-------------------------------------------------- What I Like About SDF -------------------------------------------------- Well ... that was quite the autumnal funk, but I seem to be coming out of it now. And a good thing too, just in time for the holidays. And just in time for my two-year anniversary here on SDF. Admittedly, the coming celebrations of Christmas and New Year's will at least _somewhat_ overshadow the anniversary of my MetaArpa membership, but still, it should not pass unremarked. And to that end, I dedicate this phlog post to the topic in the headline. I must first acknowledge that some part of my liking for SDF is rooted in sheer nostalgia. SDF really does an excellent job of (re-)creating an idealized version of the university computing environment I experienced in the 1990s, one that I had thought gone forever now that university IT has become, of necessity, so much more locked down and corporate. Tilde accounts! Personal web space! Gopher! Emacs, Pine and Mutt! Heck, even Kermit! Hooking up with SDF was a bit like coming home, in that respect. Throw in some lingering traces of BBS culture (bboard!), and what's not to like? But you have to be careful with nostalgia. While there is nothing wrong will indulging the nostalgic impulse from time to time, one must keep a sense of perspective. Some things really were better back then (eg, the Net wasn't yet overrun with scams and advertising) but some things weren't (computers were harder to use and networks were a lot more expensive and a lot less reliable, etc, etc). Not all the changes have been for the worse. So rather than celebrate SDF as a kind of living museum, keeping alive a few relics of a bygone age (which fair enough - that would be worthwhile, I do like museums) I would instead like to celebrate it as a living alternative, or collection of alternatives, to the mainstream corporate Internet. A kind of "road not taken" thought experiment, where instead of outsourcing university computing to the private sector it was allowed to live and grow alongside the commercial Internet, and so retain its unique identity. An identity rooted in its past, but not bound by it. And the nature of that identity ... ? One that encourages learning and exploration. One where the nature of the system is not so buried in layers of abstraction that it is virtually impossible to divine its inner workings from the applications and services running on top of it. A system that doesn't coddle you too much, because it assumes you'll be able to learn a few keystroke commands if you need to. A hackable system built on open protocols and free software (for the most part). A system where text, not multimedia, still reigns supreme. Since joining SDF, I've set up a personal web site, tried out gemini (didn't take), participated in a few bboard discussions (mostly in scifi), joined mastodon.sdf.org, and now I'm trying out gopher. And there's so much more I haven't done yet! Really must get it together for one of those Plan 9 boot camps next year ... In the meanwhile, I wish everyone here all the best for the holidays.