3465 lines
163 KiB
Plaintext
3465 lines
163 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 6, Number 26 26 June 1989
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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: Vince Perriello
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Editors Emeritii: Dale Lovell
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Thom Henderson
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Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
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FidoNews is published weekly by the International FidoNet
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Association as its official newsletter. You are encouraged to
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submit articles for publication in FidoNews. Article submission
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standards are contained in the file ARTSPEC.DOC, available from
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node 1:1/1. 1:1/1 is a Continuous Mail system, available for
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network mail 24 hours a day.
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Copyright 1989 by the International FidoNet Association. All
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rights reserved. Duplication and/or distribution permitted for
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noncommercial purposes only. For use in other circumstances,
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please contact IFNA at (314) 576-4067. IFNA may also be contacted
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at PO Box 41143, St. Louis, MO 63141.
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Fido and FidoNet are registered trademarks of Tom Jennings of
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Fido Software, 164 Shipley Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94107 and
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are used with permission.
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We don't necessarily agree with the contents of every article
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published here. Most of these materials are unsolicited. No
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article will be rejected which is properly attributed and legally
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acceptable. We will publish every responsible submission
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received.
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Table of Contents
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1. EDITORIAL ................................................ 1
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2. ARTICLES ................................................. 2
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Policy 4: FidoNet now a Nazi Dictatorship? ............... 2
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The Old Frog's Almanac - TopicX on the job! .............. 7
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National Teachers Training Competition ................... 12
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Official report on Eurocon III ........................... 14
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FidoNet Policy -- Why Bother? ............................ 24
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A View From Outside? ..................................... 26
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Universal Mayhem Gains Strength .......................... 28
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Stepping Lightly through the Hornet's Nest ............... 31
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Proposal for a Public Nodelist ........................... 37
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And more!
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 1 26 Jun 1989
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=================================================================
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EDITORIAL
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=================================================================
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I wanted to write an editorial this week. I sat down and wrote
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about half of one. Then I decided that it wouldn't make a damned
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bit of difference and deleted the text.
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You people going around calling others jerks should consider that
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it's all a matter of perspective who the heroes and villains are
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in this network. How about giving FidoNet some thought for a
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change?
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Nahhhhh.
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Phooey!
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 2 26 Jun 1989
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=================================================================
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ARTICLES
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=================================================================
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FidoNet hits ANOTHER New Low!
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by Phil Buonomo, 1:107/583 (at least until the RC's read this)
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(By the way, this may be some sort of record! TWO "New Lows" in
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a month!)
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Well, I do believe the world may be coming to an end.
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I actually AGREE with Jim Grubs on something! ;-)
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This past week, many of you received a number of messages
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protesting the institution of Policy 4 by the RC's. These
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messages were HOST ROUTED by Jim Grubs. This is commonly called
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a 'bombing run', and for those unfamiliar with it, is considered
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'impolite', the theory being that if you're going to send out
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several hundred messages, you shouldn't make the routing points
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pay for distribution of your note, it should go on YOUR dime.
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This has happened in the past, particularly in Net 107, where
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there are over 200 nodes. What usually happens is the offending
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party (usually ignorant of this rule) gets a couple of nastygrams
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from NC's and RC's, and promises not to do it again.
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Sometimes a Policy Complaint is filed, and the node promises not
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to do it again.
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End of discussion.
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Unfortunately, Jim Grubs was unaware of this 'gentlemens
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agreement' and routed his messages, which contained serious
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questions regarding Policy 4 and the RC's alleged grab for power.
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Hal DuPrie rightfully filed a policy complaint, though I expect
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he too, thought JG would be told not to do it again, that JG
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would apologize, and that would be the end of it.
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This sparked a discussion between Jim Grubs and Steve Bonine, the
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RC of Jim's region. Jim admitted that he was unfamiliar with
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said 'bombing run' rules. Unfortunately, in that discussion,
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Grubs questioned the legitimacy of Policy 4, and implied that it
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was illegal in nature, and would not be followed.
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Steve Bonine then removed him from this week's nodelist.
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That action is patently ridiculous, and for those who know him in
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his region, patently Bonine. (I invite others in his region to
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corroborate this. Perhaps the Net who's NC was almost removed
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for not bowing down to his demands concerning nodelist entries
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BEFORE the deadline will step forward.)
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Mere statements made in the heat of the moment should not be
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actionable. It is the ACTION that should be considered illegal,
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and for Bonine to remove Jim Grubs because he disagrees with
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 3 26 Jun 1989
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Policy 4 is ABSURD in the EXTREME.
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What's next? Randy Bush is to be excommunicated because he
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published anti-Policy 4 articles? Watch out, Randy!
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From FNEWS622:
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Date: 15 May 89 10:04:16
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From: Randy Bush of 105/6
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To: David Dodell 1/0
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Subj: Formal Objection to Proposed Method of Policy-4
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Ratification
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David,
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I hereby file a formal objection to and complaint about the
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method by which you, the IC/ZC and the RCs, are attempting to
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put a new FidoNet policy, Policy-4, in place.
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You have unilaterally declared that it will be ratified by a
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procedure described for the first time within the document
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itself, and not by the procedure(s) in place now, before the
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document is accepted.
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Policies 1 through 3 were adopted by a consensus of the net as a
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whole, and P3 was subsequently (though irrevelantly, IMHO)
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ratified by IFNA. At the time Policy-3 was adopted, it was
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assumed that time would require new policy, and the the new
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policy would be adopted by means similar to that of Policies
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1-3.
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If and only if Policy-4 is accepted, then the procedure outlined
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in Policy-4 is appropriate for adopting a Policy-5 or whatever.
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But, there is absolutely no grounds under current FidoNet policy
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and procedures for Policy-4 to be adopted by just the *Cs.
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I formally object, and deny your right to use such procedures,
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and deny the validity of any policy purportedly adopted by such
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a means.
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randy (with apologies for being a stickler as usual)
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Well, speaking from 1:107/583 (for now, anyway), this is Phil
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Buonomo (who has also called Jim Grubs a "no good bastard" in the
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past, but hates to see ANYBODY get the shaft from the
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establishment) forwarding this discussion to you, directly from
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Jim Grubs:
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* Forwarded from 1:234/1, Private Node - No Trespassing,
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Sylvania OH
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* Originally to Steve Bonine, 1:115/777
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* Forwarded by Jim Grubs, 1011/1, 13:44 6/22
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> cc: Pete White
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> David Dodell
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> Jim Dunmyer
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 4 26 Jun 1989
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>
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>>cc: Pete White <R16C>, David Dodell, Steve Bonine, Jim Dunmyer
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>> Jim,
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>> I have all the information regarding the Policy Complaint
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>> filed by Hal DuPrie at 101/0. I feel the complaint is
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>> fully justified as the `bombing run' has always been
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>> considered `exceedingly annoying'.
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>JG> I already conceded in my messages to Mr. Dunmyer that I was
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>JG> in error about my interpretation of the meaning of the
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>JG> rules on bombing runs. As to the comment about Mr.
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>JG> Duprie's attitude on demcocracy, that is my interpretation
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>JG> of his words and actions. I'm entitled to my opinion, which
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>JG> remains unchanged.
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>JG> The question which remains unanswered is the legitimacy of
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>JG> Policy 4. You can neither excommunicate nor canonize
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>JG> under a policy document that was not legally adopted.
