• floppy disks are cool!

    From mary4@21:1/166 to All on Sunday, April 21, 2024 22:33:42
    who here uses floppy disks still?
    i still use them for my computers!! <3
    especially my 286! <3

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... Error, no Keyboard - Press F1 to Continue.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From niter3@21:1/199 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 08:49:50
    who here uses floppy disks still?
    i still use them for my computers!! <3
    especially my 286! <3

    I haven't touched a floppy in years. I mean 15+ years....

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Clutch BBS * telnet://clutchbbs.com (21:1/199)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to niter3 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 23:15:43
    I haven't touched a floppy in years. I mean 15+ years....

    :<< they are still pretty neat! just old and old school

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From geos_one@21:1/999 to niter3 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 16:31:55
    yes i am still using diskets or more pecisly tape drives and disks

    ... Computer warten alle mit der gleichen Geschwindigkeit!

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Disconnected by Peer BBS (21:1/999)
  • From niter3@21:1/199 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 10:48:33
    :<< they are still pretty neat! just old and old school

    I got a cool story...

    When we were teens my buddy had his BBS hacked and had the whole system wiped.

    We as kids in the early 90's called the cops to make a report and we realized after calling them we had a ton of pirated software still hanging around.

    We ended up having to backup all our data to floppies..

    Laughable now, because those cops looked at us like idiots. :D

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Clutch BBS * telnet://clutchbbs.com (21:1/199)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to geos_one on Monday, April 22, 2024 01:34:38
    yes i am still using diskets or more pecisly tape drives and disks

    based and magnetic media pilled! :D <3

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to niter3 on Monday, April 22, 2024 01:46:18
    I got a cool story...

    When we were teens my buddy had his BBS hacked and had the whole system wiped.

    We as kids in the early 90's called the cops to make a report and we realized after calling them we had a ton of pirated software still
    hanging around.

    We ended up having to backup all our data to floppies..

    Laughable now, because those cops looked at us like idiots. :D

    lol :D i love this story! :D :3

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 02:21:07
    I got a cool story...

    When we were teens my buddy had his BBS hacked and had the whole syst wiped.

    We as kids in the early 90's called the cops to make a report and we realized after calling them we had a ton of pirated software still hanging around.

    We ended up having to backup all our data to floppies..

    Laughable now, because those cops looked at us like idiots. :D

    i wish i had interesting stories like this but most of my internet experience is combating really bad mental illness and bullies/shit people online

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... This virus requires Microsoft Windows 3.x

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From Ben Collver@21:2/101 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 11:55:03
    Re: floppy disks are cool!
    By: mary4 to All on Sun Apr 21 2024 22:33:42

    My first computer had two 5.25" floppy drives, so there's a nostalgic
    place in my heart for floppies. A year or so ago i inherited a Pentium
    with a corrupted filesystem. It came with an optical drive but the
    BIOS was too old to boot from it. So i had to boot from 3.5" floppy to
    recover data from the disk and install a new OS (FreeDOS 1.3).

    I have a couple of USB floppy drives. I read that they are not all
    made the same. Some are way faster than the original floppy drives
    ever were, but have subtle compatibility issues. In other words,
    some USB floppy drives write floppies that cannot be reliably read
    on retro hardware. Others are more compatible.

    I've had fun working on challenges to fit lots of functionality onto a
    single floppy. I've done a few projects of my own, and i remember
    others:

    * A DOS boot disk with a dial-up PPP Internet stack, DOSLynx, telnet,
    etc.
    * BasLinux, a Linux live-floppy with a surprising amount of
    functionality. It uses kernel 2.0. A second floppy contains X11.
    * QNX
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From niter3@21:1/199 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 13:36:57

    i wish i had interesting stories like this but most of my internet experience is combating really bad mental illness and bullies/shit
    people online

    I could tell you a few interesting stories from the 90's BBS days. We had all sorts of drama. :>

    It was around a couple different sysops. One ended up being arrested. :)

