687 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
687 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
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Path: blister!jtsv16!torsqnt!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!think.com!samsung!news.cs.indiana.edu!purdue!spaf
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From: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU (Gene Spafford)
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Newsgroups: news.announce.newusers
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Subject: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
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Message-ID: <15398@ector.cs.purdue.edu>
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Date: 25 Jul 91 23:15:55 GMT
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Expires: 23 Oct 91 23:15:54 GMT
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Organization: Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue Univ.
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Lines: 674
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Approved: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU
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Supersedes: <14694@ector.cs.purdue.edu>
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Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
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[Most recent change: 23 Jul 1991 by spaf@cs.purdue.edu (Gene Spafford)]
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Frequently Submitted Items
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This document discusses some questions and topics that occur
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repeatedly on USENET. They frequently are submitted by new users, and
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result in many followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The
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purpose of this note is to head off these annoying events by answering
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some questions and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking
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others. If you don't like these answers let spaf@cs.purdue.edu know.
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Note that some newsgroups have their own special "Frequent Questions &
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Answers" posting. You should read a group for a while before posting
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any questions, because the answers may already be present.
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Comp.unix.questions and comp.unix.internals are examples -- Steve Hayman
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regularly posts an article that answers common questions, including
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some of the ones asked here.
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This list is often referred to as FAQ -- the Frequently Asked
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Questions. If you are a new user of the Usenet and don't find an
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answer to your questions here, you can try asking in the
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news.newusers.questions group.
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Contents
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========
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1. What does UNIX stand for?
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2. What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?
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3. Is a machine at "foo" on the net?
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4. What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?
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5. What does :-) mean?
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6. How do I decrypt jokes in rec.humor?
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7. misc.misc or misc.wanted: Is John Doe out there anywhere?
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8. sci.math: Proofs that 1=0.
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9. rec.games.*: Where can I get the source for empire or rogue?
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10. comp.unix.questions: How do I remove files with non-ascii
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characters in their names?
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11. comp.unix.internals: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
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protection for programs that run suid, or any other report of
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bugs with standard software.
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12. Volatile topics, e.g., soc.women: What do you think about abortion?
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13. soc.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS stand for?
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What does LJBF mean?
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14. soc.singles and elsewhere: What does HASA stand for?
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15. sci.space.shuttle: Shouldn't this group be merged with sci.space?
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16. How do I use the "Distribution" feature?
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17. Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
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of their articles?
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18. What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?
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19. What is the origin of the name "grep"?
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20. How do I get from BITNET to UUCP, Internet to BITNET, JANET etc. etc.?
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21. Didn't some state once pass a law setting pi equal to 3 ?
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22. Where can I get the necessary software to get a "smart"
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mail system running on my machine that will take advantage
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of the postings in comp.mail.maps? (E.g., pathalias, smail, etc.)
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23. What is "food for the NSA line-eater"?
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24. Does anyone know the {pinouts, schematics, switch settings,
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what does jumper J3 do} for widget X?
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25. What is "anonymous ftp"?
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26. What is UUNET?
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27. Isn't the posting mechanism broken? When I post an article to both
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a moderated group and unmoderated groups, it gets mailed to the
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moderator and not posted to the unmoderated groups.
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28. comp.arch and elsewhere: What do FYI and IMHO mean?
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29. Would someone repost {large software distribution}?
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30. How do I contact the moderator of an Internet mailing list rather than
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post to the entire list?
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31. I see BTW (or "btw"), wrt and RTFM in postings. What do they mean?
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32. Are there any restrictions on posting e-mail someone sends to me?
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33. What's an FQDN?
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34. How do you pronounce "char" in C, "ioctl" in UNIX, the character
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"#", etc., etc.?
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35. How do you pronounce "TeX"?
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36. What is the last year of the 20th century A.D.?
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37. I heard these stories about a dying child wanting
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postcards/get-well cards/business cards to get in the Guinness Book
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of World Records. Where can I post the address for people to help?
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38. I just heard about a scheme the FCC has to implement a tax on
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modems! Where can I post a message so everyone will hear about
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this and do something to prevent it?
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39. Is there a public access Unix system near me? How can I get
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access to system for news and mail?
