.
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Long before the Web's promise of online shopping, CompuServe was delivering.
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I purchased several games from vendors on CompuServe--I fondly remember
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receiving my Infocom adventures from American computer stores. I still
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remember driving down to Canada Customs to pick up my packages. I can't
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think of Infocom's "Sorcerer" game without thinking "CompuServe".
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CompuServe had something else that caught my attention as well: the
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so-called "CB Simulator" (what would be known to the world at large as "online
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chat" someday). The CB Simulator had lots of channels--this was where Richard
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Garriott had met his fans to talk Ultima. I spent many hours in the CB rooms
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chatting it up with various people, impersonating celebrities (for some
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reason I decided to name myself "Yoko Ono") and generally being an asshole.
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However, all good things must come to an end. In my case, the VISA bill
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arrived and put a quick end to my CompuServe voyages. DataPac is DAMNED
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expensive!
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For a while, I tried trolling BBS numbers listed in warez'd copies of video
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game software...you know what I mean, the "greetz screen" that would come up
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before the game started, listing about a million different handles and
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aliases, and a few BBS numbers. One such BBS was a 313 (Detroit) BBS called
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"The Lighthouse".
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My friend "Lurch" and I decided we'd become impromptu haX0rs at this point.
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We called The Lighthouse and attempted to make our mark. The Lighthouse was
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a BBS run on a Commodore-64, running the venerable All-American BBS software.
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The "File Base" was served off of a couple daisy-chained 1541 floppy drives,
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filled with various kinds of waR3z. Naturally, we didn't make the cut to
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become members of this elite community of pirates, despite our best efforts
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to hype ourselves to the erstwhile sysop.
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For a time, I left the BBS scene. I graduated from elementary school to
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high-school, and eventually entered some computer courses. This was around
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Grade 11, circa 1986-1987. My computer teacher, a fat, bearded individual
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who's favourite phrase was "You don't have to know about that...." (I'll call
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him "Mr. A") was continually droning on and on about various local BBSs.
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He kept promising that we'd set up a BBS for our high-school right there in
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our class, but that never happened. Even a decade later he was supposedly
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telling his class the exact same thing.
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"Mr. A" had a real cork bulletin board on the wall. One of the things posted
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there was dot-matrix printed advertisement for a local BBS called "The
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Fisherman's Scroll". For some reason I scribbled down the phone number and
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filed it away.
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Back on the home front, I was getting tired of my aging Commodore 64. The
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300 baud modem was laughable--I gave it away to a friend who managed to
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mangle it beyond recognition with some plumber's solder and an oversized
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soldering iron. The future was already out there, and it's name was Amiga.
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I had in my grubby teenaged hands the premiere issue of Amiga World and was
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devouring every word. Trip Hawkins was proudly announcing to the world that
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"We See Farther!" and I was already an addict, straining to see whatever it
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was he saw. I dreamed Amiga dreams.
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My dreams became reality one day...a friend's neighbour was selling his
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genuine Amiga 1000 computer, complete with every piece of software he owned,
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including modem. I jumped at the chance...I pooled every cent of the
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pittance I was making as a pizza flipper at the local pizza joint and became
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the VERY proud owner of an Amiga 1000. My dream had become true!
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Ah, the Amiga. So many flame wars, so many angry rants. But at the time,
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1987 to be exact, none of this had happened yet. This machine beguiled me
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and seduced me in every way. I wanted to do everything...I wanted to program
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every bit, I wanted to explore every byte.
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My brand-spanking-used Amiga came with a 1200-baud Prometheus Pro-Modem.
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This re-kindled my interest in the entire BBS phenomenon. I dug up the
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number for the Fisherman's Scroll and re-entered the world of the BBS.
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The Fisherman's Scroll was the most popular BBS in the city it turned out.
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The sysop originally started this BBS with a religious bent, but it quickly
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became the most general-purpose BBS of the city. Everyone that was anyone
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was on The Fisherman's Scroll. The Fisherman's Scroll was run by Neil
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Trudel, a genuinely nice guy who would come to your doorstep with a nicely
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printed-and-bound handbook on how to use the BBS. I still fondly remember
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the day Neil showed up with my "kit"--all for free at that, he didn't ask
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for a cent running his BBS.
