Where Are The Founders Of The Dial-Up Revolution? 295
RIMBoy writes "The Atlanta Journal-Constitution recently tracked down the founders behind the dial-up modem revolution. The founders of Hayes Micromodem set the standard with their AT Command set. While Dennis Hayes finds himself inducted into the Computer Industry Hall of Fame, at the same time he is broke (with a stop as a bar owner) and trying to find the next big thing. Dale Heatherington cashed out early and has dedicated himself to several projects, including ham radio."
Easy (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, the dialup days... (Score:5, Funny)
That damn callback verification feature always woke up my mom in the middle of the night when I was cruising the BBS's for porn... Thank god for these "always on" connections!
--
Rate Naked People [fuckmeter.com] at FuckMeter! Not work safe (unless your boss likes pr0n)
Re:Ah, the dialup days... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm bored now.
Re:Easy (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't think about the web, think about your keystrokes think about those who saw they could send much more then just text for the first time.
(Never mind sending a 1 meg file for 60 minutes).
Tower
Re:Easy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Easy (Score:5, Informative)
man login
touch ~/.hushlogin
Re:Easy (Score:5, Funny)
Them were the days
Re:Easy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Easy (Score:2)
Also think about us who had to surf BBS'es in other countries using International calls. Can you say expensive? LOL! Thank god for a large company with unlimited international calls
My first experience was with acoustic couplers, placing the phone handset into the suction cups after calling on a rotary dial and receiving the 'noise'! ahhh good old days... Did I say Good? By golly, I don't even wanna think about it! These days I get a 2 CD set of the latest
Duh (Score:2, Funny)
Blogzine [blogzine.net]
Fortress of Insanity [homeunix.org]
Come to think of it (Score:5, Funny)
Working in bars, claiming benefits etc. etc.
Broad Band Revolutionaries (Score:5, Funny)
Check "VH-1 Where Are They Now?" to find out the fate of those great Broad Bands of the past.
I know about "Heart". They look like Roseanne Barr now.
think about it.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:think about it.... (Score:2)
at one point, the internet was mostly dial up. don't you remember waiting patiently for that uucp script to cron so you could get your email?
Re:think about it.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:think about it.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah-ha - now we know who to blame!!! Seriously, it didn't have THAT much of an impact on other technologies. Not all technology is internet-related, not even most computer technology. Sheesh~
well duh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:well duh (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, but it's those hardassed people seeing a business opportunity that bring the technology to the masses, away from ivory towers and geek playgrounds. And when you have competition, that's what makes things affordable. That's what capitalism does well. It's not always free from problems, what with monopolies an
Re:well duh (Score:2, Insightful)
Um. I'd attribute that to legislation. Sure, it might have happened if we didn't regulate telecom the way we do, but... as it happened, it doesn't feel like capitalism to me.
Re:well duh (Score:3, Insightful)
For years and years, Hayes defined modem technology. Far from being "too hardassed to profit", they were too profit-oriented to meet the market. They failed to make their products cheap enough for the home user, so USRobotics and other clonemakers won the modem wars.
Re:well duh (Score:2)
now, the sportster, or the supra's... those were the cheap ones...
Re:well duh (Score:3)
Re:That's right (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:3, Funny)
No, if they refuse a 140 million offer they certainly don't.
Cheers,
Re:well duh (Score:2)
If I had a nickle... (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
sounds kinda sad (Score:3, Insightful)
Too bad about these guys.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember cruising along with my 1200 baud modem why others were stuck with 300 baud! Too bad that these guys are now out in the cold (figuratively speaking, though maybe for some, literally) because it was modems that people used to first connect to the internet, not DSL or cable. Modems unfortunately will become nothing more than a tale that we can tell our grandkids about many years from now.
"Back in my day, we didn't have these fancy wireless petabit connections. We had to use 300 baud modems over the telephone (uphill, both ways by the way!) and we liked it!"
Re:Too bad about these guys.... (Score:4, Informative)
Ah, but if you concentrate you'll remember that before 56k (or maybe 28.8) modems, it didn't do the boing boing noise at the end. It ended with the static sshhhhhhh, (and maybe had a short even "aeaea" tone or two over the static), and then cut out. The boing boing sound was a shocking late development in modem handshaking art.
56K limit... (Score:2, Insightful)
So, if anyone knows, why 56k and not more, and is there any research into anything beyond 56K for dialup?
