8088 day                                                      02/23/24
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With the recent posts about gopher  best practices or whatever it was,
I  got to  thinking  about my  8088.  I  wasn't using  it  much, so  I
disconnected it and set it aside a  few months ago (I think, but maybe
it hasn't been that long?); and  of course, I've missed it ever since.
Today, I setup a new spot for  it, moved some other things around, and
got it back in service.

I'm presently typing on this post on the old pal. So you don't have to
dig around my gopher  hole to get the specs, it's  an Epson Equity I+,
8088 with 640KB,  an 8-bit IDE controller with CF  adapter and 1G card
(only partitioned  for 256MB I think,  was all the hardware  seemed to
want to do,  but haven't played hard with that),  3c503 ethernet card,
and OTI VGA card. Genius three-button  mouse as well, and DOS 6.22. It
has Windows 3.0 (only works in real mode, which is very limiting), but
mostly I use Joe Hass' "HDM" menu system, which is fantastic.

For connectivity  to circumlunar space,  there is a packet  driver and
mTCP telnet, a  hop to a local system,  then SSH to CS. I  have yet to
find a  version of  SSH that  will run on  an 8088  and has  the right
protocols to speak with any modern system, so I'm stuck with the local
telnet hop. All those men-in-the-middle on my LAN are probably reading
this right now as we speak.

For today's 8088 party, I decided to poke around at gopher using a few
different  clients. Then,  I decided  to try  to get  a gopher  client
running in Windows--which  failed miserably, as they  all require more
than Win3.0 in real mode :/

Cruising gopher was as good as  ever. I prefer my own client, NCGopher
(which came out about  the same time as the modern  client by the same
name), which is loosely modeled after  VF-1 (it even has a tour!), but
which isn't nearly as cool. It's  written and compiled to EXE in QB45,
and depends on mTCP's "nc" netcat utility for the network bits. Like I
said, not really "cool", but it works and I like it!

Also fiddled with a couple other clients. PC Gopher III from UMN is my
second  favorite, to  be honest.  It's easy  to configure,  reasonably
fast, and works well on most gopher holes. I was a little disappointed
that it seemed to choke on .MD files, but otherwise it worked well. It
even worked  just fine with tomasino's  i item type posts  (links were
navigable, etc).

Every client I tried did poorl with baud baby's graphics :( I have to
eat my words on  that one, as my own client did  worse than I expected
(it  had  issues  calculating  the  lines and  scrolling,  so  it  was
impossible to navigate). I'll have to  see if there are any changes to
my code that might mitigate.

Downloaded and  tried out  gopherus, again. The  program says  it will
work on a  system like mine, but  it just hangs on a  black screen and
does  nothing. Tried  two different  packet drivers,  and a  few other
little things, but no luck.

It  was  a nice  8088  day,  and  I have  it  setup  next to  my  main
workstation for now, so it's easy to  hop on. I'll have to fiddle more
often.

Some  notes: winworldpc  and vetusware  are both  great resources  for
old  applications, if  you need  a  source. NCGopher  is available  on
vetusware, where I am a volunteer.

Have an exceptional day gopher!