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40. In rec.pets: My pet has suddenly developed the following symptoms
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.... Is it serious? In sci.med: I have these symptoms .... Is it
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serious?
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41. I have this great idea to make money. Alternatively, wouldn't an
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electronic chain letter be a nifty idea?
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42. Where can I get archives of Usenet postings?
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Questions and Answers
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=====================
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1. What does UNIX stand for?
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It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "Multics". Multics is a
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large operating system that was being developed shortly before
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UNIX was created. Brian Kernighan is credited with the name.
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2. What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?
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The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
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acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
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to be a military term. (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
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usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
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the same derivation.
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3. Is a machine at "foo" on the net?
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These questions belong in news.config (if anywhere), but in fact
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your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
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If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
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asking for the "comp center." Also, see the newsgroup
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comp.mail.maps where maps of USENET and the uucp network are posted
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regularly. If you have access to telnet, connect to nic.ddn.mil
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and try the "whois" command.
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4. What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?
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It is related to the phrase "run commands." It is used for any
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file that contains startup information for a command. The use of
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"rc" in startup files derives from the /etc/rc command file used
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to start multi-user UNIX.
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5. What does :-) mean?
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This is the net convention for a "smiley face". It means that
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something is being said in jest. If it doesn't look like a smiley
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face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.
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Variants exist and mean related things; for instance, :-( is sad.
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6. How do I decrypt jokes in rec.humor?
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The standard cypher used in rec.humor is called "rot13." Each
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letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
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(cycling around at the end). Most systems have a built-in
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command to decrypt such articles; readnews and nn have the "D"
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command, emacs/gnus has the "^C^R" combination, rn has the "X" or
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"^X" commands, notes has "%" or "R", and VMS news has the
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read/rot13 command. If your system doesn't have a program to
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encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell script
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using "tr":
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tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
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On some versions of UNIX, the "tr" command should be written as:
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tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"
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7. misc.misc or misc.wanted: Is John Doe out there anywhere?
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I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
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mates that they haven't seen in ten years. If you have some idea
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where the person is, you are usually better off calling the
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organization. For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
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request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
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at a different location. If you must try the net, use newsgroup
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soc.net-people *NOT* misc.misc or misc.wanted. Also, you can try
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the "whois" command (see item #3).
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8. sci.math: Proofs that 1=0.
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Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
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They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
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square root of a negative number.
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9. rec.games.*: Where can I get the source for empire or rogue?
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You can't get the source of rogue. The authors of the game, as is
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their right, have chosen not to make the sources available.
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However, several rogue-like games have been posted to the
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comp.sources.games group and they are available in the archives.
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You can obtain the source to a version of empire if you provide
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a tape and SASE *plus* a photocopy of your UNIX source license.
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To obtain further info, contact mcnc!rti-sel!polyof!john.
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You can also call John at +1 516 454-5191 (9am-9pm EST only).
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Sites with Internet access can ftp several versions of empire
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from site g.ms.uky.edu
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Also, please note that the wizards' passwords in games like these
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are usually system-dependent and it does no good to ask the
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net-at-large what they are.
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10. comp.unix.questions: How do I remove files with non-ascii
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characters in their names?
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You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
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This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
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they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
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Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
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with i-node numbers and "find".
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Some Emacs editors allow you to directly edit a directory, and
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this provides yet another way to remove a file with a funny name
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(assuming you have Emacs and figure out how to use it!).
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To remove a file named "-" from your directory, simply do:
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rm ./-
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11. comp.unix.internals: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
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protection for programs that run suid, or any other report of
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bugs with standard software.
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There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
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setuid programs. When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
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range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
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kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
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is used and when the real id is used to control accesses. Sooner
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or later you can expect this to be improved. For now you just
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have to live with it.
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Always discuss suspected bugs or problems with your site software
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experts before you post to the net. It is likely that the bugs
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have already been reported. They might also be local changes and
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not something you need to describe to the whole Usenet.
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12. Volatile topics, e.g., soc.women: What do you think about abortion?
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Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
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soc.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
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up. All abortion-related discussion should take place in the
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newsgroup talk.abortion. If your site administrators have chosen
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not to receive this group, you should respect this and not post
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articles about abortion at all.
