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Showing posts with label Freedom BBS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom BBS. Show all posts

Friday, February 02, 2018

Friday Read: The Lost Civilization of Dial-Up Bulletin Board Systems

In late 2016, Benj Edwards wrote a somewhat melancholy article about the few bulletin board systems (BBSes) that remain active today. Like several of my friends, I was an avid BBSer from about 1987 to 1994, that golden era before the Internet changed the world. There was a BBS for the U.S.S. Bonaventure (the Edmonton Star Trek Club, which is still around and has a Twitter account (!)), and my friend Ron hosted Freedom BBS for several years, an anarchic reaction to some of Edmonton's more button-down BBSes. Someone has compiled what seems to be a pretty authoritative list of BBSes that existed in the old, more expansive 403 area code, which back then included all of Alberta and the Northwest Territories. There were hundreds of them! I had no idea.

Benj's article covers the American BBS scene, and he relates some amusing anecdotes. It makes me a little misty; thanks to Ron, I have some of the writing I shared on BBSes in those days, but most of it has been lost. Most of it was likely garbage, but I remember a story or two that I thought was pretty good.

I can still remember the screeching noise my modem made before it connected. Ah, those were the days. 

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Freedom Fragments: Untitled Star Trek Story

Ron's generous gift of his Freedom BBS archives has presented me with a few surprises, including a number of poems, stories and fragments I have absolutely no recollection of writing. Most of it is pretty awful, including the following bit of Star Trek fan fiction, but there are a few turns of phrase I might steal from my past self for future projects.

The following story fragment was written in early 1992, and I present it here with post headers (my Freedom BBS handle was The Turtle in those days, after The Great and Powerful Turtle created by George R.R. Martin) and spelling mistakes intact. Aside from the purple prose I'm also a little embarrassed by the objectification of the story's lead woman character - it's pretty clumsy.

Here it is:


   92Jan29 8:14 pm from The Turtle


    His hands were shaking as they hovered above the shuttlecraft's antiquated
controls.  Only one more lightyear.  Already the viewscreen was relaying the
long-range sensor scan of his destination:  a wavering, shimmering pond of
space.  The distortion effect was hard to look at for very long, but the man
felt tears welling despite the inherent unpleasantless of the gateway.  That
was what he had come to call it; what he had called it for thirty years now,
ever since he had come through.  

    In two minutes, he would be through.  His hands fumbled for the medikit
that rested on the tattered copilot's seat.  Sweat was pouring into his eyes
as he searched for the hypospray; irritated and near panic with expectation,
he wiped the salty moisture away in a frantic, spastic motion.  His right hand
closed on the hypo, clutching it in a white-knuckled grip.  Even from this
range, he felt the effects of the Gateway begin to prey on his mind.  The
contents of the spray would protect him, however.  He pressed the injector to
his left forearm.  
    Before he could activate the device, a red warning blinker flashed
insistently.  His eyes bulged.  He dropped the hypo and slammed his hands down
onto the helm controls, initiating evasive maneuvers.  
    There was, simply, no time.  The man screamed as the shuttle lurched
violently, throwing him to the deck.  He heard the hypo slide across the
floor, heard circuts burning, felt raging heat on his back.  The lights went
out; only the viewer remained intact, the distortion growing larger, more
pronounced.  His eyes flicked up to that beckoning cloud.  Fingers seemed to
reach out to him, beckoning him to come to the other side.  

    He knew that the madness was gripping him.  He knew that it was too late to
avoid it, even if he found the hypo right away.  His heart broke as he saw the
distance readout:  1.1 AU away.  So close.  The shuttle shook again and began
to  tumble end over end, artificial gravity lost, viewscreen dimming, the only
light from flickering flames.  

    With the last glimmer of sanity, the man cursed Fate, feeling stupid and
superstitious for doing so.  

    And then he felt himself begin to fade.  He suddenly saw stars through the
shuttle walls; it was like looking through a gossamer curtain.  He saw the
cruiser that had found him, so close to his goal...

    And then the cruiser faded in turn, just as the shuttle walls turned
opaque once more.  The man felt his own body solidifying, and he knew that he
was through.  

    He began to scream.  

    And scream.

    And scream.

