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137 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
137 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
JayJay's Story
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In 1983, I saw my first home computer ... a Commodore VIC 20 that my
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brother-in-law had purchased. I was amazed ... really was fun typing in
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those basic programs and then playing GAMES with 3K (yes, K) of ram. In
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early 1985 when the Commodore Plus/4 came out, we purchased one. Along
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with the Plus/4 came a free introductory subscription to Compuserve, as
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well as a 300 baud modem. I signed on that evening to Compuserve and from
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the moment I saw those words coming across the screen via the phone lines,
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I was hooked! I thought it would be really, really neat if I could make
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my computer work in that same fasion, where people would call it up and
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receive my programming on their screen. I looked around all over in order
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to find Software which could accomplish that for me on the Plus/4 - no
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luck. So I decided to sit down one evening and learn to program in order
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to author my own BBS software.
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In a few weeks, we were beta testing ... my brother-in-law would call with
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his (then) new Commodore 64, and I would troubleshoot my code while he was
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online ... I actually had a full-blown BBS running in approximately a
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months time.
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From there, I purchased a Commodore 128 and had a fantastic time with all
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the software that I could purchase for both the C128 and the built-in C64
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that it contained. I also ran a BBS on the C64 end of the Commodore for
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quite some time as I learned on the IBM.
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In the Spring of 1988, The Twilight Zone BBS went 'live' with an IBM 286
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clone from Swan Technologies with 640K of memory, a 20 meg Hard Drive and
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a 2400 baud modem. I ran RBBS software. Approximately a year or so later,
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I purchased and installed Quarterdeck's DesqView Multitasking software and
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added a second line to the BBS. By this time, I also had 2 US Robotics
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Courier HST modems (14.4K) for High-Speed callers.
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Sometime in 1990, I decided in order to get the BBS to grow, it needed
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both a Sponsor and more powerful software, not to mention more phone
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lines. Being a member of the CWCS, (Central Wisconsin Computer Socitey), I
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asked them if they were interested in Sponsoring the Bulletin Board
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Service. They were, so in exchange for the use of the BBS for club
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business and promotion, they presented me with Artisoft's LANtastic/AI
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v4.1 to network the system. I also purchased a 386DX-33 and a 330 Meg SCSI
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Hard Drive for the growing file section. I installed LANtastic/AI and
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became acquainted with the operations of a LAN with my simple new
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peer-to-peer style network.
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Once I felt comfortable with the LAN, I decided it was time to grow and
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take the next step ... I purchased 4 more 386DX-40s and turned the
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original BBS machine into a dedicated file server with LANtastic/AI,
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installed 2 1.2 Gb hard drives, and used the new 386s for Workstations,
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each one running a single phone line for the BBS. I also utilized all USR
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Courier 28.8K modems at that time as well.
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In January of 1993, I purchased a subscription with Planet Connect, a
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satellite-delivery method of FIDOnet Conferences and thousands of
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shareware files. I hooked up a new machine to the satellite feed and
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transported the newly-acquired files and conferences onto the File Server
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once a day so callers always had a ton of new files and conferences to
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use. We also put USA TODAY(r) online for the callers to read each morning.
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Interest in the BBS service continued to grow, and in April of 1993, The
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Twilight Zone BBS system was chosen from over 50,000 BBSs in the world as
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one of only 7 ASP HUB BBSs! WorldWide Recognition! Obviously, the feeling
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when I was notified that The Twilight Zone BBS was one of the chosen 7 is
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unexplainable. We began receiving callers from all over the world and
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subscriptions from people as far away as Portugal, Italy, and other
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countries.
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By 1995, I knew that we were in dire need of more telephone lines, and we
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also needed to take the BBS one step further -- full Internet
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Connectivity. I did a ton of research into which was the Best BBS software
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for us to go with, which method of Internet Connectivity would best suit
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us, etc.
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In May of 1995, we decided upon eSoft's TBBS for the BBS Software because
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of its tremendous versatility and excellent company support. We put the
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operating system on a single 486DX2-66 with 8 dial-in phone lines and the
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users really seemed to like the change and added new features.
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In June of 1995, we purchased eSoft's IPAD, formed a corporation, and
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began testing the internet capabilities. We performed countless hours of
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testing to ensure our subscribers would have the fastest, easiest to use,
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and most versatile internet service available to them. We went "live" on
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October 1st of 1995 with 8 phone lines into our internet service and added
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8 telnet lines into and out of the BBS service. In just a few short weeks
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we realized that we needed more phone lines for the internet system, so we
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added another 8 lines, bringing the total to 16. To our amazement, in
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another short month, we required even more internet lines, so we added
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another 16 lines to the IPADs terminal server, bringing the total to 32.
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In January of 1996 we put up our Web Server for the Internet Service and
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began offering FREE PERSONAL WEB PAGES to our Flat Rate (unlimited)
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subscribers. We utilized MICROSOFT'S' Windows/NT Server v3.51 and
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Quarterdeck's WebServer software. Unfortunately, we felt that WebServer
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wasn't fast enough nor would accomodate enough simultaneous web "hits" so
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we purchased O'Reilly's WebSite, a Fantastic Web Server for NT.
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In March of 1996, we saw that we needed even more growth, so we purchased
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the 32-line version of TBBS for the Bulletin Board Service, and added 16
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more Telnet lines into and out of the BBS, along with 2 more gigs of Hard
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Drives for the new files that come in on a daily basis.
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In November of 1996, we added a live UPI NewsFeed into the BBS for callers
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to get immediate newsfeeds from all over the world.
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At the end of 1996, the T-Zone BBS had 10 Dial-in Lines and 22 Telnet
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in/out lines. T-Net's Internet Service had 144 Dial-in lines.
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By the end of 1997, the T-Zone BBS had 14 Dial-in Lines,and 32 Telnet
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in/out lines. T-Net's Internet Service had 250 Dial-in Lines, and local
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connectivity in Marshfield, Spencer and Wisconsin Rapids.
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Growth continued ... and at the end of 1998, T-Net's Internet Service was
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up to 800+ lines, the vast majority of them being X2/v.90 56K lines. We
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became multi-homed with multiple backbone feeds to ensure the best service
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for our customers and to minimize the possibility of downtime. We were
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hooked into the backbones of MCI (now Cable & Wireless), UUNet, and
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Norlight. We also installed a local system in Stevens Point for Internet
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callers.
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By the end of 1999, T-Net had 1400+ phone lines and growth was still
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snowballing.
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At the end of 2000, T-Net had 1900+ phone lines, growth is still ongoing,
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and we began offering DSL services in the Marshfield and Wisconsin Rapids
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areas.
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In Mid 2001, we added Nationwide Connectivity. We also have upgraded our
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backbone feeds to Dual DS3s from 2 separate Tier 1 Backbone Providers to
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ensure top-of-the-line quality for our customers. We built a 24x7 Call
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Center manned by professional technicians to help any of our customers
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with internet-related problems 24 hours a day. We also installed a 35,000
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watt generator to ensure we can never lose power for our equipment at our
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headquarters, again, to ensure our customers receive the best possible
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service available. We know of no other ISP that does what T-Net does for
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its customers!
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