Bandit Alley
GENERAL MOTORCYCLE FORUMS => GENERAL MOTORCYCLE => Topic started by: jbrough7 on April 25, 2006, 07:39:43 AM
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Is it Bulletin BoardS? I haven't been able to sleep at night worrying about this!
:wink:
Jim
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Bulletin Board System... often referred to as "the Board".
Thats really slang though.
If you wanna see what industry terms are, here is Bandit Alley's software origin site. http://www.phpbb.com/ What is phpBB?
phpBB is a high powered, fully scalable, and highly customizable Open Source bulletin board package. phpBB has a user-friendly interface, simple and straightforward administration panel, and helpful FAQ. Based on the powerful PHP server language and your choice of MySQL, MS-SQL, PostgreSQL or Access/ODBC database servers, phpBB is the ideal free community solution for all web sites.
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Bulletin Board System, the term coined long before the Internet and the World Wide Web, in the days of 300bps acoustic coupler modems and non-graphical interfaces. Some of the bigger ones had as many as several hundred 'nodes' (read: telephone lines with modems on them) so that many people could chat at the same time!
Gopher? Veronica?
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And the winner is Mike by a minute over Vlad! :lol:
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......and all this time I thought it meant "Bandit Bull Sh!t".........
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so its not "Bandit Bull Shit"! :bigok:
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Bandit Alley Bandit Bull Shit Board !
OVER 18 only, please, and no SPAM allowed!
:stfu: :bs:
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Ah, 300 baud modems. There was a time that was all you needed, really, because you were mostly dealing with text, and most files downloaded were under 100k. My first computer was a Commodore 128 with a 300 bipper.
I would go online through a service called QuantumLink, or Q-Link for short. That service would later become PC-Link (for IBM PCs and compatibles), which would finally evolve into AOL.
There was a board coordinator at Q-Link named GEOS Steve, a PR schmuck who would answer your questions about service-related issues in general, and about a GUI front-end in particular for the Commodore called GEOS (Graphic Environment Operating System), a MAC-like interface for the BASIC-driven C-64s & C-128s.
I would later discover that was Steve Case. :shock: LOL!
Ah, the old days, when camaraderie rather than greed drove the computer industry...