...purchased the DOS version of Mustang's BBS software
...I decided to make my own Prodigy and devote it to hobbies.
Back in the late 80's, I had a subscription to Prodigy. When it expired, I research and purchased the DOS version of Mustang's BBS software and ran 4 p lines into my house.
My wife loved to write in Prodigy's Cross-Stitch echo, so I decided to make Prodigy and devote it to hobbies.
I lived in Broward county Florida and found various other dialup systems tha willing to
carry my feeds. The feed went as far as south Dade county and as far north Beach county.
Re: The Birth of HobbyNeton
By: Mike Dippel to All on Sat Jan 03 2026 08:29 am
Back in the late 80's, I had a subscription to Prodigy. When it expired, I
research and purchased the DOS version of Mustang's BBS software and ran 4 p
lines into my house.
My wife loved to write in Prodigy's Cross-Stitch echo, so I decided to make
Prodigy and devote it to hobbies.
I lived in Broward county Florida and found various other dialup systems tha
willing to
carry my feeds. The feed went as far as south Dade county and as far north
Beach county.
Thanks for sharing. Great story. Wish we could see more traffic in the echoes.
But I guess we are all overwhelmed with stuff on the web. I love reading the echoes and UseNet. Hate the spammers messed up UseNet, but same has happened
the web.
===
Amessyroom
toolazy.synchro.net:2323 (telnet)
On 1/11/2026 10:28 AM, Amessyroom wrote to Mike Dippel:
Re: The Birth of HobbyNet
By: Mike Dippel to All on Sat Jan 03 2026 08:29 am
Back in the late 80's, I had a subscription to Prodigy. When it expir research and purchased the DOS version of Mustang's BBS software and r lines into my house.
My wife loved to write in Prodigy's Cross-Stitch echo, so I decided to Prodigy and devote it to hobbies.
How did I get into BBSing?
Well if I recall, I had a TRS-80 Model III. 1st a 300 baud acoustic coupler modem. Then a direct connect phone line modem, still 300 baud. Got this while
in middle school. Took it to college and tried to believe it was good as the PCs. To me anyway it was, and all I had.
I eventually got a PC XT and got higher speed modems. I remember calling BBSes
during college. I didn't get into the games but enjoyed taking to sysops and message bases.
About the time I graduated, OS/2 was being pushed and I got interested in it as
a computer geek and computer science graduate. I got into Amateur Radio and decided to merge the two and created "The Backdoor BBS" in Morrisville, NC. I later moved to Cary, NC. Had two lines, one for BBS and other for house use
and when I needed to go get files.
I provided amateur radio call sign lookup, os/2 cd roms, and various shareware.
I got in some trouble indirectly with the BBS at work. Don't know if someone was trying to trash me or what; but worked through it. Don't know if I took it
down then or a little later when things declined.
For a year or two, I keep and published a list of ISPs and BBSes that had internet in the Research Triangle Area in NC.
I proceeded to concentrate on career, and didn't think about BBSes until I saw
some activity in 2024. I downloaded synchronet and have had it up since.
HobbyNet was one of the first FTNs I added and appreciate all your help Mike.
Love reading about your camping, BBS, and music adventures as well as your newer healthnet.
===
Amessyroom
toolazy.synchro.net:2323 (telnet)
My first computer was a Texas Instrument (forgot the model # maybe 99-4a)) and
| Sysop: | smooth0401 |
|---|---|
| Location: | New Providence, NJ |
| Users: | 4 |
| Nodes: | 4 (0 / 4) |
| Uptime: | 26:29:58 |
| Calls: | 333 |
| Files: | 673 |
| D/L today: |
33 files (18,232K bytes) |
| Messages: | 56,347 |