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breve 15 hours ago

telnet lambda.moo.mud.org 8888

dekhn 15 hours ago | parent [-]

MUDs were my introduction to telnet- I grew up a university kid and had access to Wesleyan's minicomputer EAGLE.WESLEYAN.EDU running OpenVMS. I used it to telnet to CMU's TinyMUD and later other TinyMUDs around the country. I recall OpenVMS's telnet had a problem with newlines/carriage returns so all the text was staircased, so I ended up learning C and writing a MUD client. I still habitually use telnet today even if netcat and many other tools have replaced it.

All of that was foundational for my career and I still look back fondly on the technology of the time, which tended to be fairly "open" to exploration by curious-minded teenagers.

ErroneousBosh 10 hours ago | parent [-]

For a few weeks I ran a MUD over AX.25 for a couple of my friends.

Because on their own, MUDs aren't nerdy enough, amateur radio isn't nerdy enough, and indeed packet radio isn't nerdy enough.

Eventually we decided we'd had our fun and now I needed to the TNC for something else.

dekhn 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Ah, my grandfather was a ham (N4MDB) and he always tried to get me interested in it, but I had to tell him I preferred the internet (this was late 80's, so few people actually had internet). Later when I read Stevens networking books I learned there was a whole Hawaii-based packet radio (ALOHAnet) , and the UC campuses had intercampus microwave networking for a while as well. I actually still remember him telling me about bouncing radio waves off the atmosphere which seemed like magic to me at the time.