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>JG> The rules under which it was adopted were made up
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>JG> unilaterally as the process went along. Furthermore, I was
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>JG> not a part of the process. The *C's can enter into all
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>JG> the agreements among themselves they want to. They can't
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>JG> force people who were not a party to that agreement to
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>JG> comply with it. I could organize a bunch of sysops and
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>JG> 'pass' Policy 7-requiring the *C's to wear mirrored
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>JG> eyeshades and carry nerf bats, too. So, what? Do as you
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>JG> wish. You will anyway.
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>JG> 73 de Jim Grubs, W8GRT
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> I am accepting the above message as an affirmation of your
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> desire to terminate your relationship with FidoNet, since you
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> do not wish to observe FidoNet policy. I will remove your
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> nodelist entry, effective immediately. Thank you for your
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> past contributions to FidoNet, many of which have been
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> positive. Should you have a change of heart, and decide that
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> you are willing to be bound by FidoNet policy, please re-apply
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> for a node number.
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I am willing to observe and comply with Fidonet policy. What I
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deny is that Policy 4 IS Fidonet policy. It was not adopted
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legally. You are attempting to make it "legal" by bludgeoning
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all dissenters. It is THAT attempt that I repudiate. If you have
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Policy 4 ratified by a referendum of ALL Fidonet sysops, you'll
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have my full suport. Until then, forget it.
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73 de Jim Grubs, W8GRT
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----------
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* Forwarded from 1:234/100, EchoMaster, Temperance MI
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* Originally from Jim Dunmeyer, 1:234/0
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* Originally to Jim Grubs, 1:234/1
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* Forwarded by Jim Grubs, 1011/1, 13:47 6/22
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Jim,
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I have just spoken with Steve Bonine on the phone, and he
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verified that he has in fact removed your node number from this
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 5 26 Jun 1989
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week's NODELIST. This was not due in any way to your views on
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democracy or anything else, only your statement that you do not
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feel bound in any way by POLICY.
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There is no choice for me but to follow through on this. As of
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tomorrow AM, you will not be in the nodelist; in the meantime all
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other signs of your existance here are being removed
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(distribution list, AREAFIX password, AREAS.BBS, etc.) It
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saddens me greatly to have to do this, as I feel as Steve does:
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you have made contributions to the Net, but as a member, you
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must agree to abide by policy. There are mechanisms in place to
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change Policy, but negativity won't do the job, and in the
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meantime, what you see is what we have to work with.
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If you change your mind on agreeing with Policy, please FREQ
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NODEREQ3.ARC from here and follow the Doc's.
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Thanks, and sorry... <<Jim>> *
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----------
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* Forwarded from 1:234/1, Private Node - No Trespassing,
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Sylvania OH
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* Originally to Jim Dunmyer, 1:234/100
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* Forwarded by Jim Grubs, 1011/1, 13:48 6/22
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I regard Policy 4 as having been illegally adopted. It therefore
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is NOT Fidonet policy. If it was, I would abide by it. Steve is
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trying to browbeat people into swearing allegience to it as a
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means for getting around the fact it was illegally adopted. Does
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that sound right to you?
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73 de Jim Grubs, W8GRT
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----------
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* Forwarded from 1:234/1, Private Node - No Trespassing,
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Sylvania OH
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* Originally to David Dodell, 1:114/15
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* Forwarded by Jim Grubs, 1011/1, 13:45 6/22
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From one point of view I would be willing to be "purged" because
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I know the resulting anger would contribute to bringing Steve
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Bonine down. He's been like a rampaging Cossack trampling the
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peasants under his horse's hooves from the very beginning of his
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appointment. It's not just me. He can't get along with anyone.
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He likes to exercise power for its own sake.
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Instead I choose to fight back. I appeal his arbitrary and
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capricious decision to you. He cannot hold me or anyone to
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account for violations against a Fidonet Policy that that does
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not exist. Because it was illegally adopted, Policy 4 is NOT
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Fidonet policy. If it was I would abide by it.
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I said it before and I say it again: before the summer is over,
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David, Bonine will have blundered you into another Freenet
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rebellion. You can disagree all you want to about the logic of
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Policy 4, etc. If it is not what people want, it will never
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 6 26 Jun 1989
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succeed. Fidonet consists of BBS'es and their sysops. What THEY
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want is the only thing that counts - even if they don't want
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what you or Steve think they SHOULD want. Anything else is
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classic tail wagging the dog. (Pun intended.)
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I am personally willing to accept as a compromise an announcement
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that within two or three weeks there will be a sysop referendum
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to ratify Policy 4. I will never accept being bullied into
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pretending to agree with an illegal document that makes no
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meaningful provisions for democratic control by sysops over
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THEIR network.
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73 de Jim Grubs, W8GRT
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--------------
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Well, that about says it all. If you're as outraged as I am,
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please put your feelings to keyboard and let David Dodell, Steve
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Bonine, and the other RC's know that you're not going to let them
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push you around. If you like, you can use my following message:
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To: David Dodell, 1/0
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From: Phil Buonomo, 1:107/583
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Subject: Objection!
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cc: Steve Bonine
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Sir,
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I most strenuously object to the removal of Jim Grubs from the
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FidoNet nodelist. There are many legitimate concerns among
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FidoNet sysops regarding the adoption of Policy 4, and the flat
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out elimination of those voicing such concerns teters on the
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brink of Brown Shirt tactics of early Nazi Germany. While Jim
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Grubs has always been vocal in nature, and annoying at times, it
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is patently WRONG to remove someone from the nodelist for voicing
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opinion in a non-excessively annoying manner.
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It is actions such as these that have spurred the creation of
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alternate Networks, such as AlterNet, in the past. The sysops of
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FidoNet will NOT condone these heavy handed tactics, and if you
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allow them to continue, it will be the downfall of yourselves,
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and FidoNet as a viable entity.
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With FidoNet's best interests at heart,
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Philip J. Buonomo
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 7 26 Jun 1989
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TopicX Topical Extraction System
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The last time I ran a series on my extraction process for The Old
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Frog's Almanac, I described how Sirius, EGREP, and my packer all
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worked together to produce an enormous variety of topical files.
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These files (there are now over 1300 of them) required a lot of
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system time, enormous amounts of drive space, and untold hours of
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work to maintain....
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The series of articles I entered here resulted in a wave of file
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requests from all over North America, and just about every
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country in Zone 2. ALMANAC.LZH, which contained all the sample
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batch files, Sirius scripts, and a few related files, was soon
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distributed world-wide as more sysops decided to begin their own
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extraction systems.
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One sysop who found himself "hooked" by the extraction system
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became more and more frustrated at both the complexity of the
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process and the time required to complete it. Scott Dudley, an
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Ontario (Canada) programmer, decided to write a single utility
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which would do the entire job in a single pass, and TopicX was
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born.
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I heard from Scott soon after he began working on TopicX - he
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sent me a note (which amounted to the sum total of what passed
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as TopicX "documentation") explaining what he was working on,
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and asked me if I would help him test it. I wrote back and
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said "sure," but didn't hear from Scott again until late January,
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when he sent me the first beta copy, along with an extensively
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documented configuration file, and wished me luck.
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By the time I began testing TopicX, I had expanded the Almanac's
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extraction system to the point where it was taking 90 minutes a
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day to complete, so I was ready for anything that promised (as
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TopicX did) to speed things up. I was (might as well be honest -
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it WAS a raw beta system) unwilling (hell, I was downright
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scared) to let TopicX run unattended, as the Sirius/EGREP system
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did, so I began by assigning a single message area to the new
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program, and running it manually whenever I had the time. When
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problems crept up, I'd send Scott a note, he'd fix them, send me
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another copy, and the cycle would begin again. On the 12th. of
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June, TopicX V1.0, the end result of four and a half months of
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testing, was released. By then, Sirius and EGREP had been
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retired, and TopicX was doing the entire job.....
