tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post7448999832274216435..comments2024-03-28T09:40:37.931-04:00Comments on Femulate: Correcting HistoryStanahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10259788604423472207noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-56189711542026801622023-12-01T16:43:46.781-05:002023-12-01T16:43:46.781-05:00I was on Genderline for a short time when Jennifer...I was on Genderline for a short time when Jennifer was section leader, and then later very active when ::Christina:: was S/L. I too remember 300Baud and Howard owned HSX100/200. Genderline was in room 9.<br />Heck, AOL/Steve Case wasn’t even around yet. Kathi<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-69515472588480190702023-06-10T17:49:10.244-04:002023-06-10T17:49:10.244-04:00I was on Genderline and remember Jennifer Wells.
...I was on Genderline and remember Jennifer Wells.<br /><br />AOL did have a T* section before the TCF though it was not "official" ... there was folder in the lesbian area called Transsexual Lesbians... And Melody was there... Yes she was the one who lobbied AOL... but for sure CI$ HSX-200 long predated it.<br /><br />Although I don't know when it started there was also T section on the now long defunct GEnie service. <br /><br />There were also mailing lists like Transgen that had been around for awhile back then.<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-33224581166556402662017-10-21T10:26:45.941-04:002017-10-21T10:26:45.941-04:00300 baud!!! Holy Modem, Batman!300 baud!!! Holy Modem, Batman!Stanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10259788604423472207noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-66504862561800635892017-10-21T10:23:21.108-04:002017-10-21T10:23:21.108-04:00Those were the days... when 110 baud was king!Those were the days... when 110 baud was king!Stanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10259788604423472207noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-89196596156176369202017-10-21T10:19:23.064-04:002017-10-21T10:19:23.064-04:00The biography read "first public forum on a m...The biography read "first public forum on a major online service" not "first public standalone forum on a major online service." Compuserve's Genderline was a public forum and it predated America Online's public forum. Those are the facts. They may be "meaningless to almost all," but not to me.Stanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10259788604423472207noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-11416296362654510172017-10-21T01:02:06.515-04:002017-10-21T01:02:06.515-04:00Coming out as trans is a very personal thing, so t...Coming out as trans is a very personal thing, so the first thing we did is what we remember, not some shared history. When you talk to people like Dallas Denny, who not only was there but also cared to collect narratives there is a bigger picture, but that image is lost to most people. Sad.<br /><br />In this case, I suspect that the devil is in the details. The CT/TS was a subsection of Human Sexuality -- originally section 8 of page HSX100 -- and not a standalone forum. Jennifer didn't join until it was moved to HSX200, around the time that CI$ handles no longer had to contain TV or TS for cross-gender names.<br /><br />Gwen and the TCF on AOL did come later. but it was the first full trans area, marked as such. <br /><br />It was the difference between 300 and 1200 baud, and so long ago that it has become meaningless to almost all. Sad.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01514822263157077946noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-79367393173193891772017-10-20T22:36:10.477-04:002017-10-20T22:36:10.477-04:00One's perception of the beginning of the Inter...One's perception of the beginning of the Internet seems to always date from the time each user discovered it and got hooked up for the first time. Even many professional technology and history writers seem to get caught in this trap. I got my first 300 baud modem around Christmas of 1982, and rather quickly found gender forums on The Source (my first commercial online experience) and Compuserve. Certainly the Genderline forum was operating by the summer of 1984, and I still have some saved messages from that time period. The real action in those days was in the independent dial-up bulletin boards, although these eventually proved to be a technological dead-end after the spread of always-on TCP/IP based Internet connections. I made my living for almost a decade installing and operating dialup BBSs based on software I wrote. (And a certain author's books were instrumental in my extending this to an amateur radio packet BBS package starting in the late '80s, but I digress!) By the 1983-'84 period, long distance dialup BBSs like Feminet, Gendernet, Carolyn's Closet and the Jersey Shore System were valuable sources of information in those days, and looking back over some of my archives, covered a lot of the same issues and practical questions that are still discussed online today. Only the pictures weren't as good. :-)<br /><br />- DianeDianehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07465952388545291880noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3372432081562643074.post-65416549270055750302017-10-20T14:21:28.873-04:002017-10-20T14:21:28.873-04:00Also, Delphi had a gender forum. I wasn't a CS...Also, Delphi had a gender forum. I wasn't a CS member but I did hang out on Delphi in the 300baud modem days.CallMeMeghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14184763491635476887noreply@blogger.com