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(→The later years of Bungie.org: clarifying what Marathon stuff is being served) |
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In time, the activity on the PID subdomain lessened, and the Marathon and Myth communities began to shift towards other domains, so the founders of b.org generally moved on. Steve Campbell went on to found forerunners.org in 2002, devoted to covering the Bungie fandom from a different angle by hosting personal fan sites and serving as a general portal to the rest of the community, and cortana.org in 2003, for hosting Halo maps and mods. Eventually Claude Errera was left in sole charge of the Borg domain and its servers. | In time, the activity on the PID subdomain lessened, and the Marathon and Myth communities began to shift towards other domains, so the founders of b.org generally moved on. Steve Campbell went on to found forerunners.org in 2002, devoted to covering the Bungie fandom from a different angle by hosting personal fan sites and serving as a general portal to the rest of the community, and cortana.org in 2003, for hosting Halo maps and mods. Eventually Claude Errera was left in sole charge of the Borg domain and its servers. | ||
Today, most of the traffic on the B.org servers goes to the Halo subdomain, which Claude personally manages. The rest of the bandwidth goes to oni.bungie.org, run by Harry, and to | Today, most of the traffic on the B.org servers goes to the Halo subdomain, which Claude personally manages. The rest of the bandwidth goes to oni.bungie.org, run by Harry, and to serving the freeware Marathon trilogy from [http://source.bungie.org source.bungie.org]. | ||
==The second pillar: Oni2.net== | ==The second pillar: Oni2.net== | ||
{{Anchor|2005}} | {{Anchor|2005}} |