Domain: lonestar.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to lonestar.org.
Comments · 50
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Re:Python is eating Perls lunch
Can any language do unicode right yet?
You can throw away any language that uses UTF-16 right from the start. What's left is C/C++, if you are careful enough.
In fact C (C89/90 to C11) is character-set neutral, and continues to maintain support for EBCDIC for those still stranded without 7-bit ASCII (which is technically superseded by ISO/IEC 646) by providing trigraph (5.2.1.1) and digraph (6.4.6.3) support.
See Section 1 Scope: 2. "This International Standard does not specify / the mechanism by which C programs are transformed for use by a data-processing system" and the definition of 3.6 Byte which is an "addressable unit of data storage large enough to hold any member of the basic character set of the execution environment". So yes Cray, you can even have 12-bit bytes (CDC Cyber).
Kids these days.
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Re:Are there any old drives around that read these
Yes, there are. I have one, and a Catweasel controller that can read and write basically any format on it.
The 8 inch standard format is very similar to the 1.2MB 5.25 inch format. Actually, it's the other way around, as when IBM built the PC AT and the high-density drives for it they apparently intentionally made the formats nearly identical. They're so close that computers that use 8 inch diskettes can typically be modified to run with 1.2MB HD 5.25 drives and media with only a new controller to drive cable and new drive power supply (8 inch drives typically take either AC mains power to run the spindle or 24VDC, and 5.25 drives take 12VDC to run the spindle). See http://nemesis.lonestar.org/co... for some tech info on how to do this with one of the first multiuser 'personal' computers, the Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 16 (and descendents the 16B and the 6000). Also see http://www.dbit.com/fdadap.htm... for the 'proper' adapter board.
8 inch diskettes are famously reliable with good quality media, and the bits aren't packed so densely that an EMP event will wipe them out, as long as they're in a faraday cage with sufficient attenuation and power handling capacity.
Current production high-density PC FDC's can easily handle the 8 inch drive with the proper adapter cable, but the number of supported formats is small. More flexible is the USB interfaced Kryoflux, and the PCI Catweasel MK3 and MK4 (the Kryoflux is currently in production and available for purchase; the Catweasels have been out of production for a while and are a bit difficult to obtain last I checked; I bought my MK4 from amigakit.com, but they appear to only have the Amiga-specific MK2's in stock.
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Re:chicken or egg?
Wow does that look weird. By the early 80s Z80 syntax was much more common. LXI. Ewwww.
http://nemesis.lonestar.org/computers/tandy/software/apps/m4/qd/opcodes.html
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Re:secret resistors abound
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Re:So where is it used?
off the top of my head the Super Dimensional Fortress and (afaik) Android uses the NetBSD userland with a Linux kernel.
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Look for SDF or other public access Unix
SDF, Silence is Defeat, and other providers that come up if you search for "public access unix" should fit the bill. The price for basic E-mail should range from free to a few dollars a month, and other services like DNS and domain registration should be pretty easy to set up. The best thing of all is that these systems usually have a nice community of users and one or more admins who can give personal attention to whatever services you're paying for. I have some personal experience with SDF, so I can say with some assurance that it is a nice community, the way more of the Internet used to be.
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SDF - Public Access UNIX System
http://sdf.lonestar.org/index.cgi
One of the oldest and most respected Public Access UNIX Systems. -
Re:OMG -- Tandy!
Tandy had quite the Unix following back in the 80's. See Frank Durda's History of the Assembly Language Development System for a few details.
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Re:yoos net??
You could also try gopher://sdf.lonestar.org/11/users/rp/links for a list of gopher servers that are maintained on a regular basis.
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Re:Incessant whining! Argh!
>Given enough bandwidth, an SDTV stream's colors will be richer and more stable-- akin to those of a DVD
That is true for a raw SDTV capture, if the colours are mixed with the signal on the analog and there is noise and attenuation present (this is likely, so you do win a point on that!)
