I am enamored with the idea of SDF, and I think it is an important part of computing history and the present. That being said, I am curious as to whether anyone actually finds it useful—aside from the fact that it hosts the instance!!

  • jermz@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    For me, SDF is a refuge. It’s a part of the Old Internet where I can go and just enjoy a shell account for its own sake. Usenet, email, and a simple web page. Now with mastodon and lemmy, I feel like I’m contributing to a better Internet of the future while preserving and honoring the technology that started it all.

  • adw@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    I mostly use it for my website and gopher space, thought it’s nice to have a trustworthy instance to use as a home base in the fediverse.

  • Korthrun@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    SDF was the first legitimately obtained shell I had that wasn’t tied to my ISP.

    I appreciate the retro computing functionality a lot (comm, bboard, etc), it’s just fun to dive back into TUI land for a bit.

    I have my own boxes for small scale stuff, but for stuff like Lemmy or Mastodon I prefer something with a community base.

    I point newbs that want to learn more advanced computer stuff at SDF as a resource as well.

    Mostly I just like what SDF does and what they “stand for”.

  • Les Orchard (at SDF)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    I’ve kind of lurked around SDF since the mid 90s. (My first time on IRC was via SDF!) I keep meaning to participate more in the community, but my ADHD seems to give me a lack of object permanence with communities 😅

    Either way, I’m glad to be reminded periodically that SDF still exists and I ponied up for a membership a few years back. The shell account comes in handy, occasionally. Glad to see new services pop up from SDF. Happy to see things still trucking along!

  • alternativeninja@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    I am way younger than you guys at 29 (Although I feel old now, I feel I cant change my life direction because of it, but… meh), but I use it for messing around with a large shared server. As odd as that sounds. Its fun being a limited user on a server that is being used in the same way by a bunch of people at the same time.

    As for what is it actively doing? It hosts a meme website built with iframes for nostalgia. Thats about it. I might mess around with the other paid features at some point. I find using something shared like this a lot of fun, even though I rarely interact with others.

  • SDF@lemmy.sdf.orgM
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    2 years ago

    The mission statement is so simple:

    -=- a community platform for inspiring, facilitating and implementing new ideas -=-

  • David Emerson@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    Exploring! SDF is like the coalition of servers I ran in college with friends and campus friendlies. A little of it was explicitly practical, some of it unstable, all of it educational and fun and sometimes stuff took off. I love that SDF survives, and I love that they have paying members.

    When new or esoteric stuff hits, whether it’s 9front or the latest fedi service, SDF is where to see if it makes sense for you. Sure there’s home labs, but a home lab doesn’t have the community around it that we have here on SDF, which means it doesn’t give you the sense of how a service runs at scale or in the (sometimes positive, sometimes corrupting, but always informative) presence of others.

    • #!/usr/bin/woof@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 years ago

      I can’t say it better than this post. Only thing I’ll add is it’s often just nice to have a shell on a machine outside of one’s usual machines for debugging.

  • rsayers@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    Lately, mastodon (and now lemmy!). It’s also been super handy as a “swiss army knife” unix system. Need to test access outside my network? ssd -D to sdf. Need to copy files between two systems that would normally be a PITA? scp to and from sdf! Also nice to have access to a bsd machine since everything I personally run is Linux.

    I’ve also used it in the past for Plan 9 learning and a couple other random things here and there.

  • esm@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    SDF was my first Unix experience. I logged in using telnet from my Win98 computer back in the early 2000s.

  • gt24@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    When I was graduating from college, I realized that I would soon lose terminal access to their main server. I wanted a place to store my old programming bits and bobs that I could still SSH into. I found the SDF back then and it served that purpose well. At that point, I learned of bboard and I like to read that from time to time (although I have never posted to it).

    (For those not in the know, bboard is described at https://sdf.org/?tutorials/bboard-tutorial )

    SDF is notable to me because it a shell account plus more things. This elevates it past any computer I can just set up with any Linux distro. The “more things” is what keeps me checking back and what makes SDF special to me.

  • jonnyg1097@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    I just joined tonight so I’m not fully understanding what SDF is all about at this point and what I can do with it.

  • XziniK@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    I’ve lurked on the sdf for a really long time since about 2010, and some of their more colorful user pages, but last year i finally decided to register because it reminds me of pre 10’s internet, i want to do more, but don’t feel like what i have to say is kinda relevant to start a thread inside the bboard

    I’m thinking on becoming an ARPA user though, i feel like I have to give back to the internet and keep alive the sdf

  • ddelony@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    Lurking on IRC via tmux and bboard on the main cluster, plus general hacking on MetaArray.

  • gsdf@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    Happy SDF user for 9 years now. At first it was a safe place to learn and explore the command line.

    I use SDF for DynamicDNS, NextCloud, mail, Anonradio, and sometimes a convenient place to proxy through.

    There are enough tools and toys available for years of learning and experimentation. Enjoy!