I come from a mostly-UNIX, mostly-TCP/IP background. I don't understand DECnet well
yet, but I want to learn more! Much of my interest in joining HECnet and playing around is
because I largely skipped over DECnet in its original airing, and now it seems like a
weird foreign land that I feel an irrational need to grok in fullness.
What are/were the conventions for providing public services over DECnet Phase IV networks,
to remote users without their own local user accounts? I.e., let's say that I had a
node on a large DECnet-only network back in the before time, and I wanted to share a file
repository in a manner comparable to anonymous FTP on a TCP/IP network. How would I have
done that? Were there conventions for doing that sort of thing back then, or was that a
foreign concept on large DECnet networks at the time?
Were there any examples of BBS-like servers living on DECnet networks? Online multi-player
games such as MUDs? Early DECnet-based examples of "log into the coffee pot to see if
the brew is fresh"? DECnet-based analogs to Archie for discovering stuff?
DECnet-based USENET-like communities?
I don't know if any of these concepts even made sense in the DECnet world at the time.
In addition to only understanding the networks of the 80s from a UNIX-centric,
TCP/IP-centric worldview, I'm also having a hard time un-thinking the newer concepts
I'm used to after so many years of steeping in a broth of HTTP and social media. I
have somewhat conflicting urges to both learn how to think like a 1980s DECnet user, and
to retcon modern concepts into an alternate reality where TCP/IP never took off.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <nf6x at nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/