I was an annoying little shit back in the day so of course I thought Punters were the coolest thing around
I would terrorize people in AOL chat rooms by kicking them offline with IM spam, or sending obnoxious ASCII art into the chatthese programs did influence me in a positive way though
I learned to code by downloading some early version of Visual Basic retrieved from an MMer in chat on my painfully slow 2400 baud modem
I then ended up creating my own rudimentary proggies
Like one that would target a chat room user and immediately mirror any comment they made, bewildering the unsuspecting person and offering myself much entertainmentSo thank you to AOL Punters/Proggies for setting me on my current career path, even though it began as a pre-pubescent online terrorist (I called myself MoNeYmAsTa, lol)
This is how I learned Visual Basic. I wanted to create these things. I taught myself subclassing and it sent me down my career path. This was a really fun time of the internet.
I have a similar story, except for me it was Yahoo! Chat. Got a hold of VB, and started making chat bots, brute dictionary “tools”, etc. I managed to produce a few that were fairly popular in the scene.
oh yeah I spent a fair amount of time on Yahoo!, mostly the game rooms
Yahoo! Pool was peak multiplayer gaming back in the day!
Need to get those MMs of the latest WaReZ. I got a T1 FTP connect with DrinkOrDie, and chill with BoxingNun of UPS.
RIP DoD
There was a Mac client (AOL4Free, I think?) that worked by sending a token saying that the user was in a support session after each request. Support was free, so this eliminated billing charges beyond the monthly subscription. I read that it was the work of a college student. Made my life sweet at the time.
Another memory of that time: PC users calling themselves “barcodes,” with names like IIIllIllI flooding our chats and running macros to harass Mac users. Stupid shit. Whatever. We had knock-off macros, but I don’t think we had an equivalent to AOHell.
Also: Cheers to all who built a career on this hobby / fascination when we were kids and such. What a great outcome. “Say HERE to get added to my mass-mail of pirated material!”
names like IIIllIllI
haha yes I remember those too!
Barcodes are still around, these traditions die hard! :)