However, DVD being an MPEG 4:2:0 profile means lots less colour definition than the theoretical maximum of raw SDTV. Here's the gory details. Specifically, brightness is given a 720 x 480 resolution, whereas colour is given a 360 x 240 resolution, meaning colour gets 1/4 of the pixels dedicated to it as brightness gets. Professional MPEG broadcasts (like you might pull off an uplink) are in a 4:2:2 profile, which returns the same number of lines of colour resolution as brightness (the most important thing is usually lines in a broadcast like this, although horizontal resolution matters, it is technically infinite in an analog signal and that means it's unquantifiable... and not worth oversampling! :D ). At the 1/4 mark, that is about the same as, or perhaps less than what NTSC's colour system can do with a combined colour carrier. Colour separated out and in a lab environment, NTSC analog still beats all NTSC digital simulations.
Compare a DVD to a laserdisc and you will see how the above actually does make a difference... :-) IIRC, some early Criterion Collection DVDs are captured from the Criterion Collection laserdisc, nothing more than a pure NTSC analog signal (or PAL, depending on what standard they are encoding for). -
Re:So? Can't he use a Windows box to route?
http://sdf.lonestar.org/
Run putty on windows. No GUI, but does that really matter? -
Re:B.S.
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Re:Here's how it works from another perspective
On an unrelated note, has anyone else noticed a huge drop in the effectiveness of greylisting as a spam countermeasure?
Presumably one or more of the really big spam botnets like Bagle have started obeying the relevant RFC. Sigh. It was always going to happen, greylisting fanboys. Any simple, effective anti-spam measure is virtually by definition also simple and desirable for the spammers to circumvent.
We need anti-forgery technology like SPF to be widely deployed, but that will only help up to a point. SMJ, the admin of SDF, has proposed an STMP registry (FAQ) which is basically a database of SMTP servers registered with verified contact details, not unlike registering a domain. This isn't a problem for companies setting up a few long-term STMP servers, but it is for spammers with tens of thousands of constantly changing spam hosts. This could work in principle, although it has the obvious problem of needing widespread adoption before people can decide to only accept 'registered' mail.
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i love gmail
i'll be the first to admit that i am a pretty serious google fanboy and i haven't used a fastmail account so proceed with caution.
i have two public access unix accounts, one on SDF and one on hobbiton (hobbiton stopped being public access like 6 years ago). two years ago there was a sudden astronomical increase in the amount of spam that i was getting on both accounts. both systems had not yet set up greylisting or some other anti-spam measures and so i was worried that i would have to abandon an email address that i have had for almost 10 years.
i got a gmail invite from a friend and set up my new account, and gmail has an option where you can choose to send mail as another account and make that the default method for sending mail, so i set up my gmail account to send as the two unix accounts and then added the gmail address to a
.forward for each shell account.so now i use gmail as the central store for all of my email. now that both shell accounts have graylisting and other spam filtering i take advantage of that PLUS gmail's ability to bucket spam, so i have not seen a spam email in something like 6 months. i could go back to the old way (i look really oldschool using ssh to check my mail with pine) but i have become so lazy and spoiled thanks to gmail that there is no real reason to go back.
so, if you want to keep your old address and switch to gmail, it is possible, provided your old provider has some means for you to forward your mail.
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Re:Impressively retarded
http://sdf.lonestar.org/ AKA "freeshell"
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oh noes!!1
does that mean there will be no more articles about how some freak ported netBSD to a new game console or waffle iron? can't they at least wait until the PS3 is out?
/sarcasm
most of my unix learning i got courtesty of BSD on public access systems like hobbiton.org and sdf.lonestar.org. hobbiton was openBSD, but is no longer public access, and SDF is netBSD on dec alphas (i believe). it was a great way to learn about unix without installing linux. -
GNU/Linux - Windows without the GUI click tools!
Linux kernel developers have known for years that their software isn't safe. Why don't they fix it? Seriously, GNU/Linux is not usable as a general purpose shell. Its like Windows. If you can access the system, you can do anything you want.
