1) What was your typical routine for using BBS? How often would you log on and check it? What program would you use?
2) How did you even discover servers in the first place when you first started out?
3) Were there big popular servers that everyone used or was it fragmented?
4) What was the general vibe of discussions like back then? How was it different than now?
5) What kind of programming/tech things did people discuss? What were the hot topics?
pwg•1h ago
Typically every couple days, but that all depended on how much free time (and available telephone time) one had.
> What program would you use?
Typically, a "terminal program". Qmodem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qmodem) and ProComm (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procomm, link is what comes up on Wikipedia) were two popular favorites.
> 2) How did you even discover servers in the first place when you first started out?
Magazines and/or word of mouth.
> 3) Were there big popular servers that everyone used or was it fragmented?
Some of both, but way more fragmented than centralized (running a "big server" was also a "big expense" on the part of the Sysop, so most were small hobbyist endeavors that supported one to some small number (usually single digits) of concurrent users).
> 4) What was the general vibe of discussions like back then? How was it different than now?
As most were small (one or two phone lines to the BBS) and because toll (long distance phone) calls were charged by the minute, most were small isolated islands within a local calling area (which 'local' calls were usually unmetered [not charged a per minute charge]). So one usually ended up discussing with the same group of other users of that bbs rather than never encountering the same user again as is the case today. I.e. it was more a "remote access social club" for geographically "near" individuals.
At the same time, no one had the ability to broadcast to the world (in the same manner as FB, Twitter, Youtube, Tiktok, etc.) so there was (sometimes) less "politics" and/or if there was "politics" being discussed it was often local instead of national.