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377 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
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Adventures in BBSing
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BBSing Nostalgia in the Twin Cities
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or
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"Internet killed the BBS star"
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Back before Internet boomed, there was a beautiful era where BBSes
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ruled the land. There was no AOL, no poorly designed web pages, no
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spam. There were just home grown bulletin board systems that were fun
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as all hell to interact with. Nowdays you can't get anyone to call a
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BBS if you put a gun to their head. Oh well. Expect this page to be
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updated with more and more stories as soon as I get around to
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organizing all the text together.
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In the Beginning..
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While I started BBSing in 1989 with a TI-994/A, I was told of the
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earliest days of BBSing in the twin cities. I didn't have a phone line
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in my room, so I had to haul my whole setup down into the basement,
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right in the rec room. I had the stereo on, and the song I remember
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they played over and over again was "Beat the Bullet" by Vain. Some of
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the stories Primus told me(he got his name before the band from an
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AD&D manual), there were just three BBSes back in 1981. Each month all
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the SysOps got together for a meeting. One was called On-Target.
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Anybody have more historical information?
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Back in 1989 the two big mack daddy systems were TCCN(Twin Cities
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Computer Network) and Gizmode. They had silly little forums, and even
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an ASCII art section! What's funny about TCCN was that about 6 years
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after I stopped calling it, they mailed my home address with a flyer
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announcing their new Internet access service. Both those systems were
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pretty bland, but one of the very few multiline boards you could dial
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into. Of course, there was no chat.
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One other multiline system I remember calling was Minuet. Many people
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were addicted to this. It wasn't really a BBS, but just a free MUD
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people can dial into. The only notable combat I did was steal some
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powerful character's magical weapon, ran away several rooms and
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eventually got killed by its rightful owner.
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Around 1990 or so I purchased an Atari 800XL in hopes of
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abandoning the grim world of TI-994/A computers. Of course Atari 8
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bits were also obsolete, so I didn't make much of an improvement. So I
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decided to get involved in a bit with the local Atari user group,
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SPACE(St. Paul Atari Computer Enthusiasts). Through contacts on TCCN,
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I met a fellow by the name of The Emperor Dalek. He was die hard
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Atari, with the bastardized Atari 1200XL at his side. Now the Atari
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1200XL was supposed to be so much better than the previous
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models(until the 130XE and 65XE came out), but it had so many
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problems. But he didn't care, insisting it was the best 8 bit out there.
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Notable BBSes I used to call
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Callahan's Place - I was on some other system and saw the number to
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this Citadel, so I said what the hell. Needless to say at 13 the
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content on there shocked me. The users that frequented the system were
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pretty much all adults with their adult discussions. Needless to say
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they didn't like me, and I was twitted off there several times. My
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first encounter with this BBS was 1989, and to this day I think
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they're still up.
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Haven III: The Revenge - I called many BBSes listed in Computer User,
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being a free hardcopy of a BBS list for the 612. Sometimes you ran
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into a number on there that actually worked, and one of them was Haven
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III. It was an Amiga-based Citadel, run by Mysterious Stranger. For
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the first 4 months this board up, it was dead. It got about less than
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10 posts a day. But then, I think around Christmas, things fired up.
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You see, there was a common phonomenon back then what we called
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"Christmas ruggies". Basically, some kid gets a brand new computer(or
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a new modem), and starts calling all these new boards to him or her.
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It's basically what I and many others went through. They do not really
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know any sort of BBS etiquitte(and many long-time BBSers still don't
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know). So, they come on and start acting like some jerkoff, which
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annoys the rest of the BBSing community. Of course, it is enjoyable to
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make fun of them, and play with their minds. Perhaps it is a hard way
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to learn a lesson of BBS etiquitte, but it's a neccessary one. Usually
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they only call a few times, realize they are not liked, and give up.
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Maybe they call other boards looking for friendly faces, or give up
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BBSing altogether. Of course they now skip BBSes altogether and be
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morons on America Online.
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Anyways, Haven III finally picked up after a while. It started with
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loads of abuse from ruggies calling constantly and leaving stupid
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messages. The board seemed to get more abuse than normal, but nothing
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serious. All Mysterious Stranger ever did was delete the offending
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posts or just ignore them. The ruggie attacks were more amusing if
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anything. A crowd of Macintosh users came to be with names like Man of
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Few Words, Reichstud, Joe McCarthy and a few others. A user named
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Adolf Hitler came on(ruggie), and made his own room(message base)
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called Concentration Camp. And every time a Concentration Camp room
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came to be, Mysterious Stranger renamd it to Kiddie Camp. There must
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of been at least three Kiddie Camp rooms until Adolf Hitler decided to
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give up.