    However, I can also relate to morons and flame wars back then too. Bunch of people trying to be tough guys until they meet you face to face. :) Ohhhh goood times.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Clutch BBS * telnet://clutchbbs.com (21:1/199)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to Ben Collver on Monday, April 22, 2024 04:33:38
    My first computer had two 5.25" floppy drives, so there's a nostalgic place in my heart for floppies. A year or so ago i inherited a Pentium with a corrupted filesystem. It came with an optical drive but the
    BIOS was too old to boot from it. So i had to boot from 3.5" floppy to recover data from the disk and install a new OS (FreeDOS 1.3).

    i am lighting up here
    <3 <3 <3 <3 i am using FreeDOS 1.3 for my os on my computer right here! :D it is my OS of choice on my 286 and all computers
    i also love 200mm disks (5.25" ones) they last forever!
    BC> I have a couple of USB
    floppy drives. I read that they are not all BC> made the same. Some are way faster than the original floppy drives BC> ever were, but have subtle compatibility issues. In other words, BC> some USB floppy drives write floppies that cannot be reliably read BC> on retro hardware. Others are more compatible. BC> BC> I've had fun working on challenges to fit lots of functionality onto a BC> single floppy. I've done a few projects of my own, and i remember BC> others:

    usb floppy drives vary alot! xD
    i have a very good one that works with my floppies properly! :D

    * A DOS boot disk with a dial-up PPP Internet stack, DOSLynx, telnet,
    etc.
    * BasLinux, a Linux live-floppy with a surprising amount of
    functionality. It uses kernel 2.0. A second floppy contains X11.
    * QNX
    yoooo thats a cool idea!

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to niter3 on Monday, April 22, 2024 04:52:09
    I could tell you a few interesting stories from the 90's BBS days. We
    had all sorts of drama. :>

    lol like today!
    It was around a couple different sysops. One ended up being arrested. :)

    lol!
    However, I can also relate to morons and flame wars back then too. Bunch of people trying to be tough guys until they meet you face to face. :) Ohhhh goood times.

    xDD i have alot of memories on http protocol alot of them where good but a bunch of them are bad. but over all was pretty good! <3

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From AKAcastor@21:1/162 to Niter3 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 12:43:16
    I got a cool story...
    When we were teens my buddy had his BBS hacked and had
    the whole system wiped.
    We as kids in the early 90's called the cops to make a
    report and we realized after calling them we had a ton
    of pirated software still hanging around.
    We ended up having to backup all our data to floppies..
    Laughable now, because those cops looked at us like idiots. :D

    What was the outcome of this? Did local PD put their best team of digital forensic investigators on the case? :)

    There were some interesting times with the law back in the day, figuring out where it fits in the emerging digital world.


    Chris/akacastor


    --- Maximus 3.01
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 06:22:00
    who here uses floppy disks still?

    I still have 140 and 800k floppies for the Apple II range, but they're really superceded by emulation options. Most of the floppies are riddled with
    mould.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: Good Luck and drive offensively! (21:3/101)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to Spectre on Monday, April 22, 2024 07:42:22
    I still have 140 and 800k floppies for the Apple II range, but they're really superceded by emulation options. Most of the floppies are
    riddled with mould.

    not really? my floppies are clean. you must of stored them somewhere moise and cool

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 07:47:49
    i ment to say moist and dark... sorry

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... DOS=HIGH? I knew it was on something...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 10:42:51
    On 21 Apr 2024 at 10:33p, mary4 pondered and said...

    who here uses floppy disks still?
    i still use them for my computers!! <3
    especially my 286! <3

    I don't miss floppies. What is it about them that
    you like?

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to tenser on Monday, April 22, 2024 08:54:11
    I don't miss floppies. What is it about them that
    you like?

    everything!!!!!! the slowness of the reading
    THE NOISES THE FLOPPY DRIVE MAKES WHILE READING IT!
    the storing of files off the HDD :D <3 :3

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... This virus requires Microsoft Windows 3.x

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From niter3@21:1/199 to AKAcastor on Sunday, April 21, 2024 19:17:03
    What was the outcome of this? Did local PD put their best team of
    digital forensic investigators on the case? :)

    There were some interesting times with the law back in the day, figuring out where it fits in the emerging digital world.

    Nothing. After we made a report, we never heard a single thing.