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This principle applies to other topics: religious upbringing of
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children should be restricted to talk.religion.misc and kept out
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of misc.kids. Similarly, rape discussions should be kept to
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talk.rape and not in soc.singles, alt.sex and/or soc.women,
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Zionism discussions should be kept to talk.politics.mideast and
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not in soc.culture.jewish; likewise, discussions of Jesusor of
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religions other than Judaism should go to newsgroups for the
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appropriate religion or to talk.religion.misc or alt.messianic.
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USENET newsgroups are named for mostly historical reasons, and
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are not intended to be fully general discussion groups for
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everything about the named topic. Please accept this and post
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articles in their appropriate forums.
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13. soc.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, MOTAS, and SO stand for?
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What does LJBF mean?
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Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
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the appropriate sex, respectively. SO stands for "significant
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other."
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LJBF means "Let's just be friends." This phrase is often heard
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when you least want it.
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14. soc.singles and elsewhere: What does HASA stand for?
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The acronym HASA originated with the Heathen and Atheistic SCUM
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Alliance; the Hedonistic Asti-Spumante Alliance, Heroes Against
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Spaghetti Altering, the Society for Creative Atheism (SCATHE),
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SASA, SALSA, PASTA, and many others too numerous to mention all
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followed. HASA started in (what is now) talk.religion.misc and
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also turns up in soc.singles, talk.bizarre, et al. because members
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post there too.
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15. sci.space.shuttle: Shouldn't this group be merged with sci.space?
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No. sci.space.shuttle is for timely news bulletins. sci.space is for
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discussions.
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16. How do I use the "Distribution" feature?
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When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
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widely distributed you want your article. The set of possible
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replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
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in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include (for example):
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local local to this machine
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mh Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
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nj all sites in New Jersey
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btl All Bell Labs machines
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att All AT&T machines
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usa Everywhere in the USA
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na Everywhere in North America
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world Everywhere on USENET in the world
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If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is usually
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"world.". This default is often not appropriate -- PLEASE take a
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moment to think about how far away people are likely to be
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interested in what you have to say. Used car ads, housing wanted
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ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment like
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computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and Korea,
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or even to the next state.
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It is generally not possible to post an article to a distribution
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that your own machine does not receive. For instance, if you
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live in Indiana, you can't post an article for distribution only
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in New Jersey or Germany unless your site happens to exchange
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those particular distributions with another site. Try mailing
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the article to someone in the appropriate area and asking them to
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post it for you.
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17. Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
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of their articles?
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Some earlier versions (mid-80s) of news had a bug which would
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drop the first 512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.
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The bug was triggered whenever the article started with
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whitespace (a blank or a tab). A fix many people adopted was to
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begin their articles with a line containing a character other
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than white space. This gradually evolved into the habit of
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including amusing first lines.
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The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
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and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
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prevent articles from losing text. The "bug-killer" lines are
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therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.
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18. What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?
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Try the white and yellow pages of your phone directory, first; a
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sales representative will surely know, and if you're a potential
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customer they will be who you're looking for. Phone books for
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other cities are usually available in libraries of any size.
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Whoever buys or recommends things for your company will probably
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have some buyer's guides or national company directories. Call or
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visit the reference desk of your library; they have several
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company and organization directories and many will answer
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questions like this over the phone. Remember if you only know
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the city where the company is, you can telephone to find out
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their full address or a dealer. Calls to 1-800-555-1212 will
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reveal if the company has an "800" number you can call for
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information. The network is NOT a free resource, although it may
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look like that to some people. It is far better to spend a few
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minutes of your own time researching an answer rather than
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broadcast your laziness and/or ineptitude to the net.
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19. What is the origin of the name "grep"?
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The original UNIX text editor "ed" has a construct g/re/p,
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where "re" stands for a regular expression, to Globally
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search for matches to the Regular Expression and Print the
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lines containing them. This was so often used that it was
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packaged up into its own command, thus named "grep". According
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to Dennis Ritchie, this is the true origin of the command.
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20. How do I get from BITNET to UUCP, Internet to BITNET, JANET etc.?
