1612 lines
79 KiB
Plaintext
1612 lines
79 KiB
Plaintext
|
Volume 5, Number 10 7 March 1988
|
|||
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|||
|
| _ |
|
|||
|
| / \ |
|
|||
|
| /|oo \ |
|
|||
|
| - FidoNews - (_| /_) |
|
|||
|
| _`@/_ \ _ |
|
|||
|
| International | | \ \\ |
|
|||
|
| FidoNet Association | (*) | \ )) |
|
|||
|
| Newsletter ______ |__U__| / \// |
|
|||
|
| / FIDO \ _//|| _\ / |
|
|||
|
| (________) (_/(_|(____/ |
|
|||
|
| (jm) |
|
|||
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|||
|
Editor in Chief Dale Lovell
|
|||
|
Editor Emeritus: Thom Henderson
|
|||
|
Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
|
|||
|
Contributing Editors: Al Arango
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews is published weekly by the International FidoNet
|
|||
|
Association as its official newsletter. You are encouraged to
|
|||
|
submit articles for publication in FidoNews. Article submission
|
|||
|
standards are contained in the file ARTSPEC.DOC, available from
|
|||
|
node 1:1/1.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Copyright 1988 by the International FidoNet Association. All
|
|||
|
rights reserved. Duplication and/or distribution permitted for
|
|||
|
noncommercial purposes only. For use in other circumstances,
|
|||
|
please contact IFNA at (314) 576-4067. IFNA may also be contacted
|
|||
|
at PO Box 41143, St. Louis, MO 63141.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The contents of the articles contained here are not our
|
|||
|
responsibility, nor do we necessarily agree with them.
|
|||
|
Everything here is subject to debate. We publish EVERYTHING
|
|||
|
received.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Table of Contents
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. EDITORIAL ................................................ 1
|
|||
|
What's become of trust? .................................. 1
|
|||
|
2. ARTICLES ................................................. 2
|
|||
|
Opus Date Bug Fix ........................................ 3
|
|||
|
PC-SIG CD-ROM On-line 24 hrs ............................. 4
|
|||
|
My Answer to "How do you write?" ......................... 6
|
|||
|
Consolidate or Divide? The Future of EchoMail ........... 11
|
|||
|
MENSA Echo Loses Its Founder and Host .................... 18
|
|||
|
3. COLUMNS .................................................. 19
|
|||
|
Corrections to "Routed Gateways" ......................... 19
|
|||
|
4. NOTICES .................................................. 20
|
|||
|
The Interrupt Stack ...................................... 20
|
|||
|
Latest Software Versions ................................. 20
|
|||
|
5. COMMITTEE REPORTS ........................................ 22
|
|||
|
Agenda and Minutes of IFNA BoD Meeting February 19-21, ... 22
|
|||
|
A Statement of Position by IFNA Board of Directors ....... 28
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 1 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
EDITORIAL
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What's become of trust?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It used to be you could trust what you read in EchoMail, not to
|
|||
|
mention FidoNews. Everyone treated FidoNet (and it's users and
|
|||
|
sysops) with respect and decency. If you received a netmail
|
|||
|
message from someone, you knew it was legitimate. Likewise, no
|
|||
|
one would have thought of impersonating anyone in EchoMail. What
|
|||
|
brings all this up? Let me tell you...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I thought it very odd when some messages supposedly written by
|
|||
|
Thom Henderson popped up in the sysop echomail conference. I
|
|||
|
thought it very odd because they didn't sound like Thom, besides
|
|||
|
which I was under the impression he was leaving FidoNet alone.
|
|||
|
Well, the other day I received a phone call at work. Even though
|
|||
|
Thom is now in AlterNet, we keep in touch. This was unusual only
|
|||
|
because I was the one who usually placed the call. Thom's main
|
|||
|
reason for the call was to find out if I had seen any messages
|
|||
|
from him in the sysop echomail conference. After a long
|
|||
|
discussion with Thom, I am convinced that he isn't the one who
|
|||
|
sent those messages. If you've received a nasty message from
|
|||
|
Thom, odds are you've been hit by someone with a juvenile
|
|||
|
mentality and no respect for FidoNet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is also the case with "Auntie Tyranny" and NeuterNet. The
|
|||
|
person behind these messages doesn't understand that FidoNet is
|
|||
|
about communication and understanding. All their messages prove
|
|||
|
is their senders immaturity. FidoNet has to learn to ignore
|
|||
|
these type of messages. The attention given to bogus messages
|
|||
|
like this only serve to destroy FidoNet. The attention gives rise
|
|||
|
to mistrust and flames. This isn't what Tom Jennings envisioned
|
|||
|
with FidoNet. This also isn't what most of us want to see happen
|
|||
|
in FidoNet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All in all, what happened to the trust I learned in Alexandria
|
|||
|
last August at FidoCon. Is that spirit of cooperation and
|
|||
|
understanding still alive? How long will it take for us to learn
|
|||
|
to work together instead of flaming at each other.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sadly,
|
|||
|
Your Editor
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dale Lovell
|
|||
|
1:1/1 (1:157/504)
|
|||
|
216/642-1034 (data)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Home Work
|
|||
|
3266 Vezber Drive Parma Computer Center
|
|||
|
Seven Hills, OH 44131 5402 State Road
|
|||
|
216/524-1875 (voice) Parma, OH 44134
|
|||
|
216/661-1808
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 2 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
ARTICLES
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"You're More Than Your Physical Body"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The key phrase for a very new, and needed bulletin
|
|||
|
board system dedicated to the New Age and Occult community.
|
|||
|
The Astral Plane (r) Online is a relatively new, yet very
|
|||
|
quickly upcoming BBS in Linthicum, Maryland. The board is
|
|||
|
run by the owners of The Astral Plane, an Occult and New Age
|
|||
|
store also found in Linthicum which carries hundreds of
|
|||
|
curios, books, herbs, crystals, and other items on this, very
|
|||
|
rapidly growing, area.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The main interest for The Astral Plane (TAP) which is
|
|||
|
stated in our welcome messages is to "Provide Information On A
|
|||
|
New Age." there are a lot of misguided and hollywood created
|
|||
|
images on Magick, Witchcraft, and Psychic abilities that almost
|
|||
|
everyone has a different idea and/or opinion on what it really
|
|||
|
is: Satan worship? A bunch of frauds? Some crazy people who
|
|||
|
don't know any better? Those are just some of the thoughts about
|
|||
|
people who are "into" Magick, Witchcraft, and New Age and
|
|||
|
Psychic related areas of study. The sad part is that many people
|
|||
|
havnt had the chance to actually, safely, find out what it is all
|
|||
|
about. Since there is a good and bad to everything it is
|
|||
|
important to shift through and find out what is and what
|
|||
|
isn't. Although, sometimes that becomes quite a task!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To make sure we don't lead the reader to the wrong
|
|||
|
impression, TAP is not only for the New Age and Occult
|
|||
|
community. We support message areas and U/Ds for
|
|||
|
Commodore, CoCo, Apple, IBM, and Atari computers and several
|
|||
|
echomails! See for yourself what TAP has to offer, we're
|
|||
|
pretty sure that we will have something for everyone and your
|
|||
|
suggestions are always welcomed! Call us at 301-768-7947 24
|
|||
|
hours a day 300/1200/2400 baud.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 3 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Opus Date Bug
|
|||
|
---------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is a problem in OPUS-CBCS (v1.03a) that can cause it to
|
|||
|
miscalculate events between 3/1/88 and 3/1/94.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A "fix" is available in an archive called OBUG_103.ARC. The
|
|||
|
archive contains a 330 byte .COM file that will patch OPUS.EXE.
|
|||
|
When executed, it will patch the system and set a new version
|
|||
|
number (1.03b).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Source code for the fix program is being posted in the MEADOW
|
|||
|
echomail area.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 4 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The IEEE Port CD-ROM at 1:107/233 516-757-9469
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As of March 16th 1987, the entire PC-SIG 705 disk library
|
|||
|
of public-domain and shareware programs is on-line at the IEEE
|
|||
|
Port (1:107/233). This has been done through the sponsorship of
|
|||
|
the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) which
|
|||
|
has provided a Philips CM 100 CD-ROM player and the PC-SIG Disks
|
|||
|
1-705 CD-ROM.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We have established a somewhat convoluted procedure for
|
|||
|
gaining access to the over 700 directories on the PC-SIG CD-ROM
|
|||
|
disk. This process is described below and is also readable on-
|
|||
|
line.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The files listed below are file requestable 24hrs from
|
|||
|
1:107/233. They are the ARCed Tables of Contents of the various
|
|||
|
disks. Note that because all these files are ARCed you are
|
|||
|
required to first download each of them to your own disk and
|
|||
|
unARC them. Once you have done this, you may search for
|
|||
|
occurrences of any particular string in the Tables of Contents
|
|||
|
with one of these commands:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DFIND "string"
|
|||
|
FFIND "string" outfile.nam
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
where "string" is the value for which you wish to search.