    One, I think it was just over the head of the police officers, and two, it probably seem childish.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Clutch BBS * telnet://clutchbbs.com (21:1/199)
  • From niter3@21:1/199 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 19:17:41
    everything!!!!!! the slowness of the reading
    THE NOISES THE FLOPPY DRIVE MAKES WHILE READING IT!
    the storing of files off the HDD :D <3 :3

    Odd, this was exactly why I disliked them back in the day. :)

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/04/30 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Clutch BBS * telnet://clutchbbs.com (21:1/199)
  • From Newtype Len@21:2/148 to mary4 on Sunday, April 21, 2024 17:55:00
    A few years ago I had to work on an old computer system that was controlled
    by software running off of a floppy. There was never anything good enough or better to replace this system with, so the entire opertation was dependant on that software to someone had written God only knows how long ago.

    I have dozens and dozens of USB drives, now. They seem to be the new floppy disk, only they all have an absurd amount of storage space that I'll never
    use.


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    ---
    * Origin: Shurato's Heavenly Sphere telnet://shsbbs.net (21:2/148)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Ben Collver on Sunday, April 21, 2024 13:46:00
    Ben Collver wrote to mary4 <=-

    My first computer had two 5.25" floppy drives, so there's a nostalgic place in my heart for floppies.

    Pure Nihilism! BBS ran on an Apple // with two floppies. It felt like
    every time you saved a message, it had to chunkachunkachunka and delete
    a message to make room... :)


    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to AKAcastor on Sunday, April 21, 2024 13:48:00
    AKAcastor wrote to Niter3 <=-

    There were some interesting times with the law back in the day,
    figuring out where it fits in the emerging digital world.

    Bruce Sterling's book "The Hacker Crackdown" does a good job of
    documenting those very weird times. I had a BBS during Operation
    Sundevil, and remember boards disappearing with no warning.

    The book also talks a lot about early law enforcement engaging hackers
    and the founding of the EFF. It's worth a read, and available freely
    online.



    ... Adding on
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to poindexter FORTRAN on Monday, April 22, 2024 10:33:42
    Pure Nihilism! BBS ran on an Apple // with two floppies. It felt like
    every time you saved a message, it had to chunkachunkachunka and delete
    a message to make room... :)
    LOL flop flop flop flop floopy flop xD

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... Operator, give me the number for 911

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to poindexter FORTRAN on Monday, April 22, 2024 11:12:56
    Bruce Sterling's book "The Hacker Crackdown" does a good job of documenting those very weird times. I had a BBS during Operation
    Sundevil, and remember boards disappearing with no warning.

    The book also talks a lot about early law enforcement engaging hackers
    and the founding of the EFF. It's worth a read, and available freely online.



    you learn something new everyday. this is one of the things i learned recently

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... Documentation: The worst part of programming.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From AKAcastor@21:1/162 to Poindexter Fortran on Sunday, April 21, 2024 20:53:38
    There were some interesting times with the law back in the day,
    figuring out where it fits in the emerging digital world.

    Bruce Sterling's book "The Hacker Crackdown" does a good job of documenting those very weird times. I had a BBS during Operation
    Sundevil, and remember boards disappearing with no warning.

    The book also talks a lot about early law enforcement engaging hackers
    and the founding of the EFF. It's worth a read, and available freely online.

    "The Hacker Crackdown" is on my bookshelf, but it may be time for a re-read, I don't remember when I last read it. A great recommendation.

    Drifting just slightly (but still within very weird times), another great book is "The Cuckoo's Egg" by Clifford Stoll. The true story written by theastronomer at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who uncovered an international hacking ring based in West Germany, working for the KGB, penetrating American research and military computers. A fascinating story, anyone who hasn't read "The Cuckoo's Egg" should give it a read!


    Chris/akacastor


    --- Maximus 3.01
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 18:38:00
    not really? my floppies are clean. you must of stored them somewhere moise and cool

    None of these are my originals... which have long since bit the dust, I know some were stored in a wardrobe which appeared dry, and the rest I've got no idea, but its a pretty common problem. You wouldn't think there's anything
    for mould to grow on, on a floppy.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: Good Luck and drive offensively! (21:3/101)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to tenser on Monday, April 22, 2024 18:40:00
    I don't miss floppies. What is it about them that you like?

