> On Jun 18, 2020, at 5:53 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> On 6/18/20 1:19 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
>>
>
>> Nice. Yes, airfight and any number of other multi-user games -- a
>> thing made popular by PLATO and possibly originated there. There is
>> a running PLATO system around, see www.cyber1.org for details. Its
>> users normally use a terminal emulators, but real terminals can be
>> connected to it and a few are around that are set up that way.
>
> In my collection, I've got a 5.25" (360K) floppy sent to me back in the
> day that has the PLATO software for the IBM PC. Other than filing the
> disk away, I never thought to boot it and see what was there.
>
> Still have the disk, though. I don't imagine that it's particularly rare.
I don't know. My PLATO experience predates the PC. Are you sure that's what
it is? The later PLATO terminals (starting with the "PLATO V" one, in fact)
had local execution capability, and some of them included a floppy drive for
local program load. Those would be essentially PLATO software executing on the
terminal rather that at the host. If so, recovering that information may turn
up something not previously preserved.
If it is indeed a PLATO terminal implemented as PC software, you could hook it
up to Cyber1.
paul