   92Feb04 8:43 pm from The Turtle


   "Captain's Personal Log, Stardate 10187.3.  The ship is maintaining
standard orbit around Beta Cassius II--called H'Levn by the natives--while Dr.
Sternbach and her staff attempt to discover the cause of the plauge that has
reached epidemic proportions among the H'Lev.  I find myself hoping that the
doctor is correct in proposing that the plague is not a natural occurance, but
a virus introduced deliberately by a spacefaring power.  If she is
correct--and only if--then we can act to help the H'Lev.  

   I find it ironic that in this situation I am actually depending upon the
capriciousness of the Federation's neighbours."  

                                ***

    "Henry, I said get in here, *Now!"  Cynthia Sternbach's voice was hoarse
from shouting through the howling winds and blowing sand, and she held a hand
up to muffle a cough.  Even within the shelter of the caves, the sands were
blown into clothing, hair, and eyes.  Sternbach admired the hardiness of the
indigenies.   And, she added to herself, their ability to make strangers feel
welcome.  Sternbach and her med team had come in disguise, of course--it was
standard prochedure when investigating cultures below tech level seven--and
she thought that the  supplies people had been a bit off in their costumes.
Even though the not-quite-right clothing garnered a few strange looks from the
humanoid H'Lev, no questions had been asked and shelter from the sandstorm had
been quickly offered.  

    "Coming, Doctor!"  Henry Childan called back, still huddling over the
tricorder he kept carefully hidden against his body.  The storm was playing
havoc witht the readings, and he gave in, securing the 'corder beneath his
tunic and turning to scamper into the cave.  Childan hurried over to Doctor
Sternbach's side.   The CMO led Childan over to a relatively uncrowded corner
of the cavern and pulled back the hood of her dark tan robes, revealing a lush
crown of luxuriant brown curls that Childan had wanted to bury his hands in
more than once.  

    "What did you find out?"  Sternbach asked quietly, mindful of the dozens
of  H'Lev surrounding them.  Most of the refugees were near death, lying in
disorganized heaps, tended to by relatives in only marginally better health.
Sternbach gave the species only a year to a year and a half to extinction if a
cure wasn't found for the disease that had already ravaged half of their one
billion lives.  
    "You were right, sir--there are soil traces of the virus.  It's all over
the place--scattered on rocks, trees, buildings, and it's still alive.  Either
this virus is incredibly resilient, or it's been genetically engineered to
wipe out  the H'Lev.  We'll have to get back to the ship to do a full
analysis, though."  

    "Dammit.  By the time we do a full scan, who knows how many more will
die...all right, Henry, well done."  Sternbach hooked a finger, beckoning the
other two members of the away team to her side.  "We're going back up."  The
others murmered assent and they moved for the cave exit.  A concerned H'Lev
rushed forward.  
    "Friends, wait--the storm is not over.  To venture forth now is certain
death!"  
    Cynthia patted the man's shoulder reassuringly.  "The Great God Lev
watches over us--we seek a cure for the blight that has passed over our
people."  Cynthia thought that it sounded a bit, well, melodramatic, but the
speech had the desired effect.  The H'Lev made a short wave with his left
hand--a salute.  "Lev watch over you," he said sincerely.  The party left the
cavern.  

    "I'm never going to get this stuff out of my clothes," Childan whined as
the raging sands blasted against them.  And then the storm sparkled and winked
out, to be replaced by the soft lights of the transporter room.  Childan
breathed a  sigh of relief and stamped his feet on the transporter pad to
shake out some of the sand.  

    "Thanks, Channey,"  Cynthia said to the sad-eyed, vaguely East
Indian-featured man standing behind the transporter console as she descended
from the raised  pad.  The medical party left the room, stamping and shaking
as they went, leaving a trail of red-gold silica behind them.  Channey sighed
and prepared dutifullt to clean up the mess.  
    "No problem," he replied, resigned, to Cynthia's retreating back.  

                         

   92Feb04 8:57 pm from The Turtle

    "I'm not saying I don't *know,"  Cynthia asserted, "I'm saying I don't
have  100% *proof."  