    Once upon a time in a fit of desperation I used a 1.2 as a file area :)

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: Good Luck and drive offensively! (21:3/101)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to AKAcastor on Monday, April 22, 2024 18:44:00
    book is "The Cuckoo's Egg" by Clifford Stoll. The true story written by

    A story that begins with an accounting error. :)

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: Good Luck and drive offensively! (21:3/101)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to AKAcastor on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 00:09:29
    On 21 Apr 2024 at 08:53p, AKAcastor pondered and said...

    There were some interesting times with the law back in the day, figuring out where it fits in the emerging digital world.

    Bruce Sterling's book "The Hacker Crackdown" does a good job of documenting those very weird times. I had a BBS during Operation Sundevil, and remember boards disappearing with no warning.

    The book also talks a lot about early law enforcement engaging hacker and the founding of the EFF. It's worth a read, and available freely online.

    "The Hacker Crackdown" is on my bookshelf, but it may be time for a re-read, I don't remember when I last read it. A great recommendation.

    The system that became SDF even plays a role in that book.

    Drifting just slightly (but still within very weird times), another
    great book is "The Cuckoo's Egg" by Clifford Stoll. The true story written by theastronomer at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who uncovered an international hacking ring based in West Germany, working
    for the KGB, penetrating American research and military computers. A fascinating story, anyone who hasn't read "The Cuckoo's Egg" should give it a read!

    +1 for "The Cuckoo's Egg". Stoll was also on an episode of
    Nova talking about tracking down said hackers. The recent
    conspiracy theory ramblings that have been posted around come
    from someone calling themselves, "pengo", which is a name
    that appears in the book.

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good, as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to tenser on Monday, April 22, 2024 23:15:18
    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good, as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    i did not know cyber punks are an irl thing! :D

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... System halted - Press all keys at once to continue

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From Blue White@21:4/134 to Ben Collver on Monday, April 22, 2024 08:35:17
    I've had fun working on challenges to fit lots of functionality onto a single floppy. I've done a few projects of my own, and i remember
    others:

    I had a older Sharp laptop that "ate" hard disks. After a couple, I quit buying them. I would boot it from a DOS floppy that would install a RAM
    disk as C:, then ask for a B: drive (i.e. another floppy) that would
    contain ZIP files on it. It would unzip whatever was on that floppy to
    the RAM drive, then ask for A: to finish the AUTOEXEC.BAT.

    I used to use this machine for a couple of things:

    -- When traveling, I could load it with a comm program and access my BBS
    and the Internet via dial up
    -- I would also sometimes have it load MicroFocus COBOL and SPF/2 so I
    could work on and compile programs.

    I eventually took the machine apart to see if I could put a Raspberry Pi
    into it. I wish I had not done that. ;)


    --- Talisman v0.53-dev (Linux/armv7l)
    * Origin: possumso.fsxnet.nz * telnet:24/ssh:2122/ftelnet:80 (21:4/134)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to Blue White on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 01:22:00
    oh no those poor floppies! </3

    i'd say keep the machine as is

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... This virus requires Microsoft Windows 3.x

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From Ogg@21:4/106.21 to tenser on Monday, April 22, 2024 11:53:00
    Hello tenser!

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    Do you have an Author for that one?



    --- OpenXP 5.0.58
    * Origin: (} Pointy McPointFace (21:4/106.21)
  • From Ben Collver@21:1/149 to Blue White on Monday, April 22, 2024 09:04:11
    Re: floppy disks are cool!
    By: Blue White to Ben Collver on Mon Apr 22 2024 08:35 am

    That old Sharp laptop sounds cool! I too have experienced instant regret
    more than once attempting to modify/repair hardware and unintentionally bricking it for eternity.

    I wonder what caused it to eat hard drives.

    Once i had a Sharp pocket PC with a MIPS processor. It came with an old version of Windows CE and i installed NetBSD on it. It had a PCMCIA slot, which i could use to get on WIFI. It ran NetHack and a text editor just
    fine, but it was definitely a situation where i would want to
    cross-compile the binaries from a more powerful system.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Fool's Quarter, fqbbs.synchro.net (21:1/149)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to AKAcastor on Monday, April 22, 2024 06:54:00
    AKAcastor wrote to Poindexter Fortran <=-

    Drifting just slightly (but still within very weird times), another
    great book is "The Cuckoo's Egg" by Clifford Stoll. The true story written by theastronomer at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who uncovered an international hacking ring based in West Germany

    A great read as well. I haven't read that since college, I worked at
    the bookstore and borrowed books to read at slow points in my workday.