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.....in 15 minutes instead of 90!
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Got your attention? Good....now I'll explain the GOOD stuff :-)
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One problem with the Sirius/EGREP system, as nice as it was, is
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that I could never figure out a way to put the "working" archives
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into the directories where they would eventually end up. Instead,
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they collected in a work area for an entire month, and were then
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moved manually (using Fido-Fam) to wherever they belonged. Since
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there were usually about 300 of them by the end of the month, I
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could kiss the better part of one day a month goodbye while I sat
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FidoNews 6-26 Page 8 26 Jun 1989
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here moving those damned files around.
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TopicX puts them wherever I want them, so I don't have to move
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diddly-squat...
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I also had to edit the EGREP batch file every month, in order to
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change the month designator, and, although it only took a few
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seconds, I often forgot, and ended up collecting January's mail
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into December's topical archives.
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TopicX permits me to use variables in the output file names, so I
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don't have to worry about editing in new date specs at the
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beginning of the month.
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TopicX uses a single configuration file for the entire job - it's
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||
a standard ASCII file, so it's simple to set up and easy to edit.
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It lets you designate whether or not you want blank lines
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||
stripped out, use a custom dividing line between messages (if you
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||
want one), designate your favorite packer, assign macros, use
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||
UNIX-style pattern-matching tricks, archive or not archive the
|
||
text files, and so many other features that I am not going to
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||
attempt to list them all.
|
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The program runs pretty well under DESQview, although it hangs
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sometimes in my 340k window - (Scott doesn't know that yet, but I
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suspect he'll have it fixed a day or two after he reads this :-
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)), and early versions couldn't handle large configuration files.
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Scott fixed that problem by adding a memory management feature
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which lets you designate how much RAM to reserve for message
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processing, and I can now run my 36K TopicX.Cfg file without any
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||
problems. He also added a pre-compile to speed things up, which
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further reduced processing time....
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I could go on all night about TopicX - I LOVE it - but I won't.
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||
It's a dandy piece of software engineering, the docs are more
|
||
precise and easier to understand than most, and the sample
|
||
configuration file which comes with the release version is so
|
||
well done that many of you will be able to set up an extraction
|
||
system without ever reading the docs. So, rather than carry on
|
||
for another two pages, I'll just tell you to use the magic word
|
||
TOPICX and get started. It's available from 1:153/20 (HST),
|
||
1:153/194 (2400), 1:250/814 (2400) (AKA 7:483/202), and
|
||
1:250/810. My HST now uses European guard tones, so come and get
|
||
it, no matter where you are - you'll love it too!
|
||
|
||
TopicX is shareware, and the unregistered version won't run from
|
||
a batch file, but it's a full-featured version that'll maintain
|
||
both NetMail and EchoMail areas flawlessly, and it's only US$15
|
||
to register in any case - a helluva deal for anyone with message
|
||
management problems!
|
||
|
||
Ken McVay, SysOp TOPX_100.LZH
|
||
The Old Frog's Almanac (153/20, 153/194) 62223 Bytes
|
||
Nanaimo, British Columbia, CANADA ("TOPICX")
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 9 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chuck Allen, 1:129/41
|
||
|
||
|
||
In his FidoNews 6-25 editorial, Vince Perriello commented:
|
||
|
||
Quote: Vince Perriello
|
||
|
||
Isn't there anyone else in Zone 1 who has something to say?
|
||
These guys are so prolific they're putting you all to shame ...
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
You're right Vince. Quite a few people have something to say,
|
||
many hold their peace in fear. I know my hand has been stayed
|
||
by the desire of the RC structure to meddle in the affairs of
|
||
FidoNews. They aren't content to wreck havoc only within
|
||
FidoNet.
|
||
|
||
My net (129) knows I have taken a dim view of Policy 4, a
|
||
document written by small minded and mean spirited men who are
|
||
morally and ethically bankrupt. I am proud that net 129 was one
|
||
of the nets voting "NO". I am ashamed the "NO" vote was decided
|
||
by a tiny minority of sysops in 129 who expressed an opinion.
|
||
The vast majority kept silent (didn't care?).
|
||
|
||
I'll take this opportunity to comment on Tom Jenning's brief
|
||
article in FidoNews 6-25
|
||
|
||
Quote: Tom Jennings
|
||
|
||
Since I see my name is getting dragged into this, I thought I'd
|
||
respond on the subject of Zone 2's autonomy, which is really an
|
||
issue of control.
|
||
|
||
First of all, no one need worry about trademark abuse; I am in
|
||
contact with all parties involved, and there is nothing to worry
|
||
about. Things will be settled to everyones benefit and
|
||
satisfaction. No further discussion is needed on this matter.
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
Sounds good to me. Maybe we can get on to more important things
|
||
like discussing the alleged skid marks in the IC's undershorts.
|
||
|
||
Quote: Tom Jennings
|
||
|
||
It is none of our business how Zone 2 (or any other zone) runs
|
||
their network(s), other than how they interface to us, just as
|
||
it is no business to net 125 how net XYZ runs theirs, unless it
|
||
somehow physically affects our operation. If they have different
|
||
criteria for joining a network, what business is it of ours? To
|
||
meddle ahead of time "in case they do something awful", is
|
||
silly; they are no more (or less) likely to do something stupid
|
||
than we in Zone 1 are. Europe is not just the U.S.-only-
|
||
different; it is a totally different environment, socially,
|
||
technically, legally and politically. Europe is none of our damn
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 10 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
business.
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
Tom, I agree wholeheartedly. How do you suggest we rid
|
||
ourselves of leadership hell bent on exercising control? You've
|
||
pointed out the problem, how about proposing a solution?
|
||
|
||
Quote: Tom Jennings
|
||
|
||
Zone 1 is not the police force of the world. Have we not learned
|
||
our lessons from other arenas? We do not "have" a unified world-
|
||
wide network, nor is such a thing even desirable. What we do
|
||
have is a number of cooperative networks, that can cooperate in
|
||
a world-wide networking effort. This is a critical difference.
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
Geez Tom, you don't pull any punches, do you? You're going to
|
||
be lucky if on of the myriad *Cs doesn't file a formal policy
|
||
complaint against you for embracing that sort of concept. Rumor
|
||
has it the *C structure is advising China on how to suppress the
|
||
movement toward democracy, their having great experience
|
||
squashing dissent in FIdoNet.
|
||
|
||
Quote: Tom Jennings
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, meddlers and control freaks will not give up
|
||
until everything not exactly like themselves is squashed or
|
||
controlled. Or they are in turn removed. We have a growing
|
||
bureaucracy in our Zone 1 that wants to reorganize us from being
|
||
a bottom-up network, where sysops choose their net hosts and
|
||
other /0's, and determine how to run their own BBS, nets and
|
||
lives, to one (according to POLICY4) where the existing
|
||
bureaucracy picks their own region and net hosts. Bureaucrats
|
||
always tell us, if they can control this one more thing, then
|
||
all the problems will be solved.
