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Hey! They've Got One and They are Nowhere Near as Cool!
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I'm not sure why Phillyblog deserves its own entry in Wikipedia, but I did notice that the entry is open for further editing and expansion on the topic...
I like the following new word that I'd never seen before: the negadelphian, or someone who enjoys posting negative comments about Philadelphia, especially about its professional sports teams. |
It should be done as a matter of course, but I have not bothered to learn the Wikipedia format and it seems like a requirement.
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Probably just cutting and pasting the history page, with mention of Dinty's book, should do for a start.
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I believe to do it properly in the wikipedia "style" there would need to be two or three different factions with axes to grind making competing edits over a period of several weeks, resulting in press coverage.
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Actually, although I joined the Cellar back in the dialup days, I wasn't a member from it's inception and I can't recall the actual year the Cellar started. I know I missed a great deal from what I was told at the first GTG I went to at the Reading Market where I learned about the Kaos saga.
Also, there was that telnet period where I only connected briefly. Has the Cellar been in continuous operation since it's inception? If so, it can probably claim to be the Philadelphia regions oldest on-line community. |
That is the case Rich, the year was 1990. (Which is why the logo says "Est. 1990" in nearly unreadable type.)
It was the first place in Philly where the general public could reach Internet email. It's surely one of the 25 oldest virtual communities in the world and I would think it's probably in the top 10. |
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Would you consider ARPAnet to be just one big community? It relates to your top 25/10 lists. Perhaps in 1980-5 it was one community spread across the USA. My last X-gf is from Philly; we lived together in NY and were part of DARPA contracts that gave us ARPAnet access. After her PhD, she got a job back in the Philly area, met her husband thru an ARPAnet news group in '85. He was also local to Phillie. So, we had special access as CS reserchers with DARPA contracts. The Cellar was public access. Ra! |
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Pre-web, son. There was such a time. Giants strode the earth in those days. editor and cerberus and siano and adamzion. Yes, those were the days.
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your advertising dept is asleep at the wheel. |
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When bps and baud meant the same thing? When you had to put command strings in front of a phone number to keep the modem from timing out trying to handshake? Downloads were done in Xmodem and Kermit. Usenet was the only way to network, and there were less than 2,000 newsgroups. I remember getting a used 300 baud Hayes Smartmodem at an employee auction and sitting on a porch one vacation weekend in Atlantic City with a soldering iron and two user manuals making a serial cable for my Atari 800. Man I feel old. |
My first modem was a 1200 baud Migent Pocket Modem; it could run off a 9 volt battery (though I usually used the AC adapter). Though I did use a 300 baud at my campus job. (There was no computer network between buildings at that time, so to connect up to the VAX from the departmental computer lab I worked at we would just dial through the campus PBX with a 300 baud modem.)
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a soldering iron and two user manuals making a serial cable
That sounds like MY job !!! |
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