SDF stopped using GNU/Linux years ago because of this very reason. No software is perfect, but damn!
Check out the SDF com log from when they shutdown the GNU/Linux server. A guy gets root while they are in com. Funny stuff.
ftp://sdf.lonestar.org/pub/sdf/historical/bye-bye- leenox.txt -
get a free unix account
If you just want to practice/learn on a unix command line, get a free shell account on a public access unix server. Google for "free shells" or try one of these:
sdf.lonestar.org
bsd.miki.eu.org
freeshells.ch
rootshell.be -
Lynx, Pine, Pico, trn, et al Await your Return!
Recently, I got myself a membership on sdf.lonestar.org. Originally, I just wanted a truly external site from which to ping & probe back into my network (was studying for CCNA, got it!). But I went ahead and paid for the membership (there is a free version which is still satisfying). So now, I'm typing this from a hp laptop (which is yes on my lap) and still checking newsgroups using trn on the G4 iMac occupying the desk. I have pimped out my terminal emulator so that it shows bright green text on a green-black background, then made the whole thing largely transparent (the emulator, not the iMac) so I can keep an eye on my little Forex venture behind the terminal. It's all vaguely unsettling.
Anyhoo, does anybody remember a column/website/mailing list called "Outgoing Mail" from the early 1990's? This was when I first got online, at UNM. 2400, Lynx, trn, etc... Imagine my horror when I was ordered to "upgrade" all of those beautiful WFW 486s to Win95! We slapped in 14.4 modems, and might just as well have started using smoke signals. But eventually, we were MOSAIC and Netscape and happy.
Then, as others have pointed out, NS4 (Collabra, etc) came out and it sucked, and it was time to leave school, anyway...
And for those who missed it, let me just throw that little plug in there again: http://sdf.lonestar.org/. Hopefully, I'll see you there. -
Re:Uses?
Screwed up the link, for SDF. Here
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Obligatory BBS plug
One of the last remaining BBSes: SDF-1
I'm a member. I'm seventeen years old. I missed the golden age of the BBS. I must watch this documentary.
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Re:Give me my any-color-but-blue SOD!It all goes back to the IBM CGA colors. Lovely explanation and table available here.
Early arcade games used resistor ladders to change the level of red, green, or blue signal to the monitor per pixel. CGA only understood "on" and "off" (and "on brighter").
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Re:Duh, analog of course.
EGA monitors supported 64 colors: four different intensities for each of red, green and blue.
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Radix-50
Non-obvious and novel? No. Radix-50 encoding is very similar.
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Re:Asymptotic
9600 baud is the limit of copper, and we haven't crossed it. The 33.6 is BPS or bits per second. Every speed increase over 9600 was obtained by compression (this is why you don't hear of a 33.6k baud modem).
Compression in the form of v.42bis or v.44 is not generally factored into the speed rating of the modem, since its effectiveness depends on the data being transmissted.
See these tables for a better idea how these speed increases above the actual signalling rate (baud). There is a combination between faster signalling rates (note that none of these appear to have reached 9600 baud) and cramming more and more information into the signals using advanced modulation techniques.
Compression is on TOP of this. -
Re:thanks for the mirrors guys!
Your freeshell didn't die so badly, you just used up all of your bandwith. You used almost twice you allowable bandwith.
Check out your usage from the command line with webquota or on the web page -nicnak -
SDF
SDF (a.k.a. freeshell.org) is good. Large userbase; running since -87. Several access levels are available.
As a serious user, you appreciate some degree of user validation - it means the server won't be full of spammers and script kiddies. -
Re:Is webmail a good choice?
For the record, I don't prefer webmail. I do pine-over-ssh on a nice shell account here if anyone is interested.
But a fair chunk of my reasons for this would also be reasons to use webmail. I move around a lot. For me, this is because I'm multi-homed(/nomadic/technically homeless/whatever), traveling a great deal (for work or for pleasure) can cause a similar set of problems. If I were to download all my mail onto my main system I would be unable to access it much of the time. If I were to keep address book and similar information on my main system I would have the same problem. Having a webmail or shell account to keep this information means that it's accessible from pretty much any computer with net access.
