this channel will be #general talking (not to take away from here though)...
the feeds are automatically added to other channels with names of the alerts...
thanks
moosejunky99
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Only since the late 90s!man.. this site been here forever.. wow your joined date is crazy
Not by all that muchYeah, I'm still a n00b compared to some of the old timers.
When did you first use the internet?The internet existed back in 2003?!??!!?
Hey I worked for Bell Labs back then and AT&T gave me a free WeCO issue standard phone or two for use at home Before that at Stony Brook, New York Telephone (a Bell Company) had only one kind of standard WeCO black phones to use in the dorm rooms. So all was good since the acoustic couplers were designed to work well with those.I remember those .... what a pain if you didn't get it seated quite right - or if you didn't have a "standard" phone handset
I had GEnie and a 1200 modem.....I thought it was the greatest thing since sliced bread for home use, boy have times (and expectations) changed
That is exactly the reason that there is the "scheme" field in the structure of a URI. Some call it the "protocol" field, but the core standard for URI calls it the scheme field, which is where the "http" or "ftp" or whatever goes, preceding the ":". If there is an "authority" that is introduced by the "//" following the ":".GEnie was great, and much better than Plodigy. I joined Compuserve in 1979(?) or so. Far too many think the Internet is the Web. Nope, http is merely one of many protocols. </geekspeek>
That is exactly the reason that there is the "scheme" field in the structure of a URI. Some call it the "protocol" field, but the core standard for URI calls it the scheme field, which is where the "http" or "ftp" or whatever goes, preceding the ":". If there is an "authority" that is introduced by the "//" following the ":".
Wiki has a good article on the structure of URIs (and how they relate to URLs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Identifier
Back in the days I was knee deep in the TCP/IP vs. OSI wars. It was quite educational and entertaining actually. Those were the days of wild west in the guts of the internet stack, probably some of the best and most satisfying parts of my technical career. We had the unique privilege of moving up the stack layer by layer, contributing some at each layer, as the whole thing evolved and matured.Somehow I knew somebody would nab me for my omission of ://
As long as we don't discuss Gopher and Veronica, we can bring this thing back to Discord.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_protocol_suite
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