• You Can Use the Internet the Old-School Unixy Way With Shell Accounts

    From Paul W. Schleck@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 2 05:19:44 2025
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet, news.groups

    "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/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From anthk@21:1/5 to Paul W. Schleck on Sat Mar 22 09:31:45 2025
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet, news.groups

    On 2025-03-02, Paul W. Schleck <pschleck@panix.com> wrote:
    "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/


    I use gopher, irc (and bitlbee.org servers to comment on Mastodon/Jabber) and lots of other tools
    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

    And it rocks, no matter being remote or local.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From yeti@21:1/5 to Paul W. Schleck on Sat Mar 22 11:55:24 2025
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet, news.groups

    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 (*).

    --
    I do not bite, I just want to play.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From lkh@21:1/5 to anthk on Tue Mar 25 14:37:04 2025
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet, news.groups

    anthk <anthk@openbsd.home> wrote:
    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.

    these are some of my favourite tools as well. I didn't know about sfeed though. I'll check it out since I find newsboat somewhat clunky.

    gopher://magical.fish it's trully... magical

    That's a great gopher place! Thanks for posting!


    --
    Laurens Kils-Hütten
    PGP: 487E D5A5 41A1 E9A7 07AD 4990 E34F 096D 35DE 0A86

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From El Kabong@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 27 12:51:57 2025
    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.

    Bookmarked. Excellent resource!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Borax Man@21:1/5 to yeti on Fri Apr 11 14:14:50 2025
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet, news.groups

    ["Followup-To:" header set to alt.culture.usenet.]
    On 2025-03-22, yeti <yeti@tilde.institute> wrote:
    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.


    I signed up to one or two, and that was my experience. The *idea* was
    cool, but no one was really there. The fundamental problem, I think, is
    its not a real community. Its people who want to use a particular
    technology, but don't share any other interest. It's like starting a
    group for people who like to meet in community centres. Once you're
    there, then what? You've already achieved your goal? The Gemini
    community had the same problem. They just liked the idea of using
    Gemini. That doesn't make what you have to say more interesting.

    It was basically, at least to me, people who liked to use a particular
    means to an ends, but actually had no ends. I do understand that the communication format does matter (part of the appeal of Usenet to me),
    but you need more than a shared desire to use the same format. At least
    on Usenet, you can find others with similar interests.

    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.


    These technologies can be useful for closed groups. NNTP could be used
    for a company, like group email and centralised posting. IRC useful as
    well. I can see the need, and value for a private community, which may
    be large to do that (such as a social movement). But we don't need more general "public" twitter clones.


    The users tend to be other Linux and Unix enthusiasts. These spaces
    are just fun to hang out in."

    See (*).


    I'd be interested to see these fun places.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)