(no title)
magoon
|
6 years ago
Running a FidoNet-connected BBS meant I had direct access to read every EchoMail group I could subscribe my BBS to. At the time it was a great source of real, insightful written conversation. Because the readers were text-based, and it was all on my hard drive, I could consume postings at such great speed. (spacebar, spacebar, spacebar...)The memories.
throw0101a|6 years ago
You didn't have to run a BBS to do this. Using an offline mail reader like Blue Wave [1] and downloading QWK files [2] allowed anyone to do it—and helped keep the lines, as downloading was (relatively) quick compared to reading 'online'.
I initially got "on" Usenet by downloading SOUP files from a local free-net [3].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Wave_(mail_reader)
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QWK_(file_format)
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-net
BeetleB|6 years ago
In fact, when I finally got email, I wrote a QB program to convert my inbox to QWK format. I would then use OLX to read/reply to emails. I don't recall, but I probably used OLX's Save As to store my replies to text files which I then uploaded to my online mail server.
I used OLX for emails until at least 1999.
EricE|6 years ago
myth_drannon|6 years ago
unknown|6 years ago
[deleted]
6c696e7578|6 years ago
yakk0|6 years ago