![]() Joining a forum meant abiding by its rules of conduct, and trolls were swiftly warned to keep the conversation civil or face being banned.ĬompuServe dominated cyberspace through the 1980s and 1990s, when it reached more than 3 million subscribers. Fans mourned the passing of Jerry Garcia in the RockNet forum. ![]() Each forum covered a topic, such as music, collecting, or gaming. 1980s computers did not display photos of products, so all shopping happened by text (search YouTube for a video of the early CompuServe Electronic Mall - it’s well worth three minutes of your time.)įorums, similar to today’s Facebook groups, became the heart of the information service. Members could browse catalogs and purchase goods from Tiffany and Co., the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Neiman Marcus. Strangers who wouldn’t have otherwise met became lifelong friends, business partners, and even couples: George Stickles of Dallas and Debbie Fuhrman of Phoenix fell in love there and were the first couple to be married on the CB Simulator in 1983.ĬompuServe is also the source of early digital shopping. Like its 3-D counterpart, CB Simulator offered 40 channels of conversation and soon became the coolest online place to be. By Monday, Sandy Trevor had developed a working prototype. On a Friday, CompuServe employees wondered if the concept could translate to the digital space. “For something like the CB Simulator, we borrowed a metaphor from another world.”ĬB Simulator was the world’s first real-time chat service, named for the citizens’ band radio craze of the day. “The CompuServe times were very heady because you were trying things that had never been tried before,” Louden says. His memories include brainstorming with bright, creative, and practical thinkers “throwing things at a whiteboard to see what would stick” in the new digital world. The monthly CompuServe Magazine offered pages of tips for getting the most from the service.Ĭleveland native Bill Louden was on the original CIS team. For a monthly fee, subscribers could access a world of news and information as fast as their 300-baud modems could deliver it (in comparison, today’s slowest DSL lines are roughly 200 times faster broadband can transport data nearly 1,000,000 times faster).Īt the time, both CIS and home computers were new, so something as simple as a mouse could cause confusion - does it work like a TV remote? A sewing pedal? Can you clean it in the dishwasher? - so CompuServe’s customer service team often focused on teaching members computer basics, like how to double-click or change a password. In 1979, CompuServe Information Service (CIS) was born. A decade later, as the personal computer began making its way into American homes, the company saw an opportunity to reach consumers. Golden United Life Insurance founded CompuServe in 1969 as a computer time-sharing service. Digital breakthroughs still in use today originated there, including online shopping, stock research, and self-serve airline tickets. Although the name may not mean much to anyone under 40, CompuServe played a pivotal role in the early days of the Information Age. Wilhite invented the GIF while he worked at CompuServe, an early tech company that was based in central Ohio.
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