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
Now you've gone and done it. By fingering the problem, it looks
|
||
like you are a malcontent and should be dealt with under policy
|
||
4 before you can do any substantial damage to the control
|
||
freaks, er, the ZC and his mindless minions, the RCs.
|
||
|
||
Don't you know the hundreds and thousands of hours they've spent
|
||
seeking ways to force us into the mold? Don't you appreciate
|
||
the massive effort they've exerted to control us for our own
|
||
good? What are you, an ingrate or what?
|
||
|
||
Quote: Tom Jennings
|
||
|
||
Our network has never run smoothly, and I propose that it will
|
||
*never* run smoothly; this is good, not bad. It means we're
|
||
alive, only dead rigid bureaucracies are pure order. (Or pretend
|
||
they are.) Excessive order is not good for any organism. It
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 11 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
stifles creativity and free expression. Let's take a hint from
|
||
history, OK?
|
||
|
||
End Quote
|
||
|
||
Ok, sounds good to me.
|
||
|
||
Now, how do we reach the average sysop who doesn't care and
|
||
isn't interested in "net politics"? How do we reach the sysop
|
||
who has no concern beyond when the next echomail archive
|
||
arrives? How can we open the eyes and minds of people who have
|
||
no desire to exercise freedom and creativity?
|
||
|
||
Damn, Tom, you talk a good fight. But you have to know the
|
||
control freaks are going to blow you off and the average sysop
|
||
has no idea of what you're talking about.
|
||
|
||
Why not simply make a statement like "Policy 4 sucks and the ZC
|
||
and his appointed automatons should be removed and replaced with
|
||
people more interested in administrating than in ruling."? Why
|
||
not say Steve Bonine is an ass for causing Jack Decker grief by
|
||
rigidly imposing the "geography rule" for the sake of the rule
|
||
as versus the application of reason and common sense in
|
||
administering Policy guidelines?
|
||
|
||
What am I saying? Get some guts Tom, set aside the rhetoric and
|
||
lead the revolution.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 12 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Claude F. Witherspoon
|
||
Fido 1:288/525
|
||
Home of KidsNews
|
||
|
||
National Teachers Training Competition
|
||
|
||
Its that time of year again. Computer Learning Month will be upon
|
||
us before we know it. With that in mind, we at KidsNews would
|
||
like to share the following information in hopes to make this
|
||
year even better than last year:
|
||
|
||
CLF TAKES LEAD IN SUPPORT OF COMPUTER CLASSROOM TRAINING;
|
||
SPONSORS NATIONAL TEACHER TRAINING COMPETITION
|
||
|
||
Palo Alto, Calif., (April 4, 1989) -- The Computer Learning
|
||
Foundation (CLF), a non-profit organization dedicated to
|
||
advancing computer literacy, today announced sponsorship of a
|
||
national teacher training competition as part of its new
|
||
television series entitled School Vision, which focuses on the
|
||
integration of technology into elementary and secondary classroom
|
||
curricula. School Vision airs weekly on public broadcast stations
|
||
around the country and in Canada.
|
||
|
||
"CLF is dedicated to acting as a central clearinghouse for
|
||
teacher training ideas and providing teachers with support and
|
||
ideas on how computers can be used more effectively in the
|
||
classroom," said Sally Bowman, CLF director. "As part of our new
|
||
School Vision broadcast, the Foundation will be able to showcase
|
||
exemplary training programs, which in turn will help seed
|
||
additional ideas and increased enthusiasm for teaching with
|
||
computers."
|
||
|
||
According to the U.S. Department of Education, there are nearly 3
|
||
million elementary and secondary school educators and
|
||
administrators in the United States. A 1988 study commissioned by
|
||
the House Committee on Education and Labor of the U.S. Congress
|
||
entitled "Power On" was conducted by the Office of Technology
|
||
Assessment (OTA) and indicated that "only one-third of all K-12
|
||
teachers have had as much as 10 hours of computer training."
|
||
Additionally, the study noted that much of that training time has
|
||
been dedicated to instructing teachers about how computers work,
|
||
not how to teach and integrate them into the classroom curricula.
|
||
|
||
As the number of computers in schools increases annually -- the
|
||
installed base is expected to increase 100 percent from 3 million
|
||
in 1987 to nearly 6 million by 1990 -- the need for teachers to
|
||
have more computer training and support on how to integrate
|
||
technology into their classrooms becomes evem more critical. To
|
||
facilitate these efforts, CLF is taking the lead by sponsoring a
|
||
national teacher training competition. Many of the program and
|
||
computer learning ideas submitted to the foundation as part of
|
||
its 1989 competition will be made available to educators
|
||
throughout North America through CLF's School Vision broadcasts
|
||
and through lesson plan publications.
|
||
|
||
Recognition will be given to top teacher training programs
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 13 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
developed for early childhood education, special education,
|
||
curriculum integration (combining social studies, foreign
|
||
laguages, writing, art/music, math, science), and the "at risk"
|
||
population. The grand prize winning entry in CLF's competition,
|
||
which is open to individuals and organizations in the U.S. and
|
||
Canada, will receive three computer systems. One system will be
|
||
awarded to the individual who developes the winning training
|
||
module/program; one system to the school or organization that
|
||
acts as host of the training program; and one system to the
|
||
individual or organization that videotapes the presentation. In
|
||
addition, second prize winning entries will receive software
|
||
programs for the teacher training program developer and host
|
||
school. Top entries will be aired on CLF's School Vision program.
|
||
To request official entry forms and rules, individuals should
|
||
write to: Teacher Training Competition, Computer Learning
|
||
Foundation, P.O. Box 60400, Palo Alto, Calif., 94306-0400. All
|
||
entries must be postmarked by September 1, 1989.
|
||
|
||
School Vision is broadcast via local PBS stations, with dates and
|
||
times varying depending on location. Parents and educators are
|
||
encouraged to contact their local public broadcast station
|
||
program managers and ask that the School Vision broadcasts be
|
||
picked up, via satellite, from the Central Education Network for
|
||
local viewing. Spearheading the development and production of the
|
||
weekly School Vision programs is a coalition of industry and
|
||
educational organizations, including the Central Education
|
||
Network (CEN), Software Communications Services (SCS) and the
|
||
CLF. The School Vision video briefings will be presented through
|
||
WCET, Cincinnati and the Ohio Network Broadcasting Network
|
||
Commission.
|
||
|
||
The Computer Learning Foundation sponsors Computer Learning Month
|
||
programs each October. The non-profit organization, based in Palo
|
||
Alto, Calif., is supported by leading software publishers and
|
||
computer manufacturers, including IBM, as well as 52 U.S. State
|
||
Departments of Education and Canadian Ministries of Education,
|
||
and more than 20 national non-profit organizations.
|
||
|
||
Published with permission of the Computer Learning Foundation
|
||
(CLF), Palo Alto, Calif.
|
||
|
||
I have initiated a National Computer Learning Month echo
|
||
available on Fido 1:288/525 by request. If you are interested in
|
||
carrying the echo which uses the name NCLM, please send a request
|
||
to Butch Witherspoon, Fido 1:288/525 (Continuous Mail (CM)), and
|
||
I will be happy to tie you into the echo and send it to your
|
||
system. You must be able to accept continuous Mail for this
|
||
request. This offer is good for the U.S. only until someone
|
||
offeres to gateway the echo to other regions. I would like to see
|
||
the echo carried on the Backbone if folks are interested enough.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 14 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Peter Janssens
|
||
Fidonet 2:512/1
|
||
|
||
Official Report on Eurocon III.
