Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 12:40:08 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Slow Code wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 10:28:10 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Actually top posting is a sign of *experience*. Us guys that were on the internet back when it was run by darpa always top posted. That was because we were running very slow lines, typically 110 to 300 baud, and it was desirable not to have to wait through the down load of a dozen copies of the same quoted Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt! My bull**** detector just went off real loud. Here is an authoritative statement about ARPANET from one of Comer's books: "Initially, most of the leased data circuits in the ARPANET operated at 56 Kbps, a speed considered extremely fast in 1968 but slow by current standards." -- Douglas E. Comer, Internetworking with TCP/IP, Volume One, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall (1995), page 57. Yep, those were the *backbones* of ARPANET. We had *ONE* at the University of Maryland back in the 1970s. That leased line cost thousands of dollars per month, and was paid for by darpa. Compare that to the backbones of today which are measured in terrabits per second. These 56K backbones were connected to mainframe computers that acted as concentrators, and provided connections to other mainframes, and to thousands of users on timesharing systems. Yes, I have that right, *thousands* of users shared a single 56K backbone. Those users that were local to the concentrator (eg, in the computer room) were connected to the mainframe by various speed RS-232 lines, but those who were on remote dial up connections were connected by good old bell 103, 110 to 300 baud modems. 300 baud, my ass! You should have been on a time sharing machine connected directly to the 56K ARPANET, Yep, we were on timesharing machines, Univac 1106's, 1108's, and 1140's, and as I said, thousands of users shared a single 56K leased line into Darpanet. Do the math, if you can't, I'll help you: 56K/1000 = 56 bps. So you think that 1000 users at your location were always using ARPANET simultaneously? Please don't tell me that someone gave you an engineering degree, because you obviously didn't understand the course work. If there were *only* 1000 users vying for the net at the same time, they could each pump 56bps into the backbone. But there were many many more than that, and they weren't always needing the net all of the time. (hence the name concentrator) Don't try to bull**** someone who has forgotten more about the subject than you have yet to learn. Riiiight! Just because you can look up darpa on a wiki somewhere, doesn't mean you can understand what you have read. Comer's books on TCP/IP are standards, and they don't involve a wiki. They happen to be in my library of reference textbooks, and they happen to be standard references kept in all university libraries. The claim about slow speeds on ARPANET and Usenet is quite stupid. ARPANET and Usenet did not exist at the same time. ARPANET didn't use TCP/IP protocol, and it gave way to what is now called the Internet when TCP/IP became the standard packet delivery protocol. Shortly after that, the message posting system called Usenet was formalized to run on the Internet and on several other message delivery systems (such as UUCP). So your reference to ARPANET is simply irrelevant. ARPANET and Usenet never coexisted, making the claims about 300 bps and other speed limitations total BS intended to impress the ignorant. Enough said. Conversation ended. You don't seem to be worth any followup messages until you do some additional reading. SC |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 21:59:07 GMT, Slow Code wrote:
john wrote in : I feel good that Slow Code doesn't have a ham license and is poisoning the ham bands like he does the newsgroups. What's your call Slow Code? KB9RQZ, and I'm retarded. You are K4YZ, and Mark Morgan knows it, Steve. |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
From: Chuck Harris on Sat, Oct 7 2006 12:40 pm
Thank you for the explanation. As a user on a corporate system (RCA Corporation, EASD, Van Nuys, CA) '73 to '75, and with a Tym-Share account (the time-sharing computer company), I concur. Slow Code wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 10:28:10 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Actually top posting is a sign of *experience*. Us guys that were on the internet back when it was run by darpa always top posted. That was because we were running very slow lines, typically 110 to 300 baud, and it was desirable not to have to wait through the down load of a dozen copies of the same quoted Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt! My bull**** detector just went off real loud. Here is an authoritative statement about ARPANET from one of Comer's books: [Blowcode's ears must be ringing all the time from his "bull**** detector" going off on his own postings... :-) ] "Initially, most of the leased data circuits in the ARPANET operated at 56 Kbps, a speed considered extremely fast in 1968 but slow by current standards." -- Douglas E. Comer, Internetworking with TCP/IP, Volume One, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall (1995), page 57. Yep, those were the *backbones* of ARPANET. We had *ONE* at the University of Maryland back in the 1970s. That leased line cost thousands of dollars per month, and was paid for by darpa. Compare that to the backbones of today which are measured in terrabits per second. These 56K backbones were connected to mainframe computers that acted as concentrators, and provided connections to other mainframes, and to thousands of users on timesharing systems. Yes, I have that right, *thousands* of users shared a single 56K backbone. Those users that were local to the concentrator (eg, in the computer room) were connected to the mainframe by various speed RS-232 lines, but those who were on remote dial up connections were connected by good old bell 103, 110 to 300 baud modems. Heh heh heh...the "high tech" of its time, a mere 30+ years ago. "Speedy" Teletype Model 33s (?) and "high speed" 300 baud video terminals (with local memory to print out screens on Teletypes) where I was using it. :-) 300 baud, my ass! You should have been on a time sharing machine connected directly to the 56K ARPANET, Yep, we were on timesharing machines, Univac 1106's, 1108's, and 1140's, and as I said, thousands of users shared a single 56K leased line into Darpanet. Do the math, if you can't, I'll help you: 56K/1000 = 56 bps. If there were *only* 1000 users vying for the net at the same time, they could each pump 56bps into the backbone. But there were many many more than that, and they weren't always needing the net all of the time. (hence the name concentrator) "Concentrators" still exist but in a vastly different form, configuration, and specifications. As a personal computer hobbyist since '76 I've not delved into them (no need to for personal dial-up connections) but know many who are; they have supplied some interesting literature on them as well as in-person explanations. so don't bother to backpedal by I'm sorry, I don't backpedal for idiots. I don't brake for them either. Blowcode is the road kill of this newsgroup... claiming dialup speeds. (And of course Usenet didn't even begin until the 80's, shortly after ARPANET had ended.) Don't try to bull**** someone who has forgotten more about the subject than you have yet to learn. Riiiight! Just because you can look up darpa on a wiki somewhere, doesn't mean you can understand what you have read. HAAAAAA... :-) Blowcode has never stated his amateur license call. Perhaps he has "forgotten" it? :-) |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Who is Slow Code? What is his call???
Does anybody know??? On Sat, 7 Oct 2006 22:59:20 +0000 (UTC), Lloyd Morgan wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 21:59:07 GMT, Slow Code wrote: john wrote in : I feel good that Slow Code doesn't have a ham license and is poisoning the ham bands like he does the newsgroups. What's your call Slow Code? KB9RQZ, and I'm retarded. You are K4YZ, and Mark Morgan knows it, Steve. |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Slow Code wrote:
On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 12:40:08 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Slow Code wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 10:28:10 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Actually top posting is a sign of *experience*. Us guys that were on the internet back when it was run by darpa always top posted. That was because we were running very slow lines, typically 110 to 300 baud, and it was desirable not to have to wait through the down load of a dozen copies of the same quoted Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt! My bull**** detector just went off real loud. Here is an authoritative statement about ARPANET from one of Comer's books: "Initially, most of the leased data circuits in the ARPANET operated at 56 Kbps, a speed considered extremely fast in 1968 but slow by current standards." -- Douglas E. Comer, Internetworking with TCP/IP, Volume One, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall (1995), page 57. Yep, those were the *backbones* of ARPANET. We had *ONE* at the University of Maryland back in the 1970s. That leased line cost thousands of dollars per month, and was paid for by darpa. Compare that to the backbones of today which are measured in terrabits per second. These 56K backbones were connected to mainframe computers that acted as concentrators, and provided connections to other mainframes, and to thousands of users on timesharing systems. Yes, I have that right, *thousands* of users shared a single 56K backbone. Those users that were local to the concentrator (eg, in the computer room) were connected to the mainframe by various speed RS-232 lines, but those who were on remote dial up connections were connected by good old bell 103, 110 to 300 baud modems. 