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?
For computer networks, it was using BBS's via the secondary school computer lab in the early 1980's.
I didn't get to use the internet until years later.
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@blogdiva Started via BBSes, so the first large network I was on was FidoNet - however, the same BBS also offered internet email but more importantly Usenet. FTP and gopher followed once I got to college.
@jf_718 can’t imagine life without Usenet tbh. it’s how i got news about what was happening back home because gringo media never reported on us and we ricans are friggin everywhere

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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 uucp pulling Usenet overnight to my home minix system circa 1986. Even then I had to pick and choose which parts of the hierarchy to drop. Time flies.
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@matuzalem porque matuzalem eres

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@blogdiva BBSes in 1984 and 1985, and then Bitnet in 1986, from the campus IBM 4341 and later from the CS department's Vax 11/780.
Bitnet had email, meaning mailing lists (LISTSERV), RELAY (which eventually was rewritten for Arpanet as Internet Relay Chat, IRC), and email gateways from bitnet to/from arpa, so if you emailed a properly formatted request, in 24 hours you'd magically get several emails back that contained the uuencoded version of what you requested. I got a lot of CP/M software from some software archive on some army base that way.
After I finished my Navy hitch and went back to school in late 1991, we had real internet, and that meant Usenet and real FTP (and Archie to search) and then Gopher (and Veronica) and finally NCSA Mosiac.
Computers and networks were so diverse back in the day. I miss that.
@grumble209 @blogdiva
WE ARE POSIX.
WE WILL ADD YOU TECHNICAL AND SOCIAL DISTINCTIVENESS TO OUR OWN.
YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED.
RESISTANCE IS FUTILE. -
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
Would have been around 1995; local BBSes, QWK mail, and Fidonet. -
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 34 years later this year, I think. I poked around briefly on some BBSs and a text-based online multi-player game, but then when I discovered Usenet I got hooked.
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@blogdiva 34 years later this year, I think. I poked around briefly on some BBSs and a text-based online multi-player game, but then when I discovered Usenet I got hooked.
@blogdiva
TIN and TRN on a dos box 8088 clone I'd mostly been using as a word processor then a friend gifted me a used dial-up modem. -
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@blogdiva
TIN and TRN on a dos box 8088 clone I'd mostly been using as a word processor then a friend gifted me a used dial-up modem.Clearing out my old files a few years ago, I found this instruction sheet for accessing New Orleans Public Library online in 1994. I scanned it before adding the paper to recycling.
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MOSAIC was my first browser
I wish I could still access some sites on LYNX.
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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 We never had a modem for the C=64 we had when I was in elementary/high school. At college, I used a lot of telnet (ahhh, BBSes) and Lynx in the computer labs.
When I got my first PC I used FTP to download Spyglass, which I then used to download Netscape. I remember telling that to my boss and her looking at me like I'd just sprouted second head.
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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?
SMTP (e-mail) in 1985 (41 yrs)
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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
Protocol? Going back that far it was all Hayes Standard, 300 BAUD kids! FIDO NET FTW! -
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 using UUCP over hand-soldered RS232 cable to 300 baud modem calling UC Santa Cruz every night at 2 am
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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, Archie and Usenet back in '92. I also remember updating Mosaic 1.0 to 1.1 on my DECstation, so I guess HTTP too.
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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?
The first large-scale network I used was BITNET in 1988. So, not even “the Internet” yet, to be pedantic. Email and a rough BITNET equivalent of IRC were available immediately; Usenet newsgroups had to wait a year or two until I got an account on the system that was plugged into the “actual” Internet.
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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…uh…borrowed an account from a university in southeast Texas around 1992 and telnet’d all over the damn place for months before I was caught.
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@geolaw gopher was really simple and elegant. we had better metadata for documents back in the day. it was called the Dewey Decimal System and Library of Congress archiving standards.
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@jf_718 can’t imagine life without Usenet tbh. it’s how i got news about what was happening back home because gringo media never reported on us and we ricans are friggin everywhere
