Commodore 64 Helps Revive The BBS Days

Before the modern Internet existed, there were still plenty of ways of connecting with other computer users “online”, although many of them might seem completely foreign to those of us in the modern era. One of those systems was the Bulletin Board System, or BBS, which would have been a single computer, often in someone’s home, connected to a single phone line. People accessing the BBS would log in if the line wasn’t busy, leave messages, and quickly log out since the system could only support one user at a time. While perhaps a rose-tinted view, this was a more wholesome and less angsty time than the modern algorithm-driven Internet, and it turns out these systems are making a bit of a comeback as a result.

The video by [The Retro Shack] sets up a lot of this history for context, then, towards the end, uses a modern FPGA-based recreation called the Commodore 64 Ultimate to access a BBS called The Old Net, a modern recreation of what these 80s-era BBS systems were like. This involves using a modern networking card that allows the C64 to connect to Wi-Fi access points to get online instead of an old phone modem, and then using a terminal program called CCGMS to connect to the BBS itself. Once there, users can access mail, share files, and even play a few games.

While the video is a very basic illustration of how these BBS systems worked and how to access one, it is notable in that it’s part of a trend of rejecting more modern technology and systems in favor of older ones, where the users had more control. A retro machine like a C64 or Atari is not required either; modern operating systems can access these with the right terminal program, too. A more in-depth guide to the BBS can be found here for those looking to explore, and we’ve also seen other modern BBS systems recently.

Thanks to [Charlie] for the tip!

3 thoughts on “Commodore 64 Helps Revive The BBS Days

  1. again..hackaday posting crap like its a new thing…..
    hate to tell ya…but weve been connecting to bbs’s with amstrad cpc’s for years now…on the original hardware… no fpga crap needed

    1. No, they are not posting crap like it’s a new thing.
      The thing here is that with the new C64 hardware now available and hitting the market at very large numbers, it’s “suddenly” just more accessible out of the box than it ever was before, making it easier for more people to join the party. Which is the whole idea… the more people at the party the more fun the party could become. Which might “revive the BBS days” a bit more then just a handful of people (that needed to buy a DIY modem with a 3D printed case from ebay) ever could.

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