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All the active users of Haven III proposed a small GT at a Pizza Hut
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in Dinkytown. Now Mysterious Stranger had different plans. He proposed
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we all go to the Science Museum of Minnesota to get together. He
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couldn't even make it to the Pizza Hut get toghether. Needless to say,
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nobdody showed up to Mysterious Stranger's plans, and Mysterious
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Stranger didn't even make it to our little get together. But that was
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alright. It wasn't like he really even cared about his BBS. It was a
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fun get together regardless.
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The NUG - One of the first users that came across my board went by the
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name of Big Eddie. It was before I ran Citadel at the time. I broke
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into chat with him and we had a long converstaion. He was about to
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start a warez
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board, and after a while we got together and exchanged a bit of warez.
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He had an even slower system than mine, being an original IBM PC. The
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only mediums we could exchange over was on a 720K disk, one at a time.
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He brought his whole system to my house, where he had the IBM PC wth
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the 1.44 and 360K drive. I was still using the Tandy 1000HX at the
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time, so there really wasn't much for me to game with, but we traded
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anyway.
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He eventually he started the board board up, the NUG. What did NUG
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mean? Nothing. Users were asked to submit what the NUG acronym stood
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foor. Some of the best ones were Nintendo Users Group, and Naughty
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Under Garments. Big Eddie must of ran at least 5 different BBS
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programs over the course of its existed. It started with Remote
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Access, then WildCat(his logoff banner said "Thanks for calling a
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WildCrap system!"), and a few others. There was a BBS program he
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actually purchased, which required the BBS to have at least a 14.4
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modem running it. It was called SiliCosis, and from using it, it
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seemed like somebody was trying to make some money off of yet another
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hacked Vision BBS program. I'm not sure what the original BBS program
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was, but there was at least 20 knock-offs of it each pretty much being
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the same. After several months of running this program, things went
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downhill. Suddenly all these bugs started to show up, screwing up
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messages and so forth. It got a nickname of SiliBugSis, and Big Eddie
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switched to yet another BBS program. He looked at buying this awful
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BBS program as an investment gone bad, instead of hunting the author
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down.
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Eventually a scene called lameNESS started up.Regular users like The
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Madman, TNSLB(The Not so Lame Babe), Video Slime, Lord Toad, and
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others were involved. One of the best features of the board was Big
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Eddie's Oldies Emporium. It was a file section that contained games
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from the early 1980s. Acquiring these "classic" warez was easier said
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than done. Have you tried to scrounge around to look for games that
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have been long out of production? Fortunately, the collection was a
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decent size. When I first acquired my Tandy, I managed to get some
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games that were just the right speed for it, like Spy Hunter and a few
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others.
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Today Big Eddie is in a band which shall remain nameless.
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Absolute Zero - This was another one of those free for all BBSes, not
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too different than Haven III. Here is wherre my war between me and
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Toxic Nerd continued, and I met a bunch of unusual people at a related
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GT. I never actually met Toxic Nerd in person, but I heard recently
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that he was a programmer in his 40's.
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The Realms of Valor - This was a fun one. It had HackerNet, which was
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netted with Angus Young's board(in some other state) for a while, and
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was one of the many lone-standing h/p BBSes out there. It ran through
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most of 1995.
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The Crackhouse - I think this was the name. This was before
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"crackhouse" was known as a name where junkies hang out in. This was
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just another, but still fun Appleslime BBSes I called. It had a
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massive text file section explaining how to crack or cheat in various
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games for the Apple // in the early 1980s.
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Boards that really sucked for one reason or another
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Chez Spaz- The sysop, Your Father, was basically a dick towards me.
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Now your Father wasn't only an jerk towards me. When Larry Laffer
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first logged in he got on his case. yF said he didn't like the Leisure
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Suit Larry game, blah blah blah. But eventually he was let on. Then
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there was BellaTrix. Here's a guy who comes on to Bad Sector and Chez
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Spaz, and acts obnoxious, like any other Citadel user. After awhile,
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BellaTrix gets aide priveleges on CZ and things are going okay for him
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on there. Then several months later(it could be a year, I dunno) your
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Father kicks him completely off of Chez Spaz for deleting a bunch of
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rooms. Nice guy, huh?