Though I have to say, webmail will never provide some of the things that I really like about my shell account -- starting with script development (for all the usual things, plus occasional mail box parsing), a nice jump off point for connecting to other systems (particularly nice if you have a box or network that uses inbound IP filtering -- only one IP address or range, and while, yes, that means everyone with a paid account with sdf can *also* ssh in, likely they don't have the passwords and that's still better than the entirety of the 'net -- and then there's surfing written erotica at work without the boss ever knowing ;) ), my favorite MUA (one of these days I'll switch to a free alternative, though), a place to run little apps and whatnot, and (perhaps best) even on windows boxen I fear not the email virus, not even the new one that no one is scanning for yet. Oh, and backups (ssh -l username hostname "tar -cvzf -" > backup.tar.gz) are a cinch. I essentially mirror my sdf account to my main system as often as possible, and to a large extent vice versa, so that as long as I can reach *one* I'm just fine. Some webmail providers also have POP3 or IMAP access, which can make this fairly easy, but many don't.
The only real advantages I can see to webmail are that:
A. it can be difficult to find public access terminals with ssh. I can use telnet, though I prefer not to. But even that can be difficult to find. It's rather rare to find a public access terminal without a web browser. At one point my solution to this involved logging in to a second shell-provider's boxes via their web-based java applet and then sshing out to sdf. The other shell provider's account only had 1MB of combined email/file storage, making it somewhat useless as a main account. But 1MB is more than enough to keep all my ssh keys.
B. It *may* be easier to find a stable webmail provider than a shell provider. My only complaint about sdf is that it sometimes goes down, occasionally for days at a time (I think it's been a year or so since that's happened. But it went down for several hours last week, annoying me greatly). OTOH, I just lost one of my junk webmail accounts because the provider suddenly decided they didn't want to provide email anymore, with about two weeks notice, so webmail is hardly a guaranteed proposition. But the large providers (hotmail/yahoo/etc) do seem to be a tad more stable/reliable than my beloved sdf.
C. The GUI interface may be more appropriate for some non-power users (I almost forgot this. bad sysadmin, bad)
The only other real alternative to either shell or webmail accounts in similar situations is a laptop. But the laptop solution is more expensive and the risk of someone walking off with a laptop is much higher than the risk of someone walking off with a large installation in (likely) a secure colo facility. Not to mention it is generally easier to find a computer that is net connected than it is to find a place to connect up a laptop.
Done stupidly, of course it's foolish. Done right it's a more robust system than most people's pop3/outlook (or whatever) setup, whether one chooses a (large stable) webmail provider and backs up with POP3/IMAP or a shell account backed up with tarpipes.
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10 Minutes Ago
For the first (and probably last) time I used it to look at gopher://sdf.lonestar.org/. I was mostly curious and found the gopher site through Vivisimo It's pretty cool and works great over dialup. I used Mozilla Firebird 0.7 to access it.
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Re:Still don't get it....
Would be more effective if you wrapped it into a mailto link.
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Re:not as bad as it sounds.
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Re:xmas list and what I'm probably getting
What I've hinted for my xmas list is
Some CDRW for screeners
A girlfriend
And a gift certificate
What I probably will get
Blank VHS tapes
Socks & Underwear
deodorant
Wierd chewy candy that I give away to guinea pig vistors
Oh, and I wouldn't mind a membership with SDF Public Access UNIX System too :) -
Super Dimensional Fortress
I highly recommend SDF. It's an OpenBSD powered, Non-Profit, unix shell account based service. They offer a webmail interface via Squirrelmail (see above posts)
$1 gets you a lifelong membership with 20MB email (inc. web, POP, IMAP spamfiltering) and 20MB webspace (http://yourname.freeshell.org), along with all major unix shells and common typical unix utilities(elm, pine, mailx, rmail, lynx, cgi/php4 etc. etc.)
