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This is what we wrote about it back then (1987):
Our multi line BBS is available 24h at (+352) 292199 - V34. We offer a 5
Gigas HD and 6 CD-Roms online to our members. Only line 1 and the HD
are available to unregistered user. See registration menu on the BBS for
more information. Don't hesitate to mail for additionnal information. Besides
the BBS and the online presence, we offer courses in various computer related
matters, hardware discounts in local shops and we occasionnaly sell hardware
as well, at bulk price (see the local page).
The very first BBS was hosted on a 286 Olivetti machine with 20 Megs under DOS, the last one on a pentium with 10 Gigs under OS/2.
Fidonet is an amateur network. It is relatively simple to set up, does not use complicated things like a tcp/ip stack, works over a simple phone line, is free and available to anyone. Moreover it's basic principle is that most of the things are done offline: that ensures a reduced cost.
This is roughly how it works:
You read it whenever you have some time.
The trick is to make a kind of pyramid with the mail. This highly perilous exercice is called "routing", ie determining the basic rules governing the dispatching of the mail.
In the best of worlds, things go like this:
the world is divided into smaller and smaller units: zone, networks, nodes, points. It is usually written as zone:network/node.point. For example:
2:270/25.1 2 means Europe, 27 means Luxemburg (Region), 0 is the network, 25 is the node (the computer of the Club de TeleMatique) and 1 is the final user.
When 2:270/25.1 writes a mail to somebody in the USA, for example 1:1/1.1, the mail goes from
2:270/25.1 to 2:270/25 => 2:270/0 => 2:1/0 => 1:1/0 => 1:1/1 => 1:1/1.1
Downside: depending on the number of "jumps" the mail has to do, delivery can take several days.
BUT: it's fun :-) and very cheap, since with just a local call you can send out an unlimited number of messages, which makes the individual message cheaper than any postal rate.
The principle is actually the same as internet, where mail also bounces from one computer to the other.
The main difference is that in internet, computers are usually online 24h, whereas in fidonet they only have to be available at certain times of the day (zone mail hour).
Fidonet has also schemes for file distribution, an equivalent of FTP, and many other things.
All this is glued together by a weekly nodelist which enables mailers to know where to call to send the mail.
This means that fidonet is much more chartered than the internet, and therefore maybe more suitable for beginners.
You can communicate with somebody from fidonet by reversing the fidonet address this way:
2:270/25.11 becomes joe.bloke@p11.f25.n270.z2.fidonet.org at leats when the gateway works.