300 baud, my ass! You should have been on a time sharing machine connected directly to the 56K ARPANET, Yep, we were on timesharing machines, Univac 1106's, 1108's, and 1140's, and as I said, thousands of users shared a single 56K leased line into Darpanet. Do the math, if you can't, I'll help you: 56K/1000 = 56 bps. So you think that 1000 users at your location were always using ARPANET simultaneously? Please don't tell me that someone gave you an engineering degree, because you obviously didn't understand the course work. And gee, you only had to read the next sentence to see that I said no such thing. Look down. If there were *only* 1000 users vying for the net at the same time, they could each pump 56bps into the backbone. But there were many many more than that, and they weren't always needing the net all of the time. (hence the name concentrator) Don't try to bull**** someone who has forgotten more about the subject than you have yet to learn. Riiiight! Just because you can look up darpa on a wiki somewhere, doesn't mean you can understand what you have read. Comer's books on TCP/IP are standards, and they don't involve a wiki. They happen to be in my library of reference textbooks, and they happen to be standard references kept in all university libraries. Just because you can find the names of some books by using google, doesn't mean you have ever read them, or understood them. I have copies of all three volumes of "Internetworking with TCP/IP- Client -Server Programming and Applications" by Douglas E. Comer, and David L. Stevens, Prentice Hall on my book shelf. (pick a page, any page, and I'll give you a quotation from it.) If you note the copyright date of this series, you will see 1993. A mere 20 years after I started working with GE's world wide networks... top posting my email on model 33 teletypes with bell 103 modems. The claim about slow speeds on ARPANET and Usenet is quite stupid. Really? Well, I suppose you think that everyone had 56K connections back in the '70's. I worked in the Electrical Engineering department at the University of Maryland, back then, and we were pretty proud of our first 9600 baud connection between the PDP11's, and the Univac's that had the darpa connection. It wasn't until we got a VAX 11/780 that we got a 56K pipe to the Univac's that connected to the darpanet. That was around 1980. I think diapers were you most prominent media for communication back then. ARPANET and Usenet did not exist at the same time. ARPANET didn't use TCP/IP protocol, and it gave way to what is now called the Internet when TCP/IP became the standard packet delivery protocol. Prior to usenet, a variation on email, we were using email broadcast lists. The same top posting rules applied. Usenet came into being while I was in graduate school, around 1980-83. I remember there was quite a buzz at that time. Decwriters were 300 baud, and the most common affortable modems were still using the Bell 103 standard from the late '50s. 1200 baud modems were used for expensive applications, usually computer to computer data transfer. The 1200 baud modem didn't come into general use until DC Hayes produced an inexpensive model around 1983. It was a real screamer compared to the Bell 103's. Shortly after that, the message posting system called Usenet was formalized to run on the Internet and on several other message delivery systems (such as UUCP). So your reference to ARPANET is simply irrelevant. ARPANET and Usenet never coexisted, making the claims about 300 bps and other speed limitations total BS intended to impress the ignorant. Enough said. Conversation ended. You don't seem to be worth any followup messages until you do some additional reading. I don't need to read about it, I was there doing it. My first exposure to a world wide network was GE's back around 1970. It was the first commercial use of a global network. The normal terminal to connect to that net was a Model 33 Teletype, with a bell 103 modem. I bet you think they used Windows based PC's with 56K modems, and Netscape. -Chuck |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
john wrote in
: Who is Slow Code? What is his call??? Does anybody know??? Hello John. I'm KB9RQZ, and I just love CW. We need to bring back code testing for Techs. 13 wpm should work fine, Then we can keep the riff-raff off the repeaters and end all the bogus moon bounce contacts. I've been burned by bogus EME contacts, but I'm a retard. 73'sssss & 88'sssssss SC |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
" wrote in
ps.com: From: Chuck Harris on Sat, Oct 7 2006 12:40 pm Thank you for the explanation. As a user on a corporate system (RCA Corporation, EASD, Van Nuys, CA) '73 to '75, and with a Tym-Share account (the time-sharing computer company), I concur. Slow Code wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 10:28:10 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: Actually top posting is a sign of *experience*. Us guys that were on the internet back when it was run by darpa always top posted. That was because we were running very slow lines, typically 110 to 300 baud, and it was desirable not to have to wait through the down load of a dozen copies of the same quoted Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt! My bull**** detector just went off real loud. Here is an authoritative statement about ARPANET from one of Comer's books: [Blowcode's ears must be ringing all the time from his "bull**** detector" going off on his own postings... :-) ] "Initially, most of the leased data circuits in the ARPANET operated at 56 Kbps, a speed considered extremely