    ... Wait, this is a *scene*?
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From AKAcastor@21:1/162 to Tenser on Monday, April 22, 2024 11:36:12
    +1 for "The Cuckoo's Egg". Stoll was also on an episode of
    Nova talking about tracking down said hackers. The recent
    conspiracy theory ramblings that have been posted around come
    from someone calling themselves, "pengo", which is a name
    that appears in the book.

    Good catch. I thought "pengo" seemed like a familiar name but hadn't put it together.

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good, as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    I don't think I read the Masters of Deception: The Gang That Ruled Cyberspace book, not sure why as I do recall hearing about it, gotta add it to the list I guess. I've heard positive things about this book from others too.

    Not sure which book is "Cyberpunk", searching for that is tricky as it brings up all kinds of stories in the cyberpunk genre, hard to look it up without the author's name.


    Chris/akacastor


    --- Maximus 3.01
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to mary4 on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 06:59:30
    On 22 Apr 2024 at 11:15p, mary4 pondered and said...

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good, as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    i did not know cyber punks are an irl thing! :D

    It's just the title of the book. :-)

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to Ogg on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 07:04:59
    On 22 Apr 2024 at 11:53a, Ogg pondered and said...

    Hello tenser!

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    Yes, that's the one. Slatalla and Quittner.

    as is
    "Cyberpunk".

    Do you have an Author for that one?

    The one by Hafner and Markoff. I believe it was
    mentioned here earlier? The part about RTM was
    interesting (disclaimer: I've interacted with RTM
    a few times professionally. He's gone on to a very
    distinguished career in systems after his early
    infamy).

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  • From Blue White@21:4/134 to mary4 on Monday, April 22, 2024 16:55:15
    i'd say keep the machine as is

    Like I said, I wish I had! ;)



    --- Talisman v0.53-dev (Linux/armv7l)
    * Origin: possumso.fsxnet.nz * telnet:24/ssh:2122/ftelnet:80 (21:4/134)
  • From Blue White@21:4/134 to Ben Collver on Monday, April 22, 2024 17:00:05
    That old Sharp laptop sounds cool! I too have experienced instant
    regret
    more than once attempting to modify/repair hardware and
    unintentionally
    bricking it for eternity.

    I wonder what caused it to eat hard drives.

    Well, to say it at the hard drives might have been misleading. What I
    actually think the problem was is that the hard drives made to fit that
    machine were not very good. Keeping in mind we are talking about a
    laptop, the drives were very sensitive to vibration. I have used other
    laptops that I have traveled with that (knock-on-wood!) have been a lot
    better about actually being able to be moved!

    Once i had a Sharp pocket PC with a MIPS processor. It came with an
    old
    version of Windows CE and i installed NetBSD on it. It had a PCMCIA
    slot,
    which i could use to get on WIFI. It ran NetHack and a text editor
    just
    fine, but it was definitely a situation where i would want to
    cross-compile the binaries from a more powerful system.

    Speaking of nethack, one of the programs I would load onto the RAM drive
    on the Sharp was a DOS version of Rogue. I used to play that one all the
    time! Another one that would fit, believe it or not, was Simcity 2000,
    another game I was very found of.



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  • From Ogg@21:4/106.21 to AKAcastor on Monday, April 22, 2024 18:53:00
    Hello AKAcastor!

    Not sure which book is "Cyberpunk", searching for that is tricky as it brings up all kinds of stories in the cyberpunk genre, hard to look it up without the author's name.

    https://bookmanager.com/tbm/ ?q=h.tviewer&using_sb=status&qsb=keyword&qse=OqerFF92q0u4cgiz1T
    30xw

    --

    --- OpenXP 5.0.58
    * Origin: (} Pointy McPointFace (21:4/106.21)
  • From AKAcastor@21:1/162 to Ogg on Monday, April 22, 2024 16:57:20
    Not sure which book is "Cyberpunk", searching for that is tricky as it brings up all kinds of stories in the cyberpunk
    genre, hard to look it up
    without the author's name.

    https://bookmanager.com/tbm/ ?q=h.tviewer&using_sb=status&qsb=keyword&qse=OqerFF92q0u4cgiz1T
    30xw

    Thanks, I don't think I'd heard of "Cyberpunk: Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier", it looks like a good read! Appreciate the recommendation.


