This is profoundly unrelated to anything voice, but thought I'd share a brief 
anecdote that I regret not taking the time to put into words earlier. I'm sorry 
if it's inappropriate for this list, but it's not very busy nowadays, so 
hopefully it won't be skin off anyone's nose.

I'm pushing 40 now, but I spent much of my 1990s childhood at [the University 
of] Notre Dame, where my parents were poor graduate students. We couldn't 
afford any nontrivial computer hardware or home Internet access; I believe we 
had a 386SX/40 with 8 MB of RAM and MS-DOS 6.22/Win 3.1 as late as 1997, no 
connectivity. However, Notre Dame is a wealthy private institution and I 
certainly had proximity to impressive hardware and connectivity. 

The old-timers on this list won't be impressed that I was on the web (and 
Gopher, and Usenet) in 1994, but considering I was 8 and had just arrived to 
the US two years prior, from the USSR, it was quite a precocious start.

Spurred on by an interest in the C programming language and multi-user chat 
servers, I wormed my way to some atmospheric awareness of UNIX, and even Linux, 
by 9 or 10, but had neither the skills, nor hardware, nor the mandate to take 
over our paltry family PC with it. I knew I needed to learn something called 
the UNIX shell, which I understood to be akin to the by-now familiar DOS 
commands, but, aside from some not-entirely-licit but limited tinkering with 
Solaris and AIX on campus (abetted by sympathetic CS graduate students), I 
didn't have a straightforward path to doing that.

I remember being sat in the Hesburgh Library reference room at an NT4 
workstation, aged maybe 10, when I ecstatically stumbled upon one of the 
vanishingly few places that offered Linux/UNIX shell accounts to... well, 
anyone: nether.net <http://nether.net/>, run by one Jared Mauch, based in 
Ypsilanti, MI in those days I think. The other was sdf.lonestar.org 
<http://sdf.lonestar.org/>, which I think was *BSD, and in any case, quite 
overloaded. 

Nobody was more uplifted and grateful than ~10 year-old me to his own Linux 
shell account at puck.nether.net <http://puck.nether.net/>. I could even host a 
site out of ~/public_html! My first few baby steps with 'ls', 'cd', 'mkdir' and 
the rest were taken there, and, while I don't want to get too grandiose and 
lyrical, I think it's safe to say that was instrumental and central to every 
aspect of my professional future. Within a year or two, I was running RedHat 
4.0 / kernel 2.0.29 at home on a donated 486, and the rest is history. 

All to say, I found it quite heartwarming when I saw that this list was hosted 
here when it spun out of NANOG. 

Thank you, Jared, for nether.net <http://nether.net/>, for hosting this list, 
your service to the community, and to giving a know-it-all munchkin an 
invaluable learning tool. 

-- 
Alex Balashov
Principal Consultant
Evariste Systems LLC
Web: https://evaristesys.com
Tel: +1-706-510-6800

_______________________________________________
VoiceOps mailing list
[email protected]
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops

Reply via email to