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This BBS was a FIDO-connected Opus BBS. I remember the various echos, which
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naturally contained the usual flame wars and grievances...PC vs. Amiga, Atari
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vs. Mac, Mac vs. Everyone else, Apple ][ vs whoever was left. Ah, good times.
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The Fisherman's Scroll had the obligatory list of other BBS systems in the
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city: the venerable Dog Star (which operated until 2000), the Shamrock BBS,
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the Handy Tandy, the Handyman's Project,, The Other Bob's Opus,
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The Tandy Connection, and a host of others. For some reason, my town seemed
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to specialise on OPUS-style BBS systems. We had a couple Apple ][-related
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BBSs, but mostly we were an OPUS town.
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The Dog Star was a great place to be back in the late 80's. The sysop,
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Mario Dulisse, was your typical grumpy sysop--but that didn't matter much,
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because he had a kick-ass BBS. As I recall, it was the first BBS in town to
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offer "doors" online games. Trade Wars was the order of the day: everyone
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played Trade Wars. Hell, I knew people with several fake accounts trying to
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stack the game in their favour! God, what great times. Mario, wherever you
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are--thanks. The Dog Star was awesome.
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The message bases, often shared between the various OPUS BBS systems, were
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quite lively. The various echos kept you coming back for more on a daily
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basis. I still remember the flame wars we had...in general, the PC users
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faced off with the Amiga users. I made many an Amiga-using friend on these
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echos! The PC-heads would attack the Amigans, and the Amigans would respond
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in kind. The tables turned only slightly when the PS/2 users appeared--this
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created an uneasy alliance between PC-heads and Amigans, who summarily ganged
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up on the PS/2 losers (many flames announced "PS/2, what's that mean? Piece
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of Shit 2?").
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I fondly remember the Apple ][ diehards who were resisting the PC, the Amiga
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and the Apple Macintosh. God, these guys were something--I have nothing but
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respect for the Apple ][ thanks to these guys, even though I was a diehard
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Commodore lunatic. You won't hear me badmouth the Apple ][....I'm sure that
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in my sleep, I talk Apple ][ "call" codes thanks to these guys.
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It's funny--much of what I remember about BBS forums involved operating
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system and computer flame wars! Most of it was quite good-spirited and
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friendly flaming, but sometimes...well, at one point, a friend I met on The
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Dog Star managed to anger a couple of die-hard PC users. These PC users
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decided to seek us out to "teach us a lesson" in person. We both had a laugh
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when these "die hards" showed up at his door one day, revealing themselves to
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be a couple of 13-year-old skateboarders.
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Thanks to my Amiga, "Mr. A", and my 1200-baud modem, an entire world of
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local computing was opening up to me. Heck, thanks to stuff that was saved
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in the software inherited from the previous owner of my Amiga 1000, I was
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calling BBS systems in Toronto, like the Toronto Sun and elsewhere. I
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couldn't get enough!
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There was a consistent rumour going around back in 1988 about a local
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warez/pirate board called "The Black Orchid". The rumour was that they
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managed to get a phone book listing for themselves--although it wasn't true.
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No one knew what their number was, but everyone had heard of them. They
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were the ultimate chimera--I spent a lot of time trying to track down this
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alleged "Black Orchid" BBS to no success. I still have no idea whether or
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not they "really" existed....but this didn't stop me from attempting
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to get some "street cared" for myself as a bad-assed haX0r.
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Let me digress for a moment--I want to talk about BBS-ing as a teenager in
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the late 80's. Back then, if you had a modem and were "connected", the BBS
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was a vital part of your life. If you weren't fanatic about it, you still
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checked in on a regular basis to see what was up. Hell, I had an active
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social life in the "real world" of a high-school sophomore and I still had an
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active alter-ego in the BBS realm. On friday I'd be out at the high-school
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dance, only to come home and check in at The Dog Star to see what was going
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on, or to "download a few files". Back before people were literally living
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on the Internet, the BBS world was a regular part of my life.