-dameron
Legal, not technical (Score:5, Informative)
"In the U.S., the FCC places a power ceiling on phone lines of -12dbm average per 3 second interval. X2 modems work within this by restricting throughput to 53kbps in the U.S. X2 modems can theoretically work at 56k, although they are constrained to operate 5% slower than this in the U.S. (Some users have reported occasional connections past 53kbps.)"
(from this page [lowendmac.com]
Re:Legal, not technical (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Legal, not technical (Score:2, Interesting)
My guess is that they were doing this to test the phone systems all over the country to see if X2 was viable. I figured they picked me because I was in on the sys
Re:Legal, not technical (Score:4, Informative)
I think the V.FC couriers needed a daughterboard upgrade in order to support the X2/56K code; the V.34's just needed to flash update their ROM. USR supported the hell out of their Couriers--they knew who their important customers were IMO.
The Whitney was USR's most reliable platform. You could tell what board you had by the last few numbers of your modem's serial number. I think if it ended with 00 you had a Whitney.
Don't know the Courier daughterboard name. There was no Houston IIRC. The modem names were based on Harley Davidson motorcycle names (Courier, Sportster) Not sure where the internal board names came from...
HTH
Re:Legal, not technical (Score:2)
Re:Legal, not technical (Score:5, Informative)
Lucent's 56k system could actually do 56k and stay within the limits, but the v.90 standard didn't use Lucent's technology for that.
As to why nothing is more than 56k: that is all that a standard voice line (or POTS line, for Plain Old Telephone System) can do. A POTS line is carried within a DS0 (the base channel of the phone system), and a DS0 is 64k. You can't get all 64k though, because many voice lines use "robbed bit" signalling that takes one of every eight bits to handle switch communication. Getting 56k at all requires that one end be a digital line (ISDN BRI or PRI or channelized T1); you can't push 56k through the analog to digital conversion otherwise.
The "what's next" for the telephone system is already here; it is DSL. DSL uses different frequency bands that are not used for POTS lines but that can be carried over the same copper reliably (more or less). However, DSL is not a switched circuit like a modem connection; the DSL frequencies are pulled off the line (by a DSLAM, DSL Access Multiplexer) before the line connects to the regular phone network. So, you can't "dial" a different DSL provider or your friend's house; you can only be connected to one service (and any changes require a call to the DSLAM owner, usually the phone company).
The other "what's next" was ISDN, which would give you the full 64k channel (because signalling is always done on a separate dedicated channel with ISDN), or 128k if you use both channels (the base ISDN line is a BRI, which has 2 64k data channels plus a signalling channel). However, ISDN use was slowed because it was complicated to configure (you couldn't just plug a phone in and use it), required all new equipment, and even the telcos really never understood it well (so when there was a problem, it could take weeks to get it fixed).
Re:56K limit... (Score:5, Informative)
Most calls get digitized by the phone company, and the 53K modems take that into account to get almost all of the theoretical bandwidth. I know someone will correct me, but I think that most phone calls are digitized as 64Kb data streams. There may be some overhead in that, lowering the theoretical maximum throughput.
Of course, if all the phone companies upgraded their equipment to some different standard, they could probably support significantly higher data rates. But then again, isn't that called DSL?
Re:56K limit... (Score:2, Informative)
You asked for it ... ;)
In the US the phone lines are digitized with 8000 Hz and 7 bits, resulting in a bandwidth of 56 kbps. In Europe 8 bits are used, giving 64 kbps. I can't remember off-hand what Japan uses (they mix happily european and US standards )
So you can't go above 56k and hope to sell your modems in the US, thus losing at least half of your potential customers. It's just not theoretically
Re:56K limit... (Score:2, Interesting)
So the maximum usable bandwidth of the lines in the US is 56k with the degredation from the in-band signaling (which may account for the high bit).
Re:56K limit... Ooops Gotta correct this one :) (Score:2, Informative)
What you described is US PRI T1 which is 23 B channels with a D channel in the US at 64K each(this is what isdn service is based on, you can also run standard telco calls over them). US also has the standard T1 which is 24 channels as you described.
