The internet killed them.
From: [email protected] (Ant)
Subject: Re: The BBS days are long gone
:(
Gactimus <[email protected]> wrote:
The internet killed them.
From: [email protected] (Ant)
Subject: Re: The BBS days are long gone
:(
Gactimus <[email protected]> wrote:
The internet killed them.
not really, some of us are still alive and kicking :)
From: [email protected] (Ant)
Subject: Re: The BBS days are long gone
Robert Wolfe <[email protected]> wrote:
From: [email protected] (Ant)
Subject: Re: The BBS days are long gone
:(
Gactimus <[email protected]> wrote:
The internet killed them.
not really, some of us are still alive and kicking :)
Like which ones (the popular ones)? I know all my local ones are gone
Like which ones (the popular ones)? I know all my local ones are gone. :PSubject: Re: The BBS days are long gonenot really, some of us are still alive and kicking :)
:(
The internet killed them.
Like which ones (the popular ones)? I know all my local ones are gone. :
I don't think they are gone (apart from some telnet BBSes - honour to the I am currently working on a modern BBS system, written in PHP and
relying on common used technology like NNTP, Jabber and SMTP(S)/IMAP(S). Users can login on the web frontend - the BBS system - or connect
directly to the services with their clients.
What do you think about the approach to make a BBS system with modern technology?
I don't think they are gone (apart from some telnet BBSes - honour to
s!)
I think it developed. Look at Facebook. It's nothin different than a
BBS. And people became more and more lazy consumers - or the internet brought more and more to lazy consumers... Installing a client? OMG!
take the web frontend regardless if someone is collecting your data.
I am currently working on a modern BBS system, written in PHP and rel
common used technology like NNTP, Jabber and SMTP(S)/IMAP(S). Users c
on the web frontend - the BBS system - or connect directly to the ser
their clients.
What do you think about the approach to make a BBS system with
modern technolog y?
Let's see. Synchronet, Mystic, WINServer, BBBS -- all of these already
do the very thing you are seeing. At least two out of those are open
source and one is still supported shareware and three all multi-platform
and have one has source code available. So, why, I ask, are you trying
to reinvent the wheel?
| Sysop: | Keyop |
|---|---|
| Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
| Users: | 715 |
| Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
| Uptime: | 24:50:25 |
| Calls: | 12,106 |
| Calls today: | 6 |
| Files: | 15,006 |
| Messages: | 6,518,171 |