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Daftar/Tabel -- BBS software

This is a list of notable bulletin board system (BBS) software packages.[1][2]

Contents

Multi-platform

  • ATBBS – PHP-based BBS software.
  • BBBS
  • Citadel
  • CONFER – CONFER II on MTS, CONFER U on Unix, written by Robert Parnes starting in 1975.
  • EleBBS
  • Exchange BBS
  • IN-MENU – written in Borland Pascal 7.0 by Viktor Nozhnov. Running on MS-DOS and All Windows.
  • PortaCOM
  • Synchronet
  • Virtual Advanced, also known as VBBS
  • Mystic BBS – written by James Coyle with versions for DOS, Windows, OS/2, Linux, and Mac OSX although only Windows, OSX, and Linux in recent versions.

Acorn RISC OS

  • ArcBBS
  • vhost (bulletin board software)

Altos 68000

Amiga based

  • 4D-BBS – by Dale E. Reed Jr.
  • ABBS (a Mike's BBS-like system)
  • AmBoS – by Jörg Eßmann and Kai Szymanski
  • Ami-Express aka "/X" (Very popular in the crackers/pirate software scene)
  • AmiCon v1 & 2, C language based modular BBS system by Paul Roffey
  • Atredes (evolved into Skyline)
  • BBBS
  • BBS-PC! (v4.13 -4.20)
  • CNet Amiga – by Ken Pletzer (1-4)
  • CNet Amiga – by Zen Metal Software (4.1 – 5.07a)
  • CNet Amiga – by Storm's Edge Technologies (5.10+) http://www.cnetbbs.net/
  • DayDream BBS – by Antti Häyrynen and Mattias Nilsson
  • Dialog BBS (which then evolved into DLG BBS)
  • DLG Professional BBS
  • Excelsior! BBS
  • Falcon CBCS a work-a-like of MSDOS Opus-CBCS
  • Fastrack
  • MAX's BBS – by Anthony Barrett
  • MAX's Pro – by Niki Murkett
  • MEBBS
  • Metro BBS – by Percy L Broadnax
  • NiKom – by Niklas Lindholm
  • New Touch Pro (NTPro)
  • OzMetro BBS – by Peter Deane and Percy L Broadnax
  • Paragon BBS – by John Radoff (evolved into StarNet BBS then MEBBS)
  • Phobos
  • Prometheus
  • Rapport BBS – by Mark Brinicombe and Paul Roberts
  • Remote Access – by Andrew Milner
  • Skyline BBS, featuring Skypix Protocol, the first online communication protocol sporting rich graphic content such as changeable fonts, mouse-controlled actions, animations and sound[3]
  • StarNet – by Eric Drewry (which came from Paragon, then later became MEBBS)
  • Stormforce BBS – by Kris Hudson & Andrew Ward
  • System-X – by Peter (zed) Zelestny and Michael (rawfox) Clasen
  • Tempest BBS – by Michael P. Bockert
  • Transmission Impossible BBS – by Lee Bates
  • TransAmiga – by Timothy J. Aston (written in BlitzBasic)
  • Wildcat BBS – by Mustang Software
  • Xenolink 2 – by Xeno Inc
  • Zeus BBS originally – by Nick Loman and Alex May

Apple II series

  • ABBS
  • AppleNet
  • AcmeNet
  • Citamad/Lumadel
  • CompuNet
  • DDBBS
  • Diversi-Dial (DDial) – Chat-room atmosphere supporting up to 7 incoming lines allowing links to other DDial boards.
  • EBBS II
  • FredMail
  • FutureVision – by TC Wilson (aka The Captain) – based on the METAL language
  • GBBS – Applesoft-based BBS program
  • GBBS Pro – based on the ACOS or MACOS (modified ACOS) language
  • HBBS – a hi-resolution graphical dial-up BBS and client package for the Apple II – supported threaded, rich media messages including graphics, shapes, sound, fonts, sprites and animation via its desktop client entitled Pixterm
  • Hopscotch – by Eric Senior – written in 6502 assembly, chat system supporting up to 16 users
  • HotCom – by Hansi
  • KauCom – by Brendon Woirhaye
  • Networks II – by Nick Naimo
  • Nexus
  • People's Message System (PMS)
  • Proving Grounds
  • METAL BBS – written in a powerful scripting language designed for more than just a BBS
  • PBBS
  • PEPSI (BBS) – by Bill Wolf & Tod O'Brien – based on MACOS, a hacked & improved version of ACOS
  • Prime
  • ProLine – by Morgan Davis – popular with many A2 user group BBSs
  • The Proving Grounds – a role playing game BBS
  • Pseudodel – a Citadel variant for the Apple //
  • SNAPP
  • SBBS – Sonic BBS by Patrick Sonnek
  • Tele-Cat – Free, used the Novation Apple-Cat II Modem, supported 1200 bit/s (202-half/212-full duplex), last version was Tele-Cat // 3.0
  • TProBBS – an RPG BBS by Guy T. Rice; a version has been ported by Robert Hurst at RPGD
  • Warp Six – Applesoft-based BBS program, by Jim Ferr
  • WAPABBS – Washington Apple PI Users Group BBS
  • WWIV BBS[citation needed]
  • VinyaMicil (VM)