In Japan they call theirs a J1 (or PRI J1) and its bas
Re:56K limit... (Score:2)
I don't want to start some flame war, but telcos can't simply upgrade equipment to get higher bandwidth from pots lines. The entire phone system is based on these 64kbit blocks, which are time division channels that make up T1-T3 (and higher) circuits. It would be more a matter of rewriting telco standards that date
Re:56K limit... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:56K limit... (Score:2)
I really don't think that is relevant because so few really saw much more than 33.6k
Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Hayes: Dennis Hayes stays with company, guy who did the technical work, Dale Heatherington, leaves
2. Microsoft: Bill Gates stays with company, guy who did the techincal work, Paul Allen, leaves
3. Apple: Steve Jobs stays with the company, guy who did the techincal work, Steve Wozniak, leaves
So seems like techies have all the fun: start a company, keep a low profile, get rich, and then quit. That way the techie gets to spend the rest of their lives with enough money to just hack!
Sweet.
The story was meant to be a sad reflection on Hayes-the-man, ended up making me feel good about being a geek.
John.
Don't forget this (Score:4, Interesting)
Gates and Jobs were both programmers in their own right. Just because they didn't STICK with the hardcore tech side doesn't mean they were never there to begin with.
Gates coded early versions of Basic software/DOS and Jobs coded Atari games and helped manufacture the first Apple's.
Re:Don't forget this (Score:3, Interesting)
I figure Gates was the sort of boss that though he could code and his
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hear, hear.
Don't get me wrong, they're both hackers, and I'd be honored to buy either of 'em a beer. But the most inspirational thing of that article was seeing that Heatherington didn't just get out with the cash -- but that because he took the money and ran, and lived within his means, he's still hacking hardware for the sheer fun of it.
Before I grow up, I wanna be like Heatherington.
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:5, Insightful)
While Hayes dreamed of empire, Heatherington dreamed of quitting.
It's one of life's paradoxes that those who are most able to accumulate lots of $$ are those who are least able to enjoy it. It's nice to find someone who can enjoy it.
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:3, Insightful)
Its not that hard to live within your means with $20 million.
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:2)
No it's not, but it's absolutely amazing how many people can't. Look at virtually any lottery winner, most pop stars, or anyone else who goes from millionaire to zilch.
If you've got $20M in the bank, your yearly operating budget is a "mere" $1,00,000. Certainly more than enough to live on anywhere in the world, and live very comfortably, but you can't go spending money on anything you want to, and you probably can't afford to own more than 3 ho
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:2)
http://asia.news.yahoo.com/031126/afp/031126230
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:2)
>
> Its not that hard to live within your means with $20 million.
Tell that to every lottery jackpot winner, pro athlete, rock star, and dot-commer who "made it big", only to run out of cash within a few years
For that matter, (and this is the sad part of the article) tell that to Dennis Hayes.
Correction. (Score:2)
Re:Correction. (Score:2)
Actually, a four second google search would reveal this link [vt.edu]. Here's the relevant part (emphasis mine):
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:2)
Ward Christenson writes MODEM7 and CBBS, while Randy Suess slings the solder. Ward is forgotten, while Randy starts Chinet, one of Chicago's first publicly-available UNIX systems, complete with e-mail *and* Usenet news
Karl Deninger and Randy Suess - Randy runs Chinet while Karl learns about UNIX on it, then Karl starts his own ISP - MCS.Net.
I lost track of that whole crowd many moons ago, when I moved away. Haven't heard about any of them, but far as I kn
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:4, Interesting)
Indeed, it is interesting...the comparisons are interesting as well.
*Gates likes to surround himself with really bright people and good managers. Hayes, according to the article, tried to run everything himself.
*Jobs was a brillaint visionary all by himself. His problems in his early years stemmed from bullheadedness and personality conflicts. I suspect getting older has tamed him.
*Hayes would have had a good sum of money if it had not been for two very messy divorces.
Now he's being raked over the coals in child support (which I suspect was set to a level that reflected his original high net worth.)
The whole issue with child support is so ugly that I'm coming around to the idea that you would have to be a fool to father children. Get em snipped now, you'll save yourself a lot of hell in the long run.
That, or I'll start a company that would collect insurance premiums now and protect you from child support payments in the future. That could work.
Re: very insightful and interesting (Score:4, Interesting)
While it's true that the techies seem to "have all the fun" in these scenarios - it's also equally true that the techies needed the business-oriented/business-building personalities of their partners, in order to get themselves into a situation where their contributions became valuable enough to allow them to leave with a big "wad of cash".
Really, after reading the Hayes/Heatherton article, it appeared to me that Hayes' biggest reason for eventual disaster was a lack of any inventive/R&D motivated people working for him after Heatherton bailed out. Certainly, Hayes achieved all the brand name recognition and marketplace respect a tech. company could ever want. Properly run, his company could have been building, say, the #1 most popular DSL and/or cable modems used today.
