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On 2024-03-08, vallor <vallor@cultnix.org> wrote:Speaking of gopher and gemini, what would you need there in order to cut off the regular internet completely? And I don't count the commercial internet (banking, travelling, online shopping), but apart from those use cases, what would it take for you to shift completely onto gopher or gemini?On Fri, 8 Mar 2024 09:46:32 -0000 (UTC), Kaz Kylheku>
<433-929-6894@kylheku.com> wrote in <20240308013928.226@kylheku.com>:
>On 2024-03-08, vallor <vallor@cultnix.org> wrote:>We like to give customers a soft landing when turning down services.>
I'm wondering if anyone has suggestions for good shell providers,
places like Panix.
That concept mostly went away 30 years ago with free Unix-like operating
systems that run on low-spec consumer hardware.
That turns out not to be the case.
>
Some shell users don't want to be system administrators.
>>>"bare-bones" for the users I'm thinking of. Some of them might be able>
to transition to being a system administrator, but a lot just want to
run tin, pine, mutt, irssi, tf, and so forth.
To access some remote shell account you need a machine that is internet
connected and can run SSH. That machine can just run a freeware OS with
all the above packages.
...with all the system administration that entails.
>
I suppose the formal name for my request is recommendations for "managed
shell services".
>
Thanks to those who responded, sdf.org and the tildeverse are great
suggestions.
>
Part of your community could move to tilde.pink . There's no http, the
server runs NetBSD and there's limited disk space. But maybe that's not
an issue? More information on tilde.pink :
>
gemini://tilde.pink
gopher://tilde.pink
>
More information on gemini:
>
https://geminiprotocol.net
>
You can find us on irc in #pink . Server tilde.chat port 6697 (tls).
>
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