Steve Deckert
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I don't know if any of you remember or were into Bulletin Boards (BBS) in the 1980's back when dial-up modems were 1200 and 2400 bps! For me it was a real thrill to have been exposed to it right away when the first IBM PC computers came out. I ran a BBS myself, in Peoria IL called Opus which I wrote a lot of software for. I was a "Sysop" as they called it, and had many friends around the area who were also BBS operators... it was an exclusive club and a hell of a lot of fun!
After a few years of running the BBS on floppy disks, we upgraded to a 20 megabit hard drive from Segate that cost $720. That got things rolling much better and eventually it became necessary to install a second phone line. I remember well the buzz I got every time the phone rang as I ran into the office to watch the ASCII screen log-in sequence to see who it was!
(as a side note, the biggest hard drive you could get after a couple years of the Senate 20 meg, was an 80 meg drive. You could have several drives, and being a unix based system we could stack many hard drives, but virtually no one had enough money to create a 1-gigabyte hard drive.) Also for those who are too young to remember, and think todays computers make things happen faster, they don't. Things were faster in 1990 with a fraction of the memory and a fraction of the processor speed. The reason it was faster is lack of graphics and superior software. High efficiency software. Programs were single executable files that were less than 100Kbytes. Today a firkin flashlight app is 28 megabytes. The bureaucracy of todays software is so pathetic it's just pathetic.)
It wasn't long before we figured out how to share message bases between all the various BBS in the area by having one BBS call the next and upload all the data -- but always within the local calling area. By this method we were able to bounce messages from one location to another without encountering long-distance phone charges. This was later developed into what we called ECHO MAIL. It grew to a nation-wide network that we called FIDO NET, and most BBS operators were ham radio operators who switched over to computers.
I remember how we divided into NETS and NODES to transmit packets around the world into Europe. So this network of BBS operators in less than 5 years created FIDO NET and shared message boards between all the BBS in the system around the world. I think when I quit it was a NET/NODE list of 270,000 BBS around the world. For example, if you logged onto my BBS in Peoria IL, and selected the international message board, your message would make it's way to Europe in 3 days and the response would make it's way back in 3 days.
We wrote scrips to dial and hack into Illinois Southern University and others to download real-time information, such as national news and weather. We would then post it in real time on our BBS systems for our local users.
No BBS on this network had more than a few hundred users, all were free to users and fully funded by the Sysops.
For those who don't know -- a BBS is a general message board, virtually exactly like this forum. FIDO NET was all the affiliated message boards in the world connected together via packet-sharing through dial-up phone service. It started at 1200 bps (baud rate) and finished at 56000 bps.
For those ISU professors and Al Gore who claim to have invented the internet... I don't think so. It was ham radio operators and little guys like myself who made that happen.
So with that back history, I remember after my days as a Sysop ended due to being entangled in a thing called life which is somewhat spontaneous, I shifted my attention to audio. After I was good and into Audio as my new hobby, I remember sitting on my back porch after having just build my very first tube amp and getting it to actually play music 30 days later, thinking how cool it would be to have a BBS just for audiophiles!!!! At the time it would have been impossible because there weren't enough people "connected" through the FIDO NET and the "internet" was not yet formed.
I am SO thrilled to be able to sit here with all of you and realize that that dream on the back porch has come true and then some!! At the time the idea of becoming a high-end audio company was only a fantasy. This forum is exactly the international BBS I fantasized about, only 100,000 times faster and with graphics capabilities I couldn't comprehend at dial-up speeds and with monitors that were only 640 x 480 at the time.
Thank all of you for making this concept so fruitful! And God Bless technology!
Decware is a well-balanced blend of technology and old-school kick-ass result-oriented make it happen methodology that just works.
Steve
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