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The following items have been addressed at Eurocon III:
|
||
|
||
A) Resignation of ZC2, Henk Wevers (2:500/1).
|
||
B) Appointment / election of new ZC2.
|
||
C) Cost and quality of echomail.
|
||
D) Opinion on IFNA, by Randy Bush (1:105/6).
|
||
E) Proposed Fidonet Policy 4.06.
|
||
F) Foundation of European Fidonet Organisation; EFO.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A) Resignation of ZC2, Henk Wevers (2:500/1).
|
||
--------------------------------------------
|
||
In 1988, at Eurocon II, Henk Wevers already announced that he
|
||
would resign as ZC2. This announcement was repeated in ENET.SYSOP
|
||
(Zone 2 sysop conference) a few months ago.
|
||
Before Henk addressed the nomination procedure for his replacement
|
||
he explained some developments in the past year.
|
||
|
||
Henk Wevers visited Fidocon in August 1988 whwre he agreed with
|
||
the Zone 1 sysops, including the ZC1, that Fidonet would need
|
||
major Policies for each Zone with an overall Policy for the
|
||
Fidonet world.
|
||
At that time Zone 1 was ruled by Policy 3 whereas Zone 2 already
|
||
had adopted Policy 4E, being an adjusted Policy 4 draft from Ben
|
||
Baker, dated Feb 7, 1988.
|
||
|
||
To his disapppointment the Zone 1 *C's did not hold the agreement
|
||
upright when Fidocon was finished and came with a proposal for an
|
||
elaborate new world Policy without consideration for the different
|
||
needs that each Zone would have for such a Policy.
|
||
|
||
As an example Henk explained that in Zone 1 geographically
|
||
overlapping nets do not exist and are disallowed by the proposed
|
||
Policy whereas nearly every Region in Zone 2 _does_ have
|
||
overlapping nets.
|
||
|
||
Henk tried several times to find support against the proposal at
|
||
the Zone 2 RC's. However, he got no feedback and finally decided
|
||
to finish the ongoing discussion with the Zone 1 *C's about the
|
||
proposal.
|
||
|
||
This discussion has been very demanding for him and the outcome
|
||
strengthened him in his decision to resign as ZC2.
|
||
|
||
|
||
B) Appointment / election of new ZC2.
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
As mentioned above Henk Wevers has asked for candidates for the
|
||
position of ZC2 in ENET.SYSOP. Three sysops responded to his
|
||
appeal and presented themselves as candidates.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 15 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
They were: Werner Cappel (2:515/30), Ron Dwight (2:515/1) and Nik
|
||
Middleton (2:252/114).
|
||
|
||
Two weeks before the start of Eurocon III Henk wrote a crash
|
||
netmail to each candidate with a request to explain their
|
||
qualifications for being a ZC2 as well as the programme they had.
|
||
He received only one reply from Ron Dwight.
|
||
|
||
Henk also noted that Ron was the only candidate who was present at
|
||
Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
This formed a strong feeling amongst everyone present that Ron was
|
||
to be considered the only serious candidate for the job.
|
||
|
||
Henk ended his speech here and Louis van Geel stood up and
|
||
expressed the gratitude towards Henk Wevers on behalf of all Zone
|
||
2 participants for having done an outstanding job as co-founder of
|
||
European Fidonet and ZC2.
|
||
|
||
Ron Dwight was then asked to present his goals and targets if he
|
||
would be nominated the new ZC2.
|
||
|
||
He explained that his "mission" and prime goal as a ZC2 would be
|
||
to establish democracy in Zone 2 and as a part of this he would
|
||
work towards official elections of NC's, RC's and the post of ZC
|
||
before Eurocon IV.
|
||
This would include a new Zone 2 Policy which should be approved /
|
||
voted upon by all of the Zone 2 sysops.
|
||
|
||
The chairman of the meeting (me ;-) then explained that Ron and
|
||
David Dodell (1:1/0, the IC) have had several netmail discussions
|
||
in the recent past and that he considered it highly unlikely that
|
||
David would appoint Ron Dwight as ZC2.
|
||
|
||
(Note: Under current Policy the ZC is appointed by the IC,
|
||
normally upon advice of the resigning ZC)
|
||
|
||
It was noted that that an election for a new ZC2 would be contrary
|
||
to Policy. It might even lead to the conclusion that Zone 2 would
|
||
be segregating from Fidonet.
|
||
|
||
The participants then expressed the feeling that they _do_ want to
|
||
cooperate and coexist with the other Zones in Fidonet. However, it
|
||
was unanimously voted that the new ZC2 should be elected at
|
||
Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
Consequently an election was held.
|
||
The question was: Do we want Ron Dwight as new ZC2?
|
||
|
||
The results of the election was:
|
||
90% voted "Yes", 7% voted "No" and 3% votes were invalid.
|
||
|
||
After this election Ron Dwight was installed as new ZC2.
|
||
The meeting asked him to contact David Dodell to explain that the
|
||
Zone 2 sysops desire to cooperate with the other Zones in Fidonet
|
||
and that desintegration of Fidonet is not the case.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 16 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
David Dodell should also be asked to confirm the results of the
|
||
election and officially appoint Ron Dwight as new ZC2.
|
||
|
||
(Note: This has now been confirmed and Ron is installed officially
|
||
as ZC2)
|
||
|
||
C) Cost and quality of echomail.
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Dieter Soltau (ZEC2) explained how echomail is financed in
|
||
Germany. Every node pays a mandatory fee of ECU 4 per month to
|
||
cover the cost of the backbone including a fully operational
|
||
backup node.
|
||
The backup node takes over from the backbone as soon as the system
|
||
goes down (i.e. when Dieter leaves home for more than one day ;-).
|
||
|
||
Joaquim Homrighausen (1:135/20) then talked about how TAP (Trans
|
||
Atlantic Project) started in summer 1987 with only one or two
|
||
Swedish conferences and through the time grew to a full echomail
|
||
Zonegate currently exchanging over 45 conferences between Zone 1
|
||
and Zone 2. The cost of TAP amounts to some ECU 15.000 against
|
||
total (voluntary) contributions of some ECU 1.300.
|
||
|
||
Both speakers agreed that the main problems of echomail
|
||
distribution are caused by the political power implied and the
|
||
lack of organisation. Especially the latter increases cost and
|
||
decreases the willingness of sysops to participate in the
|
||
financing of echomail distribution.
|
||
|
||
Dieter was asked to make a start on issues like cost-control,
|
||
mapping of conferences and exchange of information.
|
||
|
||
However, Dieter noted that several REC's never replied to his
|
||
requests but that he will continue to stimulate the cooperation of
|
||
REC's and NEC's.
|
||
|
||
The session was concluded with Dieter's announcement that he will
|
||
try to develop an echolist system suitable for Zone 2.
|
||
|
||
|
||
D) Opinion on IFNA, by Randy Bush (1:105/6).
|
||
-------------------------------------------
|
||
Title: Why IFNA failed, why "Othernets" failed,
|
||
why Fidonet is succeeding.
|
||
|
||
The original goal to establish IFNA was to save Ben Baker from Tax
|
||
impact on donations received to support the Fidonet
|
||
administration.
|
||
|
||
Randy expressed that the goal has not been achieved as IFNA does
|
||
not pay any of the cost of Fidonet administration, e.g. cost of
|
||
IC, Nodelist and Fidonews distribution, Zonegates, etcetera.
|
||
Apart from this, IFNA has not even met any of the secondary goals
|
||
like helping to administer or promote Fidonet. They haven't even
|
||
been able to publish financial reports or Board minutes.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 17 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
He concluded that IFNA has done nothing else for Fidonet but taken
|
||
our time and money.
