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Randy Suess
Randy Suess
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Randy John Suess (January 27, 1945 – December 10, 2019)[1] was the co-founder of the CBBS bulletin board, the first bulletin board system (BBS) ever brought online.[2] Suess, along with collaborator Ward Christensen, whom he met when they were both members of the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists’ Exchange, or CACHE, started development of CBBS during a blizzard in Chicago, Illinois, and officially established it four weeks later, on February 16, 1978.[3][4][5]

Biography

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Suess was born in Skokie, Illinois, to Miland, a police officer, and Ruth (née Duppenthaler), a nurse. He served in the Navy, and afterward, attended the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. Suess worked at IBM and Zenith.[1]

Suess put together the hardware which supported CBBS, while Christensen built the software, which was automatically loaded whenever someone dialed in. Suess also hosted CBBS, because his home in the Wrigleyville section of Chicago could be called without paying long-distance charges by anyone in Chicago. By the time they retired the system in the 1980s, its single phone line had received more than half a million calls. There is still at least one active CBBS system as of August 2020.[6]

In the 1970s, Suess was also an amateur radio operator, using the call sign WB9GPM.[7] He was an active member of the Chicago FM Club, where he helped with maintenance on their extensive radio repeater systems.

In 1992, Suess and Christensen received a Dvorak Telecommunications Excellence Award for their development of the first BBS. [8]

In May 2005, Suess and Christensen were both featured in BBS: The Documentary.[9]

Suess died on December 10, 2019, in Chicago, Illinois.[1]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Randy Suess'' is an American computer hobbyist and engineer known for co-creating the Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS), widely recognized as the world's first public dial-up bulletin board system, with Ward Christensen in 1978. The CBBS, built during the Great Blizzard of 1978 in Chicago, allowed computer enthusiasts to post messages, share software, and communicate online via modem connections, serving as a pioneering platform for digital communities and laying essential groundwork for modern online forums, social media, and networked communication. Born on January 27, 1945, in Skokie, Illinois, Suess served in the U.S. Navy, attended the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, and held technical positions at companies including IBM and Zenith. He joined the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists’ Exchange (CACHE), where he met Christensen, and took the lead on hardware for CBBS, constructing and hosting the system in his Wrigleyville basement to enable local access without long-distance charges. The original CBBS ran for years and received hundreds of thousands of calls before being retired in the 1980s. Suess later developed Chinet, an expanded multi-line system that connected to early internet infrastructure and attracted users internationally. His work with CBBS is credited with inspiring the broader dial-up BBS culture of the 1980s and 1990s, which introduced many to online interaction through features like messaging, file sharing, and real-time chat. Randy Suess died on December 10, 2019, at the age of 74 in Chicago. A version of CBBS remained operational decades later, and it was used to announce his passing.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family

Randy Suess was born on January 27, 1945, in Skokie, Illinois, a northern suburb approximately 15 miles from downtown Chicago. His father, Miland Suess, worked as a police officer in the nearby village of Lincolnwood, while his mother, Ruth Suess (née Duppenthaler), was employed as a nurse. Suess grew up in the Chicago metropolitan area, spending his childhood in this suburban region north of the city.

Education

Randy Suess attended the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle following his service in the U.S. Navy. No details are available regarding the duration of his attendance, field of study, or completion of any degree. This period of formal education occurred prior to his involvement in technical jobs and computer hobbyist activities in the Chicago area.

Military Service

U.S. Navy Service

Randy Suess served two years in the United States Navy after completing high school. Limited public information is available regarding specific details of his service, such as rank, assignments, locations, or dates of enlistment and discharge. Following his Navy service, he transitioned to civilian pursuits, including education and technical employment.

Early Career and Hobbies

Technical Employment

Randy Suess held a variety of technical jobs in and around Chicago after his military service in the U.S. Navy and attendance at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. These positions included roles at IBM and Zenith. Described as a self-taught computer technician who made decisions quickly and decisively, Suess applied his practical expertise in these professional settings. His technical employment in the Chicago area provided foundational experience in computing hardware and systems during the early years of personal computing development. Suess also participated in the local hobbyist scene through his involvement with the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists’ Exchange (CACHE).

Amateur Radio Involvement

Randy Suess held the amateur radio call sign WB9GPM (ex-WB9GPM).

Creation of CBBS

Collaboration with Ward Christensen

Randy Suess and Ward Christensen met through their mutual involvement in the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists' Exchange (CACHE), a prominent local group for computer enthusiasts. Both were active participants in Chicago's computer hobbyist community during the mid-1970s, regularly engaging with other members at CACHE meetings and events. Their collaboration began in this shared context, as they discussed technical ideas and projects common among hobbyists in the group. Christensen initially approached Suess with a concept for a computerized system to facilitate information exchange, leading to their joint work on what became the first public dial-up bulletin board system. The major Chicago blizzard of 1978 provided additional uninterrupted time that helped advance their early efforts on the project.

