1218 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
1218 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 3, Number 43 10 November 1986
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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| _ |
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| / \ |
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| /|oo \ |
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| - FidoNews - (_| /_) |
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| _`@/_ \ _ |
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| International | | \ \\ |
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| FidoNet Association | (*) | \ )) |
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| Newsletter ______ |__U__| / \// |
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| / FIDO \ _//|| _\ / |
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| (________) (_/(_|(____/ |
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| (jm) |
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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Editor in Chief: Thom Henderson
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Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
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FidoNews is the official newsletter of the International FidoNet
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Association, and is published weekly by SEAdog Leader, node 1/1.
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You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
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FidoNews. Article submission standards are contained in the file
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ARTSPEC.DOC, available from node 1/1.
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Copyright (C) 1986, by the International FidoNet Association.
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All rights reserved. Duplication and/or distribution permitted
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for noncommercial purposes only. For use in other circumstances,
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please contact IFNA.
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The contents of the articles contained here are not our
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responsibility, nor do we necessarily agree with them.
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Everything here is subject to debate.
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Table of Contents
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1. EDITORIAL
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Double Dawns
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2. ARTICLES
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CompuServe's side of the story
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The Ultimate Utility
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HOW TO BUILD A BETTER NODELIST
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Net 109: The Saga Continues
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3. COLUMNS
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Doug's Column
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Off to a GREAT start!
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The Nautical View: The "Open BBS"
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4. NOTICES
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The Interrupt Stack
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Fidonews Page 2 10 Nov 1986
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=================================================================
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EDITORIAL
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=================================================================
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What a weekend! I just got back from three days in New
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Hampshire. Bob Hartman (132/101) hosted dual meetings of the
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Bylaws Committee and the Technical Standards Committee, and it
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was quite an experience. [Side note: Thanks, Bob, for a job well
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done!]
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I can't really say that a new day is dawning. First, because it
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isn't yet. Everything that got discussed will take awhile to get
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implemented. The technical stuff will probably go faster that
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the political stuff, but that's always the case. But also, it's
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more like two new days will be dawning at once.
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On the one side, we came up with some really nifty techie stuff
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that should have some impact on all of us and how we view this
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thing we've created. On the other side, we've finally launched
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the seeds of an organization that will hopefully be able to
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manage what we are growing into.
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I really know more about the techie side, since that's the
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committee I was on, and where I spent my time. But I did see a
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little of the bylaws side. Mainly from walking through to get a
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drink. The bylaws guys had a PC with dual monitors, a printer, a
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modem, buckets full of sodas and ice and stuff, and bags and bags
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of munchies. We techies toughed it out with nothing but too much
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fresh air and too few chairs.
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The technical changes are simple and devious. I'll frankly admit
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that it looks like a godawful horrible kludge at first. But the
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more I looked at it, the better it looked. I'll let Randy Bush
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(122/6) describe it in detail, since he's the chairman of the
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Technical Standards Committee who already has sensitive toes by
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now that don't really need any more tromping on for a bit.
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But briefly put, we came up with a fairly simple mechanism that
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will allow us to handle zones, points, gateways to different
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networks (like UseNet and ArpaNet), echomail, and much, much
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more. Kludge it may be, but it's simple and straightforward, and
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it allows darned near limitless possibilities. I'd never stick
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my neck out so far as to say that one technical fix can solve all
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present and future needs, but this one probably comes close to
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solving all of the problems that we'd ever have been able to
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handle anyway.
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And here's the good news: The change will be FULLY backwards
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compatible with existing software! It's essentially an extended
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addressing ability that current versions of Fido, Opus, SEAdog,
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TBBS, et al will preserve and transmit without even knowing that
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they're doing it. It should even be possible (though not
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terribly convenient) for you to enter messages using extended
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addresses with current software.
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Fidonews Page 3 10 Nov 1986
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It'll also be easy for you clonemakers out there to deal with it,
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since you can implement some, all, or none of it, as you wish.
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Now I guess I'd better deal with the political stuff. Like I
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said, I didn't see much of it. But from what I saw, everyone
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involved took it all quite seriously, and was very intent on
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seeing to it that everyone got a fair shake. I also gather that
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everyone is going to vote on it before it's fully accepted. So
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if you don't like it, vote it down and we'll lock them in a
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closet until they come up with something better.
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I haven't read the proposed bylaws yet, but I expect to soon. In
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fact, we have to get cracking on this, since the Colorado Springs
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group only gave us until January first to resolve all of this. I
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expect to get my copy soon, and I'll be shipping them out with
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FidoNews. In fact, next week's issue will probably be a special
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issue containing the proposed bylaws and not much else!
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I'm looking forward to reading what they came up with, even if it
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means wading through the legalese. I know all of them seemed
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pretty satisfied that they'd found an acceptable compromise. I
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don't expect it to be perfect; nothing in this world ever is.
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But I know they were wrangling with some pretty though issues,
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and I'm interested in seeing how they resolved them.
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So keep your eyes open for new software with new features, be
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watching for the proposed bylaws, and above all
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DON'T FORGET TO VOTE!
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Fidonews Page 4 10 Nov 1986
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=================================================================
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ARTICLES
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=================================================================
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Vince Perriello
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Fido 141/491
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Bill Roberts of the San Francisco DEC PC User's Group and I
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recently had a long conversation about CompuServe policies (you
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all know which ones we were discussing!). He was sufficiently
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interested to take it up with them; the following is the
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response he received, along with a few of his comments.
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COMPUSERVE INFORMATION SERVICE
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OFFICIAL STATEMENT ON COPYRIGHT POLICY
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October 1986
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[Note: The following statement currently is available on
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CompuServe. It appears to have been produced in response to
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recent questions and criticism concerning certain ambiguities in
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CompuServe's policy toward "public domain" software uploads. The
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following text may be obtained on CompuServe by entering GO
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COPYRIGHT at any ! prompt.]
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The CompuServe Information Service provides more than 400
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online products covering thousands of subject areas to its more
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than 300,000 subscribers.
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Material offered on the CompuServe Information Service
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originates with a wide variety of sources, ranging from creative
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public domain software programs uploaded by subscribers to
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multi-faceted databases provided by large corporations.
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The following information will address some commonly-asked
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questions about copyright and ownership of material, particularly
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as it relates to public domain information and shareware
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programs.
