ggm 8 hours ago

The funny thing for me is that I reposted pre-grand-reorganising USENET to a mail list 2-3 years after the disaster, as a stream of consciousness thing and it felt "old" at the time. People emoting about mod.* and the structural semiotics of names, all kinds of things.

Old is as old does. I think Henry Spenser's utzoo postings would be interesting to see.

throwing_away 13 hours ago

But does it include binaries?

  • genewitch 13 hours ago

    this is a valid - if cheeky - question. There is probably a fair amount of software lost to the sands of time that would be fun to discover on an old NNTP server.

    • throwing_away 10 hours ago

      Valid and cheeky is squarely where I'm aiming, so thank you ;)

    • reddalo 11 hours ago

      It's sad that the Usenet archive by Google doesn't have old binaries at all, and neither do all those "modern" services which are primarly used for piracy.

      I wonder how much software has been lost forever.

      • genewitch 8 hours ago

        there are people like me that try to save everything forever, so less lost than would otherwise be assumed. Hopefully.

BirAdam 6 hours ago

I love the design of the site. Vivid memories of my Zenith Z-89

pogue 14 hours ago

What is this? An NNTP service of some sort?

  • krelian 13 hours ago

    An NNTP server that allows you to experience old Usenet with a 40 year delay. You'd get each day's messages as if they were published today.

  • nickthegreek 13 hours ago

    > olduse.net was posting the first 10 years of archived usenet articles to a news server, replaying usenet as it happened 30 years earlier. It also had a web interface with an interactive news reader, allowing you to access the news server via the web instead of using nntp.

  • yapyap 13 hours ago

    looks like an NNTP service that’ll publish your message after a certain amount of time depending on the port

WD-42 8 hours ago

Extremely fun to browse for a while, thank you.