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It seems that every story about the heydey of the BBS world includes some
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sort of brush with authority. Mine is no different, although probably not
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nearly as exciting as some. I didn't get busted by the Secret Service or the
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RCMP, but rather by a clueless principal and vice-principal at my high-school.
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Back in high-school, our computer classes were taught on ICON computers.
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Those of you outside of Ontario, Canada have probably never heard of these
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beasts--they were based on genuine Intel 186 processors (yes Virginia, there
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was a 186), and ran the QNX operating system (a UNIX knock-off, still
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available today!). They were quasi-client/server--there was a file server
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that each "workstation" booted off. Each ICON terminal had a track-ball
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instead of a mouse, and a questionable CP/M-MS-DOS emulation mode. It was
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also the most insecure operating system in the history of computing, as far
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as I'm concerned.
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Our computer teacher, the ubiquitous "Mr. A" was pretty damned lazy--we
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constantly made jokes about him going down to the cafeteria several times a
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day for doughnuts. His idea of "computer programming" was scripting up junk
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in "WATFILE" on the ICONs. Maybe if we were lucky he'd let us fiddle around
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with "QBASIC" or even "QSPREAD", the craptastic spreadsheet program on the
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ICON computers. The real fun stuff was hidden from us behind a wall of
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administrative priviledge.
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Well, naturally the upper crust of this class got pretty damned bored with
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it very quickly. My friend Lurch decided he'd had enough--he found a way to
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get administrator access on the ICON systems with only a simple keystroke.
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See, each ICON came installed with some sort of "computer aided design"
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program called "autoskill", with a password of "reading". If you hit
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control-break during the login process, it would drop you into a root prompt
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with no password at all.
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With the "root" password (called "flexadmin" on these machines), a choice
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clique of us was able to explore the "fun" aspects of the ICON systems. One
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of the most entertaining commands in QNX was the "apb" command, which sent a
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text message to every terminal on the ICON network. Many messages were
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covertly sent out...everything from subliminal messages extolling the class
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to get up en-masse and leave 10 minutes early, to blatant "FUCK YOU!"
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messages sent to the whole class. The latter once provoked an amusing
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response from one of the acid-eating headbangers that managed to crawl to
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class that day...the message was sent, and the burnout yelled loudly "Hey,
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this machine just told me to fuck off!"
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One day Lurch went on a rampage. He changed all passwords to "peaches"
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(named after my dog, no less) and locked the fileserver. For an entire month,
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"Mr. A" pretended that nothing was wrong...we were to do "desk work" and
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"design stuff". In the mean time, frantic calls to Toronto were
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made...eventually someone from ICON central arrived with what was called a
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"sonic screwdriver" to unlock the fileserver and give "Mr. A" access again.
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Lurch was permanently banned from computer classes at our high-school as a
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result.
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One year later, this opera repeated itself--several lower-grade students got
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the password in the same manner. Nothing was done with it, but I was
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conversing with another student at another high-school about this on a local
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BBS. Unluckily for me, "Mr. A" was a friend of the sysop of this BBS, and
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happened to be IN THE ROOM at the time I was typing out the email--he saw
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everything. Well--this began the witch-hunt in earnest.
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See, "Mr. A" hadn't forgotten his humiliation a year before--and this latest
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incursion in his territory was not going to be taken lightly. I was in
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Grade 11 at the time, and had just returned from a family vacation to
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Jamaica (complete with braided hair).
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I got to school one sad February morn and was summoned to the hallowed
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offices of the Principal himself. I was greeted by the Principal and his VP,
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and told to sit at the other end of the inquisition desk.
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They made me remove my braids first of all (telling me to "take them out
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right now"), which I learned they had no right to do. Then, they grilled me
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on what was going on in the computer class--passwords, security breaches, the
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whole enchilada. They foolishly claimed that the computer teacher had seen
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all on his friend's BBS--this was true, but it was still HIGHLY ILLEGAL of
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them to admit it. This was my out, naturally. Once I responded that they
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couldn't legally DO that, and that the school board would not look kindly on
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illegal eavesdropping, they backpedalled pretty fucking quickly. But on one
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thing they did not relent: I could not take computer classes at my
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high-school anymore! My good friend Mr. Confusion suffered the same fate--we
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were twin martyrs to an accidental cause. He was the recipient of the e-mail
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I had been composing that fateful day the computer teacher had been
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eavesdropping.
