The Usenet, in 1986. rec.humor.funny and rec.travel were memorable though I was using many newsgroups, and the rn and then nn newsreaders on a HP mini computer in a research centre. That and email, which ask ran for some time on dial up 1200bps and later 2400bps links.
How did that shape my digital journey? Guess it's main influence was to take computing out of the perky number crunching realm (we mostly used FORTRAN to solve renewing, and math problems numerically) into the social realm (networking with like minded folk globally and chatting about stuff that wasn't number crunching). Of course, over time the social side has come to dominate or experience with the internet and connectivity.
Perhaps one of the enduring lessons of the day was the emergence of flaming as an idea and thing and alt.flame as a dedicated newsgroup for it, a venting group. Flaming has been lost from the vocabulary over time I guess but was the bigger Usenet term essential for rage driven obnoxious behaviour that was already emerging in these communities, empowered as it was, by the imagination in lieu of body language, time of voice, and social proximity, and the imperative for moderation as both a behaviour and job, emerged.
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The Usenet, in 1986. rec.humor.funny and rec.travel were memorable though I was using many newsgroups, and the rn and then nn newsreaders on a HP mini computer in a research centre. That and email, which ask ran for some time on dial up 1200bps and later 2400bps links.
How did that shape my digital journey? Guess it's main influence was to take computing out of the perky number crunching realm (we mostly used FORTRAN to solve renewing, and math problems numerically) into the social realm (networking with like minded folk globally and chatting about stuff that wasn't number crunching). Of course, over time the social side has come to dominate or experience with the internet and connectivity.
Perhaps one of the enduring lessons of the day was the emergence of flaming as an idea and thing and alt.flame as a dedicated newsgroup for it, a venting group. Flaming has been lost from the vocabulary over time I guess but was the bigger Usenet term essential for rage driven obnoxious behaviour that was already emerging in these communities, empowered as it was, by the imagination in lieu of body language, time of voice, and social proximity, and the imperative for moderation as both a behaviour and job, emerged.