However, if you want to financially support SDF, for a lifetime membership donation of $35, upgrade to ARPA membership and get additional web, email and /home disc storage (100MB for each!) 300MB total)
ARPA includes compiler access (GCC, ruby, python, perl, lisp etc) and additional internet access - telnet, ssh, ftp, ytalk, irc, snarf, ICQ etc.
Click here for more information - there's additional services available - MySQL, VPM, SSH-tunnelling, DNS, listservs, virtual hosting etc.
SDF is not a fly-by-night service, it's a thriving community that's been around for over 16 years with hundreds of members and a lively community (bbs)
For us European users, we've got a dedicated server at SDF-EU
Beats every other suggestion here into a cocked hat :) -
Super Dimensional Fortress
I highly recommend SDF. It's an OpenBSD powered, Non-Profit, unix shell account based service. They offer a webmail interface via Squirrelmail (see above posts)
$1 gets you a lifelong membership with 20MB email (inc. web, POP, IMAP spamfiltering) and 20MB webspace (http://yourname.freeshell.org), along with all major unix shells and common typical unix utilities(elm, pine, mailx, rmail, lynx, cgi/php4 etc. etc.)
However, if you want to financially support SDF, for a lifetime membership donation of $35, upgrade to ARPA membership and get additional web, email and /home disc storage (100MB for each!) 300MB total)
ARPA includes compiler access (GCC, ruby, python, perl, lisp etc) and additional internet access - telnet, ssh, ftp, ytalk, irc, snarf, ICQ etc.
Click here for more information - there's additional services available - MySQL, VPM, SSH-tunnelling, DNS, listservs, virtual hosting etc.
SDF is not a fly-by-night service, it's a thriving community that's been around for over 16 years with hundreds of members and a lively community (bbs)
For us European users, we've got a dedicated server at SDF-EU
Beats every other suggestion here into a cocked hat :) -
Re:Stratus prior art
Everything in a Stratus was redundant. CPU, memory, disk drives, etc. They had unmatched reliability but at a cost. If memory serves, a redundant 600MB disk assembly cost on the order of US$20K (that was around 1991). Replacing a running CPU didn't mean downtime. You were still running on the other member of the redundant pair. And I expect that most of the Stratus systems had more than one redundant pair of CPUs. (The 680x0 CPUs were pretty good but weren't going to set any speed records.)
The VOS operating system would even detect when a terminal was going bad and alert field service. (I'd bet that their UNIX clone OS could do that as well.) More than once I had the field service rep walk up to my cubicle and want to know where so-and-so sat so he could replace their terminal or I'd get a phone call out of the blue to let me know that they'd been alerted about a terminal that was going to need replacement.
And that's just one vendor that could contest this. Heck if your looking for prior art, DEC had maintenance consoles on some of the larger PDP-11s that could be used by field service to service the system or run diagnostics remotely. I'm not sure if they had a ``phone home'' capability but I wouldn't be a bit surprised. (I have some of the old literature/manuals down in the basement but I wouldn't know which boxes to dig through anymore -- the pack rat's curse!)
Indeed I did find mention of the ability to get into the old DEC machines remotely I could not find whether the system could call on its own, though. Unfortunately most old dec stories are about what was wrong with dec service not what was right
:). -
Re:Outrageous!
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Re:HrmmReminds me of a website that talks about the 6 levels of DEC support. Where the Field Service Engineer enters the server room, observing the flames coming out of the system cabinets and saying: "AH, HA! This looks like a software problem."
Here's the link: The Six Stages Of Field Service Support
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Check out Freeshell.org
The Freeshell.org Unix shell/email provider uses a distributed filesystem to provide transparency across their various machines. After a few minutes of searching, I was not able to determine what their method is, but it's worth asking them about it, as Freeshell has over 10,000 users and high traffic.
