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    • Creator of the WWIV BBS system

      • Wayne Bell is the creator of the WWIV BBS system. The first WWIV BBS went online in Los Angeles in December 1984. His BBS, WWIV version 1.0 written in BASIC and 2.0 written in Turbo Pascal later came to be named Amber, node 1 of the WWIVnet BBS network. His handle as the SysOp was Laison Al'Gaib when it was WWIV, then Random when it became Amber.
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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wayne_BellWayne Bell - Wikipedia

    Wayne Bell is the creator of the WWIV BBS system. The first WWIV BBS went online in Los Angeles in December 1984. His BBS, WWIV version 1.0 written in BASIC and 2.0 written in Turbo Pascal later came to be named Amber, node 1 of the WWIVnet BBS network.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WWIVWWIV - Wikipedia

    History. Origins. WWIV started out in early 1984 as a single BBS in Los Angeles, California, run by Wayne Bell, who wrote the original 1.0 version in BASIC as a high school programing project, and shared the software with 25 of his friends.

  3. May 10, 2020 · 9. 1.5K views 3 years ago. Discussions of WWIV BBS Software (its naming, source code, and user interface) and WWIVnet from Jason Scott's one-on-one interviews with Rob Swindell and Wayne Bell...

  4. The Official History of WWIV. By Wayne Bell Random 1@1. Originally posted in WWIVNEWS Volume 1, Issue 1, January 1991. WWIV started around December 1984, when I first put up a BBS. It was run on an IBM-PC with a 10 meg hard disk and a Hayes 1200. I was running WWIV v1.0, which was in interpreted BASIC.

  5. WWIV is no longer in the hands of Wayne Bell and is actually open source (like Synchronet). It's a bit ironic now, but WWIV version 5 actually includes the Synchronet FOSSIL driver to enable support for 16-bit external programs (doors) on Windows systems.

  6. Aug 1, 2002 · Hi Wayne! I just wanted to thank you for making big difference in my lfe when I was first learning about computers. I loved Borland's Turbo Pascal and compiled WWIV countless times, enjoying the thrill of making changes to the source and seeing what would happen.

  7. www.bbsdocumentary.com › photos › 063bellBBS: The Documentary

    Certainly, in a non-scientific observation, I would put WWIV in with the top five BBS programs ever distributed out there. Even if not entirely true, the WWIV software finds itself in modified form in later programs such as Renegade and Telegard, which are themselves adopted widely. Wayne Bell was the engine behind some amazingly far-reaching work.

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