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131 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2006 01:32:56 -0500
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From: Thomas O'Nan
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To: jason@textfiles.com
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Subject: Love Your Site
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Thanks for putting up the information about my old BBS, The T.A.R.D.I.S.
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One of my old users discovered your project and told me about it because
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my system wasn't there. You asked for an essay about early BBS life, and
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I thought I'd let you have one about the early years.
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TARDIS actually started as an amateur radio BBS running a program called
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Super Ratt in 1982. This ran over the radio using RTTY-ASCII encoded
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radio signals and a device called a TNC to interface between the radio and
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an Apple ][+. You didn't need a login, all you had to do was send RBBS
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and the system would startup, ask for your callsign and start talking to
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you. It was fun, but after a while something new came along called Packet
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Radio and the software for radio BBS on that only worked on PCs. My
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little system never had much traffic. But then I discovered the phone
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modems and a service called Genie. Not long after that I discovered the
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earliest version of the Prime BBS software. I spent about five hours
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downloading it at 300 baud from Genie for a 140k disk file. After that
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the TARDIS was born. Based in the style of the British SciFi show Dr. Who
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(bigger on the inside than it was on the outside), I kept a simple
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philosophy, run a BBS that anybody, using any equipment could use. This
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included the deaf and blind people who had difficulty in the old days when
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things started getting complicated with special ASCII graphics codes. I
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kept it pretty simple. The original system was a 300baud,48k Apple ][+
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with two 140k floppy drives, one with the program and system files, and
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the other to store the messages. It didn't take long for this to blossom
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to a larger system. The next step was upgrading to a 64k Apple ][+
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running Apple ProDos, then a 400k 3.5" drive. Next a new thing called a
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hard drive was added, a whole whopping 5meg of hard drive, then a 10meg
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was added when the 5meg for a whopping 15meg system. This wasn't bad for
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a system running at 2400baud. You could store a lot of text messages on
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15meg of space after all. At the end, I had a 40meg hard drive, but the
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speed never made it past the 2400 baud modem speed, the Prime program
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didn't support it.
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During the time that the BBS ran in Indianapolis, there was a little free
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computer paper and tried to let people know about the local computer
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shops, and there was a BBS list. At one point they had a person who wrote
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a few articles that talked about the local BBSs who went by the name Mr.
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Microphone. He'd write about the technology behind a particular BBS, the
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programs, the games and such, but not much else. Then he did a story on
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The TARDIS, the fan hit the crap! My users were insulted, they wanted his
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hide nailed to a barn! Seems he didn't like the TARDIS, not because it
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was one of the few non IBM BBS running in Indianapolis, not because it was
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an Apple //e (another upgrade, thanks to a user called Romana, and a
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monetary donation from another user, the BBS was always free), his problem
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was the fact that there weren't enough PC files for download. Seems his
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grading system only worked if you had PC files for download, my users
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pointed out that the TARDIS was a community message and e-mail BBS and not
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a file exchange. The next month, he printed a different review, that kind
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of apologized for his lack of vision. I thought it was kinda fun at the
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time, so I kept out of the controversy and let my users do their thing.
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The thing I really liked about the BBS was the community that happened
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around the TARDIS. The Prime software allowed the BBS to run with ease.
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The Sysop could run the system with the help of others and I did. We had
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things that weren't seen on other local systems, often things that some
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users never knew were there. Once a user logged on for the first time,
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the sysop had to verify them, and once that was done, they had access
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based on how old they were and male or female. At the time there was a
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lot of problems with females getting online, they usually ended up having
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a bad experience with all the guys hitting on them. Prime allowed me to
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set up rooms and set access so that people would have or not have access.
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So I set up several general rooms that everyone could get into, I set up
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an Adult's section, and I set up a Ladies only section. If you weren't
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allowed into a room, you never knew it was there, it was invisible. I had
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several of the local BBS ladies who ran the Ladies room, and I stayed out
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of it, they did it all, to this day, I don't know what went on in that
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room! It was fun. One of the neat things that the PRIME software allowed
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was the ability of any user to start a conversation topic, so inside of
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each room there might be as many as 255 discussion topics going on. All I
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had to do was keep the flame wars to a minimum, and I did have some.
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There were some topics I didn't allow, mostly because they always ended up
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causing a flame war, usually topics coming from the extreme right wing,
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most of the users I had were academic, moderate or liberal. I still have
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all the equipment too, but I don't think I'd ever do it again, no time.
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So what happened at the end? Well, that wasn't fun. Phone lines were
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noisy and we were all constantly looking for ways to help keep out the
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noise. I had special lines put in that were less noisy, I had filters in
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the line to quiet the noise, for the most part, it was pretty good. My
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first modem ran 150 baud, then 300, 1200 and 2400. Then the first error
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correcting modems came out. But the problem with the PRIME software at
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the time was the way the modem interfaced with the computer, Bob Garth
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used a custom wired cable to do his own hand shaking between the serial
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card and the modem. This all worked really well, UNTIL error correction,
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at this point a simple flaw happened between certain modems, and I tried a
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ton of them, but if a user with one or two of the cheaper, old non error
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correcting and very noisy would call in, the modem would wait for a longer
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period to connect, during the part of the connection where the error
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correcting happened, the modem and the serial card would loose sync and
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stop talking, I would then have to shut down the computer and reboot to
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get resynchronized. I spent months working on this problem, changing
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modems, program settings, dip switches and filters. Then just when I
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thought I had everyone informed what was happening a couple of kids who
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wanted something destructive to do, decided to set up their computers to
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crash mine using the modem sync problem. They just put on a cheap 2400
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modem, and set their systems to dial mine every 30 seconds, this locked up
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my system, and kept everyone else from getting in. They did this for two
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months! I knew the stats on my incoming traffic and I knew that I didn't
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have people calling me every 30 seconds, when things worked, I would get
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about 500 calls a day, and never had people complain about getting in,
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once these two started their thing, nobody got in. I contacted the phone
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company about the problem, at first they weren't willing to help, in those
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days the phone company hated BBSs, they wanted to classify them as a
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business and when a modem was on a residential line (like mine) they (ATT)
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didn't want to deal with it. Eventually I talked so a person at the phone
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company that dealt with nuisance calls. He went after the two kids and in
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the end they were arrested for what they did, I kept out of it, I never
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received any compensation for what they did. Their parents swore they
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didn't know what was going on and that it was all my fault for running a
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BBS that locked out their kids from an adult section they weren't supposed
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to be in anyway. After that, I just didn't have the heart to run a system
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anymore, the internet was coming and everything changed, after about two
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more years the good local community BBSs were all gone.
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The neat thing was that I had 3500 users able to log in at the end, 750 of
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them were regulars, about 40 were more than daily callers. I became
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friends with many of my users and still keep contact with them today using
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iChat and e-mail. My co-sysops were all wonderful people and the
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community that grew around the TARDIS was something I will always cherish.
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Thanks again.
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Tom O'Nan
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