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Re:Windows is SysFascist Friendly as well
My school's ISP blocks all of this, so our admins can't do anything. Although, they DID block anything that wasn't HTTP or FTP. IM, Telnet, E-mail, music sharing, anything not quite kosher was blocked. AND, that was at the SCHOOL's proxy this time
If you don't mind Links, and they allow Telnet (I think that's why they blocked it), try Super Dimensional Fortress. You can get a 60-day account for free, and if you send $1 (or 2 Euros), they'll make it lifetime (it's to ward off hackers).
SDF
This'll telnet right in. If you'd rather go to their site first, try:
SDF's site -
Re:what is sdf?
Let's see... We have:
I'm guessing the first one, as it is "a networked community of free software authors, teachers, students, researchers, hobbyists and enthusiasts." Did I get it right?
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Re:Link for the online form ?
I got the same. Also, did you notice that random character that appears after the sentance? Try refreshing the page a couple of times. Tried typing the address into a new browser window and got this: Not Found The requested object does not exist on this server. The link you followed is either outdated, inaccurate, or the server has been instructed not to let you have it. Just use the link on lonestar.org I guess...
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Dissapointing to see
SEMAPHORE will cost SDF more than double its current rent, however, the technical team seem much more willing to help us. Please watch here for updates.
A breach of contract, a new ISP, and couple the costs for a public service that has been running for fifteen years all because of a dumb DoS attack. As they say, many people have come to rely on SDF. This is one of the dumbest stunts that I have seen an ISP pull in a long time and I hope that NWLink have apropriate and successful legal action taken against them. -
Their forum
They have a temporary forum for discussion (top comment atm is about making the front page at
/.). -
Re:What's wrong with synchronous?
Most people are only familiar with the x86 line, and to a lesser extent the PowerPC, and a much, much lesser extent the Alpha and UltraSPARC.
Alright, you got me here. I hope I'm not too late in responding, but I am genuinely interested in the Alpha processor. So much I signed up for a free account on the Super Dimensional Fortress 64-bit non-profit public access supercomputing center. They run NetBSD (no Linux weenies there, hehehe). I've had a difficult time finding beginner tutorials, I got the official specs from ftp.digital.com (still up after all these years+acqusitions:), but I'm looking for a kinder, gentler introduction. Google returned some semi-useful docs, but if you could recommend some authoritive recommended sources I would be eternally grateful.
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Free will take over: example - sdf.lonestar.orgMost of the people here are ranting about banner ads, and slashdot subscriptions. That's not the main point I believe.
The main point is the supposed disappearence of free services on the internet. There are many free services that are stable and around for the long haul. The trick is, to latch on to one that is NOT run by a for-profit corporation.
The original promise of the internet still exists ! It is possible to publish information to millions of people so cheaply that any noodle can do it ! Of course it doesn't cost exactly nothing, but it is cheap enough that it is conceivable that it will eventually be a commonly available utility like service. (It ain't there yet, but if the cost were to drop 50% every 18 months (seems plausible, especially once the recession finishes flushing out a lot of the dead weight) then in a decade we could be there.)
What this means is that a lot of companies trying to make business and justify fairly huge capital investments are just going to get blown out of the water by hobbiests doing it for fun. That's ok, in fact it's good. It's good because we need to invest a lot of money in various projects that will never be done by hobbiests -- getting into space, curing various diseases, physical infrastructure, etc. We need to chace a lot of these suits and corporate bureaucrats out of the internet feild and back into the kinds of big capital things they they necessary for -- like putting up multi-million dollar wind farms so we are not so dependant on oil.
So from the point of view of you, the little guy, the trick is to find the cheap free service that is being run by a non-profit club or other organization. One example is sdf.lonestar.org, non profit organization offering unix shells, web space, virtual hosting, and other services. It's not free, you have to give donations to get various levels of service. (The basic unix shell and email address is free.) These guys have been around since 1987, and I have a feeling that they will be around for a long time, especially as for-profit companies abandon the area and move to business pursuits that require and justify lots of capital.