|
|||
|
DFIND will display the results directly on the screen,
|
|||
|
whereas FFIND will write the output of the search to a disk
|
|||
|
file which you may subsequently search manually with an
|
|||
|
editor or list program.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Index to PC-SIG Disks 1-705
|
|||
|
===========================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
P001-100.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 1 through 100
|
|||
|
P101-200.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 101 through 200
|
|||
|
P201-300.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 201 through 300
|
|||
|
P301-400.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 301 through 400
|
|||
|
P401-500.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 401 through 500
|
|||
|
P501-600.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 501 through 600
|
|||
|
P601-700.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 601 through 700
|
|||
|
P701-705.ARC Table Of Contents for disks 701 through 705
|
|||
|
PC-BIBLE.ARC Table Of Contents for The Bible (King James Vers)
|
|||
|
FIND.ARC Batch commands to search Table of Contents files
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEALINK.ARC SEAlink 1.13 Excellent protocol to use for batch
|
|||
|
downloading.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PC-SIG LIBRARY - Disk Access Procedure
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 5 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When you log on to the IEEE Port (300/1200/2400) (no pre-
|
|||
|
registration is required) type "F" from the main menu to get to
|
|||
|
the files area. The procedure to select which particular disk is
|
|||
|
started in area 16 by typing "F". You will be given a menu that
|
|||
|
looks like this:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Enter I - To get information on what files and programs are
|
|||
|
available.
|
|||
|
D - To get information on addressing a particular disk
|
|||
|
from the PC-SIG Library and then to select a disk.
|
|||
|
S - I've seen it all before, let's just select a disk!
|
|||
|
C - Explain the use of SEAlink protocol for downloading
|
|||
|
a disk.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Q - Quit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I highly recommend option "C" for those who do not use SEAlink in
|
|||
|
some form or another. It will save you a lot of time and typing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since you have the instructions here type "S" to select the
|
|||
|
disk you wish to DL from. You will be prompted to enter the
|
|||
|
number of the PC-SIG disk you wish to access. Type the numbers
|
|||
|
as three whole numbers (i.e. to select disk 49 type "049"). You
|
|||
|
will then be informed that you selection has gone thru and to
|
|||
|
proceed to files area 99. In order to actually the access the
|
|||
|
PC-SIG disk that you selected you will have to transfer to file
|
|||
|
area 99. This area does not appear in the list of areas
|
|||
|
maintained by OPUS; that's OK, just use the A99 to go there
|
|||
|
anyway. Area 99 area will be pointing to the PC-SIG disk you
|
|||
|
select.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Before OPUS will let you in to area 99 you must enter the
|
|||
|
access code "PCSIG". Although you won't be able to use the F(ile
|
|||
|
List) command here, you will be able to use the R(aw Directory)
|
|||
|
display to see the names of all the files on the selected disk.
|
|||
|
You may then download any file(s) as you normally would from any
|
|||
|
file area, the only difference being that you will be DLing from
|
|||
|
a subdirectory of the CD-ROM.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Usually there is a file named DISK###.TXT on each PC-SIG
|
|||
|
disk so if you select disk 694, use the T(ype) command to list
|
|||
|
out DISK694.TXT and get a descriptive file listing of the
|
|||
|
selected disk.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I run SEAdog 4.11 on top of Opus 1.03a on an original IBM XT
|
|||
|
with 2 ST 225s. A Zoom Short 2400 baud modem (internal) and a
|
|||
|
Philips CM 100 CD-ROM Player. If you have any questions or
|
|||
|
suggestions I am reachable at 1:107/233.
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 6 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My Answer to "How do you write?"
|
|||
|
David Rice
|
|||
|
(103/503)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I got a letter in the mail. Usually I toss all mail
|
|||
|
received into the trash unexplored, which means that every month
|
|||
|
when the bills come I have to leave the state under an assumed
|
|||
|
name. It's cheaper than paying my phone bill. This letter felt
|
|||
|
different somehow, so I decided to read it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Dear Sir," it began. I knew immediately trouble was
|
|||
|
creeping my way by the "Dear". "I read and enjoyed your article
|
|||
|
'Missing Socks and the Rings of Saturn' very much. I'm a writer
|
|||
|
too. Would you share your method of writing with me? Your good
|
|||
|
friend, John."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tall order, indeed! I was tempted to throw the letter down
|
|||
|
the used food recycler (toilet), but after all, it did come with
|
|||
|
a stamped, self addressed envelope. I sat down and answered.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My Dear, good friend John,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is how I write.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Five in the morning. Dragging my body from the floor mat, I
|
|||
|
grope weakly for the heater's "ON" button. Why I do this every
|
|||
|
morning is a mystery, as the heater has never worked in the six
|
|||
|
months I've been living here. But I keep the faith, as hope,
|
|||
|
they say, springs eternal. If I'm in a playful mood I also grope
|
|||
|
my roommate, which tends to heat the room almost as well (if not
|
|||
|
better) than the wall heater would.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eyes closed against the feeble light, I trip over
|
|||
|
dictionaries, a thesaurus or two, "How to be a Better Lover",
|
|||
|
dirty jeans, the stack of "OMNI" magazines, and the speaker cords
|
|||
|
running away from the secondhand stereo. I kicked the beer and
|
|||
|
soda cans against the wall the night before so I won't amputate a
|
|||
|
toe the next morning. Usually (more often than not) I make it to
|
|||
|
my desk, where my jacket, also secondhand, is waiting for me on
|
|||
|
the chair I bought at a police auction.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The desk is painted mustard yellow on top to hide the coffee
|
|||
|
stains, grape juice stains, pickle relish, pencil marks, blood,
|
|||
|
sweat, and battery acid. Also, everything I eat has mustard on
|
|||
|
it, so the desk must surely have mustard on it as well- But with
|
|||
|
all the papers, books, cups, apple cores, condoms, and
|
|||
|
payment-past-due notices, how can I tell?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Flexing my fingers against the cold, I hunt for the
|
|||
|
pre-write sheets I scrawled out the evening before. I recognize
|
|||
|
these papers from the rest by the notes in the margins: "This
|
|||
|
won't work! <arrow>", "Change this," "This stinks", "You CAN'T be
|
|||
|
serious!" etc. Gathering up these choice pages, I proceed to the
|
|||
|
shower. While in the shower I go through the pre-writes of the
|
|||
|
night before. This usually requires great dexterity and three
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 7 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
arms, or great dexterity and the arm of a very good friend.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Stepping out of the shower onto the ice covered floor, I
|
|||
|
wring out the sodden pages over the toilet, and start thinking of
|
|||
|
the actual writing (i.e. turning the pre-writes to writes). I do
|
|||
|
this all in my head, and tell myself to remember everything.
|
|||
|
Naked, I check out the refrigerator for breakfast. A can on
|
|||
|
olives usually does the trick, or a can of diet soda and a
|
|||
|
carrot.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now I dress for work. Rummaging around the floor for the
|
|||
|
cleanness dirty underwear, I also find a miss-matched pair of
|
|||
|
socks, knot a tie tightly around my throat, and gun my Chrysler
|
|||
|
(secondhand Cordoba) to work.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While doing my mindless, thoughtless, menial task at work
|
|||
|
(no, not as an air traffic controller), I am writing in my head.
|
|||
|
My pre-writes usually lay open, drying out, on the desk before
|
|||
|
me, next to the work I'm paid to do. I think of plot
|
|||
|
developments and dialog while at the same time working on Spare
|
|||
|
Parts History Reports for the Product Repair Center.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This job allows me to send $660.00 a month to my bloated
|
|||
|
landlord, who desperately needs it for his drugs, teenage tarts,
|
|||
|
and pornographic films. Though I've never been late with the
|
|||
|
rent, my heater still remains a victim of neglect.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Lunch time! Now I write down everything I was plotting and
|
|||
|
dialog-ing when I should have been working. I use a sheet of
|
|||
|
paper and pencil for this rough draft, writing as fast as
|
|||
|
possible (I get 30 minutes for lunch).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By the time I've ran Lint through the fish market to his
|
|||
|
boat, followed discreetly by The Silent One, lunch is half over.
|
|||
|
Finally, when I get Lint's boat blown out of the water between
|
|||
|
Newport and Catalina, lunch is over.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Back home! Work was a drag, but I lived through it. Dinner
|
|||
|
is a can of soup, with the lid coaxed off with a dull, worn-out
|
|||
|
opener. I place the can directly on the stove, and know it's
|
|||
|
ready when the label is completely burned off.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I carry the hot can of soup to my desk, turn the computer
|
|||
|
on, and slop noodles on the stack of poems I've written and never
|
|||
|
sold. Usually when this happens I just put another pile of
|
|||
|
papers on top to sop up the stuff, but if I'm hungry I eat the
|
|||
|
noodles, poems and all. Lately I've been hungry, so the desk is
|
|||
|
cleaner than is normally the case.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WRITING STAGE! (Tah dah!) I whip out my rough draft that I
|
|||
|
did at work and get it in the computer. I never change anything
|
|||
|
until this is done (i.e. I don't rewrite the draft). After it
|
|||
|
is in, and saved to disk, THEN I rewrite the draft into a write.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Putting on a Wagnor Opera as background noise, or ABBA if
|
|||
|
I'm writing about sex between teenagers, I mentally go over the
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 8 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
next stages.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
From draft to write involves looking at what I've written,
|
|||
|
wondering if I like it, and changing it if I don't. More often
|
|||
|
than not, I change it. I take away padding that doesn't belong,
|
|||
|
and add meat that does. When that day's pre-writes, draft, and
|
|||
|
write is completed, my soup is also finished and I get a warm,
|
|||
|
fuzzy feeling. This feeling usually goes away when I read the
|
|||
|
last few pages to check for continuity. After all, I can't very
|
|||
|
well blow up Lint's boat when he'll be needing it for the harbor
|
|||
|
orgy Friday, can I? Or will he have to rent one?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Or better yet, what if I give Lint a broken rib from a
|
|||
|
pounding by The Silent One on page 83, and have him playing
|
|||
|
football with the Upper New York State University for Lesbians
|
|||
|
(UNYSUL) on page 85? It just doesn't feel right.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This done, I turn off the computer and rummage around for my
|
|||
|
outline book. This is what I first wrote when I started "Lint's
|
|||
|
Luck", putting it in a lose leaf binder. It's my road map that I
|
|||
|
loosely follow, though Lint often goes where no writer has
|
|||
|
outlined before. I check off the past pages, and see what's on
|
|||
|
the road ahead.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What's up ahead is what I write my pre-write from. Suppose
|
|||
|
Lint is on his kitchen floor, as in chapter eleven, under the
|
|||
|
sink working on the drain pipe. That's where we left him just
|
|||
|
before I turned the computer off and looked at my outline. I
|
|||
|
know that next up is the cool, aloof daughter of a moderately
|
|||
|
well-to-do business man, who walks in with a nasty pistol, and
|
|||
|
asks Lint why he killed her daddy. My pre-write should tell me
|
|||
|
how she stands, what Lint was doing the second she walks in, his
|
|||
|
first impression, what he was thinking, the position of his body,
|
|||
|
the color of her shoes. The pre-write may go:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Looking up, Lint noticed a pair of pale green shoes. .
