Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
Nick Andre wrote to All <=-
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT
Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS,
Searchlight and MajorBBS.
PCBoard might've made my list if it wasn't so shoved down my
throat by others in the 90's. But I remember it had a very large plugin/mod scene.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
I had a PCBoard license also, and that was the last thing I ran on dial-up, but I always felt like that system was overcomplicated in its setup and took vast amounts of time to customize.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOTProBoard was nice, PCBoard too.
Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS,
Searchlight and MajorBBS. PCBoard might've made my list if it
wasn't so shoved down my throat by others in the 90's. But I
remember it had a very large plugin/mod scene. I really wanted AdeptX/Orion to take off... lightyears ahead of its time in design
and potential on OS/2 but ended up just an unreliable buggy POS.
i only played around with pcboard but i think you agree with me on this
in that there have been some really amazing modded pcboard bbses.
Nick Andre wrote to All <=-
I really wanted AdeptX/Orion to take off... lightyears ahead of its
time in design and potential on OS/2 but ended up just an unreliable
buggy POS.
Nick Andre wrote to All <=-
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
I loved Searchlight. I co-sysoped a board called "Just Say Yes" in 1989 tha ran a cool lightbar menu that was ahead of its time.
I also really liked Maximus and if you spent the time to configure it like I did, you could make it look good.
As for modern software I do really like Talisman (which I run now) as it's configurable, supports everything and includes everything.
I dabbled with Oblivion/2, VisionX and similar "scene" packages, too but th were too niche and didn't do as much as PCBoard or ProBoard.
PCBoard might've made my list if it wasn't so shoved down my
throat by others in the 90's. But I remember it had a very large plugin/mod scene.
PCBoard for me.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
I would have to say WWIV followed by VBBS.
I had a PCBoard license also, and that was the last thing I ran on dial-up, but I always felt like that system was overcomplicated in its setup and too vast amounts of time to customize.
TBBS I think was the only software in the world that needed a freaking compiler whenever you wrote menus, but you had a nice VHS instructional video.
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
Nick Andre wrote to Dan Clough <=-
PCBoard might've made my list if it wasn't so shoved down my
throat by others in the 90's. But I remember it had a very large plugin/mod scene.
PCBoard for me.
Big scene in your area in the heyday?
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.
PCBoard might've made my list if it wasn't so shoved down my throat by others in the 90's. But I remember it had a very large plugin/mod
scene.
I really wanted AdeptX/Orion to take off... lightyears ahead of its
time in design and potential on OS/2 but ended up just an unreliable
buggy POS.
telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-
I also really liked Maximus and if you spent the time to configure
it like I did, you could make it look good.
I know theres some Max diehards out there... for a good reason, that software apparently was a dream to run on OS/2.
telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-
I would have to say WWIV followed by VBBS.
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
TBBS I think was the only software in the world that needed a freaking compiler whenever you wrote menus, but you had a nice VHS instructional vi
TBBS I think was the only software in the world that needed a freaking compiler whenever you wrote menus, but you had a nice VHS instructiona video.
I want to check out TBBS sometimes. It sounds intriguing -- and VHS instructional videos? Way ahead of its time!
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
There were only a few boards in my small town, and mine was WWIV because yo could buy the source. My friend had Hermes (WWIV mac clone), and I was alwa jealous of the much better configuration system. But having access to bette doors and WWIVNet gave me a huge advantage.
I lived in the Chicago-land area back then, so there were quite a few boards around. I'd say PCB was certainly not the majority of them, but the ones that were seemed much "nicer" than most of the rest. Maybe
"more professional" looking is the right term. So that's what I ran
then, and liked it a lot. Also registered InterMail and InterEcho for mail stuff, worked well also. As I recall the USRobotics modem site ran PCB back then. :-)
GT Power. I still run my original system on it, on port 27 and on dial-up.
As a caller, I also liked RBBS and Coco.
I know theres some Max diehards out there... for a good reason, that software apparently was a dream to run on OS/2.
you're right. it was very good on DOS, but when i switched to OS/2 it was a whole new world opening :)
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
Had one T.A.G. system in the area. It was LD for me, so when I was at my step-dad's mom's on holiday's I'd call it. It was AWFUL.
