Forum - Indy Lix

In the end, Indy Lix wasn't a forum. It was a state of mind. A place where the machine was never a tool, but a companion . And for those who still keep an SGI Indy humming in their basement, the forum is still open—one unencrypted HTTP connection at a time. Read-only. Eternal. Glorious.

In the sprawling graveyard of the early internet, where Geocities neighborhoods lie abandoned and PHPBB boards are overgrown with digital moss, few relics capture the spirit of a particular era quite like the Indy Lix Forum . To the uninitiated, it looks like a glitch: a low-color, text-heavy board with a broken SSL certificate and a login screen that hasn't been updated since 2003. But to a specific breed of hobbyist—the tinkerer, the C programmer, the SGI collector—Indy Lix is hallowed ground. What Was (and Is) Indy Lix? Contrary to the name, "Indy Lix" was never a single operating system. The term is a portmanteau of Indy (referring to the Silicon Graphics Indy workstation, a candy-colored MIPS machine from the early 90s) and Lix (a hacker’s truncation of Linux/Unix). The forum, launched in late 1999, was originally a support board for getting Linux distributions (like Debian/mips and Gentoo) to run on SGI Indy hardware. indy lix forum