Knowledge (XXG)

The Internet Adapter

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on their computer. This was especially useful at the time because simple shell accounts were much less expensive than full SLIP/PPP accounts. TIA was
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cut its market share. Cyberspace Development later sold its domain name and its owners went on to other projects while Intermind moved on to
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Usage of TIA declined rapidly with the advent of inexpensive PPP-enabled consumer-level
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or text-based software, but by logging into a shell account and starting the TIA
158: 38:(PPP) was added in 1995, by which time the software was marketed and sold by 142: 75: 195: 63: 143:"Graphical Internet Access on a Budget: Making a Pseudo-SLIP Connection" 67: 43: 55: 183: 89: 26:) was software created by Cyberspace Development in 1993 to allow 71: 203: 16:
Software to allow SLIP connections over a shell account
85:. Also, competition from alternatives such as the 46:. Shell accounts normally only allow the use of 141:McCulley, P. Michael (November–December 1995). 223: 8: 230: 216: 249:Internet Protocol based network software 105: 58:-based application, including standard 123:. Street Cred. Vol. 3, no. 3 7: 180: 178: 202:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by 62:software such as the then-popular 14: 182: 1: 113:Rapport, Steve (March 1995). 96:and automated data delivery. 28:Serial Line Internet Protocol 54:, a user could then run any 275: 177: 30:(SLIP) connections over a 115:"Slipping onto the Net" 36:Point-to-Point Protocol 259:Network software stubs 70:to a large number of 20:The Internet Adapter 64:Netscape Navigator 211: 210: 266: 232: 225: 218: 186: 179: 169: 168: 166: 165: 138: 132: 131: 129: 128: 110: 274: 273: 269: 268: 267: 265: 264: 263: 239: 238: 237: 236: 175: 173: 172: 163: 161: 140: 139: 135: 126: 124: 112: 111: 107: 102: 94:Push technology 17: 12: 11: 5: 272: 270: 262: 261: 256: 251: 241: 240: 235: 234: 227: 220: 212: 209: 208: 187: 171: 170: 133: 120:Wired Magazine 104: 103: 101: 98: 83:dial-up access 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 271: 260: 257: 255: 254:1993 software 252: 250: 247: 246: 244: 233: 228: 226: 221: 219: 214: 213: 207: 205: 201: 198:article is a 197: 193: 188: 185: 181: 176: 160: 156: 152: 148: 144: 137: 134: 122: 121: 116: 109: 106: 99: 97: 95: 91: 88: 87:free software 84: 79: 77: 73: 69: 65: 61: 57: 53: 49: 45: 41: 37: 33: 32:shell account 29: 25: 21: 204:expanding it 189: 174: 162:. Retrieved 153:(6): 34–38. 150: 146: 136: 125:. Retrieved 118: 108: 80: 48:command line 23: 19: 18: 243:Categories 164:2009-08-11 127:2017-10-15 100:References 194:-related 159:0146-5422 78:systems. 76:unix-like 40:Intermind 196:software 192:network 44:Seattle 157:  147:Online 68:ported 56:TCP/IP 52:daemon 190:This 90:Slirp 200:stub 155:ISSN 72:unix 74:or 60:GUI 42:of 24:TIA 245:: 151:19 149:. 145:. 117:. 34:. 231:e 224:t 217:v 206:. 167:. 130:. 22:(

Index

Serial Line Internet Protocol
shell account
Point-to-Point Protocol
Intermind
Seattle
command line
daemon
TCP/IP
GUI
Netscape Navigator
ported
unix
unix-like
dial-up access
free software
Slirp
Push technology
"Slipping onto the Net"
Wired Magazine
"Graphical Internet Access on a Budget: Making a Pseudo-SLIP Connection"
ISSN
0146-5422
Stub icon
network
software
stub
expanding it
v
t
e

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