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--WHAT IS A COMPILATION COPYRIGHT?
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CompuServe has copyrighted the contents of the CompuServe
|
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Information Service as a compilation copyright, just as many
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magazines and newspapers reserve such a copyright on the contents
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of their publications. This copyright is held in accordance with
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||
the 1976 Copyright Act of the United States.
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A compilation copyright is granted when an organization
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||
collects information in a lawful way, adds value to it, and
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||
offers it to others. In this case, the CompuServe Information
|
||
Service is a value-added product; CompuServe Incorporated has
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||
committed substantial financial resources to collecting more than
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||
400 databases and offering them in an organized, structured way
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||
to a defined user base through a nationwide telecommunications
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||
network. The compilation copyright is intended to protect that
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||
Fidonews Page 5 10 Nov 1986
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substantial investment from unauthorized exploitation. This does
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NOT mean that CompuServe assumes ownership of individual programs
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and databases provided to the system by subscribers or
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information providers.
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--IF I UPLOAD A SOFTWARE PROGRAM I'VE DEVELOPED TO COMPUSERVE, DO
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I STILL RETAIN OWNERSHIP OF THE PROGRAM?
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Yes, you do. CompuServe's compilation copyright does NOT
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supersede individual ownership rights or copyrights to any of the
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material furnished to the Service by subscribers or information
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providers.
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For example, a subscriber who creates a program and uploads
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it to a CompuServe forum data library STILL OWNS that program,
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and may upload it to other information services and bulletin
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board systems.
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It should be noted, however, that CompuServe cannot grant
|
||
any redistribution rights for materials copyrighted by the
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||
author, unless specifically authorized to do so, CompuServe does
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not own the material or the copyright. These rights must be
|
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obtained directly from the author.
|
||
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--WHAT IS COMPUSERVE'S STANCE TOWARD COPYRIGHTED, PUBLIC DOMAIN,
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AND SHAREWARE PROGRAMS?
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Each of these types of property have special
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characteristics, and deserves separate explanation:
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COPYRIGHT. CompuServe does not allow copyrighted material
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to be placed on the CompuServe Information Service without the
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author's permission. Only the owner(s) or persons they
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specifically authorize may upload copyrighted material to the
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Service. Any subscriber may download copyrighted material for
|
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their own use. Any subscriber may also non-commercially
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redistribute a copyrighted program with the expressed permission
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of the owner or authorized person. Permission must be specified
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in the document, on the Service, or must be obtained directly
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from the author.
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PUBLIC DOMAIN. Any subscriber may upload public domain
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programs to the Service. Any subscriber may download public
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domain programs for their own use or non-commercially
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redistribute a public domain program.
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SHAREWARE. Only the owner or an authorized person may
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upload shareware programs. Any subscriber may download shareware
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programs for their own use, subject to the terms provided by the
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owner. Any subscriber may non-commercially redistribute a
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||
shareware program subject to the provided terms explicitly
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displayed in the software itself, or with permission of the owner
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or authorized person.
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See below for more information about redistribution guidelines.
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Fidonews Page 6 10 Nov 1986
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--AS A COMPUSERVE SUBSCRIBER, CAN I DOWNLOAD PUBLIC DOMAIN
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INFORMATION AND SHAREWARE PROGRAMS FOR MY OWN USE FROM COMPUSERVE
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FORUM DATA LIBRARIES?
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Yes, you can. Public domain information and shareware
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programs are uploaded to CompuServe data libraries by their
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authors for use by other CompuServe subscribers.
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--MAY I DOWNLOAD PROGRAMS FROM COMPUSERVE FORUM DATA LIBRARIES
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AND SHARE THEM WITH A FRIEND, OR UPLOAD THEM TO ANOTHER BULLETIN
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BOARD SYSTEM?
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In keeping with the spirit of the development of public
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domain information and shareware, it is not CompuServe's current
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||
policy to prevent casual redistribution of this type of
|
||
information -- this is low volume and low frequency use or
|
||
redistribution of information where no commercialism is involved.
|
||
This means that a customer may download a file and share it with
|
||
others for no commercial gain -- either via a bulletin board
|
||
service, diskette, or other means.
|
||
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A subscriber may not, however, download a large number of
|
||
files for redistribution via any means, nor is it acceptable for
|
||
a subscriber to update another bulletin board regularly with
|
||
files obtained from CompuServe.
|
||
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||
It's important to note that CompuServe cannot grant
|
||
redistribution rights for programs clearly copyrighted by the
|
||
author, unless specifically authorized to do so. Such permission
|
||
must be obtained directly from the author of the program.
|
||
|
||
--MAY I DOWNLOAD AND RESELL A PROGRAM FROM A COMPUSERVE FORUM
|
||
DATA LIBRARY?
|
||
|
||
Commercial exploitation of material contained on the
|
||
CompuServe Information Service is specifically prohibited by the
|
||
CompuServe Service agreement, to which each subscriber agrees
|
||
before being permitted to access the Service. Therefore,
|
||
subscribers cannot lawfully download and redistribute public
|
||
information or shareware programs for personal gain.
|
||
|
||
In addition, mass redistribution of public domain
|
||
information or shareware is also prohibited. Mass distribution
|
||
is defined as high frequency and/or high volume transfers.
|
||
|
||
--WHAT ARE THE PENALTIES FOR VIOLATING THE COMPILATION COPYRIGHT
|
||
OR SERVICE AGREEMENT PROVISIONS?
|
||
|
||
When a situation involving exploitation is brought to
|
||
CompuServe's attention, we investigate and, if warranted, remind
|
||
the violator of the terms of the Service Agreement. If
|
||
subsequent violations are reported, access to the CompuServe
|
||
Information Service may be terminated for the violator and, in
|
||
extreme cases, a letter is sent from our legal counsel asking
|
||
that he or she cease and desist, or risk further legal action.
|
||
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||
Fidonews Page 7 10 Nov 1986
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This is done as a positive step to protect the value and
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||
use of the material for CompuServe Information Service
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subscribers, and to discourage unauthorized redistribution of
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that material.
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||
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Thank you for using CompuServe!
