Tom Jennings(VI)
Tom Jennings is a technological jack-of-all-trades, whose work is both
in learning and making computer history. His name is most associated
with Fidonet, the ad-hoc volunteer-run computer network of bulletin
board systems that at its peak numbered in the tens of thousands around
the world. However, his influence spans well before and after his work
with the Fido BBS and its network. From the 1970s on, his career was
involved in various programming, from Ocean Research Equipment and Bose
to Phoenix Software Associates, maker of early PC Compatible BIOS chips
(where he was the first employee). Other jobs have included work for
Apple Computer, Wired Magazine (where he was their first webmaster) and
The Little Garden, a ground-breaking Internet Service Provider that
provided resell-able internet access far in advance of most companies
that would do so.
But it is Fidonet that brought Tom Jennings fame (if not fortune), as his work on a Bulletin Board program for microcomputers in early 1980s took a technologically revolutionary turn with the addition of a networking component, called Fidonet. With the assistance of Ken Kaplan, Ben Baker, Thom Henderson, Tony Clark, and many others, Jennings designed and re-designed the Fidonet network so that messages could be passed between distant computers for relatively inexpensive telephone charges. The "mail hour" between Fido BBSes was early in the morning until the volume of messages required the ability to pass data at all times of the day. Jennings constantly rewrote his software throughout the 1980s to accommodate improvements in protocols and specifications, and the "fidonet protocols" were implemented in many other Bulletin Board Software packages to interact with the growing network.
By 1994, Fidonet had reached about 40,000 nodes all volunteer-run, when the availability of the Internet began to eat away at its numbers, until only a few thousand remained within a couple of years. Fidonet is still in use in solid numbers in countries where broadband or even Internet access is still limited, but has faded from the United States, where it began.
Jennings himself stayed in the fray of Fidonet's operation and maintenance for roughly a decade, but his interests soon drifted into other fields; he founded a skateboarders' rights group called Shred of Dignity, and was co-editor (with Deke Motif Nihilson) of a queer punk skater zine called HOMOCORE, which ran for seven issues. He also began taking an interest in recounting computer history far before the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s, tracing back advances in computing science of the 1930s and 1940s, where his writings and works have primarily focused in the past decade. He speaks on a variety of historical and technological subjects on a regular basis.
But it is Fidonet that brought Tom Jennings fame (if not fortune), as his work on a Bulletin Board program for microcomputers in early 1980s took a technologically revolutionary turn with the addition of a networking component, called Fidonet. With the assistance of Ken Kaplan, Ben Baker, Thom Henderson, Tony Clark, and many others, Jennings designed and re-designed the Fidonet network so that messages could be passed between distant computers for relatively inexpensive telephone charges. The "mail hour" between Fido BBSes was early in the morning until the volume of messages required the ability to pass data at all times of the day. Jennings constantly rewrote his software throughout the 1980s to accommodate improvements in protocols and specifications, and the "fidonet protocols" were implemented in many other Bulletin Board Software packages to interact with the growing network.
By 1994, Fidonet had reached about 40,000 nodes all volunteer-run, when the availability of the Internet began to eat away at its numbers, until only a few thousand remained within a couple of years. Fidonet is still in use in solid numbers in countries where broadband or even Internet access is still limited, but has faded from the United States, where it began.
Jennings himself stayed in the fray of Fidonet's operation and maintenance for roughly a decade, but his interests soon drifted into other fields; he founded a skateboarders' rights group called Shred of Dignity, and was co-editor (with Deke Motif Nihilson) of a queer punk skater zine called HOMOCORE, which ran for seven issues. He also began taking an interest in recounting computer history far before the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s, tracing back advances in computing science of the 1930s and 1940s, where his writings and works have primarily focused in the past decade. He speaks on a variety of historical and technological subjects on a regular basis.