Long before the Internet escaped from the lab, connected the planet
and redefined what it meant to use a computer there was a brave and pioneering band of computer users who spent their time, money
and sanity setting up their home computers and phone lines to welcome anyone who
called. By using a modem, anyone else who knew the phone number of these computers
could connect to them, leave messages, send and recieve files.... and millions did.
They called these places "Bulletin Board Systems", or BBSes. And their
collections of messages, rants, thoughts and dreams became the way that an entire
generation learned about being online.
When the Internet grew in popularity in the early 1990s, the world of the BBS faded,
changed, and became a part of the present networked world.. but it wasn't the same.
In the Summer of 2001, Jason Scott, a computer historian (and proprietor of the
textfiles.com history site) wondered if anyone
had made a film about these BBSes. They hadn't, so he decided he would.
Four years, thousands of miles of travelling, and over 200 interviews later,
"BBS: The Documentary", a mini-series of 8 episodes about the
history of the BBS, is now available. Spanning 3 DVDs and totalling five and a
half hours, this documentary is actually eight documentaries about different aspects
of this important story in the annals of computer history.