(The documentary is well-worth obtaining and watching, btw.......rf)

How Humble BBS Begat Wired World
By Kim Zetter

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67776,00.html

02:00 AM Jun. 08, 2005 PT

Remember when there was no e-mail or instant messaging? Reaching out to
touch someone digitally once meant you had to dial into a phone line through
your Trash-80 PC, type a message, post it to an online bulletin board and
then wait weeks -- or more often months -- to get a response.

Before America Online, Friendster, forums and blogs, geeks communicated with
one another in a clunky and pedestrian way that was the precursor to all
subsequent forms of online communication.

It was called a bulletin board system, or BBS, and was essentially a virtual
living room where people hooked up remotely to chat, exchange freeware or
play computer games, albeit at a really slow speed.

Anyone nostalgic for those halcyon days can now thank digital archivist and
filmmaker Jason Scott for BBS: The Documentary, a five-and-a-half-hour paean
to the era when computers were named Stacy and Lisa, and tech loyalists
fought bitter battles over the superiority of Ataris to Amigas.

Filled with interviews of the founders of the first bulletin board, the
creator of Fido software, internet patriarch Vint Cerf and many others, the
surprisingly engrossing documentary grew out of a project Scott began in
1998 when he started collecting text files posted to BBSes over the years
and published them at textfiles.com. He just wanted to preserve a bit of
tech history that meant a lot to his teen years, but he was soon inundated
with BBS artifacts that other people sent in.

BBSes were the blogs of their day and began sprouting up in the late '70s,
after the appearance of the Hayes modem, with names like Aladdin's Lamp, The
Puzzle Palace and Leprechaun Heaven, each one devoted to a different topic.
Users and system operators, or sysops, compiled directories of BBS names,
phone numbers and their topics. Scott culled the names he could find and
composed a list that has now grown to 105,000.

When he posted the list online, it gave old BBS users a blast from their
past.

"They would type in their name on Google and here would come up the name of
a BBS that they had run 20 years ago when they were 13," Scott said. "I had
a guy tell me that he was dating a girl and she asked him, 'What was the
Wizard Castle?' It was the name of a BBS he had run for only a few months in
1983."

People began sending Scott personal essays reminiscing about their life on
the boards. So Scott, who studied film in school, decided to make a
documentary. The four-year project, begun in 2001, was just released as a
three-DVD set containing eight episodes and bonus material. Fans can see
various aspects of the BBS story, such as the birth of boards, the creation
of FidoNet, the appearance of online porn and the digital art medium called
ANSI art.

The first BBS was launched in 1978 by Ward Christensen, an IBM mainframe
programmer who developed Xmodem, and Randy Suess. It was born during a
snowstorm.

When a blizzard struck Chicago where Christensen lived, he couldn't go to
work one day, and he decided to fiddle with an idea he and Suess had
discussed for their computer club, the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyist
Exchange, or CACHE. The plan was to replace the group's answering machine
that announced meetings with a computerized message board allowing people to
leave messages on the board using their computer. It took Christensen two
weeks to write the software while Suess assembled the hardware.

The board launched Feb. 16, 1978, as CBBS, for the Computerized Bulletin
Board System, using a 300-baud modem. Only one caller could connect to the
board at a time (eventually someone developed software to allow multiple
phone lines to connect to a board at once), and the system could transfer
only about five words per second. But it was a hit.

Months later, Christensen and Suess published an article about the board in
Byte magazine and distributed free copies of the BBS software. BBSes began
popping up everywhere, but callers to them were scarce since few people
owned modems yet.

Within two years, 200 to 300 BBSes flourished, and eventually more than
150,000 existed in North America at the peak of their popularity.

Unlike the nascent internet, whose use was confined at the time to
researchers and the military, BBSes were populist to their core, available
to anyone who could afford the hefty $3,000 to $10,000 price tag for a
computer. All it took to establish a BBS and become your own sysop was to
install the software on a home PC with a modem and connect it to a phone
line that remote users could dial into and leave messages.

On the surface, the BBS was, perhaps, a ridiculous idea. Conversations took
an eon to unfold. And a game of digital chess or Battleship played on the
boards would take days to progress because a player had to wait a day or two
after making a move for an opponent to dial in and take a turn.

Tom Jennings, creator of the Fido protocol that allowed hundreds of BBSes to
network with each other, recalls describing the concept to friends and
getting blank stares.

"With this program you'd have on your computer you'd dial a number, you'd
enter your name and password ... and then you could go to the messages so
you could read the messages. And then you could add one," Jennings told
friends. "And if you waited long enough, and I had to say months, other
people would have called in and left messages. And after a few months you
would have a conversation.

"And they're like, why?... It was unbelievably stupid."

And yet more and more people signed on. Scott said "BBS" became a code word
for passage to a revolutionary underground society.

"If you mentioned the term 'BBS' to someone and no spark of recognition
appeared in their eyes," one user told Scott in the film, "you said screw
them, they're not worth your time."

A number of sysops interviewed in the film described watching the lights on
the computer next to their bed flash at night as they lay in the dark and
feeling awe that technology had brought the world to their bedroom.

Often the information superhighway came at a hefty price, however, because
cross-country calls to BBSes not in the area could cost $1 a minute, leading
to $600 phone charges for heavy users who frequented half a dozen or more
boards daily.

Lasting friendships were forged, and marriages were made and broken, as the
online medium offered new ways for people to meet and cheat. The boards also
saved lives.

One woman told a sysop that finding his board led her to abandon a plan to
commit suicide, while closeted gays expressed relief at finding alternative
lifestyle boards for communities they never knew existed.

Although board communication could be laborious, its nature changed in 1983
with the appearance of Fido, a protocol that allowed BBSes to communicate
with one another to create a FidoNet for wider distribution of messages.
Instead of posting a message to just one board, a user could post a message
and have it fan out to hundreds or thousands of boards at a time.

In 1984, FidoNet had only 132 nodes; by 1995, the number had grown to more
than 35,000 worldwide.

"FidoNet really felt like it was changing the world. And it was," Scott
said. "The idea that you could send a message and it would filter out to a
thousand BBSes within a day or two was intoxicating to a person. It's easy
now when people can send messages instantaneously. But at the time nobody
thought this was something that was ever going to fall into the hands of
regular people."

The ills that hit the internet later struck BBSes early -- from innocuous
but annoying flame wars to pornography and pirated software, which drew the
attention of law enforcement and critics who hated the free-for-all nature
of the boards.

"I found quotes online ... a person was talking to a librarian at a BBS
convention and the librarian said it would be a lot easier for librarians if
these BBSes would just go away," Scott said. "Here's all this stuff going
out and nobody knows where it's from. People are transferring information
willy-nilly and there's no protection. You could see all of this fear."

And there arose a philosophical schism between free and fee-based boards,
leading purists to accuse the fee-based boards of violating the open-source
spirit of the community.

"That's where the real fights started," Scott said. "For a certain group of
people ... the minute you started charging money, you lost them. You made it
uncool."

Around 1995, just as the mention of BBSes on an episode of Law & Order
signaled the phenomenon's entry into pop culture, the reign of boards came
to a crashing end. That's when the internet took hold and, like vinyl
records and 8-track tapes, bulletin boards quickly faded to obscurity. Some
BBS owners morphed their systems into the first internet service providers
but most disappeared. Only a few hundred dialup BBSes still exist, Scott
said.

Now he laughs at the people who feared the BBS.

"I just say to them, oh yeah, BBSes went away. I hope you're happy with what
you have now," Scott said. "And let's see what comes next."

End of story



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to