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22 comments
rswailabout 3 years ago
Bangpath email addresses:<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UUCP#Bang_path" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UUCP#Bang_path</a><p>Munnari being the UUCP connection between Australia and the rest of the world, run by Robert Elz:<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Robert_Elz" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Robert_Elz</a><p><a href="https://dif.vic.gov.au/editorial/4194-a/a-computer-server-and-indigenous-reconciliation" rel="nofollow">https://dif.vic.gov.au/editorial/4194-a/a-computer-server-an...</a><p>running Usenet news and people paying for newsgroups to subsidize the phone bill to Hawaii.<p>Dial up bulletin boards, connecting via FIDOnet, then slowly being absorbed into Usenet groups and mailing lists.<p>gopher servers, ftp servers, spam email, "endless September"...<p>I'm old :)
eimrineabout 3 years ago
No batshit from our lovely governments.
Nokia S40 or similar 2G phones with J2ME apps for surfing in OperaMini and chatting in Jimm, but not simultaneously.
File sharing services like Rapidshare before torrents.
A <table></table> was an only way for layout.
Macromedia Flash was neat before it became a mess.
Liberty Reserve in pre-Bitcoin era.
Much slower computers which used to be much faster from user's point of view.<p>BTW I am not a true veteran, all of that you could see just 20 years ago.
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jgrahamcabout 3 years ago
UUCP style email addresses. JANET addresses being reversed compared to Internet/DNS. The web didn't exist. Anonymous FTP servers. Usenet before Eternal September. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion.
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spicymakiabout 3 years ago
Establishing an internet connection with a local ISP manually by connecting to a modem via a serial terminal with a tty char device/com port, sending AT commands, logging in, and then starting a PPP session and mapping that to network interface. Also transferring files via ZMODEM.
8fingerlouieabout 3 years ago
FidoNet (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FidoNet" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FidoNet</a>) was an eye opener for me.<p>While probably not "internet" by definition, it was a global network that allowed people to exchange information relatively free, with a couple days latency.<p>It had discussion groups much like Usenet, and I vividly remember dialing my local BBS every 30-60 minutes when waiting for a reply to a discussion :)
tunapabout 3 years ago
The rotten (dot) com parrot burned an image in my brain years before goatse's arrival. So much so, I think of that parrot perched on the disturbingly phallic Amazon logo every time I see it.
mikeceabout 3 years ago
When the number of websites was so small a printed book could contain them all (and still be reasonably in-date for several months after printing).
taubekabout 3 years ago
Dialing for hours due to low number of modems on your ISP. Loosing your connection because someone in your house would pick up a phone receiver.
MarkusWandelabout 3 years ago
Going to someone else's house and seeing a 17" CRT monitor running in 800x600 resolution (no! don't change that! I like it that the letters are big!) and running Internet Explorer as the only browser, with the window half obscured by a stack of "toolbars".<p>Oh, you meant ancient? Using a borrowed userid to access a VAX at the university to browse Usenet and use FTP servers. No web or even gopher yet, so your guide was FTP directories published in Usenet. And a T1 link (1.5Mbps) was fast. From the university to the world that is. Your personal dialup was good if it was 2400bps.
pfdietzabout 3 years ago
SF LOVERS digest (started in 1979!)<p><a href="https://archive.org/download/SFLoversDigestArchive" rel="nofollow">https://archive.org/download/SFLoversDigestArchive</a>
MarkusWandelabout 3 years ago
Here's another one. Asking a computer on the other side of the planet what time it is and getting an answer back immediately, in Japanese Standard Time. Whoa. This was on IBM's internal mainframe network when I was a co-op student there back in 1986/7. The world was a lot bigger place then. I still haven't quite gotten used to video calls with relatives on other continents being free and only a couple of finger taps to set up on your handheld device.
jleyankabout 3 years ago
Kermit, world.std.com, wustl repository, IRC and netsplits, VAXen running BSD, Suns and SGI’s, …<p>And the excitement from Mosaic and watching coffee pots empty. Jennycam.<p>Rec.humor.funny
FrenchAmericanabout 3 years ago
Knowing Louis Pouzin's work and role in the birth of the internet.<p>I'm not a veteran by far but I had - with very little merit - the honor to talk with him about that period.<p>Such a nice person. He knew had how important his work had been but as well that he was one among the tens of people who were keys to this collective achievement.<p>In respect to his own modesty, there is a link to the Internet pioneers' Wikipedia page - where his role is explained among all the other pioneers:
<a href="https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_pioneers" rel="nofollow">https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_pioneers</a>
h2odragonabout 3 years ago
Stolen "PCPursuit" and Telnet accounts, so long distance bills wouldn't be so bad. When "YMODEM" was a <i>real</i> improvement in information technology.
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dekhnabout 3 years ago
The day the email came through that said they were switching arpanet to TCP/IP. I was 10 at the time.
fractallyteabout 3 years ago
I still have my CompuServe email address... and it works!
gbeesonabout 3 years ago
Coupler modems
usednetabout 3 years ago
Usenet<p>which I still use actually, peep my username :)
shazeubaaabout 3 years ago
TTY-33 dial-up at 110 baud
StanislavPetrovabout 3 years ago
300 baud modems.
svilen_dobrevabout 3 years ago
you know what, movies are colourful now..