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There are so many networks and mail systems in use now, it would
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take a book to describe all of them and how to send mail between
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them. Luckily, there are a couple of excellent books that do
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exactly that, and in a helpful, easy-to-use manner:
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"!%@:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks"
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by Donnalyn Frey and Rick Adams, O'Reilly & Associates, Inc,
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2nd edition 1990.
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"The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems
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Worldwide" by John Quarterman, Digital Press, 1990.
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Another excellent book to have on your bookshelf (to keep those
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two company) is "The User's Directory of Computer Networks" edited
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by Tracy LaQuey, Digital Press, 1990.
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21. Didn't some state once pass a law setting pi equal to 3 ?
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Indiana House Bill #246 was introduced on 18 January 1897, and
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referred to the Committee on Canals "midst general cheerfulness."
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The text states, "the ratio of the diameter and circumference is
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as five-fourths to four", which makes pi 3.2 (not 3), but there
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are internal contradictions in the bill as well as contradictions
|
||
|
with reality. The author was a mathematical crank. The bill was
|
||
|
passed by the state House on 5 February, but indefinitely tabled
|
||
|
by the state Senate, in part thanks to the fortuitous presence
|
||
|
on other business of a Purdue professor of mathematics.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For details, including an annotated text of the bill, read the
|
||
|
article by D. Singmaster in "The Mathematical Intelligencer" v7
|
||
|
#2, pp 69-72.
|
||
|
|
||
|
22. Where can I get the necessary software to get a "smart"
|
||
|
mail system running on my machine that will take advantage
|
||
|
of the postings in comp.mail.maps? (E.g., pathalias, smail, etc.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are a couple of packages available through the supporters of
|
||
|
the comp.sources.unix archives. If sites next to you don't have
|
||
|
what you want, contact your nearest comp.sources.unix archive, or
|
||
|
the moderator. Information on archive sites, and indices of
|
||
|
comp.sources.unix back issues are posted regularly in
|
||
|
comp.sources.unix and comp.sources.d.
|
||
|
|
||
|
23. What is "food for the NSA line-eater"?
|
||
|
|
||
|
This refers to the alleged scanning of all USENET traffic by the
|
||
|
National Security Agency (and possibly other intelligence
|
||
|
organizations) for interesting keywords. The "food" is believed
|
||
|
to contain some of those keywords in the fond hope of overloading
|
||
|
NSA's poor computers. A little thought should convince anyone
|
||
|
that this is unlikely to occur. Other posters have taken up this
|
||
|
practice, either as an ambiguous form of political statement, or
|
||
|
as an attempt at humor. The bottom line is that excessive
|
||
|
signatures in any form are discouraged, the joke has worn stale
|
||
|
amongst long-time net readers, and there are specific newsgroups
|
||
|
for the discussion of politics.
|
||
|
|
||
|
24. Does anyone know the {pinouts, schematics, switch settings,
|
||
|
what does jumper J3 do} for widget X?
|
||
|
|
||
|
These postings are almost always inappropriate unless the
|
||
|
manufacturer has gone out of business or no longer supports the
|
||
|
device. If neither of these is the case, you're likely to get a
|
||
|
better and faster response by simply telephoning the
|
||
|
manufacturer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
25. What is "anonymous ftp"?
|
||
|
|
||
|
"FTP" stands for File Transfer Protocol; on many systems, it's
|
||
|
also the name of a user-level program that implements that
|
||
|
protocol. This program allows a user to transfer files to and
|
||
|
from a remote network site, provided that network site is
|
||
|
reachable via the Internet or a similar facility. (Ftp is
|
||
|
also usable on many local-area networks.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Anonymous FTP" indicates that a user may log into the remote
|
||
|
system as user "anonymous" with an arbitrary password. A common
|
||
|
convention is that some sort of identification is supplied as the
|
||
|
password, e.g. "mumble@foo". This is sometimes useful to those
|
||
|
sites that track ftp usage. Also note that most sites restrict
|
||
|
when transfers can be made, or at least suggest that large
|
||
|
transfers be made only during non-peak hours.
