As with many things MindVox-related, the name of the software MindVox ran on, was both a play on words and an elaborate inside-joke.
Voice: Waffle ][+ the NeXTSTEP (usually referred to simply as
Voice, although it frequently was referred to by the plural
Voices as well), was the name given to MindVox's conferencing system.
Waffle refers to the original software that MindVox was based on, the ][+ pays homage to Kroupa and Fancher's hacker past and the use of
Apple II computers;
NeXTSTEP was a reference to the
NeXT platform and operating system, with which MindVox was developed and launched. As much as Patrick Kroupa's
Voices focused the media and counter-culture spotlight on MindVox; Fancher's software was a source of tremendous attention in many MindVox-related stories and it's unlikely that MindVox would have enjoyed its success without
Voice. The original Waffle software was written by
Tom Dell, who was apparently part of MindVox from its inception. To this date there are Easter-eggs and cross-references on both MindVox and the system that Tom Dell became better known for in the late 1990s and beyond:
Rotten.com. Going to Rotten's search page, and triple-clicking on the whitespace located between the Contact section and the gray bar at the bottom, reveals an inscrutable ibogaine rant. By the mid-1990s the original Waffle software was nearly unrecognizable; Fancher had converted
Voice to a client-server architecture, included a web interface, and added elaborate "power user" features which seem to have been added to address the evolving needs of the community; or due to a strange combination of drugs, nostalgia and pure whim. An example of the latter case is VoxChat, a proprietary chat system written for MindVox by employee David Schenfeld, which spun off into the commercial product
ENTchat after MindVox shut down.
Diversi-Dial, and the Diversi-Dial spinoff ENTchat, allowed MindVox to connect via the Diversi-Dial chat protocol.), or in Kroupa's own words: :As of this writing there are roughly a dozen remaining DDIAL's running on Apple computers, Novation has long since gone Chapter 11, Bill Basham (the author of DDIAL) has gone back to being a full-time doctor, and one slightly disturbed person in the Phantom Access Group has written the world's only version of DDIAL that will run on Unix based machines and allow T1 connected, distributed sites with gigabytes of disk and thousands of users, to hook into Pig's Knuckle Idaho's very own 7 line DDIAL running at a blazing fast 300 baud. Why this was done is a question best left to mental health professionals. It included advanced conferencing features interspersed with time-consuming, elaborate in-jokes with no commercial purpose whatsoever. :The
Fling Screen from MindVox. When inappropriate or extremely off-topic material was posted to a conference; moderators were unable to remove or destroy the message entirely, but they could move the message to the
r0mPEr-RuM, a conference that was the collective garbage-dump of MindVox. To this day the phantom.com MindVox archive continues its relationship with NeXT/NeXTSTEP, now in the form of
Apple Computer's
macOS. Instead of using
PHP,
Perl or
Active Server Pages, the entire site runs Apple's
WebObjects. MindVox was a fusion of many strange parts, pieces and times. While Kroupa might be said to have provided the imaginative backstory of the "thoughtscape", Fancher was largely responsible for the software that made it all work. The synergy of Kroupa, Fancher and the user-base MindVox attracted was a major aspect of MindVox's rise to fame. ==The MindVox shutdown==