in Musings, X-Geek

Fifteen Years With UNIX and the Internets

My earlier post regarding my history in Raleigh also brings up another important milestone: this month marks fifteen years I’ve been using the Internet. My first email address was an EOS one at N.C. State’s College of Engineering and I got it August 1992. I spent my early time online downloading bootleg copies of OS/2 from the New Mexico State University’s Hobbes OS/2 collection. Apologies to all the schmucks playing nettrek who’s latency suffered as a result. 🙂 (Apologies also to IBM. Hey, I was young and foolish.)

I remember my first experience with the EOS lab. My classmate buddies and I were sending each other zephyr messages while the instructor was drilling everyone on basic UNIX commands. That may have been the exact moment when I stopped paying attention to engineering classes!

This month marks fifteen years as a UNIX user, come to think of it, but it wasn’t my first experience with a multi-user system. Before State, I was the proud co-sysop of a home BBS system, the Basement BBS, run on an 8 Mhz 286 PC with PCBoard BBS software and DoubleDOS multitasking software. My brother Jeff and I scraped up $350 for the board’s first hard drive: a whopping 30 megabyte, boat anchor-sized RLL hard drive. Now you can buy a terabyte drive (that’s over 1,000,000,000 MB) for the same cost.

It was a pretty sweet BBS for its day. Quite advanced. In its heyday, the board had over 300 registered users and two phone lines. It also had a super-fast 19.2Kpbs FastComm modem (1987 price, roughly $500), when most other boards were happy with 2400 baud. I’m frankly not sure where we got all the money, being that I was a senior in high school and Jeff a freshman. Jeff, I, and our brother Allen spent far too many late nights messing with that computer, that’s for sure. The sysop experience translated very nicely to the duties of a sysadmin, though. In a way I can say I have 20 years as a sysadmin.

I’ve had my current email address for at least ten years, I reckon, and I’ve got the spam to prove it. Still, looking back over that time makes me think that broadband really has stagnated lately. Seen any whiz-bang applications lately? Where are the super-fast speeds that will open up now undreamed-of uses for this astonishing resource? I think if we netizens don’t watch out, the world will leave us behind while it defines what the next twenty years will look like.

Comments are closed.