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[END OF CI$ statement]
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[One user's commentary: From the above, it appears that
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CompuServe is grappling with finding some way to protect its
|
||
investment in establishing and maintaining a library of
|
||
user-supported materials. The recent adoption of a policy of not
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||
charging for upload time is a two-edged sword: it is both a boon
|
||
to the subscriber who goes to the trouble of uploading materials
|
||
to CompuServe and a clear way for CompuServe to show that it has
|
||
"paid" some consideration for the the material.
|
||
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||
However, nothing CompuServe may do can allow it to gather in
|
||
rights which have been scattered to the public domain. As a
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||
fundamental concept of intellectual property law, once something
|
||
is placed within the public domain, even the original author
|
||
cannot reclaim it.
|
||
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CompuServe would appear to be justified in its stance that it
|
||
holds a compilation copyright on its contents as a whole. It
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||
would be difficult to argue with this position because were it
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||
not the case, there would be little or no incentive for
|
||
CompuServe to offer the services which it does. Similarly, a
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||
number of sysops of hobbyist bulletin boards (FIDOs, etc.) have
|
||
clearly stated policies saying that they do not favor or permit
|
||
massive downloadings of files on their systems.
|
||
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CompuServe's concern appear to revolve around a need and desire
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||
to protect its contents from being "cloned" onto a competing
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||
commercial or non-commercial system. Unfortunately, the line
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||
between casual redistribution and "mass redistribution" or
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||
"updating another bulletin board regularly" is both ill-defined
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and subjective.
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||
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The CompuServe subscriber agreement is a much stronger protection
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||
for CompuServe than anything in copyright law. It gives
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||
CompuServe the simple right to suspend the subscription of anyone
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whom it believes is using its services in an undesirable manner.
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||
End of story.
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||
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It is unlikely that CompuServe or any other service, be it
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||
commercial or hobbyist supported, will survive very long unless
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||
it adds some perceived value for its users. CompuServe's value
|
||
lies in its providing a national network, extensive libraries
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||
(both public domain and proprietary), and a multi-user system
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||
available at all hours. While the hobbyist bulletin boards,
|
||
including FIDO and FIDO echomail, provide similar services, they
|
||
serve different (even if overlapping) user communities.
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||
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||
Carl Neiburger, professional journalist and editor of the Silicon
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||
Fidonews Page 8 10 Nov 1986
|
||
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Valley Rainbow newsletter, proposes a simple way in which anyone
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||
uploading material to CompuServe can protect his or her interest
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||
in the ownership and/or public domain status of the material
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||
being uploaded:
|
||
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||
"On the material I have uploaded to CompuServe so far,
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||
I have chosen one of these options:
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||
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||
1) Omitting any copyright, making it automatically public
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||
domain. As I understand it, CompuServe acknowledges that
|
||
public domain is public domain and that's that.
|
||
|
||
2) Attaching a copyright that, in effect, asserts authorship
|
||
but no financial control, i.e. "Free license is granted for
|
||
non-commercial use." That amounts to saying, "It's mine, but
|
||
I'm giving it away and you can give it away (but not sell
|
||
it), too." The idea is to allow broad distribution of these
|
||
programs, and I hope that CompuServe accepts this desire and
|
||
does not interfere with it.
|
||
|
||
Other people may and do upload software with their own
|
||
license restrictions. It seems to me that CompuServe's
|
||
policy on allowing downloading and distribution should be
|
||
governed by these licenses rather than the company's best
|
||
guess.
|
||
|
||
At the same time, of course, authors are obliged to be
|
||
realistic and up front about their licenses and
|
||
expectations, which I think they are. I have seen, "If you
|
||
like this program, send me $10'; I haven't seen, "You just
|
||
downloaded my program; send me $200."
|
||
|
||
In conclusion, it appears that CompuServe's only intent at the
|
||
moment is to restrict the wholesale downloading of materials on
|
||
its service for the specific purpose of placing those materials
|
||
in their collective entirety on a competing commercial or
|
||
non-commercial service. CompuServe's only practical means to
|
||
prevent this is to refuse the subscription of anyone who engages
|
||
in this practice. Authors of public domain and/or shareware
|
||
materials who desire additional assurances may place appropriate
|
||
copyright notices on their materials and/or upload their
|
||
materials to multiple commercial and non-commercial services thus
|
||
preventing the vesting of copyright ownership or control in
|
||
CompuServe.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
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||
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||
Fidonews Page 9 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Richard Epson
|
||
Fido 151/20
|
||
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||
The Ultimate Utility
|
||
|
||
|
||
After downloading a number of utilities for use with Fido, I have
|
||
found the best to be one that was created by Marshall Presnell and
|
||
Ben Mann (151/2) called Fido Utility 1.20 It is a collection of
|
||
useful utilities and because they are intergrated into one
|
||
"system" the ease of use is very apparent. I will try briefly to
|
||
describe the many "wonders" of this program, but it is necessary
|
||
to actually use Fido Utility to appreciate the power of this
|
||
package.
|
||
|
||
Fido Utility (FU) is a general purpose Fido utility package which
|
||
replaces or emulates the following packages:
|
||
|
||
- Killsrvr - scans the network message area and deletes all
|
||
messages from "Server."
|
||
|
||
- Lastuser - finds the last user of the system and prints it out
|
||
to std-out.
|
||
|
||
- Twituser - sets the TWIT attribute for the user specified on
|
||
the command line.
|
||
|
||
- Bounce - sends a network mail message back to the originator of
|
||
the message.
|
||
|
||
- Ricochet - allows you to forward messages to another user on
|
||
another node, similar to forwarding the message.
|
||
|
||
- Killto - kills messages in a specified message area TO a
|
||
specified user.
|
||
|
||
- Killfrom - kills messages in a specified message area FROM a
|
||
specified user.
|
||
|
||
- Waittime - waits until until a certain "real-time" specified on
|
||
the command line and exits.
|
||
|
||
- Wait - waits until the minute rolls-over so you will not have
|
||
multiple invokations of a 1-minute external event.
|
||
|
||
- Month - sets the errorlevel based on the current month.
|
||
|
||
- Userlist - lists all the users in the Fido user.bbs file. Many
|
||
options are available for listing passwords, access levels, etc.
|
||
|
||
- Weekday - returns an errorlevel based on the day of the week.
|
||
|
||
- Killrobt - scans the network message and deletes all messages
|
||
from "Robot."
