Posted on 01/28/2011 10:02:16 PM PST by americanophile
IDG News Service - "When countries block, we evolve," an activist with the group We Rebuild wrote in a Twitter message on Friday.
That's just what many Egyptians have been doing this week, as groups like We Rebuild scramble to keep the country connected to the outside world, turning to landline telephones, fax machines and even ham radio to keep information flowing in and out of the country.
Although one Internet service provider -- Noor Group -- remains in operation, Egypt's government abruptly ordered the rest of the country's ISPs to shut down their services just after midnight local time Thursday. Mobile networks have also been turned off in some areas.
The blackout appears designed to disrupt organization of the country's growing protest movement, which is calling for the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
"[B]asically, there are three ways of getting information out right now -- get access to the Noor ISP (which has about 8% of the market), use a land line to call someone, or use dial-up," Jillian York, a researcher with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society, said via e-mail.
Egyptians with dial-up modems get no Internet connection when they call into their local ISP, but calling an international number to reach a modem in another country gives them a connection to the outside world.
We Rebuild is looking to expand those dial-up options. It has set up a dial-up phone number in Sweden and is compiling a list of other numbers Egyptians can call. It is also distributing information about its activities on a Wiki page.
(Excerpt) Read more at computerworld.com ...
BB’s were mostly porn and software.
There is an oxymoron.
Bingo!
Wonder why our usurper wants the off switch?
Mu-Barak Hussein Obama.
These methods are too simplistic to work. What needs to be done is a loose network of techies needs to be formed. They need to develop a plan to hijack microwave and cell phone data towers, transmit data over existing infrastructure (thousands of miles of fiber optics), and develop backup wireless communication. Let’s face it, if the government shuts down the Internet, it’s war!
The only way to shut it down would be to shut down The Grid.
Rural areas would be a problem (at first) and it would probably have to go back to text only but it would still be communication.
A techie friend told me that cell phone data goes over the internet. No internet, no cell phones; or the cost goes way, way up.
Billions of dollars every day move on the retail side of the internet business equation. Delivery of internet purchases produces tens of thousands of jobs in the package delivery industry.
The "internet kill switch" is an "economy kill switch," which in turn is an "Americal kill switch." Which is, ultimately, why Obama wants it so much.
what the protesters need,
is a pirate radio station
Even so I'm sure all of the programs I used on those as well as on the PC's are on the HD's I've saved. The only terminal program I recall by name is "Mikeyterm" but there were lots of others as well as BBS software.
In a couple of weeks the computer I'm now using will be "retired" and available for testing and seeing what's on those old drives.
I have a few old (pre-1998) BBS software programs in my disk archives. Most of these are DOS based and may not even run on Win7 systems.
Probably, the best way would be to do a Google search. I know of a few websites that catalogue and archive old programs.
I've retired a few computers, and I'll go and buy a hard drive enclosure kit (Radio Shack has them) and put the old hard drive in the enclosure. Give me a chance to keep the old data and have an extra USB external hard drive.
(Some with active download links)
Remember, this stuff is worthless if you have digital phone service (commonly bundled with cable internet). VOIP will shut down along with the internet, so get an analog phone line (and a *modem*). Hmm, where did I put that U.S. Robotics 56K...?
At one time I was SO jealous of folks who had 56K! I was stuck a LONG time with 300 baud acoustic and then "upgraded" to a 12.4K or 24K IIRC.
Even at that speed I though I was flying, LOL!
I never had an acoustic modem, but I did start out with a 300 baud “VICModem” plugged into the back of my Commodore 64! Great fun, though dialing into QuantumLink was like watching paint dry. The later, faster modems did indeed make things more pleasant.
I think they were originally based in Canada, but after becoming part of AOL, I'm not sure if the servers moved. It makes me wonder what other options might be out there.
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