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So, alternative arrangements were made with what was called the "Alternative
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School"--a school for adult students. We signed on with Brian, a very
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receptive teacher indeed. He knew why we were there--that allegedly we had
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"hacked" our school computer system. He didn't care--he thought it was
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great, and encouraged us to learn more. The Alternative School also had ICON
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computer systems but Brian GAVE us the administrator password. While our
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peers were languishing in WATFILE hell, we were learning C programming and
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MORE. Our clueless school administrators had done us a HUGE favour, in the
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end, and all thanks to our eavesdropping computer teacher "Mr. A".
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After our aborted "fall from grace", I personally became less active in the
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BBS community. Maybe that was because I was close to graduating from
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high-school and had a great girlfriend...whatever, the end result is that I
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disconnected from the BBS world for a while.
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Along came university. University brought a whole world of UNIX mainframes
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to play on. But we had a hard-assed administrator in charge of computing
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services. This person, known as "Boob", had an irrational fear of anything
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that wasn't an MS-DOS prompt. He got his jollies by restricting people's
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access to the outside world--yes, in 1990 we were completely cut off from the
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Internet by a technophobic administrator. This gave the BBS world a whole
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new lease on life for students at my particular university.
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It wasn't long after moving from home to my new apartment in a whole new
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town that I discovered the local BBS scene. I signed on to an Amiga-based
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C-NET BBS called "Bakersfield", and it's cousin-BBS "The Dark Side" (also
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C-NET). Bakersfield had access via UUCP to something I'd never heard of
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before...something called USENET. From the realm of FIDONET I took my first
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steps into the wilds of USENET, running headlong into my first flame war. It
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was a stunning experience--from that point forward I was determined to get
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onto the Internet, and specifically onto USENET, no matter what I had to do.
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By my second year of university, rumours were flying of a secret "back door"
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out of our university network over UUCP via a certain local BBS called "The
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Swamp". Somehow they had a UUCP link-up between our university and the
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outside world--you could successfully send mail through this backdoor to the
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rest of the world. I signed on to this BBS not for the BBS content, but for
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access to the "back door"--it was at this point I knew my lust for the BBS
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scene was almost dead. The BBS had lost it's lustre to the immensity of
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USENET. The wider Internet was yet to come.
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Finally, after my second university term was complete, the technophobic
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admin "Boob" was replaced by a better sysadmin, and the AT&T 3B2 boxes
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were replaced by larger DYNIX-running mainframes. And best of all, the
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Internet was wide open to everyone. This signified the sad end of my BBS
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career as I lost myself in a world of USENET, FTP and Telnet (keep in mind
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this was several years before the web).
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So here we are in the new millennium. Strange as it seems, I look back at
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the BBS days with a lot of longing. In this day and age of massive exploits,
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DoS attacks, endless SPAM, it's quite easy to tire of the Internet. USENET
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has been completely destroyed by spammers, and e-mail is not far behind. The
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web is a sick riot of advertisements and Javascript annoyances,
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astronomically increasing in complexity each year. Web browsers are so
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bloated they consume most of your system resources just sitting there idle.
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We didn't have any of these concerns back in the BBS days. It was all
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function over form, messages over flash. Communication was the key, as was
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transfer of information. And if one BBS was acting badly, the network had a better
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chance of silencing them than the Internet ever will. And heck, barring
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that--there were always other BBSs you could join anyways to get away from
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the twits.
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Is BBSing dead? Not entirely. Syncronet and Citadel/UX are prime examples
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of how the BBS has evolved in the Internet age. Their networks are separate
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from the Internet, and their small communities are thriving. Even outside
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the age of slow modems, UUCP and XMODEM, the BBS lives on. Who knows, given
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the state of the Internet today, their time may be coming again.
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