fast in 1968 but slow by current standards." -- Douglas E. Comer, Internetworking with TCP/IP, Volume One, 3rd Edition, Prentice-Hall (1995), page 57. Yep, those were the *backbones* of ARPANET. We had *ONE* at the University of Maryland back in the 1970s. That leased line cost thousands of dollars per month, and was paid for by darpa. Compare that to the backbones of today which are measured in terrabits per second. These 56K backbones were connected to mainframe computers that acted as concentrators, and provided connections to other mainframes, and to thousands of users on timesharing systems. Yes, I have that right, *thousands* of users shared a single 56K backbone. Those users that were local to the concentrator (eg, in the computer room) were connected to the mainframe by various speed RS-232 lines, but those who were on remote dial up connections were connected by good old bell 103, 110 to 300 baud modems. Heh heh heh...the "high tech" of its time, a mere 30+ years ago. "Speedy" Teletype Model 33s (?) and "high speed" 300 baud video terminals (with local memory to print out screens on Teletypes) where I was using it. :-) 300 baud, my ass! You should have been on a time sharing machine connected directly to the 56K ARPANET, Yep, we were on timesharing machines, Univac 1106's, 1108's, and 1140's, and as I said, thousands of users shared a single 56K leased line into Darpanet. Do the math, if you can't, I'll help you: 56K/1000 = 56 bps. If there were *only* 1000 users vying for the net at the same time, they could each pump 56bps into the backbone. But there were many many more than that, and they weren't always needing the net all of the time. (hence the name concentrator) "Concentrators" still exist but in a vastly different form, configuration, and specifications. As a personal computer hobbyist since '76 I've not delved into them (no need to for personal dial-up connections) but know many who are; they have supplied some interesting literature on them as well as in-person explanations. so don't bother to backpedal by I'm sorry, I don't backpedal for idiots. I don't brake for them either. Blowcode is the road kill of this newsgroup... claiming dialup speeds. (And of course Usenet didn't even begin until the 80's, shortly after ARPANET had ended.) Don't try to bull**** someone who has forgotten more about the subject than you have yet to learn. Riiiight! Just because you can look up darpa on a wiki somewhere, doesn't mean you can understand what you have read. HAAAAAA... :-) Blowcode has never stated his amateur license call. Perhaps he has "forgotten" it? :-) I haven't forgotten it. It's a real 20WPM extra class licence. Not one of them cheap Nickled down hand-out ones. Heee Heeee Heeeeeeeeee. Ten-Four Len? SC |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On Sun, 08 Oct 2006 18:49:15 -0700, Don Bowey wrote: On 10/8/06 9:03 AM, in article , " wrote: On Sun, 8 Oct 2006 15:25:58 +0000 (UTC), ) wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 11:16:22 -0700, Don Bowey wrote: On 10/7/06 10:42 AM, in article , " wrote: On Sat, 7 Oct 2006 15:28:25 +0000 (UTC), (Slow Code) wrote: stop you welching sc http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ I reported your abuse to this and other boards, to your service provider. Hopefully they will shut you down. fukc you inner mouth. http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ stop the foring and iD theft http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ I see you have a new path this time. I sent this one and the routing to the abuse address, too. Hey Mark, this retard is following you around and harrassing you. You should complain his ISP about him and dont let the bitchwhore get way with it. He also violate his state laws and you state laws and you can file police complaint against the harrassment coward. Todd N9OGL OMEGA ONE RADIO 13.556.00 LSB 88.3 MHz FM |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Oct 2006 18:49:15 -0700, Don Bowey wrote: On 10/8/06 9:03 AM, in article , " wrote: On Sun, 8 Oct 2006 15:25:58 +0000 (UTC), ) wrote: On Sat, 07 Oct 2006 11:16:22 -0700, Don Bowey wrote: On 10/7/06 in article , " wrote: On Sat, 7 Oct 2006 15:28:25 +0000 (UTC), (Slow Code) wrote: stop you welching sc http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ I reported your abuse to this and other boards, to your service provider. Hopefully they will shut you down. fukc you inner mouth. http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ stop the foring and iD theft http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ I see you have a new path this time. I sent this one and the routing to the abuse address, too. you wilonly siht and fall backc in it again gay basher. http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Another forge brought to you by Lloyd Davies NOVFP. http://www.qrz.com/detail/N0VFP http://i12.tinypic.com/2qnv3fr.jpg Hi Lardass. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
Imax ground plane question | CB | |||
Two Shortwave Listener (SWL) 10:1 Baluns for Random Wire Antennas | Swap | |||
FS / New Motorola VHF portable antennas (Motorola Branded!!) | Swap | |||
F/A New Motorola VHF portable antennas (Motorola Branded!!) | Swap |