|
||
|
|
||
|
26. What is UUNET?
|
||
|
|
||
|
UUNET is a non-profit communications service designed to provide
|
||
|
access to USENET news, mail, and various source archives at low
|
||
|
cost by obtaining volume discounts. Charges are calculated to
|
||
|
recover costs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For more information send your US mail address to
|
||
|
info@uunet.uu.net (uunet!info).
|
||
|
|
||
|
27. Isn't the posting mechanism broken? When I post an article to both
|
||
|
a moderated group and unmoderated groups, it gets mailed to the
|
||
|
moderator and not posted to the unmoderated groups.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is a question that is debated every few months. The answer
|
||
|
is "No, it was designed to work that way." The software is
|
||
|
designed so that the moderator can crosspost the article so it
|
||
|
appears in the regular groups as well as the moderated group, if
|
||
|
appropriate. If the article were to be posted immediately to the
|
||
|
unmoderated groups, the moderated group name would have to be
|
||
|
deleted from the header and you would lose the crossposting.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whether or not this is correct behavior is a matter of opinion.
|
||
|
If you want your article to go out immediately to the unmoderated
|
||
|
groups, post it twice -- once to the unmoderated groups and once
|
||
|
to the moderated groups.
|
||
|
|
||
|
28. comp.arch and elsewhere: What do FYI and IMHO mean?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those are abbreviations for common phrases. FYI is "For Your
|
||
|
Information" and IMHO is "In My Humble Opinion" or "In My
|
||
|
Honest Opinion."
|
||
|
|
||
|
29. Would someone repost {large software distribution}?
|
||
|
|
||
|
This question should never be posted unless you are reporting a
|
||
|
widespread problem in article propagation. Lamentably, there ARE
|
||
|
occasional glitches in article transport. Large source or binary
|
||
|
postings, by their sheer size, are an inviting target.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the problem is isolated, it is much better to take it upon
|
||
|
yourself to obtain the bad portions of the program than to ask
|
||
|
thousands of sites to spend thousands of dollars to needlessly
|
||
|
move several hundred kilobytes of code. There are archive sites
|
||
|
around the net that make most source/binary newsgroups available
|
||
|
via anonymous FTP and UUCP. If you get desperate, you can always
|
||
|
mail the author a blank disk or magnetic tape with provisions for
|
||
|
return postage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
30. How do I contact the moderator of an Internet mailing list rather than
|
||
|
post to the entire list?
|
||
|
|
||
|
To do this you should know that there are, by convention, two
|
||
|
mailing addresses for every mailing list (except where noted by
|
||
|
the List of Lists):
|
||
|
|
||
|
list@host (e.g. xpert@athena.mit.edu)
|
||
|
list-request@host (e.g. xpert-request@athena.mit.edu)
|
||
|
|
||
|
When you have something for everyone on the mailing list to read,
|
||
|
mail to the list@host address. HOWEVER, if you have an
|
||
|
administrative request to make (e.g. "please add me to this list",
|
||
|
"please remove me from this list", "where are the archives?",
|
||
|
"what is this mailer error I got from sending to this list?"), it
|
||
|
should be directed to the list-request@host address, which goes
|
||
|
only to the mailing list administrator.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is considered to be in bad taste to send administrative
|
||
|
requests to the entire mailing list in question, and if (as is
|
||
|
often the case) the administrator does not read the mailing list
|
||
|
(i.e. he just takes care of the admin tasks for the list), he will
|
||
|
not see your request if you don't send it to the right address.
|
||
|
|
||
|
31. I see BTW (or "btw"), wrt and RTFM in postings. What do they mean?
|
||
|
|
||
|
BTW is shorthand for "by the way." WRT is "With respect to".
|
||
|
|
||
|
RTFM is generally used as an admonition and means "read the f*ing
|
||
|
manual" (choice of f-words varies according to reader). The
|
||
|
implication is that the answer to a query or complaint is easy to
|
||
|
find if one looks in the appropriate location FIRST.
