vBulletin is in PHP but vb-world.net for which it was named was a site about Visual Basic.
EDIT: Some background reading - http://www.zend.com/zend/cs/vbworld.php
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As far as I can recall both Kier and Scott (but who trusts scooty? really) saying that the v meant nothing.Leave a comment:
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OK but what the 'v' in vb-world.net then stood for? And it's been confirmed by Zachery & Wayne that it means 'nothing, nothing at all', so you can't really blame the Wiki editors for following staff posts.Leave a comment:
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That wiki has lies. I will have to explain what the v really stands for and that the answer isn't nothing.
John has UBB and rewrites it in PHP since it is killing his server at vb-world.net. You take the v from vb-world.net and append it to bulletin and you have vBulletin.
That is more appropriate than "The v stands for nothing".Leave a comment:
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Guest repliedYou mean ubb aka ubb.classic these days. Begin a ubb user in the old days I watched this thing take shape (as an outsider), it has come a long way!Leave a comment:
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Well, Jelsoft as a company was founded in 2000. vBulletin was initially a PHP/MySQL version of UBB.threads, but has evolved quite well since then.Leave a comment:
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Well, I think a complete history of the software, founders, developers, Jelsoft, and anything relating to vBulletin would be a nice feature on this site.Leave a comment:
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History?
Why isn't there a in-depth history of vBulletin/Jelsoft? I haven't really found one...Tags: None
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