    The Captain leaned against a diagnostic bed, one hand running through grey
hair that was still thick after eighty years of life.  The Captain spoke in
crisp, clear British tones, worry lines creasing his forehead.  "Proof is what
I *need, Doctor.  I want to help these people, desperately, but if we cannot
make it clear to Starfleet that this crisis isn't a natural occurance, then we
can't interfere.  You know the Prime Directive as well as I do."  

    Cynthia stepped forward.  "Sir, given enough time, I can prove that
someone  did this deliberately to the H'Lev--probably the Romulans, if I read
the structure of the virus correctly.  If it was interference, then the Prime
Directive allows us to correct it."  

    Captain Carter Perry thought for a long moment.  If he gave the H'Lev
help--if he allowed Sternbach to distribute the cure she'd engineered--then he
risked  breaking the Prime Directive, should the plague be natural after all.
And if he broke the Prime Directive...he would lose his command.  High
stakes.  But the odds were still in his favour.  Doctor Sternbach and her
staff believed that the virus was in fact a biological weapon delivered by
some advanced, starfaring power.  If that was so, then the Federation had
every right to act to correct such tampering with a culture's evolution.
Besides, Sternbach wasn't wrong very often.  Under Starfleet policy, Perry
knew that he was required to be absolutely certain he wasn't breaking the
Prime Directive before acting.  But if he waited for that certaintly,
thousands of sentients would die.  

    It wasn't really a choice at all.  "Distribute your cure, Doctor,"  Perry
ordered.  Sternbach beamed and started to assemble a field kit, but Perry
raised a warning hand.  "Remember, Doctor, *full cultural protectorate
prochedures.  I want as little damage to the fabric of this society as
possible.  No Messiah or Florence Nightengale impressions, please."  

    "They won't even know who cured them, sir,"  Sternbach assured him.  Perry
smiled and took his leave, heading for the bridge.

   92Feb10 8:24 pm from The Turtle


   Doctor Sternbach beamed down alone, holding the small, delicate vial of
salvation tightly in one hand.  This time no storms raged; only a gentle
breeze caressed the veldt she had arrived at, a breeze that teased her hair
and made soft shushing sounds through the broad, crimson leaves of enormous
trees.  The two suns were high and hot on her face; a stream bubbled and
trickled a few feet away.  Cynthia walked across the short distance,
replicated moccasins swishing against lush grass, and knelt beside the
stream.  Long, tubelike 'fish' slithered with the current just below the
surface, creatures the doctor knew the H'Lev used as food.  A major
settlement--the planet's largest city, in fact, with a population of an
astounding one hundred ten thousand--lay only a few kilometers downstream.
Deliberately and with little fanfare, Cynthia uncapped the vial and let a
clear liquid spill with a  quiet tinkle into the brook.  Odd that it should be
so simple, she thought, looking down at her features rippling in the stream.
In a few hours, the antiviral agent would be present in almost all H'Lev in
the city.  Her staff were duplicating the prochedure at every population
center on the planet.  Total time for protection against the disease, from
discovery until distribution:  ten hours.  A short time in her life, of the
lives of all aboard the ship--but a short time that would mean the survival of
a species, even if that species never knew how important those few hours
were.  

   A broad smile broke across the delicate, rounded curves of Cynthia's face,
a  smile that bridged the distance between 'cute' and 'beautiful' for the
doctor.   It was a smile that came when she had accomplished something
worthwhile, when  life and health had been preserved.  This place, these
people, would live and prosper, she decided as she pulled out her communicator
from beneath the heavy folds of her tunic.  The device chirped as she flipped
it open.  

   "Channey here,"  came the resigned mumble.  

   "One to beam up, Channey,"  Sternbach replied, the smile reaching her
voice, as well.  And then she was gone, replaced by a sparkle of silver-blue
light.  

    And after that disappeared, there was only the wind and the water again,
whispering softly.  