|
|||
|
." to match a perfect body, firm breasts, sharp chin,
|
|||
|
and slightly bent nose. The deadly green eyes are
|
|||
|
matched only by the .38 she pointed between his.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Lint?" she asks, eyes locking with his. Thinking
|
|||
|
quickly, Lint recalls the neighbor he doesn't like.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Sorry. He's two houses down. . . ." he says
|
|||
|
helpfully.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The woman notices the copies of his book on the
|
|||
|
table (the ones he keeps to give away to anyone who
|
|||
|
will take it). On the back, facing her, is a
|
|||
|
photograph of his smiling face. Lint smiles, like a
|
|||
|
little boy caught at a lie. She pulls back the hammer
|
|||
|
of her pistol.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"You're Lint. You killed daddy. . . ."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With this, I can then add character thoughts, ideas,
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 9 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
emotions, descriptive blocks, dialog, etc. Usually off the top
|
|||
|
of my head, as I do most of my writing while doing mundane chores
|
|||
|
(vacuuming, sweeping, sex). I've been cursed with a very good
|
|||
|
memory, and what I think up I can usually get back out when the
|
|||
|
time comes. I find I can usually get six or seven pages (typed,
|
|||
|
double spaced) out of a few short sentences like above. I've
|
|||
|
been told by better men than I that this method of writing never
|
|||
|
sells, and I think of them every time I cash the publisher's
|
|||
|
checks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the story is done I open a desk drawer (the middle
|
|||
|
left, with the bottom falling out and the side unglued) and fish
|
|||
|
for an envelope. Some times I find one, often I don't. If one
|
|||
|
is not to be had, I fold a sheet of paper into an envelope, and
|
|||
|
use a roll of tape getting it to stay shut. If I'm lucky I
|
|||
|
remember to put the MS in it first.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I always include a stamped, self-addressed envelope as well,
|
|||
|
so that the editor can immediately reject it and send it back
|
|||
|
with few delays. This means I can send it out again as soon as
|
|||
|
possible. The letter is ALWAYS addressed to the editor, so
|
|||
|
she/he/it will feel like it belongs to her/etc. As a very rich
|
|||
|
(i.e. powerful) editor is fond of saying "If the writer doesn't
|
|||
|
know my name I don't want to know his!" I, in my humble way,
|
|||
|
agree. What is the alternative? "Dear Sir and/or Madame?" No
|
|||
|
"personal" note or letter is ever included. Stuff like:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I'm a widow with eleven children, and I desperately
|
|||
|
need to sell my book 'Gone With Virginity' to you.
|
|||
|
Please buy it."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"This article has taken me seven years to write. When
|
|||
|
you buy it, put it on page three, next to the adds for
|
|||
|
laxatives."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Please find inclosed the fifth of gin, and drink it
|
|||
|
before you read my short story." (You will soon get
|
|||
|
your short story back, nix the gin.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Buy this and my body is yours to toy with." If you do
|
|||
|
use this, don't forget the photographs as well.
|
|||
|
Eight-by-tens preferably.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For postage stamps I go through all the old Christmas card
|
|||
|
envelopes that I get, and find some to steam off. I have found
|
|||
|
that if you ask people to put a two-cent stamp at the top right
|
|||
|
corner of the envelope, and the twenty-cent one under it, the
|
|||
|
two-cent stamp gets marked at the post office, but the other
|
|||
|
isn't. If everyone did this we could pay off the National Debt
|
|||
|
in a few years with all the money saved. We could also go smugly
|
|||
|
to jail.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the MS is a book, like "Lint's Luck," then I make five or
|
|||
|
six copies (single sided only, so the type on the other side
|
|||
|
doesn't show through), at work so I don't have to pay for them.
|
|||
|
This saves me 2.5 cents a page, or roughly the price of a quart
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 10 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
of Cutty Shark per book. These copies then seek out a likely
|
|||
|
buyer via mail, while I'm soaking in the tub at home dreaming of
|
|||
|
the future fortune, and author's teas and parties they will throw
|
|||
|
for me when the book goes to it's tenth printing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How do I rough out the characters in a story? There is a
|
|||
|
very good, logical way of doing so.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Once assaulted by an idea (often while trying to sleep, or
|
|||
|
while driving), I hunt around my mental attic for a hero. For
|
|||
|
instance, if the story is a Space Adventure, and has in it evil
|
|||
|
Planet Lords and a beautiful princess to rescue (or a harlot- see
|
|||
|
my story "Gallantry is a Harsh Mistress"), then my hero should
|
|||
|
have a large sword, a lusty appetite for honorable bloodletting,
|
|||
|
a tiny leather loin cloth, and a rather small brain (i.e. a none
|
|||
|
too bright lad).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the story is about a teacher being abducted, with the
|
|||
|
kidnapper demanding an "A+" in Biology for her release, we know a
|
|||
|
lot of things already. First off, the student is a dim-witted
|
|||
|
cad and heel, and was never taught to be nice to people. This
|
|||
|
can be a tragedy, comedy, or love story.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another example could be Lint. I wanted a main character
|
|||
|
who was not very impressive, brave, rich, or demanding of life.
|
|||
|
But he also needed several above-average qualities to be dynamic
|
|||
|
and interesting. These two opposite characteristics had to
|
|||
|
balance (and not cancel each other out) in a sometimes humorous,
|
|||
|
often sad way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So Lint is a plumber (non-threatening, rather mundane) who
|
|||
|
has written a moderately well selling book (a dynamic quality,
|
|||
|
but not overly so). It reasonably follows that Lint had patents:
|
|||
|
One of each sex. I give the Daddy a beard, the Mummy an apron.
