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Online Services: The Internet Before the Internet

jfruh writes "The Slashdot readership is probably split pretty evenly into two groups. There are those for whom full-on Internet access has been available for their entire computer-using lives, and then there are those who wanted to use the Net from home before 1991, and who therefore had to use a BBS or an online service. Here's a tour of some of these services, including Prodigy, Compuserve, and of course AOL. This should be a nostalgic trip for the oldsters among us, and a history lesson for Gen Y readers."

7 of 387 comments (clear)

  1. I had full-on internet access when I was a kid... by russotto · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...well, my dad did. So, I had the experience of playing the "Star Trek" game on a printing terminal connected via an acoustic coupler. It was the Arpanet back then, and not the Internet, and we wore an onion on our belt, a big yellow one, because that was the style.

    What was I saying? Oh, right, "full on" internet access wasn't so good in the days before BBSing was popular.

  2. Ah, BBSs by black6host · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I ran one, great times. Blazing 300 baud modem. By the time I was done we were up to 56K. I could probably still tell you the connection speed based on the squawks during the initial connection session.

    I'm still very nostalgic about those times as I was part of them, and contributed to them. My BBS was free, and wasn't half bad. Of course Fido Net really gave you that sense of being in communication with the rest of the world. Amazing stuff!

  3. Re:Oldster? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Egads, I'm not even an oldster, they're too young! I had to follow the link to remember a mention of LORD. And 14.4 modems were the 3rd or 4th upgrade for me, after having the wonderful experience of an new 300 baud modem. That would be after coding my first game, in assembly, on an Atari 800. We played things like Zork, Wizardry, Hack, and, heck, there was some star based game on DECs we used to play, although the name escapes me now. For that matter, there were an entire sequence of very popular Infocom games (I admit I still have them in a box upstairs) that I played, and the original D&D games in amazing 2 bit color (ok, perhaps only my graphics card was monochrome, I don't recall) But I do recall FIDONET as a new wondrous thing (hey, if we're mentioning BBS's, might as well mention the first networked system) OK, nostalgia satisfied, time to go back to my VCR and reel to reel.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  4. Revisionism. by queazocotal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There seems to be a general assumption by many that the internet was predestined to win out over these other pre-existing nets.

    It wasn't.
    Things like the much derided Al Gore 'invention of the internet' - he was instrumental in securing some funding for non-educational use.

    If the existing services that were taking off when the internet came along from behind had gotten their acts together - and gotten for example inter-provider mail working, the internet in its present form may not have happened.

    It could so easily have been that if you wanted to make a page to advertise your business, it wasn't a case of simply sign up to one of the many thousands of hosting providers - but three or four large companies dominate.

  5. Re:How I first got introduced to the Internet by FishOuttaWater · · Score: 5, Informative

    He said terminal, not modem.

  6. All the real action was on BBSes. by conspirator23 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The REAL prototype for today's Internet can be found on the single-line, amateur, free Bulletin Board Systems of that era. You won't find anything comparable to the steaming, frothing orgy of human id we have today in the archives of those online services. European software piracy boards? Check. White supremacists? Check. Crappy low-fi porn? Check. Illegal seizures by federal authorities? Check. The hijacking of discussions by socially maladjusted teenage boys? Check? The ham radio loving middle-aged pedos who stalked them? Check.

  7. Re:Oldster? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Funny

    How many times are you going to reply with this silly joke?

    Excuse me, Mary Sunshine, but this was my first time.

    And who appointed you the joke police? I was getting +5 Funny mods when you were still jerking off to the Power Puff girls.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.