|
||
|
||
- Status - displays a status report for your configuration of
|
||
Fidonews Page 10 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fido.
|
||
|
||
- Password - allows for changing a user's password without going
|
||
through the SysOp program.
|
||
|
||
- Setpriv - sets a user's privilege level to the one given on the
|
||
command line.
|
||
|
||
- Adopt removes the "ORPHAN" mark from one or all mail messages.
|
||
|
||
- Twix - scans the network message area and prints the messages
|
||
that have not been read yet. Options also exist for printing ALL
|
||
messages, also for NOT updating the "number of times read" flag
|
||
in the userlist.
|
||
|
||
- Robot - performs automated mailings of files. This version
|
||
also had an interactive mode for sending files.
|
||
|
||
- Sched - allows you to list, set, and query the Fido schedules
|
||
from a command line.
|
||
|
||
- Time - simply prints the time to standard output without a
|
||
carraige return.
|
||
|
||
- DTR - allows for the control of the DTR signal to you modem
|
||
from DOS.
|
||
|
||
- Task - is a "Timed Ask" facility for use in batch files. It
|
||
will time out unless you answer Y or N within the specified time
|
||
period. Error levels are returned based on the response (or lack
|
||
thereof).
|
||
|
||
- Log - allows you to maintain a sysem activity file with little
|
||
difficulty.
|
||
|
||
- Space - a utility to determine how much space is left on the
|
||
default disk drive. An option exists to set an error level based
|
||
on whether a certain amount of disk space is free.
|
||
|
||
- Datefile - utility to rename files based on the system date.
|
||
|
||
- Julian - utility to rename files based on the system date in
|
||
Julian form.
|
||
|
||
- Nodedata - prints information about a selected node
|
||
|
||
An added extra is that since all utilities print to "standard
|
||
output", they can be redirected anywhere a normal DOS function
|
||
can! This is true for all of the utilities except TASK.
|
||
|
||
AND new in Fido Utility version 1.20 is the Fido Utility
|
||
Environment settings which control the banner that FU prints as
|
||
it is started, and the format of the dates used in FU.
|
||
|
||
Now for the bad part - This package has been out across the Net
|
||
for months now and to date there are very very few registrations.
|
||
Fidonews Page 11 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Anyone who has seriously tried it I am sure will find it to be
|
||
much more valuable than the $15.00 registration fee. The public
|
||
distribution archive containing FU.EXE can be obtained from any
|
||
BBS which has it available. If you find (and I am sure you will)
|
||
FU to be of value to your BBS, Marshall and Ben request that you
|
||
register your copy with them so that they can supply updates and
|
||
enchancements.
|
||
|
||
There is also a structure in place for reporting "bugs" in Fido
|
||
Utility, answering questions, and making comments; If you have a
|
||
problem with FU, send a note with a detailed description of the
|
||
problem to Fido Node 151/3 (The Wizard Line). If the "To user:"
|
||
line is "FU BUGS", you will receive a reply much faster. Questions
|
||
can be sent to the user "FU QUEST", and comments to "FU CMT". The
|
||
bug reports will be consolidated and forwarded to Marshall. Also,
|
||
requests for a demo version of "Smartman", a 'smart fido message
|
||
manager' that is a commercial product by Marshall Presnell can be
|
||
sent to the user "SM REQ".
|
||
|
||
The latest version of Fido Utility is always available on the
|
||
Alert Data Fido (151/2) at (919) 274-5760. It is also available
|
||
on the Charlotte MetroNet (151/20) at (704) 541-8626.
|
||
|
||
The point is - it is an excellent utility program and deserves to
|
||
be seen and used, and the authors deserved to be compensated!
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 12 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Brian Walsh
|
||
From 109/640
|
||
|
||
|
||
Yet Another Nodelist Builder
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
NODEGEN.EXE
|
||
|
||
Yes I know what you are saying to yourself, why another
|
||
nodelist builder? Well first there was Listgen which was slow
|
||
and needed a Huge control file. It had updates that changed a
|
||
few things but then version 5.26.86 became obsolete because the
|
||
nodelist excceded it's limits. Second there is XLATLIST which a
|
||
faster than Listgen But It does still require a hefy control
|
||
file but doesn't relly offer anything new. Now there's NODEGEN!
|
||
Nodegen uses a VERY small control file, usually about 1K or
|
||
less, and has some interesting features as well as Being VERY
|
||
FAST. This being the first version of Nodegen and I want to make
|
||
it designed to suite Fido Sysops' needs so there are a few
|
||
things that aren't there that will be in version 1.1. I know you
|
||
are asking why then did you release this as version 1.0. Well
|
||
you see I wanted you to see it and run it and then make some
|
||
constructive critisism. The one feature that is new to the
|
||
nodelist builders is that you can restrict the nodelist.bbs to
|
||
your net only. The reason for that option being there is for the
|
||
Fido Sysops that are running off a IBM PCjr or just want to save
|
||
space and want to restrict the sending of mail. Another feature
|
||
that should probably be called an alteration/enhancement is the
|
||
way the NodeGEN creates the Fidolist.80 & Fidolist.132 files.
|
||
Before It was difficult to extract information from the listings
|
||
or performs types of database functions, but now you can. Also
|
||
Fidolist.80 is now an Indexed file in the respect that all you
|
||
have to do is read the margin to find the node you wanted.
|
||
Hopefully this package will be useful and used, but that again
|
||
is all up to you.
|
||
If you want to get NodeGEN you can:
|
||
|
||
File Request It Through Seadog anytime
|
||
Send a note & I'll file attach it to you
|
||
Call 109/640 and just download it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 13 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Minutes of the 4th
|
||
Fido Net 109 Sysops' Meeting
|
||
October 18, 1986
|
||
presented once again by
|
||
Michael Klein (109/610)
|
||
|
||
I received so many positive comments about my last compila-
|
||
tion of meeting notes that I decided to come back and do it
|
||
again. Chalk it up to masochism, if you prefer.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, the meeting was held on Saturday, October 18th,
|
||
1986 at Woodlake Towers in Falls Church, Virginia. In
|
||
attendance were Steven Ranger (621), Alexander Wall (606),
|
||
Robert Rudolph (628), Michael Wyrick and David Ross (both of
|
||
449), Michael Klein and David Schuetz (both of 610), Tom Tugman
|
||
(645), David Page (604), Jack Liebsch (605), Peter Thomas (622),
|
||
Alan Williams (647), Andrew Bilski (611), Sam Hargadine (115),
|
||
and Kurt Reisler, our illustrious coordinator and sysop of
|
||
both 109/74 and 109/483.