TBBS I think was the only software in the world that needed a freaking compiler whenever you wrote menus, but you had a nice VHS instructional vi
Mystic doesn't need that, it has Youtube. ahhahaha
Nick Andre wrote to Dan Clough <=-
I lived in the Chicago-land area back then, so there were quite a few boards around. I'd say PCB was certainly not the majority of them, but the ones that were seemed much "nicer" than most of the rest. Maybe
"more professional" looking is the right term. So that's what I ran
then, and liked it a lot. Also registered InterMail and InterEcho for mail stuff, worked well also. As I recall the USRobotics modem site ran PCB back then. :-)
I keep hearing from many people that Chicago had *the* scene,
possibly the biggest in the country at one time. Toronto had a
big one but nothing compared to some other American cities.
Lol wow, Dale Barnes the current IM/IE author I think lives in
Chicago... somewhere in IL anyhow.
I heard the source of WWIV was available, pretty sure thats what influenced Renegade and some others. Mark Hoffman I believe still runs Wwivnet? I helped him add the INTL kludge to Netmail.
As for modern software I do really like Talisman (which I run now) as it's configurable, supports everything and includes everything.
TBBS I think was the only software in the world that needed a freaking compiler whenever you wrote menus,
On 03 Jun 22 13:51:13, Andre Robitaille said the following to Nick Andre:
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
There were only a few boards in my small town, and mine was WWIV because yo could buy the source. My friend had Hermes (WWIV mac clone), and I was alwa jealous of the much better configuration system. But having access to bette doors and WWIVNet gave me a huge advantage.
I heard the source of WWIV was available, pretty sure thats what influenced Renegade and some others. Mark Hoffman I believe still runs Wwivnet? I helped him add the INTL kludge to Netmail.
RBBS, that was the one written in Quickbasic? *That* was impressive.
Nick Andre wrote to Shawn Highfield <=-
I know theres some Max diehards out there... for a good reason, that software apparently was a dream to run on OS/2.
Its a real shame about Adept/Orion, I really wanted to like that one.
Jas Hud wrote to Shawn Highfield <=-
well did you have to ask for a lot of help, because the documentation looks sparce. where is the documentation on doorgames?
I keep hearing from many people that Chicago had *the* scene, possibly the biggest in the country at one time. Toronto had a big one but nothing compared
to some other American cities.
RBBS, that was the one written in Quickbasic? *That* was impressive.
I've heard bits and pieces about different software influencing each other. I st liked the menu system a lot more than other stuff out there, and I enjoyed ing able to modify the source. And WWIVnet offered a lot to me because of the aller community in my city...
But then I switched high schools and got a girlfriend, so the BBS never recove
d.
On 03 Jun 22 22:09:22, Daniel Path said the following to Nick Andre:
I know theres some Max diehards out there... for a good
reason, that software apparently was a dream to run on OS/2.
you're right. it was very good on DOS, but when i switched to OS/2
it was a whole new world opening :)
The ones who had the Max/Squish/Binkleyterm combo were *diehards*.
Those guys swore by it, never at it.
telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-
On 03 Jun 22 13:51:13, Andre Robitaille said the following to Nick Andre:
I never really saw any WWIV or even any Tag systems in my area, ever.
There were only a few boards in my small town, and mine was WWIV because yo could buy the source. My friend had Hermes (WWIV mac clone), and I was alwa jealous of the much better configuration system. But having access to bette doors and WWIVNet gave me a huge advantage.
I heard the source of WWIV was available, pretty sure thats what influenced Renegade and some others. Mark Hoffman I believe still runs Wwivnet? I helped him add the INTL kludge to Netmail.
You mentioning high school and WWIV got me thinking. There were not too many long-running WWIV boards in the area I lived in c1988-1997. Most of them were were like Commodore boards... up for a while and then disappeared. But there was one that was up for most of that period, until BBSing started to wane. It was run by one of the local high school computer departments. Considering that kids are only in high school so long before moving on, looking back I am surprised it stayed active for more than 4 years.