|
|||
|
See how easy it is? Since Lint's parents probably had sex more
|
|||
|
than once, he may have had some brothers. In fact, he had two.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Lint being a rather average chap, I wanted his brothers to
|
|||
|
be a bit more colorful. The both, therefore, went to Vietnam,
|
|||
|
but only one came back (which is often the case in police
|
|||
|
actions). The surviving Vet turned middle-aged hippie, who
|
|||
|
marches in anti-war demonstrations, and likes beating up people
|
|||
|
who don't like his ear ring. He also pounds on folks that pound
|
|||
|
on Lint, as is a big brother's duty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That, basically, is how I write. It is by far the most
|
|||
|
unprofessional way that I know, as well as the best, so I use it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 11 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Consolidate or Divide? The Future of EchoMail
|
|||
|
-J. Kenneth Riviere
|
|||
|
133/303, JoKeR's BBS
|
|||
|
(after office hours)
|
|||
|
2/24/88
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have been giving some thought to the configuration and history
|
|||
|
of Fidonet recently and I decided that there were some things
|
|||
|
that I wanted to say. First let me say that I have only been a
|
|||
|
sysop for about six months now, but I have been a user on a local
|
|||
|
Fido system for several years so my familiarity with Fidonet goes
|
|||
|
back further than just the time of my sysoping.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Despite the title of my article I want to make it clear that this
|
|||
|
is not an either-or situation. Fidonet has been consolidating
|
|||
|
and dividing responsibilities for years in an effort to achieve a
|
|||
|
more efficient and effective configuration.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HISTORY
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My understanding of the beginnings of Fidonet is that all nodes
|
|||
|
were essentially independents when the net first started. This
|
|||
|
was great when there were only a few dozen nodes altogether, but
|
|||
|
it became awkward when the number grew into the hundreds and then
|
|||
|
the thousands. With some boards attempting to communicate very
|
|||
|
actively with literally dozens of other boards, the NMH became
|
|||
|
too short to make all of the connections necessary to deliver the
|
|||
|
mail. Out of this grew nets, where all the mail going from one
|
|||
|
board to multiple other boards which were geographically close to
|
|||
|
each other (and probably cheap to call locally) was consolidated
|
|||
|
and sent to the net host who then passed it on to the other local
|
|||
|
boards. International communications was streamlined with the
|
|||
|
introduction of ZoneGates which allowed this especially expensive
|
|||
|
communication to be consolidated so that fewer total calls needed
|
|||
|
to be made from one continent to another. As some nets grew
|
|||
|
larger and became more cumbersome to administer the concept of
|
|||
|
the hub was introduced so that the net host could communicate
|
|||
|
mainly with a few hubs instead of having to distribute mail to
|
|||
|
dozens of boards every night. Thus the nodes within a hub were
|
|||
|
consolidated and the responsibilities of the net host were
|
|||
|
divided.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This type of cooperative arrangement whereby a few boards picked
|
|||
|
up extra tasks in order to smooth the running of the net as well
|
|||
|
as ease the cost of running a board has been a hallmark of
|
|||
|
Fidonet throughout its existence. People recognized that this
|
|||
|
was applicable to Echomail as well and the backbone formed. I am
|
|||
|
not certain I understand exactly how the backbone is organized
|
|||
|
but I think that each region has an echomail coordinator (EC) who
|
|||
|
connects to a central node to exchange echomail. Other nodes in
|
|||
|
that region can arrange to pick up echomail from the EC, thus
|
|||
|
providing consolidated points for echomail to be distributed
|
|||
|
across the country. I have heard that there is currently an
|
|||
|
effort being made to ease the load on the Regional ECs by asking
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 12 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
that each net select a single Net EC who would pick up echos from
|
|||
|
the Region EC and redistribute them within the net. Thus, as it
|
|||
|
was with hubs, the traffic for one group (nets, in this case) is
|
|||
|
consolidated so that the burden on the board providing service at
|
|||
|
the next level up the tree is lessened.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is clear that the traditional method of consolidating traffic
|
|||
|
and dividing responsibility within Fidonet has been to do it
|
|||
|
along hierarchical lines. A top-level node distributes to
|
|||
|
sub-levels which further distribute to lower levels of the
|
|||
|
hierarchy and so on and so on until finally the data gets to the
|
|||
|
nodes at the end of the paths. This has been an effective
|
|||
|
mechanism for setting things up. However, I think that we may be
|
|||
|
coming to a time when we will want to take a different approach.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ECHOMAIL VOLUME
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The volume of Echomail is growing quickly, at least as quickly as
|
|||
|
Fidonet itself. As new nodes are added there are more voices to
|
|||
|
be heard in each echo and more sites wishing to receive each
|
|||
|
echo. This increases the volume of traffic up and down the
|
|||
|
tree.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hubs (in Net 133 at least, the Hub coordinators redistribute
|
|||
|
echomail as well as net mail) generally carry less echomail
|
|||
|
traffic than the Net ECs because there are fewer boards under
|
|||
|
them to which the echos need to be distributed as well as fewer
|
|||
|
echos which are desired than there are in the entire net. Some
|
|||
|
of the echos which are brought in for certain boards are not
|
|||
|
wanted in some of the hub groups. Thus the hub coordinator has a
|
|||
|
lighter load than the Net EC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Similarly, the Net EC is not likely to carry every echo carried
|
|||
|
by the Region EC as some of the echos may not interest anyone in
|
|||
|
that particular net. Thus the net EC has a lighter load than
|
|||
|
the Region EC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But, what happens when a new node is added. There are more msgs
|
|||
|
in a few echos as people on that node post, and there may be a
|
|||
|
desire to bring in a few more echos since the sysop and users of
|
|||
|
this new node may have interests that haven't been addressed by
|
|||
|
the echos currently being carried in that net. This increases
|
|||
|
the load on the hub coordinator (but not too much, it's only one
|
|||
|
more node and a couple more echos to that node), on the Net EC
|
|||
|
(and this is a little heavier than on the hub coordinator since
|
|||
|
there are new nodes in multiple other hubs which also want more
|
|||
|
echos), and on the Region EC (who is echoing more areas to nets
|
|||
|
all the time as new nodes are added all over the region). When a
|
|||
|
net picks up a new echo it may mean only a small increase in the
|
|||
|
traffic from the Region EC to the central distribution point
|
|||
|
since the Region EC was already carrying the echo, he just hadn't
|
|||
|
been feeding it to that particular net. However, it becomes a
|
|||
|
significant load on the distribution within the region since over
|
|||
|
time each net continues to pick up more and more echos and might
|
|||
|
go from getting 20% of the echos carried by the Region EC up to
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 13 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
40%, 50%, or even more until it takes almost as long to
|
|||
|
communicate with each net as it does to get the traffic to and
|
|||
|
from the rest of the backbone. Multiply that by the number of
|
|||
|
nets and we could start to reach the saturation point of how much
|
|||
|
echomail the Region ECs can distribute effectively.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'm going to try to guess some figures. Some of these are based
|
|||
|
on a little bit of research and some of them are just guesses. I
|
|||
|
saw a msg from a Region EC that stated that he was bringing about
|
|||
|
a megabyte of data into his region every day. At 9600 bps this
|
|||
|
represents about 20 minutes. I checked the different zone 1
|
|||
|
regions and found anywhere from 1 net in the region (region 12)
|
|||
|
to more than 20. Just to get a feel for how much traffic we are
|
|||
|
talking about let's try some figures. For a region with 25 nets,
|
|||
|
each of which is picking up, say 1/3 of the traffic available
|
|||
|
from the region EC (I know that my net brings in somewhere on the
|
|||
|
order of .5 to .6 mb per day), this comes to about 7 minutes for
|
|||
|
each of 25 nodes which works out to about three hours. This does
|
|||
|
not allow for the time it takes for the Region EC to unARC, toss,
|
|||
|
scan, and ARC the mail bundles, which will be a significant
|
|||
|
amount of time with this volume of traffic. For a region with 12
|
|||
|
nets each of which is getting 1/3 of the traffic available from
|
|||
|
the region EC this would only be about 1.5 hours. Both of these
|
|||
|
calculations assume that 9600 bps connections are being used. If
|
|||
|
half of the nets are using only 2400 bps connections then that
|
|||
|
more than doubles the total communication time required to get
|
|||
|
the echomail delivered. These situations are workable with all
|
|||
|
echomail getting delivered every night during the low-cost ld
|
|||
|
hours (unless the region with many nets has several nets which
|
|||
|
must rely on 2400 bps connections or less, in which case it is
|
|||
|
very possible that multiple nets might not get their echomail on
|
|||
|
any given night.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However, now let us up the ante. What happens when echomail
|
|||
|
volume reaches 1.5 mb/day? Remember also that by that time more
|
|||
|
nodes will have joined Fidonet so that there will likely be a few
|
|||
|
more nets and the existing nets will be bigger meaning that they
|
|||
|
will be likely to want more echo areas. So the 20 minutes to
|
|||
|
pickup 1 mb would become 30 minutes to pick up 1.5 mb. Suppose
|
|||
|
the region with 25 nets has grown to the point where there are 28
|
|||
|
nets (modest growth) but now the nets want on average about half
|
|||
|
of the total echomail which is available from the region EC. That
|
|||
|
means a 15 minute connection for each of 28 nets for a total of
|
|||
|
7.5 hours a night (including the .5 hour to pick up the 1.5 mb)!
|
|||
|
That is a lot of time. Since the low ld rates only last from
|
|||
|
11-7 which is only eight hours it is clear that it would be
|
|||
|
almost impossible to get all of this traffic delivered every
|
|||
|
night during that window. Remember, I still haven't allowed any
|
|||
|
time in my calculations for tossing and scanning and I've been
|
|||
|
assuming all 9600 bps connections.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Even looking at the region with only 12 nets it is starting to
|
|||
|
get squeezed. Let us assume that it has grown to 14 nets with
|
|||
|
each net desiring an average of half of what the backbone
|
|||
|
carries. This still works out to four hours of transmission time
|
|||
|
assuming 9600 bps and does not include tossing and scanning. And
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 14 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
of course, none of these calculations have allowed any time for
|
|||
|
any activity other than distributing echomail. Surely we do not
|
|||
|
want to condemn anyone who volunteers to help with echomail by
|
|||
|
being a Region EC to not being able to do any other activities
|
|||
|
such as having real, human callers (mail (echomail) only from
|
|||
|
11pm to 7am?).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The method for dealing with this which follows the tradition of
|
|||
|
Fidonet would be to introduce a new tier of distribution. This
|
|||
|
might be called sub-regions or something, perhaps along state
|
|||
|
lines, and would reduce the number of sites which the Region EC
|
|||
|
would have to serve, going from many nets to a handful of
|
|||
|
states. This would certainly work and would allow the traffic
|
|||
|
to continue to grow with only a few more volunteers, but at this
|
|||
|
point I'd like to suggest a couple of alternatives.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PARALLEL BACKBONES
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first thing I'd like to suggest is that a parallel backbone
|
|||
|
be set up. I don't want to duplicate the work being done by the
|
|||
|
backbone, I want to set up a parallel system that works
|
|||
|
side-by-side with the current backbone in order to serve Fidonet
|
|||
|
more effectively. Rather than suggesting a whole new set of
|
|||
|
sites which are carrying the same echos as before, I propose that
|
|||
|
the traffic which is all being funneled through the Region ECs be
|
|||
|
split to go through two (or even more) Region ECs. This is not
|
|||
|
to say that any single region could not be served by one EC, but
|
|||
|
in a region where that load is getting too heavy for it to work
|
|||
|
effectively, instead of introducing a new tier simply split the
|
|||
|
load at that level. Suppose we divide the echos being carried
|
|||
|
into subject categories, maybe Technical (includes TECH, COMM,
|
|||
|
FOSSIL, MEADOW, PASCAL, PS2, OS2, and other echos which provide
|
|||
|
information about how programs work, what new ideas are being
|
|||
|
considered for addition to the net, etc.) and Social (includes
|
|||
|
BIBLE, NOPIRACY, LAW, SF, PETS, etc.). Another possible
|
|||
|
subdivision would be to have a NetAdmin or SysopOnly group which
|
|||
|
would carry echos which pertain to the running of the net.