Atari

  • The ACS BBS (ANTIC BBS)
  • A.M.I.S. BBS (ATARI Message Information System)
  • ATKeep
  • BBCS (Bulletin Board Construction Set)
  • BBS Express! – by Rick Taylor, Keith Ledbetter
  • BBS Express-Professional!
  • Carina
  • Carnival (BASIC, first introduced in ANTIC Magazine)
  • FaST BBS (Jeff Molofee AKA NeHe)
  • FoReM BBS ("Friends of Rickey Moose")
  • FoReM-XE
  • Fox-Box
  • Michtron BBS
  • Milestone BBS – by Ernst Marending
  • MiniBBS
  • Nite Lite BBS – by Paul Swanson
  • Oasis IV
  • QuickBBS ST
  • RATSoft/ST
  • Raven of Mystic BBS – by David Bolt
  • STadel, a Citadel variant for the Atari ST
  • Titan (written by Dominic Vaccaro in 1984)
  • Titanic
  • Turbo BBS (a FoReM clone)
  • Transcendence BBS
  • Spiffy BBS (ATASCI / ASCII / VT52) for Atari ST (written by Richard Kelsch)

BASIC Stamp

  • BasiCDMA – a BBS written to work with the U300 series cell phones (under development)(abandoned as of 3/15/2011)

BBC Micro

  • Autonomic Systems – by Glyn "T'GG" Phillips
  • Bloxham BBS
  • FBBS – by Marcus Anselm (with significant help from Rob O'Donnell / Jon Freeman and Jason Tanner)
  • NBBS – by Jon Freeman
  • OBBS – by Rob O'Donnell