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Aimee's Palace/The Peach Pit/(and several other names) It just, well,
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sucked. It was ran by this 14 year old girl who I was introduced to
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through a friend. This was the total sum of all bad WWIV boards. The
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SysOp, Fly Girl ended each sentence with an exclamation mark. The
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warez on it didn't work(as if that mattered), and the discussion
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forums had nothing intelligent to say. Her and I got together once,
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which was a complete disaster. She really pissed me off, so as soon as
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I got home, I put that Co SysOp access to good use. I deleted the
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entire BBS, some directories, and, oh yes, the root directory. After
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my work was done, she couldn't boot up her computer,and didn't know
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how to fix it. Then she called me up with her "new" boyfriend, wanting
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to know my last name. Why? She wanted to take me to court over the
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fact I deleted a bunch of directories on her precious little computer.
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Somehow several months later we patched things up.
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National Police Department - This was the BBS >>I<< tried to run, and
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looking back at all of it, it really sucked. I was more powermad than
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Your Father was, but oh well. From that experience I learned through
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the headaches a SysOp goes through just to support such a crazy hobby.
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See below for the full deal on this.
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The Atari BBSing scene
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Back then there were only 3 BBSes I knew of that ran on Atari 8 bit
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computers. It was generally one community who spanned across these
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three BBSes. There weren't too many Atari 8 bit users, so they had to
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stick together. One of them was SPACE, which represented the local
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Atari 8 bit users. It stood for Saint Paul Atari Computer Enthusiasts.
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It was nothing special unless you were a hard core Atari 8 bit user.
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Warp 10 - This was the biggest Atari 8 bit board around in the 612. It
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was run by a guy named Mr. Data who was obviously a Star Trek freak.
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He had plenty of message bases, games and files online. This was a fun
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board to call, and plenty of people were on it. There were plenty of
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message bases to go around(like "Gotta Beef?"), regardless of the high
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amount of busy signals. To think I would write email back and forth
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with Chebutykin and meet her several years later at the U of M. After
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a bit of time, it seemed that Mr. Data put too much of a priority
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of running Warp 10 into his life. If you simply dropped carrier(hung
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up) on the system with out simply logging out, it took the board a few
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minutes longer to reset itself. This did not meet Mr. Data's approval,
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so he supplied a punishment for it. Suddenly there were messages and
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system news informing you your access level would be lowered if you
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dropped carrier instead of logging out. I think that was proof enough
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he was simply too involved in running his BBS, to the point where if
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you make a small step out of line, you get punished for it. And even
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later on his BBS turned from free to fee, even though it was a single
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line system. If your BBS only has one line on it, paying the SysOp to
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be on it is simply absurd. After awhile I simply lost interest in
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calling it, and went on to other boards. I don't even think it is up
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anymore.
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Running my own BBS
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(this is a small except from a book I someday hope to publish,
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chronicling all the days of being on BBSes and the net from
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1989-present)
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After about a year of BBSing, I decided to run my own board. I
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imagined all the fun you could have by running your own system. Having
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your own BBS was the ultimate ago trip. It was your* system. You could
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make it anything you wanted, You were God on your system. You could
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kick anybody you wanted off that you didn't like, and spread anything
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you wanted on there. I upgraded from the TI-994/A since then, to a
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cheap Tandy 1000HX computer. Yes, I bought a computer from Radio
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Shack. It was the cheapest available at the time, and I desperately
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wanted to get out of the TI-994/A purgatory. It was a cheap XT, with
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only 640K ram(acceptable at the time) with only a 720K floppy drive.
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The first mistake I made with running a board was making it only part
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time. It was up from 10pm to 4pm every day. Needless to say, I got
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plenty of
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calls from people(who obviously don't listen to their modem speaker)
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on off -hours. Trust me. If you're going to run a board, make it 24/7.
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The name? I decided to call it the National Police Department. Don't
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ask me why. It was yet another in-joke with a friend. The name of
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course probably scared off a lot of potential users, but oh well.
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The BBS program I first ran the board off of was a cheap public domain
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getup that no other BBS in the area code even used. It was
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user-unfriendly and the like. It ran on that for only a few weeks, but
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I met new people like Big Eddie. I decided it was time to change BBS
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programs.
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I asked a few people if it was possible to run Citadel off of only one
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floppy drive. Everybody, including the author of Citadel said it was
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not possible. With a few tricks I pulled, I made it possible. Amiga
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Citadel boards(Cit-68K) have been run before off of floppy drives, but
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running one on a PC platform was unheard of. I pulled a few
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tricks(like swapping disks around) and setup a RAMdisk for a few
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downloadable files. The message base size was considerably small(300K)
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compared to other Citadels, which had roughly 10 times the size.
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Shortly before the board went up, I changed my alias to Dark
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Thief once again making a name from my own imagination. It was mainly
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to escape my extremely bad reputation of being Sir Exodus, in hope of
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a new identity.
