"One reason to sign up for a shell account is that shell providers often
have friendly user communities. Many providers have their own IRC,
Usenet, or bulletin boards where users can exchange messages. The users
tend to be other Linux and Unix enthusiasts. These spaces are just fun
to hang out in."
https://www.howtogeek.com/use-the-internet-the-old-school-unixy-way-with-shell-accounts/
"One reason to sign up for a shell account is that shell providers
often have friendly user communities.
Many providers have their own IRC, Usenet, or bulletin boards where
users can exchange messages.
The users tend to be other Linux and Unix enthusiasts. These spaces
are just fun to hang out in."
like awk+gnuplot... daily. My main environment it's OpenBSD, cwm, and a xterm.
sfeed works great to read news. Mutt and slrn, for the rest.
gopher://magical.fish it's trully... magical
On Sat, 22 Mar 2025 09:31:45 -0000 (UTC), anthk <anthk@openbsd.home> wrote:
gopher://magical.fish it's trully... magical
And it rocks, no matter being remote or local.
pschleck@panix.com (Paul W. Schleck) wrote:
"One reason to sign up for a shell account is that shell providers
often have friendly user communities.
(*) Most neighbours I have in pubnixens are just silent, but the few
that are not are worth staying.
Many providers have their own IRC, Usenet, or bulletin boards where
users can exchange messages.
...plus fediverse, too many different link aggregators and short message
like media, local or pubnix network wide bulletin boards, Gitea and Cgit
... short: Too many services competing for users. That yields lots of sub-crowds with far to few comminication.
The too many services trap.
The users tend to be other Linux and Unix enthusiasts. These spaces
are just fun to hang out in."
See (*).
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 498 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 35:56:55 |
Calls: | 9,798 |
Files: | 13,751 |
Messages: | 6,189,276 |