Digital Archaeology: Floppy Disk #14 – OCT84.DOC

A summary for those that haven't necessarily been keeping up with this series:
I found a number of 5.25" disks at a thrift store a number of years ago (sometime in the late 1990s to the best of my recollection). I finally got around to acquiring a 5.25" disk drive and extracting the contents a several years back. Since then, I have been occasionally posting the content here.
Based on the contents, most or all of these disks were apparently once owned by someone named Connie who used to run the “Close Encounters” Special Interest Group (SIG) on Delphi in the mid 1980s.
The following description of this SIG was found in a document on one of the disks: "This SIG, known as 'Close Encounters', is a forum for the discussion of relationships that develop via computer services like the Source, CompuServe, and Delphi. Our primary emphasis is on the sexual aspects of those relationships."
This service was text based and was accessed via a modem and whatever terminal program you had available for your computer to dial in with. Many of these disks have forum messages, e-mails and chat session logs. All of this is pre-internet stuff and I am not aware of any archives in existence today that contain what was on Delphi in the 1980s.



This post includes the contents of OCT84.DOC. Similar to the last post in this series, this appears to be a report that gives details on the usage of the SIG (how many hours each user spent in the SIG, etc.). This is in the from of an e-mail from someone named KELLY who was presumably an employee of Delphi. The e-mail is dated November 5th, 1984.
There are two SIGs (Special Interest Groups) that have been mentioned repeatedly in these files. One is the "Close Encounters" SIG and the other is the "Friendship Circle" SIG though I'm not entirely sure they were different. "Close Encounters" may have evolved from "Friendship Circle". In any case "Closed Circle" is mentioned in this report but maybe this is an alias or the name changed again at some point.
This report includes username, sessions (number of times the user called), prime minutes (typically online time during more expensive per minute charged time limit), and offprime minutes (typically online time during off peak hours that are "free" with your monthly subscription, or at least much cheaper).
This file is dated September 2nd, 1985 and was in a subdirectory titled "SIGUSAGE".
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OCT84.DOC
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Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (133-136)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-133-136
Popular Computing Weekly (December 18, 1986)
https://ecency.com/retrocomputing/@darth-azrael/popular-computing-weekly-december-18
Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (129-132)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-129
Maximum PC (February 2004)
https://ecency.com/retrocomputing/@darth-azrael/maximum-pc-february-2004
Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (125-128)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-125
The Games Machine (June 1988)
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Amazing report. I used to connect just for fun to a teletype software through modem to modern communication with my neighbor. We had a terminal to chat between other but that went away soon when we found out we could do the same with games. And we both love basketball, so a basketball game that also allowed you to "dial out" for a match.
We both owned a stylish Acer Aspire in the 90s was the coolest looking PC out there.
I had two PCs in the 1990s (not counting my Commodore 64). Both were Gateway 2000s. One was a 486 and the other was a Pentium II. I loved those machines. The first one looked like this:
Oh yeah remember those days of upgrading your soundcard to a surround sound to play games. And that gimmicky "Turbo" button to "overclock" your processor.
Those were the days.
You know the turbo button was actually to decrease speed of your processor in order to play games that run on processing clock speed. The original button was to decrease speed of the processor but marketing believed it wouldn't sell the idea of slow down your machine. So they reversed the button and call it turbo keeping it always pressed until you need to play a game that rely on slower processing clock to be playable.
Interesting factoid. 😅
I always associated it to the Reebok Pumps.
Update: @darth-azrael, I paid out 0.118 HIVE and 0.000 HBD to reward 1 comments in this discussion thread.