|
|||
|
Perhaps the Technical side could be split into computer-related
|
|||
|
and non-computer-related.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reducing the volume of traffic by dividing the echos into
|
|||
|
multiple groups instead of reducing the traffic by reducing the
|
|||
|
number of nodes to be serviced by the Region EC achieves the same
|
|||
|
desired effect: the amount of data being funneled through the
|
|||
|
Region ECs is reduced by increasing the number of people who are
|
|||
|
sharing the responsibility for delivering that data. However,
|
|||
|
splitting the echos into multiple groups of echos, each carried
|
|||
|
by different and cooperating Region ECs, also has a desirable
|
|||
|
effect which the other approach to sharing the load does not: by
|
|||
|
not introducing a new tier into the distribution mechanism there
|
|||
|
would be fewer propogation delays in getting the echomail from
|
|||
|
one end of the net to the other.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Right now when I post a msg in a national echo it gets sent 1) to
|
|||
|
my hub coordinator, 2) to my Net EC, 3) to my Region EC, 4) to
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 15 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the central, coordinating site, 5) to other Region ECs, 6) to
|
|||
|
other Net ECs, 7) to other hub coordinators (not in all nets),
|
|||
|
and finally 8) to other nodes at the far end of the distribution
|
|||
|
chain. If we add sub-regions to that chain that puts two more
|
|||
|
links through which msgs must pass before they are fully
|
|||
|
distributed (one link going up the chain, and one link coming
|
|||
|
back down). By introducing parallel operations as I've suggested
|
|||
|
we would not be introducing any more delays into the distribution
|
|||
|
mechanism.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another advantage of this arrangement is that if something
|
|||
|
happens to one of the Region ECs in a region it only affects a
|
|||
|
portion of the echomail traffic in that region. If we went to a
|
|||
|
sub-region EC arrangement and something happened to the Region
|
|||
|
EC then the sub-regions would all be cut off from all backbone
|
|||
|
echomail until the problem could be resolved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Still another consideration is that it translates readily to the
|
|||
|
net level if echomail traffic in a particular net gets too heavy.
|
|||
|
In such a situation then two (or more) Net ECs could operate,
|
|||
|
each responsible for contacting a particular Region EC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One disadvantage of my suggested approach is that it does mean
|
|||
|
more calls will be made. A Net EC who had been making one call
|
|||
|
per night to the Region EC and picking up that day's echomail
|
|||
|
would now have to make two or more calls, one to the Region EC
|
|||
|
for each group of echomail. This is a slight decrease in
|
|||
|
efficiency. However, I have to wonder: is it really *that* much
|
|||
|
more efficient to make one 10 minute call than to make two 5
|
|||
|
minute calls? It seems to me that as long as there was a
|
|||
|
significant amount of echomail to be picked up then the marginal
|
|||
|
increase in efficiency acheived by consolidating two long calls
|
|||
|
into one longer call is not worth the propogation delays that
|
|||
|
will ultimately be introduced if we add another tier to the
|
|||
|
echomail distribution arrangement.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOCALIZED ECHOS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have heard some people suggest having local area echos and I
|
|||
|
think that something like this can be useful. Here in Atlanta we
|
|||
|
have a general topic echo which is open to the public and gets a
|
|||
|
fair amount of traffic without being overwhelming. There are
|
|||
|
also Region18 and Sysop18 echos for distribution within Region
|
|||
|
18 which have been well received. It was suggested that we
|
|||
|
start a Tech18 echo and perhaps some other echos which would be
|
|||
|
local to Region 18.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A big advantage that this echo would have over the national TECH
|
|||
|
echo is that it would not have as much traffic. Right now the
|
|||
|
national echo has so many msgs that it is very difficult to keep
|
|||
|
up with.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A major disadvantage is that there would be fewer people who
|
|||
|
could contribute their expertise to difficult problems since
|
|||
|
noone outside of Region 18 would be participating. However, some
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 16 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
of the people making this suggestion are pointing out that, while
|
|||
|
they are interested and are capable of helping people with
|
|||
|
problems, the national echo just has too much volume to make it
|
|||
|
worth the large amount of time it would take to keep up with, and
|
|||
|
so they don't read it and many potential contributors are lost to
|
|||
|
the echo anyway.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If people nationally, even internationally, could agree that the
|
|||
|
widely distributed echos would be only for problems which could
|
|||
|
not be solved at a more local level and that local echos covering
|
|||
|
the same topics would be available for fielding the simpler
|
|||
|
questions then many more people could be served. Let the local
|
|||
|
echos with more limited distribution be people's first source of
|
|||
|
help with problems. Then, if an answer cannot be found there,
|
|||
|
bring it up for discussion on the national echo. This approach
|
|||
|
has a two fold advantage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First of all the simpler questions from less experienced users
|
|||
|
would be likely to get answered in a more timely fashion since
|
|||
|
echomail should propogate faster on the local level. It wouldn't
|
|||
|
take as long for the questions and answers to propogate and there
|
|||
|
would still be a large base of capable users (if we're talking
|
|||
|
about a regional echo this would still be likely to go to dozens
|
|||
|
if not hundreds of boards).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Secondly, by getting a lot of the simpler stuff out of the
|
|||
|
national echo it would make it easier to keep up with the msgs
|
|||
|
there and the quality of the information to be gleaned from that
|
|||
|
echo would improve. A good quality, national echo would attract
|
|||
|
even more people who would be capable of contributing to the
|
|||
|
discussion as opposed to the current situation where capable
|
|||
|
people get fed up with the volume of traffic, much of which is
|
|||
|
too simple to hold their interest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In order for a system such as this to work it would take
|
|||
|
cooperation from many sysops to help ensure that their users
|
|||
|
understand that they should first go to the local echo for help
|
|||
|
with problems which are not monumental. Only after they have
|
|||
|
found that noone in the local echo could help them should they
|
|||
|
post problems to the national echo. Of course, if there is a
|
|||
|
topic that is clearly of national interest (a newly verified bug
|
|||
|
in a major compiler, for example) then it would not be
|
|||
|
inappropriate to post this information to the national echo right
|
|||
|
away, or even to both echos.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is one area (among others) that usenet's distribution
|
|||
|
software has better capabilities than Fidonet's. The software
|
|||
|
for posting articles in usenet lets you post to a national group
|
|||
|
while specifying local distribution so as to avoid causing
|
|||
|
systems all over the world from having to pay for distributing a
|
|||
|
msg which is only of local interest. It would be nice if the
|
|||
|
echo software had a byte in each msg where it could be recorded
|
|||
|
whether the msg was intended for local or extended distribution
|
|||
|
(even options for many levels, node, net, state, region,
|
|||
|
national, zone, international) and then identifying the links for
|
|||
|
echomail as either local, national, or whatever and the echo
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 17 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
software wouldn't bundle up a local msg for a link which is
|
|||
|
designated as a national link. However, it doesn't do this and
|
|||
|
at this point the only choice is to set up separate echos if
|
|||
|
different distribution patterns are desired. At least, it is the
|
|||
|
only way I know of to limit distribution of some msgs while
|
|||
|
letting other msgs of a similar subject matter be distributed
|
|||
|
widely.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONCLUSIONS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'm not sure I can make any, but I was taught that written papers
|
|||
|
or reports should always have a conclusion, so I'll try.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I think that it is clear that the volume of echomail is going to
|
|||
|
increase. With more nodes coming on line all of the time we need
|
|||
|
to be making plans for how to deal with this without sacrificing
|
|||
|
too much efficiency, timeliness, or expense. I have made a
|
|||
|
couple of proposals which I think could possibly help to keep the
|
|||
|
effort required to support echomail distribution manageable while
|
|||
|
at the same time not introducing gross inefficiencies that would
|
|||
|
offset the gains realized from these suggested reorganizations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I welcome constructive criticism. Flames will be consigned to
|
|||
|
/dev/null.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 18 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MENSA Echo Loses It's Founder and Host
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
George Falcon
|
|||
|
1:109/648
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My friend, mentor, and fellow Mensan Jim Kay suffered the loss of
|
|||
|
his 80 Meg hard disk this past week. This has prompted Jim to
|
|||
|
reconsider his involvement in this hobby, which can be a very
|
|||
|
expensive one, not only in cash, but in time as well.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jim was hosting the MENSA echo even before my wife Dot and I met
|
|||
|
at a Mensa Happy Hour in D.C. in October of 1985, and he
|
|||
|
patiently helped us through the rocky road to establishing our
|
|||
|
node using Fido v. 11w. I fully expect we'll stay in touch
|
|||
|
(after all, he only lives a half hour north of College Park, MD.,
|
|||
|
where we are), but I'll miss having his wit around the net.
|
|||
|
American Mensa owes him a lot, whether the members know it or
|
|||
|
not, and many do.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The MENSA echo conference had, at my last (not fully informed)
|
|||
|
count 22 systems in the U.S. and Canada as participants. I've
|
|||
|
sent a message to most of the sysops in the conference through
|
|||
|
netmail, but since some nodes are fed the echo indirectly, I'm
|
|||
|
writing this for FidoNews in the hope that more interested sysops
|
|||
|
will contact me via netmail. For those sysops who were getting
|
|||
|
the echo and would like to continue, I'd like to hear from you.