Similarly, look at dyndns.org. Those guys are not free, they are running off of your donations. But Dyndns and SDF will be here when Yahoo and Geocities finally kick me off the free email and website, because while it is cheap (not free) to provide those services, there just isn't enough money in it to justify investing people's pensions in the stock to support it. And they are close enough to free that it doesn't matter if you have a job.
In summary, what I see happening here is exactly the opposite of what everyone else here seems to be observing. There is no "end of free." That's just an illusion you get by counting press announcements of bad businesses in their death throes. In reality, I believe more and more people are using non-business services on the net: the numbers of dyndns and SDF users are going up and up, and those organizations are much more permanent than the catalog of nonsense you see on that endoffree site.
The long term trend is that connection fees will come down; bandwidth fees will come down, even if more is not available, but that's ok because as people learn how to use the net they use less bandwidth; and in the end the net will be a collection of various non-profit organizations providing services, with a layer of for-profit high-end services still there, of course, but only for a pretty small percentage.
I think the major strategy on our part is to make sure the net remains a peer-to-peer and not a hierarchical structure. To do this we have two major tools: 1) bind together in organizations like dyndns and sdf to provide what services do need a centralized and large investment, and 2) make sure that cable companies, ISPs, and DSL companies are forced to keep their service symmetrical, i.e., that you can provide services for free from your own machine.
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Re:first post
Oops. I screwed up on my demunging.
:-)
Attention: jowr@sdf.lonestar.org, please stop first post nonsense. -
SDF
SDF has been providing a similar kind of service since 1987
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Also Known as Oh My GoddessThe debate as to whether to name the English translation of the series as "Oh My Goddess" (to keep the obvious joke intact) or "Ah My Goddess" (to keep in sync with the "English" assigned as the name by it's Japanese creator) was a Holy War on USENET for many months. I think that anime fandom is still polarized on this to this day...
For me, the Belldandy/Keichi interplay was nice, but the cute techie goddess Skuld made me a fanatic, to the point where I created my Skuld Shrine with tons of images, stories, and even a Skuld Image search engine! Be warned, this is only for the diehard...
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Just incase you're wondering where Tuvalu is...
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Mirror from 2600 - probably will be gone soonMirrors
http://www.multimania.com/sxpert/decss/
http://www.posexperts.com.pl/peopl e/wrobell/css/
http://logical-solutions.com.au/DeCSS.zip
http://www.sarahandcasey.com/decss/
http://www.warren-wilson.edu/~echerry/dvd
http://people.mn.mediaone.net/bojay/s lashdot/
http://members.tripod.com/donotsueme/
http://donotsueme.homepage.com
http://donotsueme.freeservers.com/
http://www.rz.uni-frankfurt.de/~marsie/
http://www.capital.net/~mazzic
http://danger-island.com/~dav/any.lawyer.who [...]
http://www.fortunecity.com/vi ctorian/parkwood/95/DVD/
http://www.geocit ies.com/ResearchTriangle/Station/2819/index.html
http://www.execpc.com/~unicorn/dvdmirr or.htm
http://members.xoom.com/chapter3/Mamma No.htm
http://www.twistedlogic.com/archive/dvd
http://merlinjim.freeservers.com/dvd/
http://www.visi.com/~adept/liberty
