IN OTHER NEWS
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva SLiP. A local university had a dial-in that allowed you to launch SLiP and get a nice little connection. Suddenly I could use Mosaic. Once that happened, the BBS that I used to run always had a busy tone. 🫠
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@FeloniousPunk seeeeriously. do you know which was my last of such downloads? i kid you not, The Grey Album. that was 2003-4, at the end of that era.
@blogdiva @FeloniousPunk ... I haven't stopped downloading music. Strangely most of the music I download was released in 1975-1985.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
14400,8,n,1
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@blogdiva SLiP. A local university had a dial-in that allowed you to launch SLiP and get a nice little connection. Suddenly I could use Mosaic. Once that happened, the BBS that I used to run always had a busy tone. 🫠
@blogdiva I should note that the dial-in dropped you to a shell menu and I could use Archie, Gopher, and Pine, or drop to the shell easily. And while exploring with Archie and Gopher was interesting, Mosaic really changed it all for me.
Before that I was dialing up long distance BBS's and snagging cool tfiles, warez, and OS/2 stuff.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva@mastodon.social My first was the dialup service Prodigy in 90 or 91, which I believe used its own protocol (it definitely used its own image formats). Technically only a small slice of it was the internet (just email, iirc), but I used that bit, so it counts.
I remember being envious of CompuServe users because they had the “cb simulator” (early text-only chatrooms).
There was a brief period in the 90s where having a 7-letter last name was, well, not “cool”, exactly, but maybe “convenient in a neat way”. So many usernames had a technical cap at 8 characters and “first initial last name” was such a common way for organizations to assign usernames.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva gopher is so simple, so beautiful…
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@blogdiva Ooh, my friends and I started with local BBSes in the mid-80s -- a friend's older brother had a 1200 baud modem!

It was Usenet and Gopher that put me on the internet.
Me, too, them plus the WELL. It The internet was better then. There weren't as many assholes.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
ftp from some universities was my first experience on the "internet". that and usenet over uucp.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva usenet over a telnet connection to the campus mainframe
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva I was online before the internet. Can’t tell what the 300 baud mode. Used as a protocol. Something like „8N1“. 8 bit, no parity, 1 error bit.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva My fist proper *internet* exposure was ftp from a "door" on a dial-up BBS, which in turn dialled in to something internet-connected. 1987 or 1988 ? Discussion-groups on the BBSes I frequented sure felt a lot like what we have here on the fedi, except it was in a text-window. On a hand-me-down 300 baud modem at first, 1985-ish. By 1993 when NCSA-Mosaic came out, I was doing informatics. It was like "hey, pretty neat" , not "this is history in the making" .
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@blogdiva An uncle with a room full of computers and printers and whatnot got me onto the UManitoba mainframe in the early 80s, played Adventure.
Put up my first BBS in 1987, days after getting my first modem. Ok not that soon, needed to sort out that second phone line. But it was believed this was assuring me a bright future, so they got it for me.
Got back on the Internet round 92, by then UoM had a dialup service available at $1/hr, which I promptly racked up hundreds, then thousands, of hours on, while no billing requests ever came, to this day. So far as we know, nobody ever received a request to pay for their hours.
First mersh ISP showed up round 94 and I was among the first customers.
@jpaskaruk second phone line? Madness! We put up with daily refresh rates for overnight transfers! @blogdiva
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva > telnet 199.199.122.9:8000
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@TeflonTrout was forced into AOL after they bought up Compuserve. those were the days.
@blogdiva @TeflonTrout Compuserve was too expensive -- my dad cancelled it and got GEnie instead. Which still had some cool stuff, e.g. JMS posting about Babylon 5 ... but by that time I was already hooked on Usenet.
(Many of JMS' posts from the early 90s are archived at https://jmsnews.com/messages/archive).
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@jpaskaruk second phone line? Madness! We put up with daily refresh rates for overnight transfers! @blogdiva
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
Pretty much gopher here too.
I had to dial into a VAX, and all I could do was telnet to other sites. So I would telnet to a "gopher site" (really a gopher client that was publicly available via telnet) to browse the internet. I didn't have ftp access, and many gopher sites didn't have sz installed, but boombox . micro . umn . edu was one of the few, and through that I was able to download FreeBSD and other stuff.
Shortly after that, I found slirp and a local free net provided free shell and so I used that.
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Me, too, them plus the WELL. It The internet was better then. There weren't as many assholes.
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
I am <holds fingers within 1 mm of each other> *this* close to starting a new personal site served entirely and only on gopher
what a cool technology it was
Felt like such magic
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I am <holds fingers within 1 mm of each other> *this* close to starting a new personal site served entirely and only on gopher
what a cool technology it was
Felt like such magic
Have you seen this attempt at a modern successor to gopher?
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IN OTHER NEWS
i just reckoned i have been online for 42 years. started using the internet at the University of Puerto Rico. compared to my friends, twas living in the future using Gopher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_%28protocol%29
my digital footprint is older than most Millennials and Zoomers.
which protocol did you first use to pop your internet cherry?
@blogdiva I registered one of the first .com DNS names (datacube.com) and ran USENET uucp forwarders. Started an ISP (InterNex) in 1993 pioneering ISDN high speed access
and International server farms.