• Re: Pocket386 is here!

    From Tiny@21:1/162 to Poindexter Fortran on Mon Jul 1 07:53:22 2024
    poindexter FORTRAN was heard saying....

    I played with KA9Q for a while - that was an amazing feat, showing
    exactly how much you could do on an XT. I remember The Little Garden,

    I ran an ISP for a while, and when we first opened we were using an old
    386 sx-16 as the router running ka9q. The rest of the network were linux boxes.

    Why did we do it this way? I can't remember. LOL



    Shawn

    --- Via Silver Xpress V4.5/P [Reg]
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to Tiny on Tue Jul 2 07:43:00 2024
    I ran an ISP for a while, and when we first opened we were using an old 386 sx-16 as the router running ka9q. The rest of the network were linux boxes.

    If you get the basics of TCP/IP, then KA9Q has a lower learning curve than linux does. Might have been part of it, and or a machine that wasn't doing anything else? A 386 of pretty much any flavour was meant to be able to route enough packets for ~10 486 claass systems? Something like that, I forget.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From Tiny@21:1/162 to Spectre on Tue Jul 2 05:20:08 2024
    Spectre was heard saying....

    If you get the basics of TCP/IP, then KA9Q has a lower learning curve
    than linux does.

    Honestly I don't remember why we went that way. I think just because it
    was easier as you say.

    Might have been part of it, and or a machine that
    wasn't doing anything else? A 386 of pretty much any flavour was meant
    to be able to route enough packets for ~10 486 claass systems? Something like that, I forget.

    That ka9q box handled the dedicated 28.8 connection to the internet. Then
    a linux box running a boca board handled the 8 lines we had for dialup
    once we started getting clients it became ISDN, then T1, then we were
    bought out. LOL



    Shawn

    --- Via Silver Xpress V4.5/P [Reg]
    * Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)
  • From mary4@21:1/166 to kirkspragg on Wed Jul 3 01:00:43 2024
    Oh that sucks! I hope you solder woes are over and that you get many trouble free years of use from them now. I've never seen 25Mhz 286 motherboards turn up for sale, only the harris 25 Mhz 286 CPU itself.
    yeah it's a pain in the ass
    Where did you find yours?

    i was lucky to find one on ebay

    --mary4 (Victoria Crenshaw) the 286 enthusiast

    ... Error, no Keyboard - Press F1 to Continue.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/24 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Datanet BBS | telnet://datanetbbs.net:23 (21:1/166)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Spectre on Mon Jul 8 06:35:00 2024
    Spectre wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    I stopped using it, because its POP3 was a bit non-standard and
    required patching of newer clients at the time, and eventually it was
    just to hard.

    One of my first IT victories was replacing a horrid Mac LAN-based email
    system with a BSD box, Qpopper and Eudora mail clients. We figured out
    how to push out address books, back up mailboxes and use Majordomo for
    most of our big email lists. It was all pretty cool for the early '90s.



    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to kirkspragg on Mon Jul 8 06:37:00 2024
    kirkspragg wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    I played with KA9Q for a while - that was an amazing feat, showing
    exactly how much you could do on an XT. I remember The Little Garden,

    I'm not familiar with KA9Q, what can it do? Could be fun to find a download somewhere and have a play with it.

    It's out there. It was an early internet app/environment for DOS, you
    could use it to route packets, it had a couple of internet servers
    built-in, and it could act as a TCP/IP client. Pretty heady stuff for
    DOS.

    https://www.ka9q.net/code/ka9qnos/



    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to kirkspragg on Mon Jul 8 10:48:00 2024
    kirkspragg wrote to mary4 <=-

    Older version of MINIX run on a 286 - I was able to run a caching DNS server, web server and mail server on a 286 with 2mb of RAM.

    THATS COOOL!! 2MB OF RAM IS ALL YOU NEED!!!! :D srsly thats cool!
    i need to upgrade the 286 here to 16 mb of ram if those darn boards

    I was not aware that MINIX could do some much with such limited
    resources. Also RE 16MB support with 286 class machines, I've had some
    odd results with the motherboard I am currenlty using in my 286 PC &
    that you might run into.

    The board supports more than 4Mb of ram which is the usual max for most 286 motherbaords, but while it works fine with 10Mb installed (2 4Mb
    SIMMs + 2 1Mb SIMMs), 8Mb (2 4Mb SIMMs) just causes the bios to flip
    out completely, due to some weird bug. I have no idea what 16Mb would
    do as I just don't have enough 4Mb SIMMs to try.

    ... "Chief, wait!" - Kira "When?!" - O'Brien

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: 2o fOr beeRS bbS>>20ForBeers.com:1337 (21:2/150)

    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From jimmylogan@21:1/137 to AKAcastor on Sat Jul 13 12:06:00 2024
    AKAcastor wrote to Jimmylogan <=-

    Thanks. Gel shots every so often work wonders...

    It's been years since I had Jello shots! Delicious.

    Not what I meant at all - but maybe you knew that?

    I've never had Jell-O shots - no desire.

    I have a Ham radio in the house now - working on getting
    an antenna on a nice tall pole/tower.

    I haven't gotten into radio myself but I do appreciate hearing about
    the interesting equipment and infrastructure involved.

    Our 6 year old grandson has been with us for the last 6 weeks, so it's been unhooked. He enjoys the radio in the truck with me, but at home we've
    been busy with legos :-) And by the time the nightly nets start he's
    bathing and down for bed...

    Sadly he goes home this weekend, and next week we'll be at a conference.
    After that things get back to a routine, so I plan to work with it
    again.







    ... ETHERNET - A device for catching the ether bunny.
    --- MultiMail/Mac v0.52
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)