rax on Tue, 10 Jun 2014 11:22:32 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> To-morrow the Minitel! (!) |
Since we are in "old-timer" mode, here are a few additional remarks about the pre-historic media world of the 80s .... - Re: Minitel ... check the not-so-negative description at <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minitel>. But it was a text-based (French) system with rudimentary graphics and was blown away (like Timesharing networks & BBSs) when the Internet/WWW became generally available in 1994/95. No fault for the French PTT who seemed to have done everything right at the time. Who, in the early 80s, could have predicted the coming Internet Tsunami? - There were alternatives to post/fax/telephone in 1988/9 (but all, of course, "telephone-based"). One was the IP Sharp world-wide timesharing network (IPSA) with the artists user-group "Artex" which existed from 1980 till about '92. Expensive but accessibe, Artex was used for contact, organisation and as a (text-based) medium for "Telematic" art projects -- including Roy Ascott's legendary "la plissure du texte" (1983) One should also not forget the Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs) which operated on a standard protocol and exchanged data on the telephone "night-rate" by using "store and forward" messaging. BBSs were very geeky and not really suitable for art projects but very usefull for maintaining contact and organising projects Some BBSs were themselves art projects .... for instance "The Thing" BBS, founded by artist Wolfgang Staehle in the early 90s, moved to the Internet and hosted Nettime for many years. And soforth .. - There was another system which everyone seems to have forgotten in writing telecomm history - The PLATO project designed by University of Illinois and Control Data Corp.: <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLATO_(computer_system)> It was basically an educational (hardware/software) network with limited public access. I knew of it because John Southworth, an artist/teacher in Hawaii, had both Plato access and an Artex account and participated in several projects that I organised in the early 80s ... there was no way to link the systems except by typing information from one terminal into another by hand ... pre-history! enough! best, Robert Adrian ========================================================== On 09.06.2014, at 12:47, Tjebbe van Tijen wrote: > In the years 1988/1989 we were organising in Amsterdam a > congregation from radical publishers, performers and groups from all > over Europe from Russia to the British isles, from Norway to Spain: > Europe Against The Current. > > Communication in those years was - compared to now - very limited: > postal system, telephone & fax. <....> robert adrian wiedner hauptstrasse 37/69 a-1040 wien ++43 1 504 3110 <http://alien.mur.at/rax> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org