Frank -

You of the "lost generation" are definitely the frontiersmen of our domain...

My first e-mail was on an ATT Unix system in 1977,  as all UUNET addresses were in those days, you had to guess (or know) the intermediate relays that would get from here to there, off the machine, much less off campus.   I hit LANL in 1981 and we all had lanl.gov addys (mine sas, go figure) which meant *most* UUNET folks could get to me with minimal effort (and vice-versa)...  as I remember it, virtually every university (and military and scientific org) had a DNS entry by mid 80s, facilitating it all. An added level of indirection (degree of freedom) as the solution often is.

I was an early adopter of AFS (as well as the MIT suite of IP-based toolkits) in the 80s.  AFS was the perfect proof by example that (as I remember it) lead to NFS.

A *heck* of a lot has happened in the last 50 years... (UNIX Epoch?)  and it is a strange brew of open-source, academic, big tech, big gov, and scrappy entrepreneurs...

On 6/7/22 5:58 PM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
I had a CMU Andrew account.  You're all pikers. Long live AFS.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Tue, Jun 7, 2022, 9:41 AM Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote:


    Glen wrote:

    Just yesterday, I saw an email post to a math forum from someone
    with an aol.com <http://aol.com> suffix. I thought "Who in hell
    still uses AOL?" Ha! Now I've got a bad case of FOMO. But I'll be
    damned if I'm joining yet another Discord server ... maybe next
    week.

    I was recently back in touch with a high-school chum. She was
    quite proud of her aol.com <http://aol.com> account and I didn't
    have the heart to tell her how much the olde garde who had been on
    some version of the internet before Al Gore (and AOL and
    Compuserve) invented it considered AOL users to be an
    embarrassment.  And then there are the WELL (whole earth
    'lectronic link) folks who were (in?) ordinately proud of their
    Bay Area BBS system that hosted thousands (tens of?) in the 80s. 
    I still have friends who use their well.com <http://well.com>
    addys proudly.

    I am still a little mad/dismissive of AOL (and SciAm) because we
    did an early hypermedia "proof of concept" for SciAm (student
    project at LANL) and they blithely were (in the background)
    signing like a 10 year deal with AOL to provide that service for
    their customers.   For that whole decade (into the 2000s) I think
    Scientific American did not even have a website (or when they did
    it was served through AOL).   We did all the mockup on a NeXT
    machine which was a little unfair and/or showed things in too good
    of a light really.   Maybe what AOL did (pretty lame BTW) was
    actually a good LCD (least common denominator) for *their*
    customers and many who were dialing in at 1200bps on an early
    Winderz or even DOS machine.

    I was an early patron of the first ISP in Santa Fe
    (StudioX/nets.com <http://nets.com>) with Roadrunner.com and
    several others coming in on their heels for my first private
    e-mail/web address, but let it go when (on their 10th anniversary)
    they *said* they were selling/passing us all off to one of the
    others and becoming nothing but a boutique web design/services
    shop.   Apparently enough of their customers raised a ruckus
    because after I'd moved to ABQ based Southwest Cyberport (thus
    swcp.com <http://swcp.com>) they retracted the threat and kept
    nets.com <http://nets.com> running (through whomever bought them
    out)...

    I do sometimes covet a well.com <http://well.com> address, but not
    enough to actually sign up for it (seems they *still* offer new
    well.com <http://well.com> addresses?). https://www.well.com/join/
    $150/year!


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