Post by account_disabled on Mar 14, 2024 0:17:20 GMT -6
Tsois song launched by someone. In Leningrad in the s there was a legendary semblance of such voice chats called Leningrad Telephone Broadcast however instead of radio broadcasts the onair people used the city telephone network. Due to the peculiarities of the operation of old tenstep PBXs it was possible to dial an unused registered but not connected to the subscriber line telephone number. As a result all citizens who called such a number found themselves in a kind of audio conference could listen to each other through short beeps and also communicate. Such secret numbers were periodically blocked by telephone exchange employees since longterm connections created a parasitic.
Load on the network and interfered with ordinary subscribers but the onair workers found more and mor Buy Email List magic numbers which they passed on to each other in confidence. It also had its own subculture specific slang was used rules of communication and pseudonyms were adopted which chat participants used to address each other. From time to time offline gatherings of onair people were held they were organized by the informal leaders of the movement the kings of the air. The authorities as far as I know treated this phenomenon leniently and some of the Komsomol even supported the participants in the party apparently.
Among the Komsomol functionaries there were also avid users of the ether. True among the senior party comrades there was an opinion that ether was a means of communication and a concentration of blackmailers informals and other bourgeoisminded antiSoviet elements. Personally after listening to the broadcast a couple of times I didnt find any blackmailers there an ordinary gettogether of Soviet high school students discussing music and dating. In the s with the advent of Fidonet and cheaper personal computers all this movement gradually faded away remaining only in the memories of grayhaired oldfags.
Load on the network and interfered with ordinary subscribers but the onair workers found more and mor Buy Email List magic numbers which they passed on to each other in confidence. It also had its own subculture specific slang was used rules of communication and pseudonyms were adopted which chat participants used to address each other. From time to time offline gatherings of onair people were held they were organized by the informal leaders of the movement the kings of the air. The authorities as far as I know treated this phenomenon leniently and some of the Komsomol even supported the participants in the party apparently.
Among the Komsomol functionaries there were also avid users of the ether. True among the senior party comrades there was an opinion that ether was a means of communication and a concentration of blackmailers informals and other bourgeoisminded antiSoviet elements. Personally after listening to the broadcast a couple of times I didnt find any blackmailers there an ordinary gettogether of Soviet high school students discussing music and dating. In the s with the advent of Fidonet and cheaper personal computers all this movement gradually faded away remaining only in the memories of grayhaired oldfags.