I think Apple Computer thrives for exactly this reason. Steve Jobs is acutely aware that his company has to innovate -- never imitate. He may not be the mastermind behind any of the ideas, but he hires the types of people who can create cool looking and working devices/software.
The trick is, if you're going to be a "Hayes", keep hiring new "Heathertons" as your earlier ones get burnt out or want to move on.
Re:Funny how these people go in pairs... (Score:2)
BBS Documentary (Score:5, Informative)
The history of such revolutions should be documented for future generations to learn from.
Re:BBS Documentary (Score:2)
I'm glad you pointed this out. Now I'll know when to look for the release.
Regards,
Anne
I got my Multitech 300 Acoustic coupler out (Score:5, Informative)
Relive the good ol' days at textfiles.com [textfiles.com]
"If early on he had taken the company public ..." (Score:2)
If the dot.com bust taught us anything, it's that taking a company public while trusting professional managers is the quickest way to get yourself a big fat tax loss.
Tough times, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
XModem (Score:3, Interesting)
Everybody who knows Hayes remembers Ward Christensen's Xmodem file transfer protocol.
This was Ward in 1980 [portcommodore.com]. I wonder where he is now?Ward Co-INVENTED the BBS! was Re:XModem (Score:5, Informative)
More importantly, as I've mentioned Ward, with Randy Suess, also INVENTED THE BBS when this very same Dennis Hayes sent them one of his original 300 baud autodial/auto-answer modems.
Ward will tell you fun details like why CBBS looks for the modem's RING result and then sends the ATO to make the modem answer. CBBS never puts the modem into auto-answer mode.
Why? So that if the CBBS program wasn't running happily, the caller wouldn't waste money on an answered phone call to a BBS that wasn't working.
Ward takes more credit for CBBS than the MODEM* protocol because MODEM was written quickly to fix a problem (sending program files to Randy over the modem-modem link) but CBBS was planned. Ward says MODEM was a response "like a sneeze" He doesn't like taking credit for a sneeze.
* - The real name of the protocol is MODEM. Ward's original MODEM comm program had an option to auto-receive files,. XMODEM was MODEM with the option. When you're the first you don't put in version qualifiers.
Re:XModem (Score:2)
KERMIT, on the other hand, was a big fat peice of junk. Would take forever to download stuff.
I still feel wierd being hooked up to the internet without having heard my modem screech.
Re:XModem (Score:3, Informative)
Hold your horses, zmodem only went to 8192 byte blocks. 1Mb blocks would suck if you had to wait 20 minutes for each block to be retransmitted
Edwin
In lieu of the vi vs. emacs debate... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm proud to initiate the Xmodem vs Kermit flamewar.
Let's get ready to RUMBLE!
Extra points for anyone who can segue smoothly into an Anti-Bush/Anti-US rant.
Re:In lieu of the vi vs. emacs debate... (Score:4, Funny)
It's just like the airports now-a-days. President Bush has made so many regulations I can't even ride the plane! I checked in and went through security, and I was supposed to fly out at 11:40. But they oversold and gave me a seat on a different airline at 12:40. By the time I got to the other side of the enormous government-run airport, it was 12:30 -- and they didn't have any George Bush agents to search through my belongings _again_ to make sure that I still wasn't a crazy terrorist. So I missed the plane because George Bush wants too many intrusive, redundant regulations! Throwing the baby out with the bathwater, that's what I call it. I wish Bush had learned from the whole Kermit debacle.
Re:In lieu of the vi vs. emacs debate... (Score:5, Funny)
Dude, XModem sucks! Use ZModem! But whatever you do, don't even think of using Kermit. After all, if you remember Operation Sundevil back in
They were a breakthrough (Score:2)
Dale Heatherington (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Dale Heatherington (Score:3, Interesting)
I also bailed out.... (Score:4, Informative)
56K killed it for most of us... T1's required for incoming lines as well as horribly priced interfaces for the 56K dial up side made it impossible for the medium/small guy to survive. the Small towns I was going into and started out with 3-4 modems now had a minimum of 24 incoming lines because of the T1 requirement. each dial in node now doubled all it's costs for operation and quadrupled it's costs for equipment.
Dial-up died when 56K came around.
