225:. Intended to be a reinterpretation of its 1970s namesake, it is conceptually similar to the original system, but limitations imposed by the resource constraints of the time (such as the maximum room count) have been lifted. However, as of March 14, 2024, the web is now unavailable for public use due to technical reasons and the action of some users that were considered disrespectful. But, as of June 2024, Talkomatic is back up and bans people who do disrespectful actions.
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owners of those groups provided the administrative oversight necessary if user conduct was deemed inappropriate by others. At the discretion of a group owner, credentials could be suspended or revoked entirely. The most anonymous of the credential types, multiples, could be prevented from accessing the
Talkomatic system, thus preventing any type of anonymous access.
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system that facilitated real-time text communication among a small group of people. Each participant in
Talkomatic had their own section of the screen, broadcasting messages letter-by-letter as they were typed. This interaction was dissimilar from present-day chat systems and was based upon work done
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On the 6th of July, 2024, YouTuber "yikes" uploaded a video titled "I killed the oldest social media", which is a follow up to his video he released a few months previous, on the 4th of March, 2024, “I Revived the Oldest Social Media”. The site was not designed for hundreds of concurrent users. Some
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Talkomatic (Web version) was designed to be freely available for use by anyone but complete anonymity invited abuse. The
Version 4 solution was to implement an in-room voting system for rooms holding three or more participants. Participants who deemed the conduct of another to be inappropriate could
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The original
Talkomatic was the first multi-user online chat system, with the possible exception of the Party Line function of the Emergency Management Information Systems And Reference Index (EMISARI) system, created for the US Office of Emergency Preparedness by Murray Turoff in 1971. Talkomatic
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The original
Talkomatic evolved in the PLATO community which was largely limited by the constraints of requiring credentials used to access the PLATO system. The system recognized different types of users: authors, instructors, students and multiples. These users were managed as "groups" and the
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On March 11, 2018, Version 4 was released, completing the features of the original version with some enhancements in support of the greater variety of modern-day browsers and display resolutions. With this final addition, a feature was added to address the problems arising from truly anonymous
207:. It offered six channels (the analog of a "room"), which could each hold up to five participants. Along with PLATO Notes and a wide variety of games, Talkomatic was one of the features of PLATO that gave rise to a large online community that persisted into the mid 1980s.
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users posted inappropriate things on the website. There was an attempt at adding verification. Ultimately, the owner decided to shut down the website indefinitely. However, Mohd
Mahmodi has begun an open-source version under the domain
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In addition to Brown and
Woolley's original domain (talko.cc), Ray Ozzie donated three other domains to the conservation efforts. In 2018, Talkomatic was available at talko.cc, talkomatic.com, talkomatic.org, and talkomatic.net.
259:. However, this effort led to the website's shutdown due to the server's inability to handle the increased load. As of June 2024, Talkomatic is back up and running on talkomatic.co because of the community.
213:'s smartphone app, Talko (launched in September 2014 and acquired, and dissolved by Microsoft in 2016), was named after Talkomatic, which Ozzie experienced while working on the PLATO System in the 1970s.
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By the end of 2017, Talkomatic was in its third version and supported the original's features of Public and
Private rooms but work on the final feature, Semi-Private rooms had not been implemented.
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Features of the original work included public, private and semi-private spaces which enabled five concurrent "chatters" to communicate in accordance with their privacy needs.
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in 1973 at the
University of Illinois on the PLATO system by Doug Brown and David R. Woolley. The YouTuber "yikes" tried to revive the website.
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On March 4, 2024, a well-known YouTuber known as yikes attempted to revive a reimagined version of the website
Talkomatic by advertising it on
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Creating and Sustaining Online Professional Learning Communities
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was created by Doug Brown and David R. Woolley in 1973 on the
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The Network Nation: Human Communication via Computer
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435:. Ziff Davis, Inc. 17 April 1984. pp. 221–.
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306:Falk, Joni K.; Drayton, Brian (25 April 2015).
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489:"Talkomatic 2024 - Create and Join Chat Rooms"
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513:"PLATO: The Emergence of Online Community"
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
402:. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 665–.
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459:"Talkomatic: Unavailable"
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41:Please help
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569:Online chat
517:Matrix News
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187:online chat
132:Doug Brown
558:Categories
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473:2024-03-19
463:Talkomatic
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358:2014-09-28
293:References
183:Talkomatic
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99:April 2024
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551:The site
257:Instagram
211:Ray Ozzie
467:Archived
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