    Chris/akacastor


    --- Maximus 3.01
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From Ed Vance@21:1/175 to Ben Collver on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 11:32:52
    Ben, I HAD to get a 1541 when I bought a C=64.
    Someone I knew had a TRS-80 Model One w/ Cassette Tape Drive.
    I had earlier seen a Apple][ w/ 2 Floppy Drives and knew that Disk Drives were faster storing Data than Tape Drives.

    A 486 I used had both 5 1/4 and 3 1/2 Drives in it.

    I went to Radio Shack to get a 3 1/2 USB Disk Drive after getting a XP because I wanted to put files off of the 486 on the new computer.

    Mary began this thread and I have to be honest and say I haven't touched a Floppy Disk in years.

    Ed
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  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to Ed Vance on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 09:43:15
    Re: floppy disks are cool!
    By: Ed Vance to Ben Collver on Tue Apr 23 2024 11:32 am

    Mary began this thread and I have to be honest and say I haven't touched a Floppy Disk in years.

    I remember a lot of people complaining that Apple's first iMac (released in 1998 - or was it 1997?) lacked a floppy drive. Apple often seemed to make transitions too soon.. I think people were still using floppy disks fairly often at the time. I think the last time I used a floppy disk was 2004 or 2005 - and that was for making backups of some of my personal data. I eventually used a USB flash drive instead.

    Nightfox
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  • From Ed Vance@21:1/175 to Nightfox on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 11:57:54

    For the C=64 / 1541 combo later I wanted a Fast Loader Cartridge, decided on the Super Snapshot v4 Cartridge.
    Ed
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  • From mary4@21:1/166 to Ed Vance on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 03:25:17
    Mary began this thread and I have to be honest and say I haven't touched
    a Floppy Disk in years.

    lol! i still use them!

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... BREAKFAST.COM Halted... Cereal port not responding.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From Ben Collver@21:1/149 to Ed Vance on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 12:42:19
    Re: floppy disks are cool!
    By: Ed Vance to Ben Collver on Tue Apr 23 2024 11:32 am

    I am enjoying the rabbit holes we are going down together on this
    floppy thread. I remember using a tape drive on a VIC-20 and a
    friend's C=64. Once i bought a tape drive with cables at a yard
    sale for $5 and hooked it up to my first PC.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_cassette_tape

    I wrote ASM login code to give audio prompts to enter user name,
    password, and if given the wrong password it spoke out
    "Wrong password, loser!" recorded from a friend who was willing to
    do voice acting for this project.

    Useless on a single-user system like DOS, but still fun.

    I don't remember exactly how it worked. INT 15h only supports
    motor-off, motor-on, read-data, and write-data. My guess is
    that i used motor-on, a timed delay, and then motor-off for
    each prompt.

    * User prompt
    * Password prompt
    * Then either silent login or:
    * Wrong password prompt

    I could have repeated copies of the prompts, to use the tape for
    multiple login attempts. The PC couldn't rewind the tape, so i
    had to do that manually. :>
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  • From Ed Vance@21:1/175 to Ben Collver on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 15:10:27
    Talking about Commodore Computers and storing on tape made me think of the article in Popular Electronics/Computer Electronics magazine of using a 7414 TTL I.C. between a regular Cassette Recorder and the Cassette Port to put programs on tape.

    If I have mentioned this here recently just figure it was because of Old Age. Ed
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (21:1/175)
  • From Roon@21:4/148 to Ogg on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 12:48:04
    Hello Ogg,

    22 Apr 24 11:53, you wrote to tenser:

    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    i've just finished M.O.D. it was quite interesting and it has the right atmosphere.

