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The resources below are additional free pubnixes and public access systems

with various offerings and services. They mostly focus on FOSS and community

support as collaborative and loosely based social networking and learning in

a character based environment.

Super Dimension Fortress - Established 1987

The great great grandpappy of public access UNIX systems. This is actually

where the notion of what a tilde community actually has come from - the "~"

character is used to provide shorthand in UNIX for a user's home directory

and refers to virtually hosted gopher and web based publicly facing sites.

SDF began life as the Magic City Micro-BBS running on an Apple IIe in 1987.

The name Super Dimension Fortress was an homage to a Japanese anime series

and derived from the 'SIG' (Special Interest Group) called SDF-1 that the

BBS was centered around, in the Dallas Texas vicinity, and within three years

the system was migrated to the i386 platform running under SVR4 UNIX and SDF

joined the lonestar.org UUCP network, eventually annexing the domain - ergo,

sdf.lonestar.org.

Physical operations were moved to Seattle, Washington in 2001 along with the

adoption and migration to NetBSD, where it primarily has its focus to this

day. In 2016 SDF user accounts numbered over 47,000 people, and although not

all members are very active, the covetted ARPA membership is often sought out

even by those who know they're not going to be active due to such membership

being considered a badge of honor in the world of geekdom.

SDF's stewardship in the arena of retro computing, the restoration of vintage

mainframes, minis, and microcomputers is legendary, and its efforts to bring

and maintain this machinery and the respective operating sytems in a publicly

accessable museam environment is ongoing, and rivalled only perhaps, by the

similar efforts of Dr. Bernd Ulmann, AKA, the Vaxman, and his museam in

Germany.

A nod to the term, 'tilde' still exists on the official website, from which

the origin of the community name stems, although the link no longer provides

the directory listing of users, and sdf.lonestar.org still redirects to the

main sdf.org webpage where new users can sign up.

SDF-EU Public Access UNIX System

SDF-EU, based in Falkenstein, Germany, is an independant subsidiary of the

Super Dimensional Fortress (SDF.org). A networked community of free software

authors, teachers, students, researchers, hobbyists, enthusiasts and the blind

Its mission is to provide remotely accessible computing facilities for the

advancement of public education, cultural enrichment, scientific research and

recreation - including the recreational exchange of information concerning the

Liberal and Fine Arts.

Members have UNIX shell access to games, email, usenet, chat, bboard, webspace

gopherspace, programming utilities, archivers, browsers, and more.

The Tildeverse - social, learning, creating

The Tildeverse, not to be confused, neccesarily with the Fediverse, is a loose

association of like-minded tilde communities, although it does maintain a few

facilities in the Fediverse.

To describe these communities, tildes are pubnixes in the spirit of tilde.club

which was created in 2014 by paul ford.

Member status in the tildeverse mainly involves some level of engagement or

presence on irc. All of the other tilde pubnix systems are independent of

each other.

Deathrow OpenVMS Cluster

The Deathrow OpenVMS Cluster free public access system, based in

Jacksonville, Florida and now defunct, was a network of machines centered

around the naming convention of mass serial killers. Machine names such as

Gein, Manson, and Dahmer, were a tongue in cheek reference theme for hostnames

and the cluster of hardware available to those accessing the network to study

and learn operations and programming under the OpenVMS Operating system.

DeathRow was a popular service up until its decommisioning and subequent

mothballing and storage of the machines by founder Champ, "Da Beave", Clark.