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Back then I was really into "interesting" text files that have been
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floating around on BBSes since the early 1980s. The text files I'm
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talking about cover topics such as how to build explosives, hacking,
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and phreaking. You know, questionably stuff.There was very little room
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on the board for these, but I managed to squeeze in a few text files
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for other people's reading pleasure. Even had a game or two on there
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from time to time.
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For safety reasons, I made the files only available if I invited the
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user to a special directory room. I didn't want some angry mother
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calling
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me up with her son blowing his hand off from a textfile he downloaded
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off of my board.
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This security precaution of course had its downsides. Often I chatted
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with many of the users on the board, out of boredom. A good deal of
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the users only called the board for one thing, and it was those
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files. Many of the questions I was asked was "where are the, uh,
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anarchy files?". Suddenly I questioned if these files are even worth
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my time having on there.
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Looking back at a it all, I really did a shitty job running
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the BBS. With the system only running on a floppy drive, it completely
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crashed several
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times. The message bases, user logs, EVERYTHING died on that one
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precious floppy disk. At one time I got so frustrated, I took out and
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threw one of the floppies against the closet door. The little metal
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tab was bent outward a bit, and stupid me put the disk back in. The
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disk eventually got jammed in there, but the metal tab was still
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lingering in the drive. The drive broke, and it set me back about $140
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for a replacement.
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One time I remember it was late night and I turned on the screen
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seeing who was on. A user named Dr. Glade was very eager to chat with
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me. He left aborted messages saying "CHAT WITH ME. I KNOW YOU'RE
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THERE." when in fact, I wasn't. So I decided to chat with him anyway.
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He was eagerly warning me about some guy who was going to trash the
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BBS. Then a few days later, he left mesages like "Did you know I can
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run macro files on my computer when I'm away at school?" Roughly
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translated, he was bragging about he can trash my BBS for hours at a
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time and he wouldn't have to be at the console. This mystery person he
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was talking about didn't show up. Suddenly after starting up a BBS
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I had all these mysterious enemies plot some sort of conspiracy
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against me.
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The surge of oh-so-friendly users didn't end there. A user named
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Eris(it could of been Elrissa. I forgot) came on being a total snob
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towards me. Any spelling mistake I would make or any mistake for that
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matter came to her attention and she always was there to correct me.
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She liked rubbing anything she could into my face. She even took the
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ways I messed around with her account in a snotty fashion. I decided
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to take a look at her account in a user editor, and sure enough, her
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password was "fuckuforpeeking". Slick, huh?
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Most users tolerated the constant crashes, and just logged in
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as new again. And then there was the intentional destruction that was
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brought
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onto the BBS. You name it, they did it. Among some of the types of
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abuse were:
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1. Some new user comes on and leaves a message saying this
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board sucks with an assortment of swear words. Not really abuse at
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all, but it hurts your pride just a little bit, seeing how much work
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you put into it. So you just delete the account and go on. It happens
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on all BBSes.
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2. Several times my message base was flooded. My knowledge of
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Citadel at the time was low, so I didn't know how to configure the
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board to boot off message flooders. So it let people just scroll over
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the message bases. One time I set up the board off of regular hours
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just to show my friend. Less than an hour later, some asshole logs in
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as "Dark Burgler"(not even spelled right) and flooded a few of the
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message bases until I hung up on him. I learned how to add in the
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command line parameter to hang up on a user who posts 3 times in a row
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on the same base. Of course a persistent asshole could just call back
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again and again.
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3, Perhaps the most elaborate one was this one asshole who
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logged in as "Dark Theif" and told almost everybody in mail warning
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them that they will be deleted if they act up. I forgot the exact
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wording of it, but it was a really rude messsage, and the
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not-so-bright users fell for it and
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swore at me and such. I had to go on other boards to tell the whole
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story so I could get some activity on the board again.
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On the brighter side, I had a small group of regulars who
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called the BBS who all knew each other. The person I knew the best was
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Wulfgar,
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who I gave Co SysOp access to. Some of the other regulars were Neon
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Man, Corinth(who everybody didn't like much), Neon Man, D-Man, Card
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Shark, and a few others.
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Wulfgar told me an interesting little story on one of his BBS
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experience. There was some board ran by a guy named Tenjumin. It ran
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the exact BBS software as Darksword did. Wulfgar's character(account)
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seemed to be the most powerful account on the whole board, surpassing
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even Tenjumin's stats. Tenjumin did not like this, so he deleted
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Wulfgar's account. So Wulfgar and his buddies got back at him. They
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kept starting up new accounts by the truckload with names like "Tem's
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a fag" and so forth. Their revenge tactic worked.
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