|
||
|
|
||
|
32. Are there any restrictions on posting e-mail someone sends to me?
|
||
|
|
||
|
At a minimum, it is only polite for you to contact the author of
|
||
|
the letter and secure her or his permission to post it to the net.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On a more serious note, it can be argued that posting someone's
|
||
|
e-mail to the net without their permission is a violation of
|
||
|
copyright law. Under that law, even though a letter was
|
||
|
addressed to you, it does not grant you the right to publish the
|
||
|
contents, as that is the work of the author and the author
|
||
|
retains copyright (even if no explicit copyright mark appears).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Basically, your letters are your intellectual property. If
|
||
|
someone publishes your letters they are violating your copyright.
|
||
|
This principle is well-founded in "paper media," and while
|
||
|
untested in electronic forums such as Usenet, the same would
|
||
|
probably apply if tested in court.
|
||
|
|
||
|
33. What's an FQDN?
|
||
|
|
||
|
A fully-qualified domain name. That is, a hostname containing
|
||
|
full, dotted qualification of its name up to the root of the
|
||
|
Internet domain naming system tree. Example: uiucuxc is the
|
||
|
single-word hostname (suitable for, e.g., UUCP transport
|
||
|
purposes) of the machine whose FQDN is uxc.cso.uiuc.edu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
34. How do you pronounce "char" in C, "ioctl" in UNIX, the character
|
||
|
"#", etc., etc.?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Opinions differ. Pick pronunciations close to what your
|
||
|
colleagues use. After all, they're the ones you need to
|
||
|
communicate with.
|
||
|
|
||
|
35. How do you pronounce "TeX"?
|
||
|
|
||
|
To quote Donald Knuth, the creator of TeX: "Insiders pronounce
|
||
|
the X of TeX as a Greek chi, not as an 'x', so that TeX rhymes
|
||
|
with the word blecchhh. It's the 'ch' sound in Scottish words
|
||
|
like loch or German words like ach; it's a Spanish 'j' and a
|
||
|
Russian 'kh'. When you say it correctly to your computer, the
|
||
|
terminal may become slightly moist." [The TeXbook, 1986, Addison
|
||
|
Wesley, page 1]
|
||
|
|
||
|
36. What is the last year of the 20th century A.D.?
|
||
|
|
||
|
The A.D. (Latin, Anno Domini, In the Year of Our Lord) system was
|
||
|
devised before "origin 0 counting" was invented. The year during
|
||
|
which Jesus was (incorrectly) assumed to have been born was
|
||
|
numbered 1. (The preceding year was 1 B.C.) So the 1st century
|
||
|
was 1 to 100, the 2nd was 101 to 200, the 20th is 1901 to 2000.
|
||
|
This is standard terminology no matter how much some of you may
|
||
|
dislike it. However, "a" century is any span of 100 years; so if
|
||
|
you want to celebrate the end of "the century", meaning the
|
||
|
1900's, on December 31, 1999, nobody will stop you. It just
|
||
|
isn't the end of the "20th century A.D.".
|
||
|
|
||
|
37. I heard these stories about a dying child wanting
|
||
|
postcards/get-well cards/business cards to get in the Guinness
|
||
|
Book of World Records. Where can I post the address for people to
|
||
|
help?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Post it to "junk," or better yet, don't post it at all. The story
|
||
|
of the little boy keeps popping up, even though his mother and the
|
||
|
agencies involved have been appealing for people to stop. So many
|
||
|
postcards were sent (16 million +) that the agencies involved in
|
||
|
the effort don't know what to do with them, and the Guinness
|
||
|
people claim they will retire the category from the record books.
|
||
|
(See page 24 of the 29 July 1990 NY Times for an article on this.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you want to do something noble, donate the cost of a stamp and
|
||
|
postcard (or more) to a worthwhile charity like UNICEF or the
|
||
|
International Red Cross (Red Crescent/Red Magen David). There are
|
||
|
tens of thousands of children dying around the world daily, and
|
||
|
they could use more than a postcard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
38. I just heard about a scheme the FCC has to implement a tax on
|
||
|
modems! Where can I post a message so everyone will hear about
|
||
|
this and do something to prevent it?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Post it the same place as the articles in response to #37, above.
