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 Continuously since ARPAnet so it probably doesn´t count.
Used ftp to the wsmr.mil software archives and the various sunsites.
Quite some time before Canter & Siegel.
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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 33+ years. AOL, USENET, and WWW (mostly at school at first)
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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 on PLATO in the early 80’s, had email (ihnp4!uiucuxc!merlin!sawdey) mid 80’s via uucp on a Unix system. Maybe around 1987 connected two Unix systems with thinnet but it was 192.x.x.x so not really internet

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MOSAIC was my first browser
@blogdiva @JoBlakely same, I got it off a CD that came in the back of a book about the Internet. prior to that it was gopher in the public library. and prior to that it was BBSs. I guess I was first online in the early 90s or maybe late 80s but I don't have the best memory. basically my entire life. somehow my mom did something right and we always had some kind of computer in the house even though we grew up dirt poor and on welfare.
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@blogdiva Gopher, Archie and Usenet back in '92. I also remember updating Mosaic 1.0 to 1.1 on my DECstation, so I guess HTTP too.
@mlrife remember how Mosaic didn't support HTML tables with proportional-width fonts? But there was no Netscape for the DECstation 3100 in the late 90s so there I was
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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 Yay, a fellow Before Timer! I wrote and ran my own BBS on an Apple //e in Singapore in the early 1980s.
My first “Internet” access was BITNET around the same time.
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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 mists of time... I got hooked on BBSes when I met (age 14?) a sysop from the Dorsai Embassy, and volunteered to manage the Mac software uploads. That was in the mid-80s, and they were a special group of nerds -- some of the first people to offer AIDS information online (at least on the east coast), along with hosting files and forums for many other groups. And they ran a weekly soup kitchen (well, chicken & potatoes) out of Jack's loft in Soho, until it burned and the servers moved to an anodyne basement in LIC.
Then in college ca 1990, I got hooked on bitnet relay, usenet, SunOs 4, gopher, and the rest is more recent history...
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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’ve put stuff on gopher! Just before its demise in the early 90s. No idea if anyone actually saw it. Later, we ran the Georgia Extension Forestry web server under the desk. Prior to university, dialup was an expensive long distance call, so I rarely used it.
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@aud @FeloniousPunk TBH prefer it to both of the originals. Dangermouse’s 99 problems is the remix to end all remixes.
@blogdiva @aud @FeloniousPunk I still listen to the grey album regularly.
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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 kinda tough to say, actual internet: door trailing into a next lab at UCSB, where I was not attending but pretended that I was. I was using someone else's credentials to log on and found usenet, the original social media brainrot

But I started BBSing in the 80s from my land line.
... which was not sketchy at all... -
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 think it was ~1980, with a connection between the math department at SJSU and UCLA.
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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 started internet access with Delphi dial up ( $20 /20hours + $3 for bridging to internet ).
I've looked in recent years, and NONE of the Usenet post I made in the 80s and early 90s are in any of the retained archives, so I guess my digital footprint isn't much from the past. -
@blogdiva Pre www, I had my first .edu email address in 1989, so SMTP 37 or so years ago? Also pretty sure I used finger & telnet a bunch around the same time. No Gopher, but we were using NCSA Mosaic for HTTP to the real live www by 1991 or 1992, before it was officially released...
@wcbdata about the same for me. But I think we had Gopher at the first uni, then Mosaic where I was after 1992. I remember taking a stats class in 1990 and uploading my program to the mainframe, then having to run down 3 flights of stairs, out to another building, up 2 flights, then waiting till my printout was filed to learn I’d left out a semicolon. Then retrace steps, add it, run again and repeat process until I had something that worked. Watching birds was more fun.
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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 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.
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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 technically a local bbs, but my real favorite was ytalk at university.
Once I stood in line waiting for my turn at the terminal watching a girl break up with someone live via ytalk. Such angry typing.
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MOSAIC was my first browser
@blogdiva @JoBlakely Same - in college on Sparcstation/SunOS (before Solaris was a thing). I still used gopher/pine/vi/emacs if I was using the far more numerous text terminals (there were only a few of the above workstations) - to this day I still have a soft spot for DEC VT220s.
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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 don't remember what I used first, but I still remember writing code on Texas Instrument computers in Basic that made turtles run across the screen. I think I was maybe 10 or 11. I'd save up to get code books from Scholastic. I think that was around the same time I learned how to output ascii art to a printer.
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I don't remember what I used first, but I still remember writing code on Texas Instrument computers in Basic that made turtles run across the screen. I think I was maybe 10 or 11. I'd save up to get code books from Scholastic. I think that was around the same time I learned how to output ascii art to a printer.
I'm guessing it was Usenet, but not until maybe 92-93, when I had access to a computer in senior high. Spent a lot of time on BBS servers at my friend's house in junior high.
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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 started using computers at work in 1979, but that was an IBM 1120 with punch cards for road design. Then we started getting PC's with DOS 5.0, then Windows for Workgroups 3.4, which is when I got access to Netscape and the Internet.
I couldn't afford a home PC for years, still, but I moved and switched jobs. They figured out I wasn't afraid of computers (and had small hands), so I was assigned to helping the SysAdmin set up new and upgrade older PC's. Did that until disabled.
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@blogdiva technically a local bbs, but my real favorite was ytalk at university.
Once I stood in line waiting for my turn at the terminal watching a girl break up with someone live via ytalk. Such angry typing.