|
||
|
||
We got underway at about 1300 with introductions and a lot
|
||
of side conversations between individual sysops. Kurt started
|
||
the official meeting by telling us that we had 44 nodes in the
|
||
net, with 2 awaiting entry. By the end of the meeting, we had
|
||
45 in the net and 1 waiting, due to the node number assignment
|
||
of 647.
|
||
|
||
After the "State of the Network Address" from Kurt, we talked
|
||
about Kurt's trip to San Francisco and his meeting with Tom
|
||
Jennings. The question that most people had was answered quickly
|
||
when we listened to the tape of the DECUS meeting, at which Tom
|
||
stated that Fido version 12 will continue to be distributed as
|
||
it is currently, with no charge for hobbyists and $100 for
|
||
profit and private organizations. The documentation, however,
|
||
will cost money, since it is now professionally written, bound,
|
||
typeset, and all that fancy printing stuff. He could not
|
||
say, however, what was going on with a membership fee in the
|
||
network, since that's the administrator's territory.
|
||
|
||
When asked whether Fido versions will become more reliable
|
||
and stable due to this new rewrite, Tom explained in no
|
||
uncertain terms that the versions change like mad, and will
|
||
continue to do so.
|
||
|
||
From there, we moved on to local topics, such as certain
|
||
nodes with modem and line problems, and who couldn't connect
|
||
to whom for whatever reasons. We also discussed the problem
|
||
of DoubleDos crosslinking File Allocation Tables, and the
|
||
only solution offered (and the only one that will work) was
|
||
not to try to write the same file from both partitions at once.
|
||
In other works, renumbering message area 1 while there's someone
|
||
on the board is a definite no-no. Andrew Bilski (611) once
|
||
again offered his problem that Fido, while it usually catches
|
||
and handles device specifications as filenames (i.e. "T COM1:"),
|
||
does not do so properly under DoubleDos. No solution to this
|
||
was reached.
|
||
Fidonews Page 14 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
The next topic of conversation was SeaDog, which was
|
||
explained and praised by David Page (604), who also explained
|
||
some of the possible future implementations of the program. He
|
||
talked about the features of SeaDog, and offered to help anyone
|
||
install it once they get it.
|
||
|
||
The meeting soon rolled around to the topic of donations and
|
||
the ways in which various sysops regulate the use of their
|
||
systems. Andrew Bilski (611) asks his users (through the
|
||
Editorial) for donations, also letting them know that their
|
||
access will in no way be hindered by not sending any money.
|
||
He has received many donations, with $100 of it going to Tom
|
||
for Fido. Alex Wall (606) said that he gives normal access to
|
||
anyone who doesn't send in any donations, with a raise to Privel
|
||
for a $5 donation, and Extra for a $10 donation. In both cases,
|
||
it seems, people have been more than willing to send in money to
|
||
help cover the cost and expenses of running a Fido system.
|
||
|
||
We then discussed the ways in which people back up their hard
|
||
drives. This is a crucial step in running any kind of changing
|
||
system, since hard disk failures are often sudden and severe.
|
||
The two most popular backup utilities, aside from just straight
|
||
copy-restore techniques, are DataCare and Fastback. Both are
|
||
nice and fast at backing up, the difference being that DataCare
|
||
backs up without compression, and the DOS RESTORE command must
|
||
be used to recover the data onto the hard disk. Fastback has
|
||
its own restore function, which allows for compression of data
|
||
(so it takes up about half-3/4 of what it normally would on
|
||
floppies) and quick restoring. Andrew Bilski and I advocated
|
||
Fastback, while Robert Rudolph said that he'll stand by
|
||
DataCare.
|
||
|
||
Now that we'd gotten the old brain cells whirring, we went
|
||
into a biggie: How to switch over to XLATLIST and ROUTEGEN
|
||
without screwing up. Jack Liebsch (605), our resident Routing
|
||
Doctor, now sends out all routing files in ROUTEGEN format,
|
||
which was found to be more flexible (not to mention the fact
|
||
that LISTGEN has gone to the great House of Obsolescence) in
|
||
the route file structure. Kurt put up a sample XLATLIST
|
||
control file (his own) on his system for people to download
|
||
and modify, and I haven't heard any reports of trouble over
|
||
the conversion.
|
||
|
||
Someone then came up with a question about 9600 baud modems.
|
||
Kurt says that he has two of them, but never even bothered to
|
||
unpackage them. They cannot communicate at anything other
|
||
than 9600 baud, making them well nigh impractical. It was
|
||
decided that they might be quite useful on inbound and outbound
|
||
hosts, but for the most part, due to the fact that they're not
|
||
in wide use as of yet, they're not much good to us right now.
|
||
|
||
Echomail was the next topic of discussion. Kurt, as the
|
||
SYSOP and IFNA hub, took down the node numbers of those who
|
||
wanted to be added to those two areas. We also discussed
|
||
the latest version (1.36) of Echomail and the general opinion
|
||
seemed to be that it's more trouble to implement that it's
|
||
Fidonews Page 15 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
worth in added features. Michael Wyrick (449), Michael Klein
|
||
(guess who), and David Schuetz (co-sysop of 610) presented
|
||
their plan for a new program called DirectMail, which works
|
||
differently from the Echomail concept, and allows netwide
|
||
messages between individual users. (Editor's note: The
|
||
program, at this stage, is approximately 3/4 of the way
|
||
finished. Look for it at a theater near you in about three
|
||
weeks).
|
||
|
||
We then talked about in-net routing, and the use of our
|
||
NCR (No-Cost Routing) system. Jack Liebsch (605) will continue
|
||
to serve as our Routing Guru. Net 109, being in a rather odd
|
||
local/long distance area code breakdown (which I won't go into
|
||
here for fear of a migraine), has a very odd routing scheme,
|
||
but Jack seems to have kept it straight so far. An idea was
|
||
suggested (and has been thought about for a long time) to
|
||
have the numerous Baltimore nodes split off and form their
|
||
own net, which would ease routing and take a few nodes off
|
||
Kurt's back. That one's still up in the air.