|
|||
|
I've volunteered to host the echo, at least temporarily, until a
|
|||
|
faster system with more storage can be found, provided it's
|
|||
|
operated by a member who's dedicated to the success of this
|
|||
|
medium.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For those of you, sysops or users, who think they might be
|
|||
|
interested in joining the echo, I ask that you also contact me
|
|||
|
via netmail. We'll work something out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For those who'd like to know a little more about Mensa itself,
|
|||
|
you can file request or download MENSA.INF from our pure Opus
|
|||
|
system. The address of American Mensa Ltd. is 2626 E. 14th St.,
|
|||
|
Bklyn., N.Y. 11235-3992. The only requirement is a score in the
|
|||
|
98th percentile on a number of standardized tests of
|
|||
|
intelligence. Those interested in membership in Intertel (the
|
|||
|
99th percentile) can file request or download INTERTEL.INF.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I found a housemate, a part-time job, a full time job, and last
|
|||
|
but certainly not least... my wife... all through Mensa. I'm a
|
|||
|
bit biased, but I think Mensa's a fun organization.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
George Falcon
|
|||
|
Coordinator, Telecomputing SIG
|
|||
|
9314 Cherry Hill Rd. #219
|
|||
|
College Park, MD. 20740-1249
|
|||
|
Opus 1:109/648
|
|||
|
(301) 345-7459
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 19 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
COLUMNS
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Aaron Priven
|
|||
|
1:125/1154
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Corrections and Apologies
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I would like to correct certain parts of my article in
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5:7.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First, I misstated the name of the International Coordinator.
|
|||
|
It is David Dodell, not Donald Dodell.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Second, I referred to Bill Bolton as the Zone 3 Coordinator.
|
|||
|
He was replaced by Matt Whelan months ago.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Third, I misrepresented my column as an article. It was not my
|
|||
|
intent to act as the role of a journalist or a reporter, but as
|
|||
|
that of a commentator. As such I was only stating my opinions,
|
|||
|
not attempting to cover the subject thoroughly. Because of this,
|
|||
|
I did not contact any of those currently involved in other-
|
|||
|
network gateways. I do not feel that this is particularly
|
|||
|
improper behavior for a commentator, which is what I was trying
|
|||
|
to be. However, I am aware that it was easy to misinterpret my
|
|||
|
intent, and this was my fault.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I sincerely apologize for mistakes I have made. I will
|
|||
|
endeavor not to make the same mistakes again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Aaron Priven
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 20 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
NOTICES
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Interrupt Stack
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
The next Net 157 FidoNet Sysops Meeting. Contact Phil Ardussi
|
|||
|
at 1:157/1 for information.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16 May 1988
|
|||
|
Digital Equipment Corporations Users Society Spring Symposium.
|
|||
|
Will be held May 16-May 20 in Cincinnati, OH.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16 Jul 1988
|
|||
|
A new areacode, 508, will form in eastern Massachusetts and
|
|||
|
will be effective on this date. The new area code will be
|
|||
|
formed from the current areacode 617. Greater Boston will
|
|||
|
remain areacode 617 while the rest of eastern Massachusetts
|
|||
|
will form the new areacode 508.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
25 Aug 1988
|
|||
|
Start of the Fifth International FidoNet Conference, to be
|
|||
|
held at the Drawbridge Inn in Cincinnati, OH. Contact Tim
|
|||
|
Sullivan at 108/62 for more information. This is FidoNet's big
|
|||
|
annual get-together, and is your chance to meet all the people
|
|||
|
you've been talking with all this time. We're hoping to see
|
|||
|
you there!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24 Aug 1989
|
|||
|
Voyager 2 passes Neptune.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you have something which you would like to see on this
|
|||
|
calendar, please send a message to FidoNet node 1:1/1.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Latest Software Versions
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BBS Systems Node List Other
|
|||
|
& Mailers Version Utilities Version Utilities Version
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dutchie 2.80 EditNL 3.3 ARC 5.21
|
|||
|
Fido 12e* MakeNL 1.10 ARCmail 1.1
|
|||
|
Opus 1.03b Prune 1.40 ConfMail 3.31*
|
|||
|
SEAdog 4.10 XlatList 2.86* EchoMail 1.31
|
|||
|
TBBS 2.0M MGM 1.1
|
|||
|
BinkleyTerm 1.40*
|
|||
|
QuickBBS 1.02
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* Recently changed
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Utility authors: Please help keep this list up to date by
|
|||
|
reporting new versions to 1:1/1. It is not our intent to list
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 21 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
all utilities here, only those which verge on necessity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 22 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
COMMITTEE REPORTS
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INTERNATIONAL FidoNet ASSOCIATION, INC.(IFNA)
|
|||
|
AGENDA
|
|||
|
ANNUAL IFNA BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING
|
|||
|
February 19-21, 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The IFNA Board of Directors, by notice published electronically
|
|||
|
on or about January 25, 1988 to the IFNA.BOD Echomail
|
|||
|
Conference, linking all the present Directors, dis- cussed and
|
|||
|
adopted the following as the Agenda for the re- quired,
|
|||
|
scheduled ANNUAL MEETING OF THE IFNA BOARD OF DIREC- TORS,
|
|||
|
February 19-21, 1988, commencing at 10:00 AM, CST at the Mariott
|
|||
|
Courtyard, St. Louis, MO:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10:00 AM: Recognition and seating of the Chair of the IFNA Board
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I. CALL TO ORDER -:- Ken Kaplan, Chair of the Board
|
|||
|
Seating of IFNA President, Don Daniels;
|
|||
|
Vice President, Mark Grennan;
|
|||
|
Vice President-Technical Coordinator, (Acting) Dave Dodell;
|
|||
|
Secretary, Tom Marshall;
|
|||
|
Treasurer, Len Mednick;
|
|||
|
Registered Legal Counsel, Mark Rubin.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Request to Secretary to take Minutes of the
|
|||
|
Meeting and act as Parliamenterian
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
II. ROLL CALL OF MEMBERS OF THE BOARD
|
|||
|
Note presence or absence of a quorum.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Appointment of Sergeant-at-Arms.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Establishment of Special Rules for this Session.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III. Call for reading of the Minutes of the IFNA Board
|
|||
|
of Directors Meetings, August 20-23, 1987 as the
|
|||
|
DRAFT thereof was published in FidoNews August 31,
|
|||
|
1987.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Note corrections/deletions/changes/additions;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Call for Resolution Approving such Minutes of Previous
|
|||
|
Meetings
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. Call for Standing COMMITTEE REPORTS from each and
|
|||
|
review/discussion/adoption of each such:
|
|||
|
A. Report by Legal Counsel: Mark Rubin
|
|||
|
B. Executive Committee: Don Daniels, Chair
|
|||
|
C. Administration and Finance: Len Mednick, Chair
|
|||
|
Special IRS 501c Status Report: Len Mednick,
|
|||
|
Ken Kaplan, and Bill Allbritten
|
|||
|
D. Nominations and Elections: Dave Dodell, Chair
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 23 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
E. By-Laws and Rules: Steve Jordan, Chair
|
|||
|
F. Technical Standards: Randy Bush, Chair
|
|||
|
G. Publications: Tim Sullivan, Chair
|
|||
|
H. International Affairs: Henk Wevers, Chair
|
|||
|
I. Membership Services: Phil Ardussi, Chair
|
|||
|
Special FidoCON5 Report: Tim Sullivan, Chair
|
|||
|
J. Division Reports by all Directors Representing
|
|||
|
a Division
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
V. Old Business
|
|||
|
A. Ratification of Rules and Practices adopted and used
|
|||
|
by Board inaccordance with "modified RREO" to conduct
|
|||
|
business of Board of Directors in interim periods
|
|||
|
between meetings.
|
|||
|
B. Ratification of all Motions and Resolutions adopted
|
|||
|
during interim period by means of IFNA.BOD.FLOOR
|
|||
|
EchoMail Conference.
|
|||
|
C. Appointment by the Board of new Officer(s) since
|
|||
|
Elections in August, 1987 completed.
|
|||
|
D. Appointment of Alternates for those Directors who
|
|||
|
failed to appoint such.
|
|||
|
E. Determination of five at-large Directors whose
|
|||
|
terms will end in August, 1988.
