A Fishing forum. FishingBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » FishingBanter forum » rec.outdoors.fishing newsgroups » Bass Fishing
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

New Bass Fishing Forum



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old December 5th, 2006, 03:27 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Bob La Londe
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,009
Default New Bass Fishing Forum


"bill allemann" wrote in message
t...
I think that was called Arpanet, or something like that.

I don't think computer systems from back then are very relevant to
"casual" usage of recent years, though.

Bill




It could just as easily have grown from something newer like Rime-Net or
Relay-Net


--
Bob La Londe
Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River
Fishing Forums & Contests
http://www.YumaBassMan.com



--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

  #2  
Old December 5th, 2006, 05:50 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Calif Bill
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 531
Default New Bass Fishing Forum


"Bob La Londe" wrote in message
...

"bill allemann" wrote in message
t...
I think that was called Arpanet, or something like that.

I don't think computer systems from back then are very relevant to
"casual" usage of recent years, though.

Bill




It could just as easily have grown from something newer like Rime-Net or
Relay-Net


--
Bob La Londe
Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River
Fishing Forums & Contests
http://www.YumaBassMan.com



--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com


Was Arpa net and Darpa net. I was on Arpa Net in about 1981 range. We were
fed from Stanford, I think, via another company near us in Milpitas, Ca. We
had sold our Building to Xerox when they bought Shugart Associates as we
were between Building 4 and 5 in Sunnyvale. Dang I is old.


  #3  
Old December 5th, 2006, 12:45 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Joe Haubenreich
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 201
Default New Bass Fishing Forum

"Calif Bill" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Was Arpa net and Darpa net. I was on Arpa Net in about 1981 range. We
were
fed from Stanford, I think, via another company near us in Milpitas, Ca. We
had sold our Building to Xerox when they bought Shugart Associates as we
were between Building 4 and 5 in Sunnyvale. Dang I is old."
----------------------

Nah, Bill... you aren't that old. In fact, you're still a cub.

Usenet, Rime-Net, Hair-Net.... they're all light years ahead of what we had
when I entered the workforce -- scratching crude pictures and symbols on
boulders and rolling them from cube to cube! "Rock-n-roll" was fast, cheap,
and required little OJT. For short notes, a fist-size rock would do. My head
still throbs in memory of all the jokes and chain-rocks that whizzed around
our community.

Of course, rock-n-roll found its way from the office to society in general,
and then parents were faced with the challenge of figuring out the rock
symbols their teenagers devised and used among themselves. (There was no
respect for convention even back in the day.)

Once a technology has become entrenched, troglodytes will hold onto to it
forever. As I visit the major cities of the U.S., I'm pleased to note that
the denizens still adhere to the old ways, as evidenced by bricks whizzing
through the air at political rallies and large, flamboyant messages posted
on brick walls, alleyways, bridge pilings, stationary boxcars, subway
tunnels... almost any highly-visible, vertical surface invites
correspondence.

Boy, what excitement filled the place when someone introduced the technique
of using a stylus to press cuneiform patterns pressed into moist clay
tablets. Very neat, but talk about slow! We had to let them cure before we
could send over to the other cubes in our office or to other cave complexes.
And, as we later learned, every technological advance in communications
created a buracracy and new jobs. Cuneiform writing wasn't easy (it took a
while to learn to speak Phoenecian and the Ugarit alphabet), so every
complex ended up with a HRD department for training the workers. Then we had
to develop specialist for archiving. If someone sent you a note and you
wanted to refer to it later, all you had to do was run down to the stacks,
where all the notes were categorized by subject, or by sent date, or by last
update, or by author, or by recipient. (We seem to have not advanced to far
on that evolutionary path, have we?)

As I progressed in my career, we witnessed communication fads come and go.
Smoke signals were pretty cool, and you could send them over long distance
(much easier than rocks!) but when health-nicks caught wind of the risks
involved, they instituted "no smoking in public places" policies, which
damped that technological advance. Pounding on hollow logs and later
skin-covered drums was neat at first. All the nerds who knew how to drum
were snapped up by companies and drumming became "cool," but as that more
and more people jumped into the act and that technology proliferated, the
airwaves became cluttered. We were always having our messages intercepted,
and too many people online simultaneously clogged the network. The feds put
the kibosh on that with HIPPA, since it's hard to maintain confidentiality
in the open forum of drum messaging.

Fads came and went... papyrus, parchment, paper... then along came Guglielmo
Marconi, Claude Chappe and Samuel Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, John Logie
Baird, and all those braniacs who ushered in the paperless workplaces that
we all enjoy today.

Al Gore added structure and elegance to electronic communications when he
and Ali McGraw (or was it Tipper), invented the Internet. And that's where
we find ourselves today. Don't get too settled on this "Internet" thing. I'm
sure it's just a passing fad, and soon we'll all be abuzz with
"simul-thought-casting" or something else.

Joe


  #4  
Old December 5th, 2006, 02:17 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Scott Seidman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,037
Default New Bass Fishing Forum

Jay Carter ) wrote in
:

Wow.. so much hate.

I apologize for trying to open another venue for talking about bass
fishing. I thought, obvioulsy incorrectly, that people might enjoy
having a place better suited for discussions than almost 30 year old
technology.

Again, my apologies.


Nobody has any problem with that. The problem is that you haven't clearly
identified where your "off site content" is coming from, and that's just a
misrepresentation. If you clearly label the post that come from the usenet
with the group they're coming from, and allow only members to post through
so we're not bombarded by any spam that might be targeted to your site, I
don't think you'll have much problems from here.

Otherwise, you're just trying to jump start a site with content that's not
yours.

--
Scott
Reverse name to reply
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Fishing forum Keith Hampson UK Coarse Fishing 5 October 22nd, 2005 05:55 PM
Fishing Forum Mike & Kim S General Discussion 0 April 25th, 2005 11:56 PM
A New Fishing Forum Ian Sargent Fly Fishing 3 January 2nd, 2005 06:22 AM
A New Fishing Forum Ian Sargent Saltwater Fishing 5 May 18th, 2004 09:30 PM
New fishing forum Eric Saltwater Fishing 0 February 17th, 2004 05:57 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:36 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FishingBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.