|
||
|
This is an old, old story that just won't die. Something like
|
||
|
this was proposed many YEARS back and defeated. However, the
|
||
|
rumor keeps spreading and people who hear about it for the first
|
||
|
time get all upset. Before posting stories like this, check with
|
||
|
the organizations involved (like the FCC) to see if the story is
|
||
|
true and current.
|
||
|
|
||
|
39. Is there a public access Unix system near me? How can I get
|
||
|
access to system for news and mail?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Phil Eschallier posts a list of open access Unix sites (he calls
|
||
|
them "Nixpub" sites) on a regular basis to the following
|
||
|
newsgroups: comp.misc and alt.bbs. Check his posting
|
||
|
for information on sites you can contact.
|
||
|
|
||
|
40. In rec.pets: My pet has suddenly developed the following symptoms
|
||
|
.... Is it serious? In sci.med: I have these symptoms .... Is it
|
||
|
serious?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Could be. The only way to tell for sure is to see an expert. The
|
||
|
network reaches a vast audience with considerable talent, but that
|
||
|
can never replace the expert observation and diagnosis of a
|
||
|
trained professional. Do yourself or your pet a big favor -- if
|
||
|
there is a problem, go see an appropriate practitioner. If there
|
||
|
is a serious problem, it is important that it is dealt with promptly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
41. I have this great idea to make money. Alternatively, wouldn't an
|
||
|
electronic chain letter be an nifty idea?
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a few words: don't even think about it. Trying to use the net
|
||
|
to make vast sums of money or send chain letters is a very bad
|
||
|
idea. First of all, it is an inappropriate use of resources, and
|
||
|
tends to use up vast amounts of net bandwidth. Second, such usage
|
||
|
of the net tends to produce extremely negative reactions by people
|
||
|
on the net, adding even more to the volume -- most of it directed
|
||
|
to you. Users, particular system admins, do not like that kind of
|
||
|
activity, and they will flood your mailbox with notices to that
|
||
|
effect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And last, and perhaps most important, some of this activity is
|
||
|
against the law in many places. In the US, you can (and will) be
|
||
|
reported by hacked-off system administrators for suspicion of wire
|
||
|
fraud or mail fraud. In one incident, at *least* a half dozen
|
||
|
people reported the poster to Postal Service inspectors; I'm not
|
||
|
sure what the outcome was, but it probably was not a nice
|
||
|
experience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bottom line: don't try clever schemes to sell things, solicit
|
||
|
donations, or run any kind of pyramid or Ponzi scheme. Also,
|
||
|
don't start or support electronic chain letters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
42. Where can I get archives of Usenet postings?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Most Usenet newsgroups are not archived in any organized fashion,
|
||
|
though it's likely that if you look hard enough someone will have
|
||
|
kept much or most of the traffic (either on disk or on some tape
|
||
|
gathering dust somewhere). The volume on Usenet is simply too
|
||
|
high to keep everything on rotating magnetic media forever,
|
||
|
however. The signal-to-noise ratio is too low in many groups to
|
||
|
make then good candidates for archiving.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One person's signal is another person's noise; if you're lucky,
|
||
|
you'll find someone who has been keeping the good parts of a
|
||
|
particular newsgroup in their own personal stash to save up for
|
||
|
later. How to get access to a group that *is* archived depends
|
||
|
on what kind of group it is:
|
||
|
|
||
|
* The "sources" and "binaries" groups are generally archived at
|
||
|
multiple sites; for more information about getting access to
|
||
|
them, see the posting entitled "Information about finding
|
||
|
sources" in comp.sources.wanted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* Some non-source newsgroups can be found by asking "archie"
|
||
|
about the group name. See the comp.sources.wanted posting
|
||
|
mentioned above for information about how to use "archie."
|
||
|
|
||
|
* In other groups, if the group has a Frequently Asked Questions
|
||
|
posting or another periodic posting about the group, check that
|
||
|
posting to see if it mentions where the group is archived. If
|
||
|
not, then you'll have to post a message in the newsgroup and
|
||
|
ask if it is archived anywhere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
Gene Spafford
|
||
|
NSF/Purdue/U of Florida Software Engineering Research Center,
|
||
|
Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN 47907-1398
|
||
|
Internet: spaf@cs.purdue.edu phone: (317) 494-7825
|