93 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
93 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
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Whatever happened to the COMMUNICATIONS in telecommunications?
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Is this the result of the Computer Age, that people don't talk or
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communicate with each other? Are we getting so totally in tune with
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our equipment that we're excluding PEOPLE? If so, then Orwell's pre-
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dictions are tame in comparison with the reality. Who took the
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BULLETIN BOARD out of Bulletin Board System? The file transfer sect-
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ion of my board is shiny from daily use, but the bulletin section is
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obscured by cobwebs. The thought has crossed my mind more than once
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just to load up a host program and let people grab whatever programs
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look interesting.
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"Do you have a logon code for this system (Y/N) ==> Y <=="
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"What is your account number? 775"
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"What is your logon code? PASSWORD"
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"INVALID LOGON CODE"
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"Do you have a logon code for this system (Y/N) ==> Y <=="
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"What is your account number? 305"
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"What is your logon code? PASSWORD"
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et cetera, ad infinitum et ad nauseam.
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Hackers. Or so they'd like to believe. Vandals, pests, yes. Hackers?
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They should be so talented, devoted and lucky. Why do these computer-
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ized delinquents find such delight in trying to break into bulletin
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boards? Don't they realize that sysops are ordinary people just like
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themselves trying to find a little enjoyment in their hobby? Why pick
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on me? I'm spending a lot of time and money trying to provide people
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a service for free, and they want to go and spoil it for everyone.
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Heck, if they want onto the system, all they have to do is apply for a
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logon. Why make life difficult for everyone? Leave me alone. Go pick
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on CompuServe.
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Caller logs on. Leaves E-Mail to a friend. Lines only fill half the
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screen, so he's probably using a Commodore 64. Goes to file transfer
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section, and selects UltraTerm protocol. Chooses a file that indicates
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it's a TRS-80 program. BBS goes to send, he figures out that he's
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somewhere he doesn't want to be and drops carrier.
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Another caller logs on four times in a row, but keeps losing carrier
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before he can do anything. Probably phreaking on a cheapie phone ser-
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vice.
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Another caller successfully downloads a file. Sit. Wait. Wait some
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more. System eventually times out and drops him.
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I'm not the most polite person in the world and I'm certainly not
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one to stand on ceremony, but I am old enough to remember what manners
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were. They also went down the tubes with "communications" and "bulle-
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tin boards." Whoops! Dropped carrier! So what? If it's a halfway
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decent system, it'll reboot. Well, I'll just go to bed while download-
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ing this long file, the system will eventually throw me off and reboot.
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Never mind that there's other people wanting to call into the board.
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Who cares that the sysop climbs the walls when he sees someone drop
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carrier or time-out on the system? Lately I've gotten into the habit
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of dropping carrier ON MY END for the worst offenders. One good hang-
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up deserves another.
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Along with all the other goodies that have bitten the dust, there's
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good old APPRECIATION. As I mentioned before, my BBS has fielded over
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12,000 calls. Out of all of them, I have gotten maybe a dozen messages
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saying "Thanks for running your BBS." That's about one "Thank You" per
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THOUSAND calls! Unfortunately, it seems that people think they have all
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this automatically coming to them. It's their right! Sorry to disil-
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lusion anyone, but that just ain't so. The master switch for this sys-
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tem is two feet away, and I'm not so decrepit that I can't hit it in a
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flash. Alternatively, I can ban anyone I wish from my system. Callers
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use this BBS at my forbearance only, and it's not a God-given right.
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It's a sysop-given privilege! I sincerely feel that we should proclaim
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a "Sysop Appreciation Day." We certainly don't get any on a day-to-day
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basis!
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Don't get me wrong. There ARE joys and benefits in running a BBS,
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although sometimes in my nether moods I'm hard pressed to enumerate
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them. But the fact is, there have been many occasions when I've rest-
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ed my finger on the switch with the idea of going offline forever.
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Now for the moral of the story. I'm only one sysop among many,
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and I'm not trying to evoke sympathy for myself through this article.
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The point is that almost every sysop around has these feelings to some
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extent or another. And further, most of these sysops (especially the
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best and most devoted ones) are going to reach a saturation point and
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wind up depriving the general public of their services. I foresee a
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day coming, and very soon at that, when the high quality BBS's will be
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all gone. So all this is really a plea for everyone to shape up their
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acts before it's too late. If nothing else, when you're on a bulletin
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board, leave a little message to the sysop. "Thanks for the use of
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your system" or "Fine BBS you have here." Let them know they're appre-
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ciated. When I see a message like that, I say to myself, "THAT's why
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I'm doing all this!" Sysops are real, live human beings with feelings
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and emotions. Let's start treating them as such!
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