|
||
|
||
Reasons for failure are numerous, like having too much attention
|
||
for bylaws and procedures and not enough for the needs and
|
||
services of the sysops, having too much attention for only 2%
|
||
flamers, general secrecy on their work, no public appreciation for
|
||
workers, etc.
|
||
|
||
Though this caused a lot of sysops to ask for a nodenumber in
|
||
"Othernets" only 5% of them actually left Fidonet (the percentage
|
||
is based on listed phonenumbers).
|
||
The flaming in "Othernets" is just as bad as in Fidonet and no new
|
||
developments of ideas, technology or services have been
|
||
established.
|
||
|
||
Randy concluded that Fidonet is succeeding, maybe in spite of
|
||
itself.
|
||
This conclusion is based on the following observations in Fidonet:
|
||
- Continuing growth of population,
|
||
- Technical growth,
|
||
- Establishment of reliable links to other networks like UUCP,
|
||
ARPAnet and Internet,
|
||
- Wider social coverage in echomail.
|
||
|
||
He finalized his speech with a warning that there still are
|
||
problems, such as the centralisation of powers, the growth of
|
||
rules and regulations and the increasing cost to be a sysop.
|
||
|
||
|
||
E) Proposed Fidonet Policy 4.06.
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
There were a lot of comments against the proposal. I will try to
|
||
summarize some of the main issues here:
|
||
|
||
- No provisions are made for contradictions with local
|
||
legislation.
|
||
|
||
- NC's are appointed by the RC's. RC's are appointed by the ZC's.
|
||
ZC's are then "selected" by the RC's. The IC is "selected" amongst
|
||
and by the ZC's.
|
||
There is no consistency in this appointment / "selection" system.
|
||
Fidonet has always been a community carried by all sysops in the
|
||
net. There is no need to change this to a top down structure.
|
||
As a matter of fact, sysops are very well capable of electing or
|
||
appointing the *C system.
|
||
Voluntary cooperation and communication is what keeps the
|
||
(amateur-) Fidonet going.
|
||
It is preferred that the IC is not one of the ZC's.
|
||
The first objective of a ZC should be to cover the interests of
|
||
his own Zone whereas the IC's first objective is to safeguard
|
||
Fidonet as a whole.
|
||
|
||
- (par. 1.3.6)
|
||
As already noted by Don Daniels at Eurocon II the situation in
|
||
Zone 2 is very different from the situation in Zone 1.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 18 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The commercial sector often supports Fidonet in Europe and it is
|
||
perhaps inappropriate to be so harsh with them.
|
||
|
||
- (par. 2.1.7)
|
||
How long is it required to keep mail / echomail packets? How large
|
||
may they become before the sysop has the right to delete them?
|
||
|
||
- (par. 2.1.8)
|
||
Using today's high speed modem technology the transfer of echomail
|
||
during ZMH needn't be a problem. However, instead of prohibition
|
||
it should be discouraged.
|
||
|
||
- (par. 3.4)
|
||
This is in direct contradiction with the previously stated
|
||
"selection" of IC amongst ZC's.
|
||
|
||
- (par. 3.7)
|
||
This is not considered a right but a duty!
|
||
|
||
- (chapter 4)
|
||
The chapter enforces that the NC should also have node 0 in the
|
||
net and that he should be the sysop of the (mail-) distributing
|
||
system.
|
||
However, coordinating a net is in itself not a technical function.
|
||
The chapter should therefor be restated that the NC 'need' not
|
||
perform the duties but he should ensure that the duties are
|
||
performed.
|
||
i.e. The NC does not have to be the Host and the Host does not
|
||
have to be the NC. This is working very smoothly in many Zone 2
|
||
nets at the present time.
|
||
|
||
- The proposal disallows geographical overlapping networks mainly
|
||
based on the cost structure enforced by telephone companies in
|
||
Zone 1. Network boundaries are to be defined by "area's of
|
||
convenient telephone calling".
|
||
The cost structure in other Zones is very different from the
|
||
situation in Zone 1.
|
||
This would cause a total reorganisation of Zone 2 resulting in a
|
||
huge increase of the number of networks.
|
||
(Like in France; currently three networks with only four different
|
||
phonenumbers in the total Region. Imagina what would happen in
|
||
Region 28 with over 250 nodes and 50 phone area's)
|
||
|
||
- The Policy will be voted upon by the *C structure.
|
||
The is neither a precedent for this procedure nor is it defined by
|
||
current Policy.
|
||
As stated before, Fidonet has always been rules by a consensus of
|
||
all sysops and this should not be changed.
|
||
In our democratic society, everyone gets to vote.
|
||
|
||
|
||
F) Foundation of European Fidonet Organisation; EFO.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------
|
||
At Eurocon II the desire to form a European Fidonet Organisation
|
||
was already expressed. An advisory committee was formed to
|
||
investigate the possibilities for such an organisation and
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 19 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
eventually to propose a concept.
|
||
However, due to the distances and the amount of people invloved
|
||
this attempt failed.
|
||
|
||
The Eurocon III Organisation Committee asked Henk Wevers for
|
||
advice on this matter and together we invited Bob Gonsalves,
|
||
Chairman of the IFNA International Affairs Committee and a
|
||
professional lawyer, to take over the job of investigation and to
|
||
setup some discussion points for Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
He presided the EFO discussions held at Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
Conclusions of the first discusiion rounds were:
|
||
|
||
- We want an independent, non commercial, non profit European
|
||
Fidonet Organisation.
|
||
|
||
- The goals of the organisation are:
|
||
|
||
1) Ownership of the copyright on the Zone 2 Nodelist.
|
||
The nodelist has previously been commercially abused.
|
||
To protect sysops from future misuse there has to be a legal
|
||
entity which holds the copyright on the Zone 2 nodelist, similar
|
||
to the IFNA copyright on the world Fidonet nodelist.
|
||
|
||
2) Coverage of cost involved for the ZC2 operations.
|
||
Zone 2 wants a democratically elected ZC. Without financial
|
||
support this may lead to prevent less wealthy but otherwise
|
||
qualified sysop to candidate for the job.
|
||
|
||
3) Representation of Zone 2 at other legal entities.
|
||
If a sysop would repsent himself at e.g. the European Committee
|
||
they would require legal statutes of the organisation he would
|
||
represent.
|
||
The representation includes especially the promotion of the (Zone
|
||
2) Fidonet network with national and European governments, such as
|
||
the European Committee, organisations like the CCITT, as well as
|
||
the mass media and European (local) telephone companies.
|
||
|
||
The board of the organisation should be internationally oriented
|
||
while it should be formed bottom up by means of democratic
|
||
election(s).
|
||
|
||
The original thought was to set up a mandatory fee to be paid by
|
||
each node but after some discussion the general feeling was that
|
||
this may be considered too negative. It would seem as if a node
|
||
should pay a fee to obtain (or keep!) it's nodenumber which is not
|
||
the intention of the fee.
|
||
It was therefor decided that the fee (being ECU 4 per node) should
|
||
be paid by the net and the NC's should be free to organize the
|
||
collection of the funds in an appropriate manner. The RC's would
|
||
act as collecting points for their independent nodes.
|
||
Administrative nodenumbers, such as RC, NC and HUB should not be
|
||
included in the calculations.
|
||
Final decision was to take the phonenumbers in the nodelist as the
|
||
basis for the calculations.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 20 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
With the above requirements as a basis four people, being John
|
||
Caulfeild, Louis van Geel, Bob Gonsalves and Esa Laitinen, sat
|
||
together on Saturday evening to formulate the starting points for
|
||
EFO.