More than "influenced": Renegade, Telegard, TAG and many other BBS programs of the era are actual hacks/rip-offs of the WWIV v3 Pascal
source code. --
Jas Hud wrote to Shawn Highfield <=-
well did you have to ask for a lot of help, because the documentation looks sparce. where is the documentation on doorgames?
www.talismanbbs.com - click docs - menus scroll down.
RUNDOOR Runs a door, DATA is the full path and filename of a script to run, the script is passed a node number on Linux and a node number and socket handle on Windows.
I didn't find it hard to configure... maybe because I've checked out so
many packages?
RBBS, that was the one written in Quickbasic? *That* was impressive.
I think so. If not Quickbasic, some other *basic. The source is/used to
be available on the web somewhere. I thought about downloading it and
seeing what, if anything, I could do with it. That is still on my
'RoundToIt list. :)
Mike
* SLMR 2.1a * Farewell, friend. I was 1000 times more evil than thou.
--- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
* Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
started looking up old nodelists. You can see this explosion of BBSes around like 1991-1994, and then a they started all disappearing right around the time the first ISP showed up.
Apparently I missed the heyday of having lots of boards to call.
I'm curious what parts of WWIV they ended up using, because from an end-user view, those packages seem very different from WWIV. I never used WWIV when it was written in Pascal -- so I don't know how different it was from the C version -- which I am very familiar with.
I've used QuickBasic, TurboBasic, and IBM Basic to compile RBBS-PC.
I'm currently using QuickBasc 7.1 on modified RBBS-PC 17.4 with the
Cellar Door 2000 mods.
you can check it out here http://telegard.net/files/tg25src.zip
renegade was a rip off of that leaked tg source.
or maybe this was the one? http://www.filegate.net/pub/bbsprog/src/tele16a.zip
Nick Andre wrote to Shawn Highfield <=-
I know theres some Max diehards out there... for a good reason, that software apparently was a dream to run on OS/2.
Andre Robitaille wrote to Dumas Walker <=-
I seem to have left the scene right as it was spinning up. Last night I remembered that the was one board in the area that was a Fido node, so
I started looking up old nodelists. You can see this explosion of BBSes around like 1991-1994, and then a they started all disappearing right around the time the first ISP showed up.
Rob Swindell wrote to Nick Andre <=-
More than "influenced": Renegade, Telegard, TAG and many other BBS programs of the era are actual hacks/rip-offs of the WWIV v3 Pascal
source code.
I've used QuickBasic, TurboBasic, and IBM Basic to compile RBBS-PC.
I'm currently using QuickBasc 7.1 on modified RBBS-PC 17.4 with the
Cellar Door 2000 mods.
What is the telnet address for your RBBS board?
Mike
---
* SLMR 2.1a * If you chose not to decide, you still have made a choice!
* Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
What is the telnet address for your RBBS board?
It's currently not open to the public. :-(
Can confirm. I ran Max/2 for several years. Low overhead when running onWhen MS stops supporting Windows 10/32, I might have to consider ArcaNoae or Linux. Or maybe there will be a dosemu for win64.
a
properly multitasking BBS, and what I liked about it was being able to
make
changes to file areas and message areas in a text editor.
Copying/pasting
new areas, reordering them and changing naming conventions was a breeze.
Okay I'm game to stir it up. Your favourite BBS software NOT Mystic or Synchronet. Am a huge fan of Renegade, TBBS, Searchlight and MajorBBS.WWIV, WinServer
Matt Munson wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-
When MS stops supporting Windows 10/32, I might have to consider
ArcaNoae or Linux. Or maybe there will be a dosemu for win64.
Matt Munson wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-
When MS stops supporting Windows 10/32, I might have to consider ArcaNoae or Linux. Or maybe there will be a dosemu for win64.
There is a 16-bit VXD for 64-bit Windows that seems to work pretty well from what I've heard.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 376 |
Nodes: | 16 (3 / 13) |
Uptime: | 23:55:39 |
Calls: | 8,035 |
Calls today: | 5 |
Files: | 13,034 |
Messages: | 5,828,976 |