|
||
|
||
By now, it was about 1530, and the question was posed as
|
||
to whether anyone had anything else to say. Surprisingly
|
||
enough, nobody did, so we scheduled the next meeting for
|
||
sometime in the middle of November and called it a day.
|
||
|
||
Meeting adjourned.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 16 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
COLUMNS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Doug Mohney
|
||
Fido 109/74 "The Bear's Den"
|
||
|
||
Doug's Column
|
||
|
||
IF THEY CAN DO IT, SO CAN I: Look at Dvorak, Webster,
|
||
and Pournelle. All of them write about computers, but let's
|
||
face facts: Everyone and their grandmother cuddles up to
|
||
them to get Good Press, sending them free computers and
|
||
software to review, going out on magazine-funded junkets to
|
||
strip bars in Atlanta (Dvorak), and not knowing anything
|
||
about computers.
|
||
|
||
Think I'm kidding? Ok: How many common users do you
|
||
know who use S-100 buses and have the fantasy of seeing
|
||
Concurrent CP/M becoming the operating system of the 80s'
|
||
in 1986. That's ok; Mr. Pournelle writes Science FICTION.
|
||
|
||
I have this urge to write. So I'm writing
|
||
a column; if I'm lucky, lots of software companies will
|
||
send me free software to review and the FidoNews will fund
|
||
my junket to Comdex/Atlanta. If not, I'll keep on writing
|
||
just to make people think.
|
||
|
||
WHO AM I?: I'm a college student at the U. of Maryland
|
||
(the place where the basketball player died), don't use
|
||
drugs, and am the president of the Personal Computing
|
||
Association. PCA is an undergraduate user group. I keep
|
||
on getting elected Pres because I do all the paperwork.
|
||
|
||
I also use/apply/poke around with IBM-PCs, Macs, Apple
|
||
//es, Atari STs, VAXen, HP3000s, and IBM 4341s. Most of my
|
||
useful work is done on micros, and I don't claim to be
|
||
a hacker or an expert on anything. I am a USER, and proud
|
||
of it. I've written some docs, put on two computer shows,
|
||
and got DEC to donate a MicroVAX I to PCA. And I don't
|
||
use drugs.
|
||
|
||
GOSSIP TIME: All good columnists either A) Give good
|
||
gossip, B) Review products or C) Talk about products and
|
||
then speculate about the latest products (Gossip). I'll
|
||
pass on my tidbits, then rip on companies.
|
||
|
||
Green Berets Use Macs: I went to a dPub
|
||
"seminar" at a local Apple dealer. A whole 4 people showed
|
||
up, including an enlisted man from Special Forces. After
|
||
the Apple rep had finished his sermon on dPub, the Beanie
|
||
and I played with the Abatron 300 dpi scanner, and talked
|
||
for a little.
|
||
The Beanies, due to their unique "mission" in the Army,
|
||
write their own manuals, using Tempest Macs
|
||
and PageMaker. The grunt was running around trying to find
|
||
Fidonews Page 17 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
a high-quality scanner to feed lots of pictures through and
|
||
asking hard questions on delivery (ASAP) and price.
|
||
|
||
OTHER GOODIE: My friends, 2nd generation hackers who
|
||
are Indian/Chinese and eat pizza, keep on muttering
|
||
about building a lap-top UNIX machine with 68020, SCSI, 40
|
||
Meg hard-drive and Ethernet. Wish they'd hire me to market
|
||
it, but I have no idea who'd need one: NASA or NSA? Hope
|
||
they're nice and let me beta-test or review it. Naw.
|
||
|
||
RUDE COMMENTS HERE: AT&T has stated it is getting out
|
||
of general micro sales. Hahahahahaha. They never started.
|
||
Example: PCA tried to get an AT&T
|
||
rep to talk about machines. No call back. No mail.
|
||
We sent in an application for an equipment grant via
|
||
registered mail. No phone call. No mail. This from a
|
||
company who helped develop the nation's phone system. Uh
|
||
huh.
|
||
|
||
AT&T sells (sold?) 6300s through the computer store
|
||
at Maryland. Amount of advertising in school newspaper
|
||
for AT&T long-distance:
|
||
Massive. Amout of advertising for 6300: Nada. This on a
|
||
campus where Apple is spending lots of money on gimmicky
|
||
promos and IBM doesn't have to advertise 'cuz they
|
||
donated 600+ machines.
|
||
|
||
DEEP STATEMENT: The 8-bit world is dead. At
|
||
Computerfest '86, there were plenty of Amigas, some
|
||
Atari ST's. Half the room was PC-DOS/MS-DOS. Some Mac.
|
||
No Apple //. No Atari 8-bit. Few C-64 groups.
|
||
|
||
I think Atari will own the $1,000 (full system
|
||
price) market by Summer '87. Current price for an
|
||
Apple //e box, with 128K card, no drives, no monitor
|
||
is $599. A 520ST with 1 drive, mono monitor, and
|
||
built-in serial, parallel, DMA, and MIDI is $495.
|
||
Which would you buy, ignoring the technical superiority
|
||
of 6502 vs 68000, 128K vs 512K RAM, and 360K 3 1/2"
|
||
vs 128K 5 1/4"? Trying to compare the C-64 to the ST
|
||
isn't even funny. Oops. Forgot the ST has a mouse.
|
||
|
||
MOST STUPID COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT: HP's showing
|
||
various Yuppies stepping out of the shower,
|
||
leaping over floor waxers, and stopping their sports
|
||
cars in the middle of nowhere because they have found
|
||
"The Answer". Which one of them had the brainstorm for
|
||
the HP150? Or the slow hard disk in the speedy Vectra?
|
||
|
||
It's going to take more than commercials to keep
|
||
HP from becoming a glorified printer maker; a lot of
|
||
accounts which have run out of firepower on the 3000
|
||
series are upgunning to IBM or VAX. If anyone has seen
|
||
an installed Spectrum running MPE at a customer
|
||
site, send me mail.
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 18 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
OK, YOUR TURN: If you want to reach me, send me
|
||
FidoMail to Doug Mohney at 109/74. Or call me at
|
||
(301) 350-1437. Good gossip or demo copies of anything
|
||
welcome. Money not refused (although if I get real
|
||
successful, I may have to give a cut to my SYSOP at
|
||
109/74).
