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In article , Mike Coslo
writes: Len Over 21 wrote: In article , Mike Coslo writes: Len Over 21 wrote: In article , Mike Coslo (jumping in on the Sermon On The Antenna Mount trolling) writes: Awww...poor Mike got his ego perceived as stepped on? Absolutely not! I was complementing you on something. You are pretty good at this. Those replies "just seem to write themselves..." :-) About two decades ago I started computer-modem communications. Those days were something by comparison. Phone cradle modems and slow as molasses. Can't say as I'm all that sorry they are gone. In the beginning of BBSing, everyone was limited by modems which, in 1970 had 300 WPM as "fast" rates. Ten years later they had gotten past 1200 WPM. By 1990 modems could go better than 28,800 WPM. It was relatively easy for the computer to keep up on single-user lines. For 30 MHz clock computers, some better software and interrupt-handlers could handle two dozen callers simultaneously at BBS terminals. I got access to the RCA corporate net in 1972 and generally used the 100 WPM Model 33 TTY terminals. Good for moderate character-plot "graphics" in black on white paper. Saved lots of engineering time once one knew how to program in FORTRAN. No inkjet printers then (Sanders Associates was just beginning the first ones) so we just pasted printouts on backing paper and xerocopied them. :-) IBM's ECAP was king in 1972 for circuit analysis and it was good. Don Pedersen's group at Berkeley was thinking about the first SPICE (based on several other time-domain programs such as Ohio State's OSUCAD and more), but had not yet thunk up the acronym SPICE. RCA used LECAP, a frequency- domain-only short version of ECAP and it was terrific for the limited user storage of 256K space. :-) The first HP pocket scientific calculators were on the market (HP-35) and the programmable (!) version (HP-45) was just being packaged up. At an NADC visit in '72 I talked to an H-P rep whose territory included Bell Labs...the Labs had ordered 700 (!) to be GIVEN to staff. RCA corporate arranged a bulk order staff purchase for selected employees to buy the $395 calculator for $200. Three of us at EASD in Van Nuys (myself, Ken Adam, another in EW) got reimbursed for the difference...a relief since all three were constantly pestered by other staff wanting to "borrow" them. :-) I've seen and met lots of discussors and just dis-cussers in person via the BBS gatherings. Yeah, me too. The first BBS I joined was Lynzie Flynn's "Motherboard," in December, 1984. A social BBS, the "Motherboard" had monthly Gatherings of subscribers, usually at the popular 945h Aerosquadron (restaurant) at Van Nuys airport. "Talk Channel" BBS soon opened, followed by "KBBS" and all had fun competing for subscribers and social events. I was on "The Ledge" which sysop Joe Sheppard made into an international network (!) once the higher-speed modems got really fast. "US Pompeii" was networked with "Pompeii" in Holland and run by my Talk Channel buddy Zippy Manus (managed by husband Stan Manus). Regular Gatherings at the Manus house in Hollywood Hills and there were two large Gatherings combining the Motherboard and US Pompeii at Warner Center (300+ in attendance). One of the ten oldest BBSs in the USA was "Mog-Ur's EMS" (for Electronic Message System) run by double Emmy-winning Tom Tcimpidis. At least three amateur radio oriented BBSs existed in the northern Los Angeles region but none of them got large before the Internet went public in 1991. With the advent of the Internet, all the BBSs (all subscriber funded) had to close due to competition. Lynzie's Motherboard was sold after owner became Lynzie Flynn Zimmerman, Talk Channel's prime owner Gary died, and the KBBS sysop took his computers and subscriber funds and skipped town! :-) Three Motherboard/Pompeii competitor BBSs started up very late, notably Karen's "Modem Butterfly," all on the social themes but those could not hold up financially when the Internet grew. How folks write here is indicative of how they really feel, up close and personal. :-) You are 100 percent correct. One gets further insight by private messaging on BBSs. Users think they are absolutely private, but every terminal software written allows sysops to constantly monitor communications live. I was co-sysop on two of the BBSs. Some get VERY into their computer personna. One guy on Talk Channel had two subscriptions, one for himself and one for his "girlfriend" (non-existant) who also "wrote public messages." :-) There existed some feuds and weirdos on the BBSs which makes this newsgroup