SDF provides free Unixshell access, web hosting and many other features at the user membership level. Additional programs, capabilities and resources are available at "patron" and "sustaining" level memberships, which are granted with one-time or recurring dues in support of the SDF system. The SDF network of systems that serves its membership currently includes NetBSD servers for regular use as well as retrocomputing environments: a TWENEX system running the Panda Distribution TOPS-20 MONITOR 7.1, and a Symbolics Genera system.
Free Membership Services
SDF provides free Unix shell access and web hosting to its users. In addition, SDF provides increasingly rare services such as dial-up internet access, and Gopher hosting. SDF is one of very few organizations in the world still actively promoting the gopher protocol, an alternate protocol that existed at the introduction of the modern World Wide Web. The system contains thousands of programs and utilities, including a command-line BBS called BBOARD, a chat program called COMMODE, email programs, webmail, social networking programs, developer tools and games. Most of the applications hosted at SDF are accessed via the command-line, and SDF provides K-12 and college classrooms the free use of computing resources for Unix education. SDF also supports multiple Retrocomputing experiences, including free user accounts on TOPS-20 and SymbolicsGenera operating systems that are running live and accessible via the internet.
Dues-Paying Membership Services
There are additional services that are made available on SDF systems to users who apply to be "patrons" and pay one-time dues of $36 USD for "Lifetime Membership", and still more services available for at $9 USD/quarter "sustaining membership", including services such as NextCloud, and access to a large disc-array server. At the sustaining membership level, members are authorized to validate new users to SDF's free User level of membership. There are also specialized memberships which users can join to gain access to particular technologies, including mailing lists, Voice-over-IP, Databases, Virtual Private Network , and Domain registration.
History
In 1987, Ted Uhlemann started SDF on an Apple IIemicrocomputer running "Magic City Micro-BBS" under ProDOS. The system was run as a "Japanese Anime SIG" known as the SDF-1. In 1989, Uhlemann and Stephen Jones operated SDF very briefly as a DragCit Citadel BBS before attempting to use an Intel x86 UNIX clone called Coherent. Unhappy with the restrictive menu driven structure of existing BBS systems, Uhlemann, Jones and Daniel Finster created a UNIX System V BBS in 1990, initially running on an i386 system, which later became an AT&T 3B2/400 and 500, and joined the lonestar.org UUCP network. Three additional phone lines were installed in late 1991. In the fall of 1992, Uhlemann and Finster left SDF to start one of the first commercial Internet companies in Texas, Texas Metronet. SDF continued to grow, expanding to ten lines in 1993 along with a SLIP connection provided by cirr.com. UUCP was still heavily relied upon for Usenet news and email. In 1997, SDF migrated to Linux. The migration to Linux marked a turning point, as the system started coming under attack like it never had before in its history. Jones calls the Linux period the dark age. In part due to the number of attacks undertaken by malicious users against SDF, the years 2000 and 2001 saw SDF migrate from Linux to NetBSD and from Intel x86 to DEC Alpha. This migration included relocation of the servers from Lewisville, Texas to Seattle, Washington. The Linux system was officially decommissioned on August 17, 2001. The occasion was captured in a preserved by one of SDF's users. Although SDF Public Access UNIX System was registered as an operating business in 1993 according to the Dallas County Records Office, it wasn't until October 1, 2001, that the SDF Public Access UNIX System was formed as a Delawarenot-for-profit corporation and subsequently granted 501 non-profit membership club status by the IRS. SDF had operated under the auspice of the MALR corporation between 1995 and 2001. , SDF was composed of 47,572 users from around the world. SDF users include engineers, computer programmers, students, artists and professionals. SDF.org is a development site for NetBSD, and in 2018, SDF was the largest NetBSD installation in the world.