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 19 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jerry Hindle
|
||
123/6 123/0
|
||
MemphisNet
|
||
2400 baud MAX
|
||
901-353-4563
|
||
|
||
Well, since I wrote the article explaining exactly what I was
|
||
trying to do in setting up a software distribution node, I have heard
|
||
from and been called by a LOT of you out there. I have received calls
|
||
from Australia, the UK, Sweden, Canada, and from all over the US.
|
||
|
||
As I explained in that article, I am attempting to set up a
|
||
distribution node for the LATEST in Fido software and related support
|
||
programs and utilities. To date I have been sent over 30 files for
|
||
this area alone and have been sent messages requesting I pick up
|
||
certain files from either this node or that node. I attempt to do so
|
||
in as many cases as possible, but I simply cannot stand the LONG
|
||
DISTANCE for too much longer. I will eventually get to you if you
|
||
asked me to get your program and please be patient, I am working as
|
||
fast as I can.
|
||
|
||
Now on to other things.....namely, the programs in the
|
||
distribution area. I have over 130 files now ranging from utilities
|
||
that will let you customize your menus to EchoMail version to
|
||
Mailcost version 1.4 to the latest in a variety of other system
|
||
utilities and support programs. I am overwhelmed by the response you
|
||
have shown by this and I guess it could be deemed a huge success by
|
||
these standards alone, however, now I face another problem. I am
|
||
being barraged by requests for me to send the files out on disk to
|
||
this net or that one to save them on the LONG DISTANCE charges. I
|
||
will ATTEMPT to do so ONLY in the case of INTERNATIONAL callers and
|
||
then only if they will agree to send me a box of disks to copy the
|
||
files onto and a mailer (stamped and addressed to themselves) to mail
|
||
them back in. Again I can't afford all the disks this could possibly
|
||
cost me even though I pay only $29 per hundred in bulk less sleeves.
|
||
I mean the postage alone on a box of ten disks suitably packaged for
|
||
mailing would run about $2 or $3. I will either format them here in
|
||
IBM 360k format, or you can format them and tell me what format they
|
||
are in so I can copy the files over to them. Right now the entire
|
||
distribution area is almost 3 MEG and growing. I can also FASTBACK
|
||
(tm) the files to disks for you if you want to and can restore them
|
||
to a hard drive. I do not however trust the DOS back-up command too
|
||
much so I will have to shy away from that format.
|
||
|
||
In Fastback (tm) format it takes about 7 disks to do
|
||
In copy format it takes about 10 disks to do
|
||
|
||
ALL files are ARCED (tm) and will un-arc using arc512 (which I
|
||
can also provide as a regular file)
|
||
|
||
If you wish me to send you these files on disk then here is what
|
||
you do:
|
||
|
||
Send me a box of disks (you will receive them ALL back) and a
|
||
self-addressed STAMPED mailer big enough to hold them all to:
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 20 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jerry Hindle
|
||
P.O. Box 16223
|
||
Memphis, TN 38186-0223
|
||
U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
I will copy over the files and send them back free of any other
|
||
charges. If you do send a donation though, I will forward it on to
|
||
IFNA. I do ask that you send me a few files (I will keep those that I
|
||
need for the distribution area) on the disks when you send them to
|
||
me. This way the distribution area will constantly grow so that Fido
|
||
and FidoNet can continue to grow with it. One last point. I cannot be
|
||
selective in what files I send out, I simply copy the file area over
|
||
to disk and mail them out. That way you get EVERYTHING I have here on
|
||
the day I get the disks ! But remember it is always growing so.....
|
||
|
||
I also have EVERY ISSUE of FidoNews here too ! I have them in
|
||
two formats, the second of which will interest those with a LARGE
|
||
Commodore userbase. The first format is ARC, issue by issue. The
|
||
second is also ARC, BUT it is a NEW ARC program for the Commodore 64
|
||
that is Public Domain. These files are almost as small as the IBM arc
|
||
versions of the same files and I will provide them along with the
|
||
program for the Commodore to un-arc them with ! The NEWS files I can
|
||
provide in either IBM disk format OR Commodore 1541 disk format (if
|
||
you have one of those). The IBM format is ready to place ON-LINE for
|
||
users to d/l to their Commodores since all are converted to Commodore
|
||
ASCII format and then ARCED with the Commodore ARC program. I cannot
|
||
IBM arc these since the two programs (IBM version and Commodore
|
||
version) are SO CLOSE in operation that the only difference I find is
|
||
in the ARC file header. If I IBM ARC these files then they will be
|
||
corrupted, thus I sent them as standard IBM files. All FidoNews
|
||
issues in Commodore format are compliments of Mr. Mike Gordon (one of
|
||
my hard core supporters) and I wish to thank him for making the
|
||
conversions in the text and ARC services on his Commodore.
|
||
|
||
If you have any questions about the Commodore ARC program or its
|
||
operation you can netmail Mike Gordon or myself at 123/6.
|
||
|
||
Again......Thank you for the tremendous response you have shown
|
||
in having a distribution node. I have not heard from IFNA or anyone
|
||
associated with it in regards to it impact or even it's usefulness as
|
||
a system, but I think they would not mind. If they are reading this I
|
||
would like to APPLY for listing under the International FidoNet
|
||
Association as the "official" support distribution node, in the
|
||
nodelist. I think this way the net will know that I carry as much
|
||
Fido stuff as I can lay my hands on and they can be 80% certain to be
|
||
able to get it here when they call.
|
||
|
||
Authors postscript.....If I do receive any funds from this for
|
||
copy services I will forward them on to IFNA for their use.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 21 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Joe Lindstrom
|
||
Fido 134/1
|
||
Calgary, AB
|
||
|
||
+=================+
|
||
!The Nautical View!
|
||
+=================+
|
||
|
||
Part 3: The "Open BBS"
|
||
|
||
|
||
I realize that this column is normally Commodore oriented. I
|
||
am a Commodore owner, but I am also a sysop of a local BBS ("The
|
||
Flight Deck", 403-235-1659). There is a phenomenon occuring that
|
||
deserves comment: the concept of the "open BBS".
