Now I wonder if it was this guy that resonded...
Joe has been pretty cranky about current-3DR on his socials, I guess he was right about it.
> So space considerations were very real when a large part of your customer base existed on 300 & 1200bps modems in the mid 90’s.
I somewhat did a double take at this.
My family had by no means a really generous budget for i386 platform home PC equipment in the early to mid 1990s, but I clearly remember a basic ISA interface, internal, hayes compatible 2400 baud modem in mid 1993 being really affordable and fairly shortly thereafter getting upgraded to a 14.4k. The 2400 bps modem came as part of a package deal with a 486DX/33 we bought in spring 1993.
In the local BBS scene in mid to late 1993 there were pretty much zero people actually using 300 or 1200 bps modems.
It might have been different if you went back to like 1990 or mid 1991, probably there were a lot of people with 1200 baud modems, but that would be before my time.
If we say that "mid 1990s" means 1994-1996, by that time almost everyone had upgraded to 14.4k and then very quickly to 28.8 modems if they could afford it, by mid '96.