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Ward Christensen, BBS inventor and architect of our online age, dies at age 78

Christensen kick-started online culture by inspiring thousands of hobbyist communities.

On Friday, Ward Christensen, co-inventor of the computer bulletin board system (BBS), died at age 78 in Rolling Meadows, Illinois. Christensen, along with Randy Suess, created the first BBS in Chicago in 1978, leading to an important cultural era of digital community-building that presaged much of our online world today.

Friends and associates remember Christensen as humble and unassuming, a quiet innovator who never sought the spotlight for his groundbreaking work. Despite creating one of the foundational technologies of the digital age, Christensen maintained a low profile throughout his life, content with his long-standing career at IBM and showing no bitterness or sense of missed opportunity as the Internet age dawned.

“Ward was the quietest, pleasantest, gentlest dude,” said BBS: The Documentary creator Jason Scott in a conversation with Ars Technica. Scott documented Christensen’s work extensively in a 2002 interview for that project. “He was exactly like he looks in his pictures,” he said, “like a groundskeeper who quietly tends the yard.”

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