look pale by comparison. I had the displeasure of being in the group that "fired" one user who was on all known social BBSs in the immediate area, causing trouble for most other subscribers. A real closet sociopath. One was a real attorney who adopted a completely opposite personna of an outgoing, rather outrageous person named "Floyd," but done in humor, not spite. Tsk, tsk, tsk, Mike. Your words in other messages betray you... I'm sorry you feel that way. It is totally irrelevant whether anyone is "liked" or not. 100 percent correct. That doesn't change the fact that I do like you. Anyone "looking for love" on either BBSs or the Internet is deluded or too imaginative. I say that from observation even though I know at least four local couples (besides sysop Lynzie) who met and got married via BBSs. It happens on the Internet, too, but with mixed results. Everyone is subject to their ability to write words for that is solely how anyone first "meets" them. The beginner at computer-modem communications tends to get lost in their personal screen which contains only the words of the other person. They want to interpret what they read into their own thoughts and expectations. Only slightly better than monotonic telegraphy, the words-on-a-screen have nothing else for normal social clues, no tone of voice, no body language, no expressions to read. Combine that with those who are intensly competititive (or want to assume superiority) and you get the Flame Wars where winning message points is the ultimate game. The time and distance displacement afforded by computer-modem comms has an inherent "safety" feature for those who want to be "ruler" (in any way). They can toss aside their social inhibitions and be as outrageous or superior or whatever in relative safety. Sometimes those slip off the edge and start getting libelous. One case that many have seen is the special angry home page done by one of those here who went beyond the bounds of propriety. :-) Some are just too righteous for words and Their words must be taken as the Ultimate Truth...regardless of the subject. Irritation (using that term very kindly) by those with such righteousness at not being respected-for-Their-existance-as-Superior will result in all kinds of nastygrams sent, regardless of the subject thread. :-) This is computer-modem comms and the in-person social rules don't apply here. If you do not wish them to apply to you, they don't have to. You are the master of what you say and do in person or in a newsgroup. Yes and no. :-) The time-and-distance separation of computer networking, plus the vast spread of the Internet internationally, can give some a sort of god-hood on their righteousness (and using themselves as role models for all of homo sap.) As I said, some fall off the edge and go totally libelous in other venues. Those who've not seen or experienced such a build-up of intense outrage will be influenced by the one-sided libel...and then the victim is unfairly judged. In most browsers, a simple Return/Enter key will skip to the next message. Some newsgroupies can't seem to find that key. :-) - Mike KB3EIA - Kiki-Bueno-3-Encarta-Insipid-Autogyro hmmm, that's beginning to sound like some of the spam I've been getting lately! 8^) :-) BTASE (But That's Another Story Entirely) but me, too. This has gotten off the subject of phonetic alphabets. Most threads do that, given enough Flame Warriors chomping on their bits ready to do message battle to the death, unable to skip a single message. :-) NATO came up with the original "international" phonetic alphabet and released it in 1955 to all members. A lot of thought and quite a bit of study and research went into that to fit a lot of the western languages of NATO members. Some communicators want-desire-need-demand "special" jargon for Their way of doing things. Human territorial imperative, their "turf." English-speaking radio hums seem to think that English as she are spoke is "international" just by using capitol city names. They don't realize that such capitol city names are NOT pro- nounced or spelled as they are in English. :-) The ICAO decided that standard international spoken language for air traffic control shall be English. That was in the mid-1950s when, coincidentally, the surviving air carriers mostly came from English-speaking countries (as well as the aircraft makers). Just the same, the ICAO adopted the NATO phonetic alphabet as part of that spoken language regulation. It works. Even if some public safety organizations use different phonetics such as "One Adam Twelve." :-) |
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