Commodore computers

  • 1541 BBS
  • 6480 Exchange – by David Tingler
  • 6485 Exchange – by "Ivory Joe"
  • 6487 Exchange – by Nick Smith
  • 64 Exchange BBS – by "The Breaker"
  • 64 Messenger – by Messenger Software
  • A+ BBS Software – by David Culp
  • Ace-Line BBS – by Gilligan
  • All American BBS – by Nickolai Smith
  • All American 128 – by Nickolai Smith
  • ARB BBS – by Arthur Brock
  • Bizarre 64 – by Bill Atchison
  • Black Cat BBS or BCBBS – by Mike Foerster
  • Blue Board – by Martin Sikes
  • Superboard – by Greg Francis and Randy Schnedler
  • Bob's BBS
  • BBS64 – by Steve Punter
  • BBS Construction Set – by Will Gaddy
  • C*Base – by Gunther Birznieks, Jerome P. Yoner, and David Weinehall.
  • C*Base 128 – by Dan Drury
  • C-Net 64 – by RM Software (1992–2010)
  • C-Net 128 – by RM Software (1992–2010)
  • C-Net DS2 – by Jim Selleck
  • CCGMS BBS – by Craig Smith
  • Centipede BBS – by Adam Fanello
  • CHATeau – by Eugene Tiffany
  • Citadel 64 BBS – by K2NE Software
  • Color64 – by Greg Pfountz
  • Color 64 (Version 128) – by Adam Fanello
  • Commodore Mania BBS – by Don Snider
  • Dataquick BBS
  • DarkStar BBS – by DarkStar Software
  • Dircon BBS – by Jay Winick and Aaron Ogus
  • DMBBS – by ARTIsoft
  • Does the Job BBS – by Andrew Bernhardt
  • EBBS 64 – by Ed Parry
  • EBBS 128 – by Ed Parry rights sold to Mike Pugliese
  • Electric Magazine – by Bob Shannon
  • Electro-Com – by Bill Bowers
  • Elite BBS – by Bill Fink (not affiliated with the next listing)
  • Elite BBS – by HJ van Rantwijk and Coen Roos
  • Elite Exchange 1 – by Stevyn Prothero
  • Fasst 64 BBS – by Randy Epstein (former: C-Net 64 BBS v11.7a)
  • Frontier 128
  • Hal's BBS – by Richard Buchanan
  • Image BBS – by New Image Software
  • Infoquick BBS – by Lew Lasher
  • Intelligentsia 128 – by Robert S. Murawski
  • Ivory BBS – by Bill Jackson
  • Keeper-Line – by Tom Davidson
  • Laser 128 BBS – by Chris Timmerberg
  • Lightning BBS
  • Matchmaker
  • McBBS – by Derek E. McDonald
  • Microram BBS
  • Midgaard BBS
  • Mike Black BBS – by Mike Black
  • Omni 128 – by Omni Software
  • PETBBS – by Steve Punter
  • Punter BBS – by Steve Punter
  • RAD BBS – by James Williams (Beyonder)
  • RAVICS – by Adam Jacobs
  • RGBBS
  • Ribit BBS – by J.W. Fulmer
  • Realm of Shadow – by Lord of Stealth/Moonknight
  • Satellite BBS – by Shaw/Backer
  • SCBBS – by Chad Stansel
  • Star 128
  • Stellar Zone – by "Mr. X"
  • ST/R BBS – by Douglas McLaughlin
  • Spence XP – by Ken Spence/James MacFarlane
  • Spectrum BBS – by "Strange Illusion"
  • Spice-Net – by Darrell Spice
  • Supra 128 – by Julian Burger
  • System 64! – by Steve Gregory
  • Fantasy Rollplaying – by Deep Pan Software
  • Ultra-Com BBS – by PW
  • U.E.S. BBS – by Willie Goebel
  • Vision Color BBS – by Kerry Messana
  • Visions BBS – by Larry Ross
  • VortexNet 128 BBS – by Stephen Kunc
  • Xavian BBS – by Star Tech Software
  • ZBBS – by "Mr. Bill"
  • Zelch 64 BBS – by Planet Ink.
  • Zelch 128 BBS – by Elite Software

CP/M

Many of these needed BYE and KMD to handle modem interactions and file transfers

  • RBBS written in Microsoft Basic – really slow login with more than a few users
  • PBBS 4 written in Z80 Assembly Code by Russ Pencin
  • QBBS (QuickBBS)
  • TBBS
  • XBBS
  • MikroKom
  • Bulldog BBS written in BDS C

