I am enamored with the idea of SDF, and I think it is an important part of computing history and the present. That being said, I am curious as to whether anyone actually finds it useful—aside from the fact that it hosts the instance!!
For me, SDF is a refuge. It’s a part of the Old Internet where I can go and just enjoy a shell account for its own sake. Usenet, email, and a simple web page. Now with mastodon and lemmy, I feel like I’m contributing to a better Internet of the future while preserving and honoring the technology that started it all.
My first SDF account was created in 2004 (possibly before). In economic terms, the SDF services I enjoy with my sustaining membership have no equal. You’d be hard pressed to assemble the same portfolio of services from corporate providers-- ad-free, nag-free, no user productization-- for the same price.
But that’s superficial. While I certainly enjoy the services that SDF provides, the community is what sets it apart. I’ve been here, and am still here, because of the community-- even if I’ve been quiet until recently. We’re all a bunch of geeks of x, y, or z. Whenever I venture into com, I feel a sense of belonging. When I skim the local SDF fediverse feeds, I feel the same way.
SDF’s banner offering is its community. Cheers, SDF!
Lately, mastodon (and now lemmy!). It’s also been super handy as a “swiss army knife” unix system. Need to test access outside my network? ssd -D to sdf. Need to copy files between two systems that would normally be a PITA? scp to and from sdf! Also nice to have access to a bsd machine since everything I personally run is Linux.
I’ve also used it in the past for Plan 9 learning and a couple other random things here and there.
TBH, I only just now discovered SDF. But I’m curious to explore the services more.
I just joined tonight so I’m not fully understanding what SDF is all about at this point and what I can do with it.
SDF was the first legitimately obtained shell I had that wasn’t tied to my ISP.
I appreciate the retro computing functionality a lot (comm, bboard, etc), it’s just fun to dive back into TUI land for a bit.
I have my own boxes for small scale stuff, but for stuff like Lemmy or Mastodon I prefer something with a community base.
I point newbs that want to learn more advanced computer stuff at SDF as a resource as well.
Mostly I just like what SDF does and what they “stand for”.
SDF was my first Unix experience. I logged in using telnet from my Win98 computer back in the early 2000s.
I mostly use it for my website and gopher space, thought it’s nice to have a trustworthy instance to use as a home base in the fediverse.
So true. Picking SDF for my Lemmy account was a no-brainer.