Development During the 1978 Blizzard

The development of the Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS) began during the Great Blizzard of 1978, which dumped more than 40 inches of snow on Chicago, stranding residents and shutting down the city. While housebound in late January, Ward Christensen telephoned Randy Suess to propose finally building the computerized messaging system they had previously discussed as members of the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists’ Exchange (CACHE). Christensen suggested enlisting other club members for assistance, but Suess rejected the idea, arguing that involving more people would result in slow “management by committee.” Suess instead advocated for a streamlined two-person effort, telling Christensen, “Forget the club. It would just be management by committee. It’s just me and you. I will do the hardware, and you will do the software.” This division of responsibilities and decision to limit the project to the two collaborators enabled focused progress amid the storm-induced downtime. Their collaboration yielded the first public dial-up bulletin board system, which went online shortly thereafter.

Hardware Contributions and Hosting

Randy Suess assumed responsibility for all hardware aspects of the first Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS), stating to Ward Christensen, “It’s just me and you. I will do the hardware, and you will do the software.” He constructed the system around an S-100 personal computer and incorporated a modem to enable data transmission and reception over telephone lines. Suess soldered custom additional circuitry that automatically restarted the computer and loaded the software whenever someone dialed in. Suess hosted the CBBS in the basement of his home in Chicago's Wrigleyville neighborhood, a location he insisted upon so that anyone in the city could access the system through local calls without long-distance charges. Ward Christensen later described the makeshift construction of the hardware Suess assembled, noting, “Randy pretty much built it from scratch. It looked like it was put together with bailing wire and chewing gum.”

Launch and Operation

The Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS) went online on February 16, 1978, marking the official launch of the first public dial-up bulletin board system. Operating on a single phone line, the system received hundreds of thousands of calls before its retirement in the 1980s. The CBBS was conceptualized as an electronic version of traditional cork bulletin boards, providing a digital space for posting and reading messages asynchronously. CACHE members primarily used the system to exchange messages about club meetings, ongoing projects, and technical discussions. A later emulation of the original CBBS was still running in 2018–2019.

Later Career

Chinet Network

In his later career, Randy Suess operated Chinet, short for Chicago Network, a much larger bulletin board system than the original CBBS. Chinet supported 22 phone lines connected to a bank of modems mounted on a wall, enabling multiple simultaneous dial-in users to access its resources. The system included a new version of the CBBS software, allowing users to browse a downloaded global collection of data. Chinet connected to the early internet through a satellite radio link, which facilitated high-speed transfers at a time when the internet was still extremely small. Suess was able to download the entire internet onto his machine in a single evening due to its limited size during that period. This connection attracted international participation, with users dialing in from locations as distant as Australia and Singapore. The constant activity of the modems became a familiar background sound in Suess's home, described by his son as eventually blending into white noise.

Recognition and Media Appearances

Awards

Randy Suess and Ward Christensen were jointly awarded the 1992 Dvorak Award for Excellence in Telecommunications for their creation of the Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS), recognized as the world's first bulletin board system. This honor acknowledged their foundational contributions to the development of online community and messaging systems that preceded modern internet forums and social platforms. Obituaries and retrospectives have referenced this award as a key formal recognition of Suess's role in pioneering digital communication technologies.

Appearance in BBS: The Documentary

Randy Suess appeared as himself in the 2005 documentary mini-series BBS: The Documentary, directed by Jason Scott. The eight-episode series, released on May 21, 2005, as a three-disc DVD set with a total runtime of 296 minutes, examines the 25-year history of dial-up bulletin board systems through interviews and historical footage. Suess was featured in Episode 1, titled "Baud," which runs 39 minutes and focuses on the beginnings of the first BBSes. In this opening segment, he appears alongside Ward Christensen to discuss the origins of early bulletin board systems, including their collaborative creation of CBBS. The episode serves as an introduction to the foundational developments that shaped online communities prior to the widespread adoption of the internet.

Personal Life

Marriages and Family

Randy Suess was married twice, both marriages ending in divorce. His first wife was Agnes Kluck. His second wife was Dawn Hendricks. He was survived by his son, Ryan, his daughters, Karrie and Christine, and three grandchildren. His daughter Karrie confirmed his passing.

Death and Legacy

Passing

Randy Suess died on December 10, 2019, at a hospital in Chicago at the age of 74. His death was confirmed by his daughter Karrie. The news of his passing was spread on a still-running version of the Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS), which shared word about Mr. Suess’s death within the bulletin board community.

Impact on Online Communication

Randy Suess, in collaboration with Ward Christensen, co-created the Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS) in 1978, establishing the first public dial-up bulletin board system and laying foundational groundwork for online communication as it exists today. CBBS functioned as an electronic counterpart to physical bulletin boards, allowing users to post messages, share files, and engage in discussions over phone lines, thereby serving as a direct precursor to modern online forums, social media platforms, and messaging applications. The introduction of CBBS sparked widespread adoption among hobbyists, inspiring numerous subsequent bulletin board systems throughout the late 1970s and 1980s that expanded real-time chat, file sharing, and community interaction in ways that anticipated core elements of contemporary social media services. Digital historian Jason Scott described Suess's influence by stating, "Everything we do in terms of communicating with other people online can be traced back to Randy and his bulletin board. The only difference is that now it is all a little slicker." More than forty years after its launch, a version of CBBS remained operational and accessible from modern devices, and it was used to share news of Suess's death in 2019. This longevity underscores the enduring relevance of his pioneering work in shaping digital interpersonal communication.
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