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The prehistory of cyberspace: how BBSes paved the way for the Web.


In the antediluvian '80s, when mass participation in the Internet was still but a gleam in Al Gore's eye, an enthusiastic network of avant-garde geeks was exploring an embryonic cyberspace. By the hundreds of thousands, they created in miniature the precursors of the vast communication system that today envelops our social and professional lives.

They were called bulletin board systems, or BBSes: communities that allowed users to dial in at crawling modem speeds--usually only one at a time--and exchange private e-mails, public messages, and software files. The first of the boards appeared in 1979, when a snowstorm provoked hobbyists Ward Christensen (person) Ward Christensen - The inventor of XMODEM and of the BBS. Ward did physics in college and programmed mainframes for IBM.

Ward and friend Randy Suess set up their BBS on first on 1978-02-16 in Chicago.
 and Randy Suess to hack together something they called EBBS, the Computerized Bulletin Board System, for their Chicago-area computer users group. By the mid-'90s, the BBS (1) (Bulletin Board System) A computer system used as an information source and forum for a particular interest group. They were widely used in the U.S.  scene was all but defunct: The Internet had siphoned off its early-adopter members like a newborn insect devouring its mother.

The all-but-lost story of those early years is exhumed Exhumed may refer to:
  • Exhumation.
  • Exhumed, a first-person shooter available for the PC, PlayStation and Sega Saturn, also known as Powerslave.
  • Exhumed, a deathgrind band from San Jose.
 in Jason Scott's BBS: The Documentary, an eight-part, five-and-a-half-hour, three-DVD history cobbled cob·ble 1  
n.
1. A cobblestone.

2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded.

3. cobbles See cob coal.

tr.
 together from some 200 interviews with the people who ran, used, and covered the world of the boards. Rarely present in BBS himself, Scott stitches together scraps of his subjects' recollections into eight topical narrative collages focusing on different aspects of BBS culture, from the quixotic quix·ot·ic   also quix·ot·i·cal
adj.
1. Caught up in the romance of noble deeds and the pursuit of unreachable goals; idealistic without regard to practicality.

2.
 struggle to make a buck off the boards to the fierce rivalries between the BBS art groups, teams of graphically gifted kids who competed to produce the most dazzling images working from a palate of clunky colored blocks.

Among the more interesting tales is that of FidoNet and its frenetic architect, Tom Jennings. In 1984, when only a handful of academic computer scientists were aware of (let alone using) the Internet, Jennings created software that allowed BBS users to send e-mail and discussion board messages across the country and, later, around the world. By modern standards, it was slow. At the time, it seemed pretty rapid. Member boards--numbering more than 35,000 at the network's peak--would dial in periodically to a regional hub, which would then relay messages to other hubs and, finally, to their destinations.

"It really was written on explicitly anarchist principles," explains Jennings, who would later found the queer/anarchist/punk zine Pronounced "zeen." See Webzine and e-zine.  Homocore. "We work better without top-down control; we work better cooperatively." Many assume that, because the Internet grew out of the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency, it could only have been created by government. Yet FidoNet-which still exists-proved that dedicated amateurs, mostly working on shoestring budgets, could cobble together a globe-spanning network in their spare time.

It's easy to forget, now that the vast majority of Americans are online and the phrase "we met on the Internet" need not be uttered with a blush and a mumble 1. mumble - Said when the correct response is too complicated to enunciate, or the speaker has not thought it out. Often prefaces a longer answer, or indicates a general reluctance to get into a long discussion. , how empowering it was suddenly to come upon a new world untethered Unattached to any data or power source by wire or fiber; in other words: wireless. Contrast with tethered.  from geography. People have always found ways to exploit new technologies to form communities, from science fiction aficionados circulating mimeographed fanzines to early telegraph operators chatting away in Morse code between official messages. But BBSes ratcheted up the scale on which such communities could be organized.

For many in the '80s and early '90s-isolated gays, abashed alcoholics, or just disaffected teenagers--finding that first board was a dial-in to Damascus experience. It also afforded a first taste of the online world's empowering anonymity. A shy kid could craft a new identity, even become a respected system operator.

The episode of BBS that focuses on the darker side of the scene--hackers, crackers, phone phreaks, and software pirates--opens with a monologue from a portly port·ly  
adj. port·li·er, port·li·est
1. Comfortably stout; corpulent. See Synonyms at fat.

2. Archaic Stately; majestic; imposing.



[From port5.
 aging biker called Bootleg with a great frizzy friz·zy  
adj. friz·zi·er, friz·zi·est
Tightly curled; frizzly.



frizzi·ly adv.
 white beard and long hair, who sits astride a·stride  
adv.
1. With a leg on each side: riding astride.

2. With the legs wide apart.

prep.
1. On or over and with a leg on each side of.

2.
 a great black Harley taking drags from a cigarette. "Whether people are called bikers or whether they're called hackers, it's the same type of freedom we're talking about," he explains.

The online world now feels a bit less like the open highway, a bit more like a suburban street: For most people it is just another part of ordinary life, not an escape from it. By reviving this nearly forgotten history, BBS offers the vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us)
1. acting in the place of another or of something else.

2. occurring at an abnormal site.


vi·car·i·ous
adj.
1.
 thrill of that first discovery of virgin territory--and hints that, behind the easy familiarity of cyberspace, it may still be out there.

For several years in his adolescence, Assistant Editor. Julian Sanchez. (jsanchez@reason.com) administered a BBS called Surreality, where he answered to the name Lord Cardboard.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:BBS: The Documentary
Author:Sanchez, Julian
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Video Recording Review
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:728
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