|
|||
|
F. Revision of NODELIST Copyright Notice.
|
|||
|
G. Consideration of POLICYx and Associated Documents.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VI. Call for discussion/resolution of any other items of
|
|||
|
"Old Business".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VII. Review of Current Docket of Pending Matters before the
|
|||
|
Board as established in IFNA.BOD EchoMail Conference
|
|||
|
[All pending matters not already voted on and handled
|
|||
|
via IFNA.BOD.FLOOR EchoMail Conference will be listed
|
|||
|
here]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIII. New Business:
|
|||
|
"New Business" - NOT already covered above - that is to
|
|||
|
be dealt with at this Meeting. Keep in mind that in
|
|||
|
order to deal effectively with any "matter of New
|
|||
|
Business", to the extent possible, ALL such "Matters"
|
|||
|
should be the subject of prior written Notice. All new
|
|||
|
matters introduced in IFNA.BOD.FLOOR and seconded be-
|
|||
|
tween February 5, 1988 and February 17, 1988 will be
|
|||
|
listed here as "New Business".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A. DAK Industries, Inc Sales of IFNA Nodelist
|
|||
|
B. Possible Support of International Echo
|
|||
|
C. IFNA EchoMail Policy
|
|||
|
D. Determination of how best to deal with disturbances
|
|||
|
within BoD and/or Committees
|
|||
|
E. Creation of Ethics Commitee
|
|||
|
F. Establishment of Directors' Primary Assignments
|
|||
|
G. Definition of Life Membership Requirements
|
|||
|
H. Representation for Zones other than 1
|
|||
|
I. IFNA Position Statement
|
|||
|
J. International Statement
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 24 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
K. Affirmation of Support for Dale Lovell
|
|||
|
L. FIDONEWS Policy
|
|||
|
M. Determination of Foreign Membership Fees
|
|||
|
N. FIDONEWS Policy
|
|||
|
O. IFNA Trademarks
|
|||
|
P. Replacement of Bob Hartman's temporary roles of:
|
|||
|
1. IFNA.BOD/FLOOR Moderator
|
|||
|
2. IFNA.BOD/FLOOR Echo Hub
|
|||
|
3. IFNA.BOD/FLOOR Vote Processor
|
|||
|
Q. EchoMail Security - Specifically for IFNA BoD,
|
|||
|
generally for other entities.
|
|||
|
R. Support questions for FIDOCON 88.
|
|||
|
S. Formalization of Coordinator Structures
|
|||
|
T. Formalization of Coordinator Structures
|
|||
|
U. Charitable Causes
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IX. Handling of such matters that may have been tabled
|
|||
|
previously.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(VIII. F. HELD PENDING FURTHER DEFINITION, INCLUDING THE
|
|||
|
REQUIREMENT THAT EACH DIRECTOR SERVE ON AT LEAST ONE STANDING
|
|||
|
COMMITTEE, PER BY-LAW 5. SEE: DD'S MATRIX REF:ASSIGN.DOC.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
X. Opening of the Floor to such Petitions as may come from the
|
|||
|
Membership in Attendance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XI. Determination of next in-person Meeting and of interim
|
|||
|
Electronic Sessions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XII. Adjournment
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MINUTES OF THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
|||
|
IFNA - COURTYARD by MARRIOTT 19-21 FEB. 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PRELIMINARY MEETING - 19 FEB. 1988
|
|||
|
CHAIR - KEN KAPLAN APPOINTED, REVIEW OF AGENDA ITEMS FOR
|
|||
|
FORMAL BOARD MEETING - 20 FEB. 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I. CALL TO ORDER - 10:01 20 FEB. 1988 BY CHAIR - KEN KAPLAN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ADOPTION OF AGENDA AS PROPOSED BY DON DANIELS, PRESIDENT
|
|||
|
MOTION TO AMEND BY RICK SIEGEL, TABLED UNTIL ITEM V C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. A. REPORT BY MARK RUBIN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
II. CALL OF ROLL
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PRESENCE OF A QUORUM
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TERRY MUELLER ELECTED SEARGEANT AT ARMS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III. MINUTES OF AUGUST 1987 MEETINGS ACCEPTED AS PUBLISHED IN
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 25 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIDONEWS 4-33 SUBJECT TO CORRECTIONS FOR ERROR, SHOULD
|
|||
|
ERROR APPEAR. READING WAIVED.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. REPORTS FROM EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE; ADMINISTRATION AND
|
|||
|
FINANCE; BY-LAWS AND RULES; PUBLICATIONS; INTERNATIONAL
|
|||
|
AFFAIRS; MEMBERSHIP SERVICES, SPECIAL REPORT ON FIDOCON5
|
|||
|
(RICK ASHWORTH)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LUNCH BREAK: 12:10 -13:15
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. CONTINUED: DIVISION REPORTS; DIVISION 13, RICK SIEGEL,
|
|||
|
DIV. 13 READ REPORT, OTHERS MADE AVAILABLE FOR PERUSAL;
|
|||
|
DIV. 16 AND DIV. 17 ON FILE WITH SECRETARY; ZONE 2 REPORT
|
|||
|
BY HENK WEVER READ; ALL REPORTS ACCEPTED.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIII. R. SUPPORT QUESTIONS FOR FIDOCON5 AUGUST 25-28, 1988:
|
|||
|
MOTION: ROB BARKER - COMMIT NOW TO ADVANCE $2000 OUT OF
|
|||
|
$3200 PROPOSED BUDGET; INTEND TO COMMIT TO ENTIRE
|
|||
|
REQUESTED AMOUNT WITHIN 8 WEEKS, UPON NET 108'S REQUEST
|
|||
|
THEREFOR AND SUBJECT TO EXISTING FINANCIAL CONDITIONS OF
|
|||
|
IFNA AND INCOME FROM VENDORS RECEIVED BY THAT TIME; IFNA
|
|||
|
TO RECOVER ALL "SEED MONEY" FROM PROCEEDS OF FIDOCON5,
|
|||
|
BEFORE IFNA AND NET 108 SPLIT 50/50 NET PROFITS OF
|
|||
|
FIDOCON'88.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
V. OLD BUSINESS -
|
|||
|
A. ACCEPTED
|
|||
|
B. ACCEPTED, SUBJECT TO RECONSIDERATION OF ANY SUCH ACTS
|
|||
|
C. OPEN, FOR REVIEW OF "COMMITTEE" AND RECALL
|
|||
|
D. CLOSED
|
|||
|
E. DON DANIELS; BOB RUDOLPH; KURT REISLER; GREG SMALL; GEE
|
|||
|
WONG ARE THE AT-LARGE DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS WILL EXPIRE
|
|||
|
IN AUG. 1988.
|
|||
|
F. REMOVED FROM CONSIDERATION
|
|||
|
G. TABLED ON TIME
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VI. NOTHING OFFERED
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VII. CURRENT DOCKET - NOTHING PENDING, EXCEPT AS RELATES
|
|||
|
TO VIII. C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIII. NEW BUSINESS
|
|||
|
SEALED A. DAK - AFTER REVIEW OF CORRESPONDENCE, DON DANIELS
|
|||
|
INSTRUCTED TO CONTINUE NEGOTIATIONS WITH DREW
|
|||
|
KAPLAN AS THE SOLE IFNA REPRESENTATIVE. ALL
|
|||
|
MATTERS RELATING TO THE DAK MATTER ARE LEGAL
|
|||
|
CONFIDENTIAL, UNTIL THE BOARD RELEASES SUCH.
|
|||
|
B. IFNA IS NOT INCLINED TO PROVIDE FINANCIAL SUPPORT,
|
|||
|
BUT WOULD BE INTERESTED IN REFERRING TO THE
|
|||
|
INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE THE MATTER OF A POSSIBLE
|
|||
|
INTERNATIONAL ECHO, POSSIBLY FINANCED BY IFNA. THE
|
|||
|
BOARD DOES NOT APPROVE ASPECTS OF THE SPECIFIC
|
|||
|
"INTERUSER" ECHO THAT WAS THE SUBJECT OF THIS
|
|||
|
AGENDA ITEM.
|
|||
|
TABLED C. IFNA ECHOMAIL POLICY
|
|||
|
E. DON DANIELS' MOTION PASSED TO FORM AN ETHICS
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 26 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
COMMITTEE TO FORMULATE AND REPORT TO THE BOARD ON
|
|||
|
PROPOSED GUIDELINES AND SUGGESTIONS CONCERNING
|
|||
|
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT IN IFNA AND FIDONET AFFAIRS
|
|||
|
AND BUSINESS.
|
|||
|
D. REFERENCED TO BY-LAWS AND RULES COMMITTEE TO
|
|||
|
PROPOSE A NEW BY-LAW SPECIFYING THAT A DIRECTOR OR
|
|||
|
OFFICER OF IFNA MAY BE REMOVED FOR CAUSE IF ANY
|
|||
|
SUCH IS IN VIOLATION OF THE ETHICS STANDARDS ADOPTED
|
|||
|
BY THE BOARD. REQUIRES A TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF THE
|
|||
|
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
|
|||
|
TABLED E. HELD PENDING FURTHER DEFINITION, INCLUDING THE
|
|||
|
REQUIREMENT THAT EACH DIRECTOR SERVE ON AT LEAST
|
|||
|
ONE STANDING COMMITTEE, PER BY-LAW 5.
|
|||
|
TABLED F.
|
|||
|
G. LIFE MEMBER DUES SET AT $250 TO ALL REGULAR
|
|||
|
MEMBERS WHO REMAIN OTHERWISE QUALIFIED.
|
|||
|
H. REFERENCED TO BY-LAWS AND RULES AND INTERNATIONAL
|
|||
|
AFFAIRS COMMITTEES FOR RECOMMENDATIONS.
|
|||
|
I. REFERENCED TO A "COMMITTEE" : REPORT OF COMMITTEEE
|
|||
|
ACCEPTED, WITH MINOR TEXT CHANGES (REF:
|
|||
|
GOODNEWS.TXT)
|
|||
|
J. REFERENCED TO A "COMMITTEE" FOR REVIEW LATER.
|
|||
|
K. AGREED TO CONFIRM DALE LOVELL'S APPOINTMENT AS
|
|||
|
FIDONEWS EDITOR, WITH THE THANKS OF THE BOARD TO
|
|||
|
DALE LOVELL FOR ACCEPTING THE POSITION TO BE SENT
|
|||
|
BY THE PRESIDENT.