Apple Macintosh

MS-DOS and compatible

  • 1BBS – Unix-style BBS software written by Teemu Harju
  • 2AM-BBS – written by Neil Clarke, Chris Gorman, and Tom Vogl (2AM Associates)
  • Alacrity BBS
  • Allans kakburk
  • Alphabox
  • Alpha-KOM
  • Apocolis – written by Pat Barnes and Dan Joseph, an offshoot of the original Vision.
  • Auntie BBS written by Wes Meier
  • BBBS
  • Bytronix: ASCII & ANSI compatible BBS software written in IBM BASIC by Mike Bettua.
  • CBBS – The first ever BBS software, written by Ward Christensen.
  • Celerity BBS
  • Citadels including DragCit, Cit86, TurboCit, Citadel+
  • Computer Information Exchange (CIE)
  • Concord BBS – written by Pasi Talliniemi[4]
  • DarkStar BBS – the first full multimedia BBS platform, written by Jerry Thomas Hunter and distributed from 1989 through 1995
  • DeusBBS – written by Simon Giles
  • DLX BBS - by Richard Gillmann (Inner Loop Software)
  • Ebbs PC BBS - by Ed Parry
  • EDLX BBS
  • EIS-PC - by Justin Langseth
  • EleBBS
  • Emulex (later Emulex/2)
  • Elite BBS – written by HJ van Rantwijk
  • Eternity (BBS)
  • Ezycom – written by Peter Davies
  • FerretBBS – written by Jason Scott (www.textfiles.com)
  • Fido – written by Tom Jennings (www.wps.com)
  • Force! – written by Guy Smith and Jim Langley
  • Forum PC – one of the most-copied BBS sources which spawned a legion of "Forum hacks"
  • Fornax – written by Minh Ma (aka Briareos)
  • Free Speech – a simple single-template message board
  • Gap
  • GBBS (Graphics BBS) – used in the Melbourne area
  • Genesis PC BBS – written in Turbo Pascal 3.0 by Jim Berg and Steven (Kiriwuth) Path
  • GT-Power
  • Hostplus – part of the Telix suite
  • H-KOM
  • Hysteria BBS – tricky WWiV hack
  • Illusion BBS
  • Iniquity BBS
  • Infusion BBS
  • Impulse BBS
  • Insomnia BBS
  • Infinity BBS
  • Insanity BBS
  • Instinct BBS
  • Jet BBS
  • Lora BBS
  • L.S.D. BBS – written by The Slavelord of The Humble Guys (THG)
  • The Major BBS
  • Maximus
  • MBBS
  • McBBS – by Derek E. McDonald
  • Mystic BBS
  • MikroKom
  • NanoBBS
  • Nexus BBS – written by George Roberts
  • Nochange – by Jim Kloss
  • Oblivion/2 written by Darkened Enmity
  • Opus-CBCS – first written by Wynn Wagner III
  • Oracomm (early) Oracomm Plus (later) – written by Guy Young
  • PCBoard
  • PegaSys
  • PipeLine – written by Matt Stanley (Net Distortion)
  • Pobble – written in New Zealand by Josh Parsons
  • PowerBBS
  • Powerboard BBS
  • ProBoard BBS – written by Philippe Leybaert (Belgium)
  • Puppy
  • Pyroto Mountain
  • PoweredBoard
  • QuickBBS – written by Adam Hudson (With assistance by Phil Becker)
  • QuiverBBS
  • RBBS-PC
  • RemoteAccess – written by Andrew Milner
  • Renegade – written by Cott Lang
  • Revelation
  • RoboBOARD/FX – written by Seth Hamilton
  • SDLX BBS – by Dustin Thomas, Jason Quinn
  • Searchlight BBS (SLBBS)
  • Shotgun BBS – written by Brent Shellenberg
  • Spitfire
  • STadel-PC, a PC version of the STadel variant of Citadel for the Atari ST
  • SuperBBS – by Aki Antman and Risto Virkkala
  • Synchronet
  • TBBS
  • Telegard
  • TriBBS
  • TPCS
  • TCL
  • TAG
  • Tornado BBS
  • UBBS
  • VDLX BBS written by Collin Gohl
  • Virtual Advanced, also known as VBBS
  • ViSiON
  • ViSiON-X – written by Ed Youssef
  • ViSiON/2 "The Revision" programmed by Crimson Blade
  • VorTeX BBS – written by Jason S. Clary. A protected mode multitasking BBS with a mixed ANSI and vector graphic system using an ANSI-like protocol.
  • Waffle – written by Tom Dell, and supported UUCP (and Fidonet through extensions).
  • Wildcat! – originally by Mustang Software
  • Worldgroup – The latest version of MajorBBS, the last released by Galacticomm.
  • WWIV – written by Wayne Bell, included WWIVNet and while popular on DOS platforms also had an OS/2 version.
  • XBBS – written by Mark Kimes. Distributed with source code, this allowed a very customizable system. Also available for OS/2. Support was very limited ("If it breaks, you have both pieces" – M. Kimes).

OS/2

Tandy TRS-80

  • Forum 80
  • Green Machine
  • MTABBS (Michael's Totally Awesome BBS) - by Michael S. Livorsi.

Texas Instruments TI-99/4A

  • TIBBS – by Ralph Fowler.

Timex Sinclair

  • Spiffy BBS (written for the TS2068 in 1983 by Richard Kelsch)

TOPS-10

  • QZ KOM

Unix and compatible

Microsoft Windows

References

  1. ^ 2005, BBS: The Documentary, Bovine Ignition Systems, directed by Jason Scott
  2. ^ Jason Scott (2005), BBS Software Listing, http://www.bbsdocumentary.com/softwar e/
  3. ^ Scott Lee. "BBSDocumentary, An Overview of BBS Programs". Jason Scott for Wired Magazine. http://www.bbsdocumentary.com/softwar e/expanded.html. Retrieved 2005.
  4. ^ BBS: The documentary, The BBS Software Directory, http://www.bbsdocumentary.com/softwar e/IBM/DOS/CONCORD/

External links

(Sebelumnya) List of backup softwareList of BeOS programs (Berikutnya)