Hi All,
I heard this on the RCR podcast and checked it out. very interesting.
Probably more-so for our U.S. friends who can remember PLATO. 8-)
Check it out.
https://www.irata.online/
You will need a Plato compatible Terminal prog which you can get from the site.
Hi All,
I heard this on the RCR podcast and checked it out. very interesting.
Probably more-so for our U.S. friends who can remember PLATO. 8-)
Check it out.
https://www.irata.online/
You will need a Plato compatible Terminal prog which you can get from the site.
Regards..Geo
ooooOOOOoooo
ps. I was informed a while back that the TI 99/4A was the only home computer that had standalone PLATO courseware, with the PLATO cartridge. Is this correct
, anyone? Were the Apple II, Atari, etc. PLATO packages terminal-based?
ps. I was informed a while back that the TI 99/4A was the only home computer that had standalone PLATO courseware, with the PLATOcartridge.
Is this correctterminal-based?
, anyone? Were the Apple II, Atari, etc. PLATO packages
James, your name is familiar. On AtariAge? I've been trying to place
your
name as to either a caller of my BBS, the TI-99/4A Yahoogroup, AtariAge,
or
maybe just here on the Retronet.
I know the TI 99/4A had their standalone PLATO courseware. I did have an agreement with the owners of the PLATO software to legally distribute the Plato diskettes online for a period of 10 years. That timeframe has since elapsed by three or four years if I am not mistaken. I just came across that
paperwork this past week.
For people with young children, the PLATO courseware is a good way to introduce them to a computer with some education software.
Beery
--Beery Miller -- 9640 News BBS -- 9640news.ddns.net:9640 --
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A39 2018/04/21 (Windows/64)
* Origin: 9640 News BBS (80:774/27)
OK, I saw your tagline from Dragonsweb, now I remember.
Yes, I did hear back from John. I've left a few posts on a topic of
"TI'er
in Need of Help" on Atariage. Sometime late May, I am going to take stuff over to him. I've got someone sending me a PC to take to him so he can at least have a decent version of Windows where he can still do stuff with a browser. Having dial up access for him is pretty poor. I've got a USB modem
I am going to provide to him along with a USB drive with all kinds of software
goodies including MAME and MESS.
He has such an old version of a web browser on his Windows system he can
no
longer order prescriptions, do anything with PayPal or Amazon, etc.
because
they all require a certain more recent browser version.
There is a Texas Instruments group now here on Retronet.
I'm presently waiting for the final pieces of the SMTP/POP server parts of Mystic BBS to be in place so I can complete an interface with the YahooGroup.
I've already got comp.sys.ti. No way to tie AtariAge into it, and do not think Greg would even want that to happen even if it were possible.
The issue with John's lack of wireless coverage is he apparently sits pretty
deep between some hills. Had his elevation been higher, it would be different.
Geo wrote to All:
Hi All,
I heard this on the RCR podcast and checked it out. very interesting.
Probably more-so for our U.S. friends who can remember PLATO. 8-)
Check it out.
https://www.irata.online/
You will need a Plato compatible Terminal prog which you can get from the site.
Kewl. What's the difference between irata.online and cyber1.org? Are they networked in any way?
I hate fragmentation in community-building.
Greetings, James Digriz
email: jbdigriz@bbs.dragonsweb.org
Geo wrote to All:
Hi All,
I heard this on the RCR podcast and checked it out. very interesting.
Probably more-so for our U.S. friends who can remember PLATO. 8-)
Check it out.
https://www.irata.online/
You will need a Plato compatible Terminal prog which you can get from the site.
Regards..Geo
ooooOOOOoooo
Also, were the old notesfiles from NovaNET ever archived? Or are they lost forever?
ps. I was informed a while back that the TI 99/4A was the only home computer that had standalone PLATO courseware, with the PLATO cartridge. Is this correct
, anyone? Were the Apple II, Atari, etc. PLATO packages terminal-based?
Greetings, James Digriz
email: jbdigriz@bbs.dragonsweb.org
The Guy running the irata.online thing is actively seeking people to help with
the building of clients for almost all the old micro's. He nearly has a C128
one ready, and is working on Atari and Amiga and others.
As for the content, I had a poke around and it seems to have A LOT of the old
LABs and course material up there online too. Which is very neet.
8-)
Regards..Geo
I heard this on the RCR podcast and checked it out. very interesting.
Probably more-so for our U.S. friends who can remember PLATO. 8-)
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