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God's Country
editBy the mid-1990s, DDials had been bypassed by the Internet and IRC, although Chicago's God's Country, kept an incredibly loyal following between 1985-87 and 1989-1998. Many of its users are still close to this day.
God's Country was ran on a C64 using software named "Online", written by Chuck Wolfe.
From The BBS Software Directory:
Often described as a Diversi-Dial Clone for Commodore 64s. Steve Laisch has a lot of information to impart:
"Online - This was almost like DDial except a few differences: 1. It ran on a Commodore 64, not an Apple. 2. It got REAL slow sometimes. Why? Because unlike DDial, Online used a diskdrive instead of RAM to store everything. This was both an advantage and a disadvantage. In the case of a power outage - everything was saved - in DDial it wasn't. You were at the mercy of the power company. However when a bunch of people went for email and such it may slow down the system. 3. Unlike the Apple IIE which had slots for modems, the C64 version had a custom board. This board was custom made. I don't remember what the costs were but it wasn't cheap."
"The only other information I can think of is the actual hardware board that was used for connecting 6 modems to the c64 was $500. That is what was charged for it. The only 2 Online Chat systems that were available in my state of Illinois were "Magic Mirror" and "Black Magic". Magic Mirror died first I think it lasted no longer than 89-90 at the latest. Black Magic lasted a bit longer, say 93-94. I will see if I can find anything else about it but I doubt it."
"I do have a faint remember also that while DDial was written in 6502 Assembler, 'Online' was written entirely in Forth."
"Also Online was "unhackable" - I'm pretty sure about that. In otherwords, in DDial there was a command that allowed you to perform "POKES" to the system. In other words, you could in theory write machine language programs with DDial."
"This allowed you to do things like crash the system or other illegal stuff. One of the last hacks I remember is being able to turn your /P's off for individual ports. So if someone poked the system write, they COULD see ALL /P's that were being sent back and forth. Ofcourse, you had to becareful and not respond to the /P's that were not intended for you :) One of the users actually figured out that someone did this by faking a /P. You also had to UNPOKE everything before you logged off the system otherwise the next user that got on that port would have the same benefits. I think I can get you a complete listing of the commands if you like them for DDial. Online didn't have any poking capabilities as far as I know. I also know that Online did not have networking capabilities. In DDial (and with DDials big brother "STS") you could network the systems together so that you could have a whole bunch of users online instead of the maximum 7. Online did not have that feature."
<ref>http://software.bbsdocumentary.com/COMMODORE/C64/ONLINE/<ref>
Er, so what happened in 1988? -Rolypolyman (talk) 00:37, 28 August 2010 (UTC)
pretty lofty assertion.
edit"Many DDial users and owners contributed significantly in areas of IT/Software/Podcasting and are considered pioneers of social media."
Reference, proof? AFAIK Ddial users contributed significantly in areas of Obesity, unkempt beards and suspenders. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 108.35.32.21 (talk) 05:48, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
References
editI know it's difficult for early systems like this, but I think that it would be worthwhile to search for proper references for a lot of the information here. All of this article is reasonably consistent with my personal experience as an early DDial user in Vancouver, Canada, but I have no idea how that information, which perhaps no academics or others have interest in chasing down and recording, can be used as sources. Cjs (talk) 05:51, 21 April 2016 (UTC)
External links modified
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citations
editWe need to add more citations to this article. Here is one from google scholar. https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/134510.134531 Centerone (talk) 01:12, 6 April 2020 (UTC) That article was eventually published here: https://rdw.rowan.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=hollybushseries Centerone (talk) 01:14, 6 April 2020 (UTC)