   92Feb10 8:45 pm from The Turtle


    Captain Perry had taken the doctor's news fairly noncommitally, giving her
only a curt nod and a "well done."  He'd since retired to his quarters.
Looking into the mirror now, Perry saw a face that had been through much.
Even though he was only eighty--just a few years into middle age--his hair had
already gone grey, and a chorus of wrinkles was seeping, slowly but surely,
across his forehead and cheeks, lines formed more from worry than joy.  Oh, he
was still handsome in a dignified, stodgy sort of way--like one of the British
lords of old.  But he'd grown thinner, too, over the years, thin enough to
elicit concern from the CMO.  Concern, of course, that Perry had brushed
aside, hating the attention.  Sternbach admired Perry and Perry--Perry felt
more strongly than he should for the woman.  It was only natural.  She was
young, attractive, vivacious...and she quite possibly had the finest breasts
that he'd ever--

    Perry turned from the mirror angrily, cutting off that train of thought.
Is this what I am now? he wondered.  A dirty old man, more concerned with my
own infirmity--imagined infirmity, at that--than my command?  More concerned
with thoughts of romance--hell, sex, be honest with yourself--than the welfare
of an entire civilization?  He'd barely been able to concentrate on  crucial
decisions lately because of his twin obsessions...

   Carter Perry was being unfair to himself, and some corner of his mind knew
it; it was just that his preoccupations were taking up more of his time than
he was used to.  He was giving 99 percent rather than 100.  This was, in his
mind, unacceptable.  

   He sighed and sat down heavily on the bed, plunking down next to his desk
terminal and hitting a small blue square on the touchpad set into the oak.  A
"Captain's Log:  Recording"  telltale popped up on the screen recessed into
the cabin wall.  

   "Captain's Log, Supplemental.  I have ordered Dr. Sternbach and her staff
to  implement disease control prochedures on H'Levn.  Her work has been
carried out and she reports that the population of the planet is now safe from
further devestation by the virus.  Work is now proceeding to prove
conclusively that the virus was in fact a biological weapon introduced by a
hostile spacefaring race  that wished to eliminate the H'Lev in order to
garner the considerable resources of the planet.  I have made a full report of
the mission for Starfleet and am awaiting further orders from command.
    Note also that this mission concludes our current tour of duty and that
the  ship will be reporting back to the Antares shipyards immediately for our
biannual resupply and refitting.  We shall be underway in a matter of hours.
Carter Perry, USS Enterprise."  

   92Feb10 8:58 pm from The Turtle

     The USS Enterprise--NCC-1701-B, as the letters emblazoned across the bow
proudly declared--broke orbit, arcing outwards and upwards from H'Levn, golden
starlight caressing the starboard half of the ship.  Like a swan breaking away
from the surface of a wave-swept lake, her feet and wings kicking up droplets
of pure, clear water, Enterprise peeled aside Einsteinian space, stretching
with visual Doppler effect, hesitating for the barest fraction of an instant
as if taking  in a deep breath, and then snapped back into her proper form as
she was shot  forward into hyperspace, leaving a dazzling rainbow of colour
behind.  There was scattered applause from the stars, then silence as H'Levn
continued her serene revolution.  

                          END PROLOGUE  

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

My Favourite Words, 1992 Edition

A couple of years ago I posted a list of my favourite words. Such tastes evolve over time, and thanks to Ron and his Freedom BBS there's a record of my favourite words as they stood on May 7, 1992, at 7:39 pm. Here's the list as I posted it back on Ron's BBS back in those halcyon days before the World Wide Web:

Earl's favourite words: 

mannequin
accident
yeti
bag
hammer
clowns
fistfight
shiskebab
pipe
escalator
wheelchair
defenestrate
wound
pain
gut
finger
disembowel
teeth
smash
launch
jab
bubblegum

Yikes! This list appears to reflect the angst I was internalizing during my underemployed, girlfriend-less post-university years. The newer list is much more diverse, not to mention more reflective of my current taste. Still, this is an interesting look at where I was at back in my early 20s, and I'm grateful to Ron for keeping an archive of our writing during those years. 

Friday, March 09, 2012

Never Write While Sleep-Deprived

Writers exist in a constant state of embarrassment over their prior work. What felt brilliant in the moment seems trite and overwrought today. We hope it will remain lost and buried, never read again, forgotten. 

