PoiZoN BBS Sysop chiming in. I ran the BBS on a free phone line I found in my childhood bedroom. I alerted the phone company and a tech spent a day trying to untangle it, but gave up at the end of his shift. He even stopped by to tell me it wouldn’t be fixed.
I didn’t know the phone number, so I bought a Caller ID box, hooked it to my home line, and phoned home. It wasn’t long before every BBS in town had a listing for it.
Ha, same! On a TRS-80 Color, nonetheless. But I think I used four times, because no one else in the country had a BBS at the time (small city in Latin America).
It took a couple of years until it would catch on, and by then 1200 and 2400 bps were already the norm - thankfully!
My first modem (from 1987) was 300 baud, but it could be used in a split mode called 75/1200.
Before that I used 50 baud systems in the military as well as civil telex systems.
Ah, the good old days. I remember dialing up local BBSes with QMODEM.
AT&C1&D2S36=7DT*70,,,5551212
PoiZoN BBS Sysop chiming in. I ran the BBS on a free phone line I found in my childhood bedroom. I alerted the phone company and a tech spent a day trying to untangle it, but gave up at the end of his shift. He even stopped by to tell me it wouldn’t be fixed.
I didn’t know the phone number, so I bought a Caller ID box, hooked it to my home line, and phoned home. It wasn’t long before every BBS in town had a listing for it.
Man that tech was cool and did you a solid.
1 reply →
Ha, same! On a TRS-80 Color, nonetheless. But I think I used four times, because no one else in the country had a BBS at the time (small city in Latin America).
It took a couple of years until it would catch on, and by then 1200 and 2400 bps were already the norm - thankfully!