So you could say that ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I also bailed out.... (Score:2, Informative)
We made a little money when we sold (got out just in time!) but if I hadn't had to pa
Re:I also bailed out.... (Score:3, Interesting)
With a room for a couple hundred, and savings per T1, a few livingston portmasters, and bam. ISP was 56K enabled. Being in the telco building also helped when you needed more digital circuits.
I left the small mom and pop ISP business and went to work for a telco before DSL came out.
kermit (Score:2, Interesting)
Who's down for developing a ppp-centered, kermit-over-IP protocol for places communicating by telephone only? I wrote a whitepaper on this and sent it to the Redhat/K12 newsletter.
Does anyone have easy to decipher conversion specs for baud xfer and UART? I've speculated most of the work is in hardware translatio
Hey bartender! (Score:4, Funny)
To get his attention, you'd to yell: +++
Huh? (Score:2)
I tried that and they cut me off!
(AT H0 gets you cut off too)
And for all the college boys (Score:4, Insightful)
The company was recruiting people with master's degrees and Ph.D.s. Heatherington had a two-year degree from a technical college. "I think he felt funny having that kind of horsepower looking to him for guidance," Hayes says.
Keep that in mind when you sit there complaining about all us 'pseudo-engineers' that didn't have the cash to get a degree, but had the brains to make a difference in computing.
Re:And for all the college boys (Score:2, Funny)
Marriage is killing the guy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Marriage is killing the guy (Score:2, Insightful)
The wise man in the 21st Century gets good and used to living as a bachelor and never, ever enjoying sex without a metaphorical garbage bag tied around his sex organ.
What a time to be alive.
Ah yes, my first smartmodem (Score:4, Interesting)
I didn't have a computer (yet), but it was a joy to type the appropriate AT commands from my MIME I video terminal (complete with lower case character set!) instead of having to dial the phone.
Before I had a real computer (a homebrew SWTPC 6809-based clone running Flex), and WAY before I had an IBM PC clone, I built a 6809-based SBC with 4K EPROM, 2K RAM (IIRC, it may have been more, but not much), and three serial ports. I wrote a monitor program for it so I could enter code, in hex, by hand (later, I would write a cross-assembler on Concordia University's CYBER 835 mainframe in Pascal, that spewed out S1S9 records that the monitor could read).
One of the first programs (hand assembled at the time), was a "RAM-dialer": it would control the Hayes Smartmodem to repeatedly dial one of a set of numbers until it got a data connection -- see in those days most BBSes had one phone line. Bliss!
Ah, the nostalgia of the early to mid 1980s.
As they say... (Score:5, Insightful)
C64 Telnet BBS (Score:2, Interesting)
You can call it with a real 64, and there are programs now that support "ATDT 209.151.141.59" and so on. Call it Hayes 2.0 maybe?
--
Call Negative Format BBS - Hosted on a real C64!
Telnet to c64bbs.no-ip.com or 209.151.141.59 Port 23
http://home.ica.net/~leifb/bbs/ [ica.net]
Give it time... (Score:3, Funny)
Broadband killed the dialup generation...
But then reality TV killed MTV...
Ya gotta figure something will come along and wipe out broadband. My bet is on litigation...
Hayes? (Score:2)
'Twas a famous victory... (Score:3, Interesting)
The AJC reporter writes about Hayes and Heatherington, "making it easier for millions of people around the world to connect to the Internet." Perhaps the reporter didn't know there was anything before the 'net.
With all deference and due respect to their accomplishment, if we frame the discussion as a "Revolution"... "around the world", then Hayes and Heatherington did build the revolutionary weapon, but the trigger was squeezed by a fellow named Tom Jennings and a few of his friends. That was the shot heard 'round the world.
Hey! How many here can tell us their nodelisting? Hands?
Cheers!
Hey Dennis! (Score:2)
I have a couple of S-100 300 baud Modem Boards of yours that needs service.... It isn't even clear to me if it *ever* worked being serial numbers below 50.
Where shall I send them?
-- Multics
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I'm more Heatherington than Hayes (Score:2, Insightful)
In other words, the rich keep doing what made them rich, the poor keep doing what made them poor.
Re:I'm more Heatherington than Hayes (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I'm more Heatherington than Hayes (Score:2)
Re:I worked there (Score:2)
Re:Where are they? (Score:3, Informative)
I also remember using "split" modems which were asymmetric -- 1200 downstream and IIRC 150 upstream -- which prefigure today's ADSL.
Re:Where are they? (Score:3, Informative)
Laugh if you must... (Score:5, Interesting)