Coyo
2013-11-18 17:54:24 UTC
I have no idea if this newsgroup is still active, but I love Usenet, so
I thought I'd say hi anyway.
I'm currently learning how to use Lazarus (at
http://lazarus.freepascal.org ) and so far, I love pascal!
There is a massive amount of community support for Delphi, so I'm very
pleased that FreePascal is compatible with Delphi and Borland TurboPascal.
I've been getting into Usenet, Gopher, IRC and Advanced Direct Connect,
or even older protocols, as well as classic programming languages, which
I have found a lot more fun to program in than Ruby and Python, and
silly whippersnapper languages like Node Javascript, Scala and Clojure.
All the faddish newfangled languages target "platforms" like Adobe Flash
ActionScript, Microsoft Common Language Runtime and Web Browser
Javascript (such as Spidermonkey and V8), and the more this progresses,
the more I fall in love with ancient languages like Smalltalk, Common
Lisp, Pascal and Fortran.
Instead of Twitter and Facebook, I love Usenet.
Instead of Web APIs and XML, I love Gopher and yEnc or even uuencode.
Instead of Skype, Yahoo Messenger and AOL Instant Messenger, I love IRC.
I love IRC because it's easy to extend. Almost anything can be added as
CTCP and DCC CHAT protocols, providing more advanced filesharing and
voip telephony as advanced or more advanced than Skype or AIM.
I love Gopher, because I'm sick of the twisted and convoluted schemes
for turning the Web into things it was never designed or intended to do.
Gopher FORCES web developers to focus on content and substance, rather
than presentation and bling. Gopher enforces a structured and
content-centric mindset, returning to the FTP-like file-oriented
approach, as opposed to twisting the Web into eldritch monstrosities.
I love Usenet because it's fast and effecient, practically decentralized
and distributed as the Internet was intended to be from the beginning.
When DARPAnet was first created, it was intended to survive multiple and
prolonged nuclear bombardment, and to maintain communications in nuclear
warfare.
O, how far we have fallen from grace! The founders must be spinning in
their graves so rapidly you could attach electric generators to the tops
of their skulls and solve the world energy crisis!
To the other newsgroups, I am learning Perl and figured it would start
an interesting conversation in the other two.
Usenet is a small community these days. It makes me a sad panda.
I thought I'd say hi anyway.
I'm currently learning how to use Lazarus (at
http://lazarus.freepascal.org ) and so far, I love pascal!
There is a massive amount of community support for Delphi, so I'm very
pleased that FreePascal is compatible with Delphi and Borland TurboPascal.
I've been getting into Usenet, Gopher, IRC and Advanced Direct Connect,
or even older protocols, as well as classic programming languages, which
I have found a lot more fun to program in than Ruby and Python, and
silly whippersnapper languages like Node Javascript, Scala and Clojure.
All the faddish newfangled languages target "platforms" like Adobe Flash
ActionScript, Microsoft Common Language Runtime and Web Browser
Javascript (such as Spidermonkey and V8), and the more this progresses,
the more I fall in love with ancient languages like Smalltalk, Common
Lisp, Pascal and Fortran.
Instead of Twitter and Facebook, I love Usenet.
Instead of Web APIs and XML, I love Gopher and yEnc or even uuencode.
Instead of Skype, Yahoo Messenger and AOL Instant Messenger, I love IRC.
I love IRC because it's easy to extend. Almost anything can be added as
CTCP and DCC CHAT protocols, providing more advanced filesharing and
voip telephony as advanced or more advanced than Skype or AIM.
I love Gopher, because I'm sick of the twisted and convoluted schemes
for turning the Web into things it was never designed or intended to do.
Gopher FORCES web developers to focus on content and substance, rather
than presentation and bling. Gopher enforces a structured and
content-centric mindset, returning to the FTP-like file-oriented
approach, as opposed to twisting the Web into eldritch monstrosities.
I love Usenet because it's fast and effecient, practically decentralized
and distributed as the Internet was intended to be from the beginning.
When DARPAnet was first created, it was intended to survive multiple and
prolonged nuclear bombardment, and to maintain communications in nuclear
warfare.
O, how far we have fallen from grace! The founders must be spinning in
their graves so rapidly you could attach electric generators to the tops
of their skulls and solve the world energy crisis!
To the other newsgroups, I am learning Perl and figured it would start
an interesting conversation in the other two.
Usenet is a small community these days. It makes me a sad panda.