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Re: 1976 and M17


 

I recall hosting at (a major dial-up ISO) in Seattle in 1996 on a pent 133 box running Debian.? We did that because we had the Big Pipe, a T3 (45Mb/s) feed from Sprint. Those were the days.


On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 7:12?PM Tony Langdon via <vk3jed=[email protected]> wrote:
I was an early adopter of Linux, both as a hobbyist (1995) and in commercial service as a router, firewall and web server on a handful of old PCs (1997), and I saw the Linux revolution coming.? It didn't take much to convince the boss.? I had the knowledge and hands on experience, and the price was right.? A year later, the first articles about Linux in business started coming out in the tech press.

On 12/8/24 11:53 pm, K4HCK via wrote:
For the post-minicomputer generation, the relevant genX analogy will be that of Linux vs. Windows. Linux offered the same open source freedom that M17 does today in that it was a completely accessible, modifiable, and "free" alternative to Microsoft that we could tinker with. Today, almost every server on the internet runs Linux. If the M17 future follows that path, we'll see a ubiquitous mode found on nearly every transceiver. And people won't really think about it.
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It's exciting to me as a "techie" because it can be entirely a software interaction. The intersection of software and RF is what got me interested in the hobby, and this extends that world of freedom and possibility.?
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People will be persuaded to invest in M17 once they can see the benefits over other modes in practical application. That will come as the early adopters continue to build on this initial success and showcase what's possible.
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73
K4HCK
Cale


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL



--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM,?Tulalip, WA??Portland, OR, 360-474-7474

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