Subj : Re: BBS Software Recommendations To : Chad Adams From : Sean Dennis Date : Tue Nov 26 2024 17:08:10 -=> Chad Adams wrote to Sean Dennis <=- CA> To be honest, you should check out Linux Mint. If you are using it on a CA> desktop, it has the look and feel of Windows, with a Linux core. It is CA> based on Debian/Ubuntu and is extremely good. I have used Linux Mint before. However, I am no fan of systemd and that killed any interest for me right there. CA> I use Mint for development, and I use Slack15 for servers. Slackware is CA> much more difficult to learn but well worth it. Slackware is the most "UNIX-like" and the one Linux distro I like best. It was very easy for me to jump over to FreeBSD from using Slackware. I've dabbled in many Linux distros over the past 24 years but I keep coming back to Slackware. CA> Everyone is hung up on Windows to play doors and while that is true, CA> its only a small part of the BBS experience. You can always use Linux, CA> and then use Door game servers for your door games. Truth is with CA> doors, you can do all this work to host them, and then have 1 player. CA> Its just not worth it. Run whatever OS you want, whatever BBS software CA> you want, and use a BBS Door Game server and still offer a better CA> experience. I get the fun is setting it up, but it gets old.. I don't need to use "door game servers" as I can run DOS doors just fine using DOSemu. Doors are not my primary concern anyway as people mainly call for messages and files. I have one 84-year-old caller that's been calling my board for 20 years. I don't care that I get a bunch of callers as that's not why I run a BBS. The main reason I still run a board is for my enjoyment, not anyone else's these days. In the grand scheme of things, I have several other hobbies that bring me joy also but I am just not ready to yet. I have the framework in place where if I decided to quit it all tomorrow, Micronet would continue on just fine without me as would my BBS software. I'm not at that point yet and I don't know if I ever will be. My BBS runs very nicely now; it's very stable and has not crashed once on its own. It works for me and I'm happy with it. I could write a "door game server" using socat, a bash script, and DOSemu (it's surprisingly very easy to do) if that's what I wanted and be done with it. But my happy memories of BBSing's halcyon days of calling local boards are one of the reasons why I still choose to run a hardware-based BBS stillo even in this "modern" age. -- Sean .... "To be happy, make other people happy." -- W. Clement Stone --- MultiMail/Linux * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200) .