    Regards,
    --
    dp

    telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-

    ... Uptime: 1d 4h 58m 6s
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    * Origin: Roon's BBS - Budapest, HUNGARY (21:4/148)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Roon on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 06:45:00
    Roon wrote to Ogg <=-


    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    i've just finished M.O.D. it was quite interesting and it has the right atmosphere.

    I've been going through a retro reading binge lately. Decided to re-read
    Bruce Sterling's Hackers book, just picked up Slatalla's MOD, and have
    The Modem World by Kevin Driscoll to read. I'm going to see him speak at
    the Computer History Museum about BBSes tomorrow night, and meeting two
    old sysop friends of mine - Taipan Enigma from &TOTSE and Dr.
    Strangelove from Just Say Yes. They were the founders, I was one of the
    first BBSes in NIRVANAnet(tm) back in the '90s.



    ... Do you understand now, what the center represents?
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Roon@21:4/148 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 20:11:24
    Hello poindexter,

    24 Apr 24 06:45, you wrote to me:

    Roon wrote to Ogg <=-


    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    i've just finished M.O.D. it was quite interesting and it has the
    right atmosphere.

    I've been going through a retro reading binge lately. Decided to
    re-read Bruce Sterling's Hackers book, just picked up Slatalla's MOD,
    and have The Modem World by Kevin Driscoll to read. I'm going to see
    him speak at the Computer History Museum about BBSes tomorrow night,
    and meeting two old sysop friends of mine - Taipan Enigma from &TOTSE
    and Dr. Strangelove from Just Say Yes. They were the founders, I was
    one of the first BBSes in NIRVANAnet(tm) back in the '90s.

    yeah i am on this retro reading wave as well. i read hackers as well last autumn, and now i started Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet.

    Regards,
    --
    dp

    telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-

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  • From niter3@21:1/199 to Roon on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 16:17:31
    Hello poindexter,

    24 Apr 24 06:45, you wrote to me:

    Roon wrote to Ogg <=-


    The Masters of Deception book is also pretty good,

    The 1995 book by Slatalla? Sounds interesting. I've read both
    previous one just mentioned here.

    i've just finished M.O.D. it was quite interesting and it has the
    right atmosphere.

    I've been going through a retro reading binge lately. Decided to re-read Bruce Sterling's Hackers book, just picked up Slatalla's MOD, and have The Modem World by Kevin Driscoll to read. I'm going to see him speak at the Computer History Museum about BBSes tomorrow night, and meeting two old sysop friends of mine - Taipan Enigma from &TOTSE and Dr. Strangelove from Just Say Yes. They were the founders, I was one of the first BBSes in NIRVANAnet(tm) back in the '90s.

    yeah i am on this retro reading wave as well. i read hackers as well last autumn, and now i started Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet.


    You guys got me interested. I've added this to a list of things to read. :>

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  • From Ben Collver@21:2/101 to niter3 on Wednesday, April 24, 2024 23:40:43
    Re: floppy disks are cool!
    By: niter3 to Roon on Wed Apr 24 2024 16:17:31

    Those books look interesting to me as well.

    A friend of mine recommends Snowcrash by Neal Stephenson as the epitome
    of cyperpunk fiction. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Crash

    My to-read list includes:

    Mirrorshades edited by Bruce Sterling https://www.rudyrucker.com/mirrorshades/HTML/

    Juicy Ghosts by Rudy Rucker
    https://www.rudyrucker.com/juicyghosts/HTML/
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Ben Collver on Thursday, April 25, 2024 07:04:00
    Ben Collver wrote to niter3 <=-

    A friend of mine recommends Snowcrash by Neal Stephenson as the epitome
    of cyperpunk fiction. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Crash


    If you want to read Ur-cyberpunk, read Neuromancer, by Wiliam Gibson -
    if you haven't already.

    While I count "Bladerunner" as seminal cyberpunk (albeit visual), I
    don't know if the book "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" by Philip
    K. Dick counts.

    Mirrorshades edited by Bruce Sterling https://www.rudyrucker.com/mirrorshades/HTML/

    Juicy Ghosts by Rudy Rucker
    https://www.rudyrucker.com/juicyghosts/HTML/

    I like Rudy Rucker's work - it reminds me that I wanted to read the Ware Tetrology.




    ... Don't give Chad a big neural network
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