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Newsgroup service for vintage Mac SE?

frankc64

Member
I have recently succeeded in connecting my trusty old Mac SE running OS6 to the internet, using a modem connection to a RPi running DreamPi. I also installed a newsgroup client - InterNews - and now I am looking for a newsgroup service I can connect to. Preferably hosting groups about vintage computers :)
Does anyone have any suggestions for services that will allow such old software to connect?

Best
 

obsolete

Well-known member
DreamPi, huh? I had to look that up; pretty cool solution, thanks for the tip. Maybe I won't get rid of my old Global Village modem after all.

Unfortunately I'm not into newsgroups, but I know there are others here who are and hopefully will see this thread and give you some help.
 

frankc64

Member
Yeah, DreamPi is a pretty cool solution. It was developed by Kazade for the Sega Dreamcast community, but is in fact a cool general purpose ISP-emulator that you can dial up from any vintage computer with an old Hayes modem. I love the idea of a general-purpose retro-proxy for any old device.

And BTW, I found a list of free newsgroups. But I run into trouble with InterNews. If I try to connect to freenews, there are just too many groups to load for InterNews. Then I connected to news.grc.com which has way fewer groups, but they are tech-related. Even have a retrocomputing group. It loads, but then InterNews crashes due to the lack of a coprocessor in the Mac SE :-(. So I guess InterNews is not going to work at all.
 
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frankc64

Member
Yes! You get the full experience of dialing up. The DreamPi is just a phone line/ISP emulator. The modem isn't even aware that it is not dialing up on a proper phone line. To make it work I had to install MacPPP and MacTCP. My init string for the modem was ATX0, but I suppose that varies with the model.
 

frankc64

Member
Perhaps for a pre-build one. But its very easy to build your own. The RPi-image can be downloaded, and the Voltage Line Inducer is very simple to put together. Only requires two simple components and 1 (or 2 if you live in Europe) 9V batteries. The hardest bit is to find a compatible USB/phone modem that works with the RPi. I can send a link to the one I bought (good for European use).
 
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