http://mikedotd.penguinpowered.com/deccs
http://www.ct2600.org/2600-DVD.html
http://magic.hurrah.com/~fireball/dvd/
http://homepages.together.net/~ib nzahid/DeCSS.zip
http://people.ne.mediaone.net/dantepsn/
http://mikedotd.penguinpowered.com/decss
http://members.xoom.com/mxpxguy/dvd/
http://vedaa.tripod.com/decss.html
http://www.hackunlimited.com/dvd/
http://hem.fyristorg.com/police/css.htm
http://elknews.netpedia.net/dvd/
http://www.idrive.com/decss/web
http://www.chello.nl/~f.vanwaveren
http://www.clug.com/~vodak/dvd/
http://www.nacs.net/~vodak/dvd/
http://www.wpi.edu/~nassar/dvd/
http://www.glue.umd.edu/~castongj
http://www.geocities.com/cold_dvd/
http://www.projectgamma.com/deccs/
http://members.xoom.com/mogreen/decss/
http://thrash.webjump.com/decss.zip
http://www.angelfire.com/de2/decss/dec ss.htm
http://www.krackdown.com/decss
http://www.fortunecit y.com/skyscraper/motorola/1415/decss.htm
http://chaz.fsgs.com/misc/DvD/
http://www.linuxstart.com/~kv ance/projects/decss.html
http://www.darkkingz.com/DeCSS.zip
http://www.geocities.com/decss_forever/
http://revolution.3-cities.com/~spack/dv d/
http://www.geocities.com/Sili conValley/Software/8762/
http://members.xoom.com/s_o_sam/help.html
http://www.sent.freeserve.co.uk/css -auth.tar.gz
http://home.rmci.net/bert/fuckthelawyers
http://thrash.webjump.com/decss.zip
http://linux.uci.agh.edu.pl/~outlaw/ decss.html
http://debian.mps.krakow.pl/mirror/css/
http://www.mindspring.com/~stonethrower
http://www.geocitie s.com/SiliconValley/Hardware/6188/index.html
http://matt.frogspace.net/css/
ftp://www.spamshack.net/pub/dcss/
http://imezok.tripod.com/Untitled.txt
http://warpedreality.members.easyspace. com/
http://w1.1634.telia.com/~u163400190
/DeCSS.ziphttp://homepages.go.com/homepage s/4/0/3/403_error/
http://members.xoom.com/maud123/Home/C SS.htm
http://hackingdvd.homestead.com
http://www.geocities.com/soho
/studios/6752/index.htmlhttp://www.geocities.com/corporatemin dcontrol
http://darklord.darkthrone.com/user s/smith/dvd/
http://thrash.webjump.com/decss.zip
http://www.twistedlogic.com/archive/dvd
http://www.divisionbyzero.com/decss/
http://kevins.ne.mediaone.net/~kevins/dv d/
http://friko6.onet.pl/war/mkochano/
http://planeta.clix.pt/DJ_AmAzInG/DVD/
http://www.kiss.uni-lj.si/~k4ef1890/css/
http://hackingdvd.homestead.com
http://www.uwm.edu/~zachkarp/index.html
http://www.angelfire.com/punk/freedom/
http://www.worldcity.nl/~frank/dvd
http://members.xoom.com/iamkeenan/master/
http://homepage.interacces s.com/~mycroft/decss/DeCSS.zip
http://members.xoom.com/nyc2600
http://zerosoft.hypermart.net/warez/ DVDcrK.txt
http://members.xoom.com/freedvdinfo/
http://www.geocities.com/Sili conValley/Software/3971/
http://24.114.168.235/public/css.htm
http://fairuse.freeservers.com/
http://jupiter.spaceports.com/~decss
http://www.crosswinds.net/oakland/~ahrendt/Lawyer
s _are_scu m-sucking_pigs [...]http://www.duffbrew.com/decss/
http://www.oblivion.net/~amar/css
http://members.tripod.com/ny2600/
http://www.angelfire.com/ny3/ny2600/
http://www.angelfire.com/electronic/decs s/
http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/dvd.htm
http://theannux.homestead.com/decss.html
http://members.aol.com/elktonstalkers/CS S/
http://pages.hotbot.com/edu/silex/mir ror.html
http://budsmoker.com/sites/decss/
http://www.geocities.com/watice2/
http://home.att.net
/~phreakonaleash/ccs_mirror--screw_the_feds/http://www.azillionmonkeys.c om/qed/recess_for_css.html
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/DeCSS
http://supportyourlocal2600.homestead.co m/
http://www.angelfire.com/pe/sh3/deccs/
http://www.angelfire.com/el ectronic/icebandits/dvd.html
http://killer.radom.net/~shoggoth/dvd.ht ml
http://www3.50megs.com/dvd4free/