mailboxes - meaning and definition. What is mailboxes
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What (who) is mailboxes - definition

COMPUTER SERVER
Bulletin Board System; Bulletin board systems; Bulletin Boards; Proboard; BBSes; Bulletin-board system; Bulletin Board Systems; ProBoard; Emulex/2; Electronic bulletin board; Bulletin Board Service; GBBS; Bulletin Board system; Hermes (BBS); GBBS Pro; BBS network; Computer bulletin board system
  • Amiga 3000 running a two-line BBS
  • A welcome screen for the [[Free-net]] bulletin board, from 1994
  • The 300 baud Smartmodem led to an initial wave of early BBS systems.
  • BBS ANSI Login Screen example
  • Welcome screen of Neon#2 BBS (Tornado)

Bulletin board system         
A bulletin board system or BBS (also called Computer Bulletin Board Service, CBBS) is a computer server running software that allows users to connect to the system using a terminal program. Once logged in, the user can perform functions such as uploading and downloading software and data, reading news and bulletins, and exchanging messages with other users through public message boards and sometimes via direct chatting.
bulletin board system         
<communications, application> (BBS, bboard /bee'bord/, message board, forum; plural: BBSes) A computer and associated software which typically provides an electronic message database where people can log in and leave messages. Messages are typically split into topic groups similar to the newsgroups on Usenet (which is like a distributed BBS). Any user may submit or read any message in these public areas. The term comes from physical pieces of board on which people can pin messages written on paper for general consumption - a "physical bulletin board". Ward Christensen, the programmer and operator of the first BBS (on-line 1978-02-16) called it a CBBS for "computer bulletin board system". Since the rise of the World-Wide Web, the term has become antiquated, though the concept is more popular than ever, with many web sites featuring discussion areas where users can post messages for public consumption. Apart from public message areas, some BBSes provided archives of files, personal electronic mail and other services of interest to the system operator (sysop). Thousands of BBSes around the world were run from amateurs' homes on MS-DOS boxes with a single modem line each. Although BBSes were traditionally the domain of hobbyists, many connected directly to the Internet (accessed via telnet), others were operated by government, educational, and research institutions. Fans of Usenet or the big commercial time-sharing bboards such as CompuServe, CIX and GEnie tended to consider local BBSes the low-rent district of the hacker culture, but they helped connect hackers and users in the personal-micro and let them exchange code. Use of this term for a Usenet newsgroup generally marks one either as a newbie fresh in from the BBS world or as a real old-timer predating Usenet. (2005-09-20)
Hermes (BBS)         
Hermes Bulletin Board Software (BBS) by Will Price was first released in 1988 as one of the first bulletin board system applications available for the Macintosh computer.

Wikipedia

Bulletin board system

A bulletin board system (BBS), also called computer bulletin board service (CBBS), is a computer server running software that allows users to connect to the system using a terminal program. Once logged in, the user can perform functions such as uploading and downloading software and data, reading news and bulletins, and exchanging messages with other users through public message boards and sometimes via direct chatting. In the early 1980s, message networks such as FidoNet were developed to provide services such as NetMail, which is similar to internet-based email.

Many BBSes also offer online games in which users can compete with each other. BBSes with multiple phone lines often provide chat rooms, allowing users to interact with each other. Bulletin board systems were in many ways a precursor to the modern form of the World Wide Web, social networks, and other aspects of the Internet. Low-cost, high-performance asynchronous modems drove the use of online services and BBSes through the early 1990s. InfoWorld estimated that there were 60,000 BBSes serving 17 million users in the United States alone in 1994, a collective market much larger than major online services such as CompuServe.

The introduction of inexpensive dial-up internet service and the Mosaic web browser offered ease of use and global access that BBS and online systems did not provide, and led to a rapid crash in the market starting in late 1994-early 1995. Over the next year, many of the leading BBS software providers went bankrupt and tens of thousands of BBSes disappeared. Today, BBSing survives largely as a nostalgic hobby in most parts of the world, but it is still an extremely popular form of communication for Taiwanese youth (see PTT Bulletin Board System). Most surviving BBSes are accessible over Telnet and typically offer free email accounts, FTP services, IRC and all the protocols commonly used on the Internet. Some offer access through packet switched networks or packet radio connections.

Pronunciation examples for mailboxes
1. around their mailbox.
Green Illusions _ Ozzie Zehner _ Talks at Google
2. the public service's mailbox,
ted-talks_431_RobForbes_2006-320k
3. portals, mayor's mailboxes.
Chinese Politics & Authoritarian Regimes _ Professor Rory Truex _ Talks at Google
4. to wait by the mailbox.
ted-talks_1603_HannahBrencher_2012S-320k
5. like a found fragment in their mailbox.
ted-talks_891_MarianBantjes_2010-320k
Examples of use of mailboxes
1. The Jeddah municipality will receive 700,000 of these mailboxes while the remaining 300,000 mailboxes will be installed in the Makkah municipality.
2. But as they watched their mailboxes each day, nothing came.
3. The boy smashed mailboxes, hit parked cars and signposts.
4. Declining new–home sales mean vacant houses sitting with empty mailboxes.
5. Mailboxes barely peaked above murky, wind–swept waters where neighborhood loops met county roads.