|
||
|
||
I've heard about this spreading throughout the U.S., and in
|
||
fact some areas have nothing but "open boards". What I mean by
|
||
this is a board in which all you must do to gain full access is
|
||
type your name. No security checks, no nothin'. Generally, the
|
||
boards here in Calgary are NOT open boards (the Calgary Fido
|
||
being one of the few exceptions). This, in my opinion, is the
|
||
way it SHOULD be! What sysop in his or her right mind would
|
||
allow any person to logon and have full access? I just can't see
|
||
it. To illustrate my point, I'll relate the story of a board
|
||
here in town called "The Means of Escape". This was an open
|
||
board, whereby all you had to do was call. If you weren't an
|
||
established user, it gave you an ID# and a password, so that
|
||
nobody else could logon as you. It did not work. Soon there was
|
||
chaos. Twits logging on and bad-mouthing the board and/or the
|
||
sysop and/or one or more of the users. Pirates advertising their
|
||
"warez". Users impersonating other users and saying things
|
||
uncomplimentary. Etc. Etc. All the while I was maintaining a
|
||
public debate with the sysop. He argued that a BBS should be
|
||
"open", and that intelligent conversations could occur. His
|
||
opinion only, since all I ever saw was name-calling and mud-
|
||
slinging. Worst of all, there were practically NO users who used
|
||
their real names: all handles, so you could never go on to one of
|
||
the more intelligent boards and say "So and so did this", because
|
||
you never know who so and so is! Anyway, "The Means of Escape"
|
||
is BBS history now. The world is a better place without it.
|
||
|
||
This is the policy on my BBS. You, the new user, call up. On
|
||
the opening prompt, you are asked to enter your name. The board
|
||
then checks to see if you exist, and if not, displays the
|
||
application information. When applying, you MUST provide your
|
||
real name, real phone number, what city you live in, and a
|
||
password for future use. After 24 to 48 hours, you'll be
|
||
validated. I look over the names of prospective new users, and
|
||
any that I'm suspicious of get a phone call. I've managed to
|
||
"intercept" dozens of hoax names, and I'm damn glad of it. As a
|
||
result, the conversations on my board tend to be of a more
|
||
sophisticated level. None of this "My computer rules! Your's
|
||
sucks!" crap. We talk about a LOT of things, and mild profanity
|
||
IS allowed. Wanna know something? People rarely use it. They
|
||
KNOW that their real names are attached to anything they write,
|
||
Fidonews Page 22 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
and if the profanity is abusive, they are warned (further
|
||
infractions result in their accounts being turfed). Although
|
||
some of the humour encountered is rather "bent" (we've got a
|
||
troupe of older gentlemen who are a tad bizarre), it isn't
|
||
anything to be ashamed of.
|
||
|
||
There are numerous other boards in town who operate this way.
|
||
Long before I began running my own BBS, when I first got my
|
||
modem, I tried calling every board in town every day. This
|
||
became cumbersome after awhile, so I started dropping some
|
||
boards. Most of the ones I dropped were of the "open" or
|
||
"handles only" variety. Don't get me wrong: there ARE some
|
||
boards where handles are allowed and intelligent conversations
|
||
happen: boards like Fly By Wire, Calgary Fido, Flight Service
|
||
Station, and a few others. These are the exception to the rule,
|
||
however. My opinion boils down to this: as a general rule,
|
||
boards that allow handles or are of the "open" variety aren't
|
||
worth bothering with. They generally attract users of the
|
||
"immature" level, and that just isn't for me. I fail to
|
||
comprehend the reasoning behind the "open" or "handles only"
|
||
boards. Is there anyone out there who can explain it to me? If
|
||
so, please submit a reply to the FidoNews, as I am MOST
|
||
interested in hearing it. For now, I will cut this short. Till
|
||
we meet again: ciao fer niao, and let's do the lunch thing REAL
|
||
soon!
|
||
|
||
|
||
I'm interested in answering any of your questions about either
|
||
the 64 or 128. If you are having a problem, please address your
|
||
mail to Joe Lindstrom via Calgary Fido (Net 134 Node 1), and I'll
|
||
address it in an upcoming article. If you would like to contact
|
||
me in person, I run a 300 baud BBS ("The Flight Deck") at
|
||
403-235-1659.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 23 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
NOTICES
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Are there any Fidos with an interface to Bitnet?
|
||
If so, would you let Bill Allbritten, 11/301
|
||
know? If our university could tie in in a modest
|
||
way in this manner, I would be very appreciative.
|
||
Thanks.
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The Interrupt Stack
|
||
|
||
|
||
23 Nov 1986
|
||
Twenty-third anniversary of Doctor Who.
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 24 10 Nov 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
__
|
||
The World's First / \
|
||
BBS Network /|oo \
|
||
* FidoNet * (_| /_)
|
||
_`@/_ \ _
|
||
| | \ \\
|
||
| (*) | \ ))
|
||
______ |__U__| / \//
|
||
/ Fido \ _//|| _\ /
|
||
(________) (_/(_|(____/ (jm)
|
||
|
||
Charter Membership for the International FidoNet Association
|
||
|
||
Membership in IFNA is open to any individual or organization that
|
||
pays an annual specified membership fee. IFNA serves the
|
||
international FidoNet-compatible electronic mail community to
|
||
increase worldwide communications.**
|
||
|
||
|
||
Name _________________________________ Date ________
|
||
Address ______________________________
|
||
City & State _________________________
|
||
Country_______________________________
|
||
Phone (Voice) ________________________
|
||
|
||
Net/Node Number ______________________
|
||
Board Name____________________________
|
||
Phone (Data) _________________________
|
||
Baud Rate Supported___________________
|
||
Board Restrictions____________________
|
||
Special Interests_____________________
|
||
______________________________________
|
||
______________________________________
|
||
Is there some area where you would be
|
||
willing to help out in FidoNet?_______
|
||
______________________________________
|
||
______________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Send your membership form and a check or money order for $25 to:
|
||
|
||
International FidoNet Association
|
||
P. O. Box 41143
|
||
St Louis, Missouri 63141, 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
|
||
in formation and BYLAWS are presently being prepared by an
|
||
International Rules Committee. Membership requirements and fees
|
||
are subject to approval of this Committee. An IFNA Echomail
|
||
Conference has been established on FidoNet to assist the BYLAWS
|
||
Committee. We welcome your input on this Conference.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|