• windows 10 32bit

    From Matt Munson@1:218/109 to All on Thu Jun 24 21:15:42 2021
    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.


    --- WWIV 5.7.2.3536
    * Origin: Inland Utopia BBS * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (1:218/109)
  • From John Hiemenz@1:154/40 to Matt Munson on Sat Jun 26 09:36:35 2021
    Re: windows 10 32bit
    By: Matt Munson to All on Thu Jun 24 2021 09:15 pm

    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.

    Well, if you are going for relics, that OS/2 is going to be the winner.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
    * Origin: The Universal JoiNT - bbs.ujoint.org (1:154/40)
  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to MATT MUNSON on Sat Jun 26 10:37:00 2021
    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.


    --- WWIV 5.7.2.3536
    * Origin: Inland Utopia BBS * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (1:218/109)

    That may depend on what kind of BBS you want to run. I like linux because
    it has native nfs. However, many distributions no longer maintain a 32-bit version of linux.

    I see you are running WWIV. The WWIV developer(s) have started maintaining
    an OS/2 version again.
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
  • From Daniel Path@2:371/52 to Matt Munson on Sat Jun 26 18:17:40 2021
    Hello Matt.

    24 Jun 21 21:15, you wrote to All:

    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.

    i love my os2 :)

    Daniel

    ... 8:12pm up 3 days, 7:27:15, load: 67 processes, 274 threads.
    --- GoldED+/EMX 1.1.4.7
    * Origin: Roon's BBS - Budapest, HUNGARY (2:371/52)
  • From Kurt Weiske@1:218/700 to Matt Munson on Sat Jun 26 06:42:00 2021
    Matt Munson wrote to All <=-

    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.

    I'm running Win10/32, and it's updated regularly. As for relics, OS/2 is as relic-ey as they get!

    I'm tempted to update the BBS box to 64 bit Windows 10, as Synchronet is a 32-bit app and will run on it. I could run my DOS apps in DOSBOX and be able to throw more memory at the BBS and Shoutcast.

    In reality, the only part of the BBS that is dos-based now are my nodelist building tools and a couple of online games which no one's played in a
    while.


    ... Groovy
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: http://realitycheckbbs.org | tomorrow's retro tech (1:218/700)
  • From Kurt Weiske@1:218/700 to Mike Powell on Sun Jun 27 08:23:00 2021
    Mike Powell wrote to MATT MUNSON <=-

    That may depend on what kind of BBS you want to run. I like linux
    because it has native nfs. However, many distributions no longer
    maintain a 32-bit version of linux.

    I know there's a couple of OSes that have 32-bit versions, still. Debian
    will support 32-bit until 2025, at least.

    You mentioned NFS - I'm inheriting a Linux farm that's running LDAP for
    auth, and it's a pain in the ass. I'm wondering what was so bad about
    NIS/NFS for networking, it seemed to just work out of the box, and in my relatively limited experience, rarely broke.


    ... Change specifics to ambiguities
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: http://realitycheckbbs.org | tomorrow's retro tech (1:218/700)
  • From Matt Munson@1:218/109 to Kurt Weiske on Sun Jun 27 10:37:34 2021
    BY: Kurt Weiske(1:218/700)


    sadly its a relic now. Im debating if i should go os/2 or linux for bbsing.

    I'm running Win10/32, and it's updated regularly. As for relics, OS/2 is
    as
    relic-ey as they get!
    Im speaking about windows 11.


    --- WWIV 5.7.2.3536
    * Origin: Inland Utopia BBS * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (1:218/109)
  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to KURT WEISKE on Mon Jun 28 15:43:00 2021
    I know there's a couple of OSes that have 32-bit versions, still. Debian
    will support 32-bit until 2025, at least.

    I think that devuan, a debian derivative, may also.

    You mentioned NFS - I'm inheriting a Linux farm that's running LDAP for
    auth, and it's a pain in the ass. I'm wondering what was so bad about
    NIS/NFS for networking, it seemed to just work out of the box, and in my relatively limited experience, rarely broke.

    I also wonder about that. Like maybe the started doing it that way to
    support something else and maybe never changed it when they went all linux?
    Like you say, once I learned how to use it, NFS just works.

    Mike

    * SLMR 2.1a * It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)