|
||
|
||
The next day they presented their "draft paper" and after some
|
||
(however emotional ;-) discussions the paper was adjusted and all
|
||
participants agreed upon the following document:
|
||
|
||
<quote>
|
||
Draft Paper on the European Fidonet Organisation
|
||
|
||
There will be founded an international, independent, non-
|
||
commercial, non-profit organisation in Europe of electronic mail
|
||
system operators networking by electronic means to the public
|
||
switched telephone system.
|
||
|
||
The name of this organisation shall be decided upon later, but
|
||
will, depending on the legal structure to be chosen, either be
|
||
European Fidonet Association (EFA), or European Fidonet
|
||
Organisation (EFO).
|
||
|
||
The Board of Directors of this organisation will be elected or
|
||
appointed in a democratic manner in that way, that the
|
||
participants in Zone 2 of the worldwide Fidonet will elect a Board
|
||
of Representatives, consisting of a representative chosen
|
||
following the well established rules of democracy, per Region.
|
||
|
||
The Board of Directors will consist of three members as a minimum
|
||
and five members as a maximum. The officers will be elected or
|
||
appointed for a period of two years, which means that every year
|
||
the half less one or the half plus one of the officers will
|
||
change.
|
||
|
||
The members of the Board of Directors will elect between
|
||
themselves a President, a Secretary and a Treasurer.
|
||
|
||
Every year the financial records will be checked by an external
|
||
auditor. His report on the verification of the records will be
|
||
published.
|
||
|
||
The secretary of the Board of Directors will keep minutes of the
|
||
minutes of the meetings of the Board of Directors which minutes
|
||
will also be published.
|
||
|
||
The Articles of Association or Foundation will be drafted under
|
||
the law of the Kingdom of the Netherlands untill such time that an
|
||
appropriate Code of European Law will be in existence.
|
||
|
||
The main goal of the organisation will be the support of Zone 2 of
|
||
the worldwide Fidonet.
|
||
|
||
The sub-goals of the organisation will be the ownership of the
|
||
copyright on the Zone 2 nodelist, the representation of the sysops
|
||
in negotiations, the public relations functions especially with
|
||
regard to the promotion of the Fidonet network with national and
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 21 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
European governments as well as with the mass media and European
|
||
PTT's, the financing of the expenses of the organisation and as
|
||
far as possible financing the expenses of the Zone Coordinator of
|
||
Zone 2 of Fidonet.
|
||
|
||
The sysops attending the Eurocon III conference will appoint a
|
||
Steering Committee of five members with a mandate to proceed with
|
||
the drafting of the Articles of Association or Foundation and with
|
||
the setting up of the elections for the Board of Representatives
|
||
for the year 1990.
|
||
|
||
The members of the Steering Committee will pay their personal
|
||
expenses and the Dutch computer organisations PCC and HCC will be
|
||
requested to assist in prefinancing the organisational expenses
|
||
for the first year.
|
||
|
||
There has to be paid by the nets in Zone 2 a mandatory fee of ECU
|
||
4, on the basis of the number of nodes in the net, for each true
|
||
entry in the nodelist.
|
||
<end of quote>
|
||
|
||
The following people have been appointed to the Steering
|
||
Committee:
|
||
John Caulfeild (2:256/27), Bob Gonsalves (*), Ulf Jungjohann
|
||
(2:246/1), Esa Laitinen (2:515/801) and Sacha Vogt (2:310/5).
|
||
(*) can be contacted via 2:500/10.
|
||
|
||
The progress of their work will be continually published and
|
||
discussed in ENET.SYSOP.
|
||
|
||
Ron Dwight agreed to cooperate with the Steering Committee.
|
||
|
||
The goal of the Steering Committee is to draft Articles of
|
||
Association (or Foundation) with full consent of the sysops of
|
||
Zone 2 which will be presented before Eurocon IV.
|
||
At Eurocon IV these drafts will be finally approved.
|
||
|
||
Ron Dwight adds the following:
|
||
Some of the proposals for the formation and operation of EFA/EFO
|
||
are somewhat contraversial. Before any organisation is created
|
||
which will force the Fidonet Zone 2 sysop to pay a fee which may
|
||
be repugent to them, a referendum will be initiated to decide if
|
||
we should proceed or not. In other words, no fee will be charged
|
||
to any sysop in Zone 2 before a European organisation has a
|
||
mandate to do so from a clear majority of the sysops of Zone 2.
|
||
|
||
== Epilogue ==
|
||
--------------
|
||
This is the end of the official report.
|
||
However, I will now abuse the circumstances to write a few
|
||
personal notes. If you mind this: STOP READING!
|
||
|
||
First of all I wish to state that it was a very rewarding job to
|
||
be a member of the Eurocon III Organisation Committee.
|
||
Our prime goal was to organise a Zone 2 Fidonet Conference in
|
||
which all interested Zone 2 sysops would participate.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 22 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
No more "Mainzcon" as opposition to "Eurocon".
|
||
We have succeeded and I believe YOU, the Zone 2 sysops, are the
|
||
true winners.
|
||
YOU were the ones that proved we can be one united Zone 2 and that
|
||
we all can live together in Zone 2, being members of a worldwide
|
||
amateur network.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, I wish to repeat the gratitude towards Henk Wevers.
|
||
Not only on behalf of the participants present at Eurocon III but
|
||
on behalf of the whole Zone 2.
|
||
As a ZC you have been like a father to the community and led us
|
||
through our adolescence. You have helped us to become a grown up
|
||
Zone in Fidonet, now fully able to participate in and contribute
|
||
to Fidonet.
|
||
|
||
Last but least <grin> I wish a lot of strength and patience to Ron
|
||
Dwight who has volunteered for the most unrewarding job in Zone 2
|
||
and who has stuck his neck out with his ambitious mission.
|
||
I have already seen the first flames fired at him, but remember:
|
||
The flamers are only 2% and there are 98% silent supporters out
|
||
there.
|
||
I hope you succeed on your quest to make Zone 2 fully democratic.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Credit where credit is due.
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
- Motel Eindhoven for making lunches and dinners a chaos.
|
||
|
||
- Hans Ligthelm for the enormous work he performed with great
|
||
enthousiasm in the organisation of Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
- Henk Wevers for the advice he gave to the organisation
|
||
committee.
|
||
|
||
- Randy Bush for being a true Zonegate in interfacing the needs
|
||
and desires of all Zones at Eurocon III and for being a very
|
||
involved participant at Eurocon III.
|
||
|
||
- John Bone for the notes he made at Eurocon III,
|
||
|
||
and especially
|
||
|
||
- Vincent Veeger for the piles of notes he supplied me with and
|
||
the great support he gave me in writing this report.
|
||
|
||
Eurocon IV.
|
||
----------
|
||
Ron Dwight has asked the Organisation Committee to assist in the
|
||
decision where we should have Eurocon IV.
|
||
If there are people willing and able to organise Eurocon IV then
|
||
please send netmail to 2:512/1 before September 30, 1989.
|
||
Include arrangements you can make for the conference, travel, room
|
||
accomodation, etc.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 23 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Peter Janssens, 2:512/1,
|
||
Secretary of the Eurocon III Organisation Committee.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 24 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Steve Bonine
|
||
115/777
|
||
|
||
FidoNet Policy -- Why Bother?