Unless, of course, you're a masochist, as many writers are. So tonight I present something angst-ridden 21-year old Earl wrote in the "2 to 6 Club" room on Ron Briscoe's  Freedom BBS. It begins with some truly terrible doggerel, then clumsily evolves - or devolves - into unfocussed stream of consciousness. I have no idea what I was trying to say; maybe I was simply putting random words together to see how they scanned. I must have written it in my dorm room - 139 Kelsey Hall on the University of Alberta campus. I would have used my Atari 520 ST and its accompanying 1200 baud modem, white 40-column text on a blue background. How primitive my once high-tech setup would seem to today's university students!

If I had to guess, I'd say my 21-year-old self was attempting to reconcile his loneliness and pain with his need to believe in a better future and the inherent decency of the human species. Or perhaps it was simply after 4:30 in the morning and he wrote it while half-asleep. Oh look, I've unwittingly started talking about myself in the third person - that seems as good a sign as any to finish this introduction and let my/his words, such as they were, indict themselves: 

91Feb02 4:36 am

I have been one acquainted with the night.
I have seen the wrongs I've failed to set aright.
I have ignored the beggar's pathetic plight
I have pushed the lonely problems from my sight

I too have stood on a lonely highway at night, my car and I--engine
ticking softly--

Warm summer night, completely alone but for the stars and the trees and the
plain over that hill--

Take a walk to the top of that hill and just look and just listen and just
smell and feel and taste and be that night.  You become night, living night,
banished with the day but not defeated.  And the wind blowing through your
hair is a part of you and the grass under your sneakers is a part of you and
the croaking of the frog is a part of you and the baleful gaze of that stern
moon is a part of you.  

It is all just you and it is all more than you can ever imagine, more than
you  are contained inside you, worn on you like an overcoat.  

Melodrama made real.  And none of the cliches matter...because they are
true.    

Walk a little further, into the farmer's field.  Stalks of grain waving back
and forth like some great living thing, one being.  A little scary, but it
doesn't matter--you are the night, a part of this, and you cannot be hurt.  

You can be lonely, but you cannot be hurt.

Look up.  That winking star overhead--a satellite, benignly swooping by,
taking pictures of you, a reminder of the fellow men who you don't need
waiting for you with the dawn.  And there, a 747, reminding you again that
there is no real escape, not now.  

Soon.  But not just at this moment.  

You walk back to the car, open the driver's side door. Car welcomes you with
harsh interior light glare and harsher seat belt buzzer. You get inside
quickly  to avoid disturbing the beautiful darkness any further.  

And you sit there for a little while on the shoulder before you finally turn
the ignition key, activating the radio, the lights, the engine. And then you
pull onto the road and just drive for a while

 just________________________________drive_____________________

Until Neon City looms large once more and the night withers before human
magic and you surrender too...giving in to another twelve hour wait before the
wonder sets in again.

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Retro Review: American Ninja

I wrote this review way back in the spring of 1991, again on Freedom BBS.

Last night I had the pleasure of viewing the Canon Group's kung-fu fistfest, American Ninja, starring the unequalled Micheal Dudikoff in the title role.

American Ninja is the touching tale of a lonely man--known only as "Joe"--who just happens to have great prowess in the mystic arts of the Ninja. Joe knows not where his skills came from--his earliest memory is of a great explosion at a mine he was caught in as a youth. Joe's troubled childhood is filled with strife and lonliness; Joe moves from reform school to reform school, until finally he is forced to join the US Army. Joe is posted on a war-torn Pacific island, where he is looked upon by his fellow Marines with disdain. "We like teamwork in this outfit, fella."

Trouble begins when the Rebels begin hijacking US arms shipments to use for their own nefarious purposes, and it is here that the movie heats up. A Rebel attack is stopped as Joe, using his incredible martial arts, beats the tar out of no less than a dozen rebel fiends. In one memorable scene, Joe rolls to a toolbox under a hail of rebel machinegun fire. Thinking quickly, he grabs a screwdriver and throws it, daggerlike, into the shoulder of one gunman. Next, Joe wields a tire iron, flinging it square into a hapless rebel's mouth. But Joe's efforts are in vain--for, streaming out of the jungle, comes a horde of black-garbed Ninjas!

The ninjas make short work of Joe's marine buddies, who fall under a hail of arrows, throwing stars, and swords. The Ninjas even go so far as to threaten the beautiful Patricia, US Army Colonel Wild Bill Hickok's only daughter.

