TAG (BBS)

T.A.G. is a DOS-based bulletin board system (BBS) computer program, released from 1986 to 2000.

T.A.G. was written in Borland Pascal and is free for business or personal use. The authors considered it fun to give the program away while others tried to charge for BBS programs.[1]

Authors over the years: Victor Capton, Randy Goebel, Alan Jurison, Paul Loeber, Robert Numerick and Paul Williams. All live in the Detroit (MI) area except Alan Jurison who lives in Syracuse (NY).

Peak number of running systems: Just over 1000, mostly in the United States and Canada.

Areas of major T.A.G. BBS concentrations:

A quote from one of the authors:

We all poured countless hours into the development and support of people running BBSs. Even today I don't think the internet has come close to the sense of community and simple accomplishment that BBSing provided. Building and running a complete environment on your local computer and watching people use it is a far different experience than putting up a web page on some remote server. We all made and still have a great many friends from being sysops and BBS developers.

Other Notes:

No one ever got them to answer definitively on what their name stood for, but there was a reasonably reliable rumor that it was from "The Adventurer's Guild" which was a Dungeons and Dragons sort of reference.

The only known T.A.G. BBS still in existence can be accessed via telnet at diskbox.homeip.net

Intro Screen

The intro screen to the T.A.G. BBS login was:

  /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
 /\/\/\/                     [>> Welcome to <<]                       \/\/\/\
|   /\/      ______________        ______          ___________         \/\   |
|  / /      /             /|      /     /|        /          /\         \ \  |
| / /       TTTTTTTTTTTTTT/       AAAAAA /|       GGGGGGGGGGG\/|         \ \ |
|/\/ /\           TT |           AA|___AA /|      GG |      GG/        /\ \/\|
|-< <  >          TT |          AA/     AA /|     GG |   _____        <  > >-|
|\/\ \/           TT |         AAAAAAAAAAAA |     GG |  /     /|       \/ /\/|
| \ \             TT |         AA |      AA |     GG |__GGGGGG |         / / |
|  \ \            TT |         AA |      AA |     GG/       GG |        / /  |
|   \/\           TT/   <>     AA/       AA/  <>   GGGGGGGGGGG/  <>    /\/   |
 \/\/\/\                                                              /\/\/\/
  \/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.