|
|||
|
L. THE BOARD SUPPORTS THE EXISTING PRACTICE OF
|
|||
|
PUBLISHING ALL SUB MISSIONS, EXCEPT THOSE THAT ARE
|
|||
|
SPECIFICALLY EXCLUDED IN THE PUBLICATIONS
|
|||
|
COMMITTEE'S REPORT. THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE SHOULD
|
|||
|
BE ADVISED OF ANY ITEMS THAT ARE EXCLUDED FROM
|
|||
|
PUBLICATION UNDER THOSE GUIDELINES.
|
|||
|
M. FOREIGN MEMBERS' IFNA DUES AND ANY OTHER PAYMENTS
|
|||
|
TO IFNA ARE SET IN US FUNDS.
|
|||
|
N. DUPLICATION DELETED
|
|||
|
S. FORMALIZATION OF COORDINATOR STRUCTURES - SUBSUMED
|
|||
|
INTO THE FUNCTIONS TO BE PERFORMED BY THE
|
|||
|
"COMMMITTEES" BEING FORMED TO DEAL WITH ECHOMAIL
|
|||
|
POLICY (Rob Barker, BOARD REPRESETATIVE) AND TO
|
|||
|
DEAL WITH POLICYx (Steve Jordan, BOARD
|
|||
|
REPRESENTATIVE).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
X. THOM HENDERSON: FIDO NODELIST INCLUDES DISCLAIMER
|
|||
|
"EVERY EFFORT", CHANGE TO "REASONABLE EFFORTS". -
|
|||
|
ADOPTED BY THE BOARD.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BRAD HICKS: SEND A RECOMMENDATION TO THE BY-LAWS
|
|||
|
AND RULES COMMITTEE TO CONSIDER EXPANDING THE
|
|||
|
MEMBERS DEFINITIONS TO INCLUDE CO-SYSOPS,
|
|||
|
POINT-SYSTEMS, MAIL-ONLY NODES, ETC.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MARK GRENNAN: WRITTEN SUBMISSION RECEIVED 20 FEB.
|
|||
|
1988, PROPOSAL TO CREATE AN IFNA ARCHIVE, A
|
|||
|
DEPOSITORY FOR ALL FORMAL IFNA DOCUMENTS. - GREG
|
|||
|
SMALL APPOINTED CHAIR OF ADMINISTRATION AND FINANCE
|
|||
|
TO ORGANIZE SUCH AN EFFORT.
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 27 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREG SMALL: NEED TO CODIFY THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF
|
|||
|
DIRECTORS, (AND ALTERNATES) OFFICERS, COMMITTEE
|
|||
|
CHAIRS, ETC. IN THE FORM OF JOB DESCRIPTIONS.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BRAD HICKS: SEND OUT A PRESS RELEASE CONCERNING
|
|||
|
THIS BOARD MEETING.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BRAD HICKS: MOTION - TO REQUEST THAT THE VP-TC ACT
|
|||
|
TO INFORM THE ZC'S, RC'S, NC'S THAT THEY SHOULD
|
|||
|
COOPERATE WITH THE ECHOMAIL COORDINATORS TO BRING
|
|||
|
ABOUT THE CESSATION OF ANY INTENTIONAL DISTURBANCE
|
|||
|
BY DECLARING SUCH ACTS AS BEING "EXCESSIVELY
|
|||
|
ANNOYING" PER SE.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 28 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A STATEMENT OF POSITION BY IFNA BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA believes in the continued and peaceful coexistence of
|
|||
|
individual bulletin boards and electronic mail systems joined
|
|||
|
together through the FidoNet network. Recognizing that FidoNet
|
|||
|
is an international collection of system operators, users, and
|
|||
|
supporters, it is with great caution and limited scope that an
|
|||
|
international association must tread. Given this caveat, IFNA
|
|||
|
accepts as primary responsibilities: maintaining a nodelist;
|
|||
|
publication of a newsletter; the FidoNet Technical Standards;
|
|||
|
and an international conference.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA firmly takes the stand that all system operators within the
|
|||
|
FidoNet network are joined by a moral and ethical thread to
|
|||
|
further the development and education of international
|
|||
|
communication for the benefit and good of all people.
|
|||
|
Additionally, IFNA acts as an advisor and a resource to the
|
|||
|
Fidonet group as a whole.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA maintains a standard nodelist to provide a directory of all
|
|||
|
FidoNet systems in a common format that permits international
|
|||
|
communication to proceed unimpeded. IFNA also supports and
|
|||
|
participates in the formation, promulgation, and publication of
|
|||
|
the necessary technical standards to promote electronic
|
|||
|
communication. Finally, IFNA fosters international
|
|||
|
communication on a human level by sponsoring an annual
|
|||
|
international conference (FIDOCON).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA also serves in an advisory role to assist in the resolution
|
|||
|
of any concerns that affect the local, regional, national, or
|
|||
|
international nature of the network.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA will provide the structures to promote international
|
|||
|
growth, goodwill and understanding among electronic
|
|||
|
communications systems and operators.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA recognizes the current structures of FidoNet as they stand
|
|||
|
and believes FidoNet is self-perpetuating and, in the final
|
|||
|
analysis, self-governing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Additionally, IFNA maintains that future policies will evolve
|
|||
|
through the structure of, and be mandated by, the network.
|
|||
|
IFNA's role will then be to codify these policies to protect the
|
|||
|
interests of all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 29 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
__
|
|||
|
The World's First / \
|
|||
|
BBS Network /|oo \
|
|||
|
* FidoNet * (_| /_)
|
|||
|
_`@/_ \ _
|
|||
|
| | \ \\
|
|||
|
| (*) | \ ))
|
|||
|
______ |__U__| / \//
|
|||
|
/ Fido \ _//|| _\ /
|
|||
|
(________) (_/(_|(____/ (tm)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Membership for the International FidoNet Association
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Membership in IFNA is open to any individual or organization that
|
|||
|
pays a specified annual membership fee. IFNA serves the
|
|||
|
international FidoNet-compatible electronic mail community to
|
|||
|
increase worldwide communications.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Member Name _______________________________ Date _______________
|
|||
|
Address _________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
City ____________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
State ________________________________ Zip _____________________
|
|||
|
Country _________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
Home Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
|||
|
Work Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
|||
|
Zone:Net/Node Number ____________________________________________
|
|||
|
BBS Name ________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
BBS Phone Number ________________________________________________
|
|||
|
Baud Rates Supported ____________________________________________
|
|||
|
Board Restrictions ______________________________________________
|
|||
|
Your Special Interests __________________________________________
|
|||
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
In what areas would you be willing to help in FidoNet? __________
|
|||
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
Send this membership form and a check or money order for $25 in
|
|||
|
US Funds to:
|
|||
|
International FidoNet Association
|
|||
|
c/o Leonard Mednick, MBA, CPA
|
|||
|
700 Bishop Street, #1014
|
|||
|
Honolulu, Hawaii 96813-4112
|
|||
|
USA
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thank you for your membership! Your participation will help to
|
|||
|
insure the future of FidoNet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Please NOTE that IFNA is a general not-for-profit organization
|
|||
|
and Articles of Association and By-Laws were adopted by the
|
|||
|
membership in January 1987. The first elected Board of Directors
|
|||
|
was filled in August 1987. The IFNA Echomail Conference has been
|
|||
|
established on FidoNet to assist the Board. We welcome your
|
|||
|
input to this Conference.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FidoNews 5-10 Page 30 7 Mar 1988
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INTERNATIONAL FIDONET ASSOCIATION
|
|||
|
ORDER FORM
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Publications
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The IFNA publications can be obtained by downloading from Fido
|
|||
|
1:1/10 or other FidoNet compatible systems, or by purchasing
|
|||
|
them directly from IFNA. We ask that all our IFNA Committee
|
|||
|
Chairmen provide us with the latest versions of each
|
|||
|
publication, but we can make no written guarantees.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hardcopy prices as of October 1, 1986
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA Fido BBS listing $15.00 _____
|
|||
|
IFNA Administrative Policy DOCs $10.00 _____
|
|||
|
IFNA FidoNet Standards Committee DOCs $10.00 _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SUBTOTAL _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IFNA Member ONLY Special Offers
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
System Enhancement Associates SEAdog $60.00 _____
|
|||
|
SEAdog price as of March 1, 1987
|
|||
|
ONLY 1 copy SEAdog per IFNA Member
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Fido Software's Fido/FidoNet $100.00 _____
|
|||
|
Fido/FidoNet price as of November 1, 1987
|
|||
|
ONLY 1 copy Fido/FidoNet per IFNA Member
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
International orders include $10.00 for
|
|||
|
surface shipping or $20.00 for air shipping _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SUBTOTAL _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HI. Residents add 4.0 % Sales tax _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TOTAL _____
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER IN US FUNDS:
|
|||
|
International FidoNet Association
|
|||
|
c/o Leonard Mednick, MBA, CPA
|
|||
|
700 Bishop Street, #1014
|
|||
|
Honolulu, HI. 96813-4112
|
|||
|
USA
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Name________________________________
|
|||
|
Zone:Net/Node____:____/____
|
|||
|
Company_____________________________
|
|||
|
Address_____________________________
|
|||
|
City____________________ State____________ Zip_____
|
|||
|
Voice Phone_________________________
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Signature___________________________
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|