Fortunately, Joe is there to defend her, deflecting arrows with the handle of a conveniently nearby shovel. However, Joe realizes he is outnumbered, so he and Patricia flee into the jungle and jump into a river to hide. This maneuver not only saves our stalwart couple from certain doom, but it also allows the viewer some choice glimpses of Patricia's anatomy, revealed by her now-soaked white blouse.

The action just keeps on coming as Joe fights Ninjas, traitorous Army officers, European gunrunners, and even his best friend. Joe's greatest fight, however, is for the understanding and acceptance of his peers. The climactic ending is truly touching--Patricia, kidnapped by the evil Ninja clan, is held captive in the evil Ninja training school. At first, Joe believes he will have to rescue her alone--but wait!! Out of the jungle mists comes Joe 's adoptive father, a wizened old Japanese soldier (one of the ones trapped on an island in the Pacific for twenty years after WWII ended and who still thought the war was on). Joe's pop returns to join him in the rescue of Patricia, but is, tragically, killed in the act of saving Joe from the evil Head Ninja, the Black Star Ninja. Joe, sobbing, attacks the Ninja horde, but the effort is impossible--he is wildly outnumbered. But then, over the hills--the US Army! Trumpets blaring and guns blazing, the 'good 'ol boys' charge into the training camp to lend Joe a hand, armed with APCs, jeeps, heavy machine guns, and grenades. The unarmed evil ninjas fall like chaff before the Marines' awesome assault. But the evil French arms dealer is running off with Patricia! Thank Goodness that Joe manages to grab the underside of the escape helicopter as it makes its lunge for freedom. Joe manages to grab Patricia just in time, leaping from the chopper just as Joe's best friend Jackson blows it up with a Made in the USA rocket launcher.

With the last bad guy blown to kingdome come, Patricia, Jackson, and Joe can relax...at least until American Ninja 2.

Rating: 9 out of 10 for pure bad movie enjoyment.

Ninja photo by Roryv

The 2 to 6 Club

Back when my friend Ron Briscoe was running Edmonton's old Freedom BBS, he set up a room called the 2 to 6 Club, a place for insomniacs to post whatever profound insights they might glean during the witching hours. Here's something I wrote in that room almost 19 years ago to the day. Unlike most of what I wrote as an angst-ridden twentysomething, I don't hate this.

I have been one acquainted with the night.

I have seen the wrongs I've failed to set aright.
I have ignored the beggar's pathetic plight
I have pushed the lonely problems from my sight

I too have stood on a lonely highway at night, my car and I--engine

ticking softly--
Warm summer night, completely alone but for the stars and the trees and the

plain over that hill--

Take a walk to the top of that hill and just look and just listen and just

smell and feel and taste and be that night. You become night, living night,

banished with the day but not defeated. And the wind blowing through your

hair is a part of you and the grass under your sneakers is a part of you and

the croaking of the frog is a part of you and the baleful gaze of that stern

moon is a part of you.


It is all just you and it is all more than you can ever imagine, more than

you are contained inside you, worn on you like an overcoat.


Melodrama made real. And none of the cliches matter...because they are

true.

Walk a little further, into the farmer's field. Stalks of grain waving back

and forth like some great living thing, one being. A little scary, but it

doesn't matter--you are the night, a part of this, and you cannot be hurt.


You can be lonely, but you cannot be hurt.


Look up. That winking star overhead--a satellite, benignly swooping by,

taking pictures of you, a reminder of the fellow men who you don't need

waiting for you with the dawn. And there, a 747, reminding you again that

there is no real escape, not now.


Soon. But not just at this moment.


You walk back to the car, open the driver's side door. Car welcomes you with

harsh interior light glare and harsher seat belt buzzer. You get inside

quickly to avoid disturbing the beautiful darkness any further.


And you sit there for a little while on the shoulder before you finally turn

the ignition key, activating the radio, the lights, the engine. And then you

pull onto the road and just drive for a while

just________________________________drive_____________________



Until Neon City looms large once more and the night whithers before human

magic and you surrender too...giving in to another twelve hour wait before the

wonder sets in again.


Some of the folks I hung around with during the heyday of the 2 to 6 Club. Ron and I are at the far right; Ron's seated on the floor.