|
||
|
||
|
||
I have recently had two distressing experiences. One of them
|
||
involves the removal of a single system from the nodelist, and
|
||
the other involves the self-destruction of an entire local net.
|
||
Both of these cases are symptoms of a malady which seems to be
|
||
invading FidoNet -- a disease which has the potential to destroy
|
||
everything we have built over the years.
|
||
|
||
This sickness is a "take it or leave it" attitude regarding
|
||
FidoNet Policy. When you accept, or continue to accept, a
|
||
listing in the FidoNet nodelist, you bind yourself to FidoNet's
|
||
policy. A listing in the nodelist is not a privilege. It is a
|
||
right that you earn by meeting the minimum requirements of
|
||
policy: ZMH and not being excessively annoying.
|
||
|
||
I observed a message in the national sysop echo from Jim Grubs,
|
||
in which he stated that he was not bound by Policy4 because he
|
||
did not vote for it. This is a classic non sequitur. I am
|
||
sympathetic with Jim's desire for more democracy in FidoNet, but
|
||
refusing to abide by FidoNet's policy is not acceptable. I sent
|
||
netmail to Jim, asking him to reconsider. He refused, so I had
|
||
no choice but to remove his listing from the nodelist.
|
||
|
||
The other situation, which has been described at length in Fido-
|
||
News, involves net 154 in Milwaukee. When I sent netmail to Ted
|
||
Polczynski, the NC of net 154, asking that he place three systems
|
||
in the correct geographic net, the response I received was much
|
||
the same as that from Mr. Grubs. Ted insists that he has the
|
||
right to list any systems in net 154, without regard to the
|
||
systems' geographic location. Ted feels that this is in the best
|
||
interests of FidoNet. Unfortunately, this is contrary to current
|
||
policy, which specifically states that an NC cannot assign a node
|
||
to a system in an area which is covered by another net. Just
|
||
like Jim, Ted has repeatedly refused to make the simple statement
|
||
that he will be bound by current policy. However, in Ted's case,
|
||
an entire net suffers.
|
||
|
||
It would be much easier for me, in both of these cases, to simply
|
||
turn my back and ignore the situation. After all, this is a
|
||
hobby. Let's all just chill out and go with the flow.
|
||
|
||
Does my failure to enforce policy help FidoNet? No. If we are
|
||
going to have a policy, it must be enforced. It must be enforced
|
||
consistently. It is my responsibility to enforce the policy. My
|
||
choices are to enforce policy or to not be a part of the enforce-
|
||
ment structure; selective enforcement is not an option.
|
||
|
||
Without policy, what is left? I do not relish the idea of
|
||
FidoNet being reduced to nothing more than a list of bulletin
|
||
board systems, which is what the nodelist becomes if policy is
|
||
abandoned.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 25 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 26 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Stephen Maley
|
||
1:261/1014
|
||
|
||
A View From The Outside?
|
||
|
||
|
||
I would like to give all of you my view on what I see
|
||
when I look at all of the networks.
|
||
|
||
To give you a little background on myself, I have been
|
||
working in computerized communications for 10 years. The
|
||
technology that I work with on a daily basis varies from 75
|
||
baud(scary isn't it) to 90 Megabit fiber links in many different
|
||
configurations. So, as you can see, I bring to this subject a
|
||
background in a wide variety of communications technologies.
|
||
|
||
When I first joined my local network almost two years
|
||
ago, I was impressed with the possibilities of the technology
|
||
that makes the networks possible. The economy and efficiency of
|
||
the network as viewed from a technology standpoint were some of
|
||
the things that impressed me. The cooperation and assistance
|
||
from my Net Coordinator and a fellow Sysop gave me the insight
|
||
needed to join the network smoothly and without causing too many
|
||
problems for others in the net which made my introduction
|
||
painless.
|
||
|
||
My first active move was to read Policy 3. It gave the
|
||
glowing impression of a large number of sysops working together
|
||
to promote communications between themselves and between the
|
||
users of their systems. That the rules of the road were
|
||
cooperation and curtesy to all. I felt that these rules were
|
||
awfully lax for such a large organization but, they apparently
|
||
worked or the network would have suffered severe disruptions of
|
||
service that would have prevented it from growing as it has.
|
||
|
||
Well, over the last two years, after reading the echos of
|
||
the controlling organizations for the network and thousands of
|
||
messages in various echo forums, many of which should have gone
|
||
into the bit bucket. After seeing splits and fights and name
|
||
calling and unrestricted changes in software. I do not feel that
|
||
the networks will survive too much longer at this pace.
|
||
|
||
I guess that the strongest emotion that I feel is
|
||
disappointment. The majority do not seem to understand the
|
||
necessity of standards and controls to keep networks as large as
|
||
these functioning.
|
||
|
||
A hobby, yes, it is. But, it is based on technology that
|
||
requires the successful interaction of thousands of computers
|
||
operated by thousands of sysops scattered all over the world.
|
||
The need for controls, standards, managing bodies and technical
|
||
standards committees can not be ignored.
|
||
|
||
In order to promote the survival of this form of network
|
||
communication and to reduce many of the difficulties that all of
|
||
the networks are operating under, everyone needs to spend less
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 27 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
time trying to tear down the controls that are in place and spend
|
||
more time in trying to help those in positions of authority to
|
||
make knowledgeable decisions for the continued successful
|
||
operation of all of the networks.
|
||
|
||
From a technology standpoint, it would be relatively easy
|
||
to remove 90% of the problems, but, from a political stand point,
|
||
it may be impossible to correct any of them. The political
|
||
situation is of your own making, so you are the only ones who can
|
||
correct it.
|
||
|
||
If you feel that you have the knowledge and experience to
|
||
improve the operation of a network, use it for the betterment of
|
||
all of the networks.
|
||
|
||
If you are opposed to a technological standard or network
|
||
management policy, prepare a document that details the problem as
|
||
you see it. What the impact on the operation of the network is.
|
||
Then provide a detailed description of what you think a viable
|
||
solution to the problem is. Send the document to your Net
|
||
Coordinator and discuss it with him or her. After discussing and
|
||
refining it with your net coordinator, send it to your Regional
|
||
Coordinator and work with him or her. Use the structure that is
|
||
in place. It may not be exactly to your liking and you may not
|
||
like all of the persons in it, but you will be able to do more to
|
||
improve the network by working with the structure that is in
|
||
place than by trying to destroy it.
|
||
|
||
There are many talented people in all of the networks.
|
||
Many of them are constantly working to improve the technology
|
||
that makes these networks function. To those of you who have
|
||
developed new techniques, do not forget that your simple
|
||
improvement, introduced without proper checks and balances, could
|
||
render the network un-usable and that trying to force change
|
||
without proper controls not only reduces the effectiveness of the
|
||
advancement that you have made, but greatly reduces the overall
|
||
operational effectiveness of the network.
|
||
|
||
One day, I hope to be able to log-on to my net
|
||
coordinators system and read national sysop or one of the other
|
||
echos that is supposed to be a forum for effective communications
|
||
between all of us that make up the networks, and not have to stop
|
||
reading after the third message because of the frustration and
|
||
disappointment that I feel. Look at how everyone is acting and
|
||
think about how it looks from the outside. What is the
|
||
impression given when viewed by an interested public or corporate
|
||
organization.
|
||
|
||
In my opinion, from a network management and engineering
|
||
standpoint, all of the networks combined are primed for a massive
|
||
disruption of services if the individuals involved down to the
|
||
Sysop level do not start pulling together.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 28 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fredric L. Rice
|
||
Astro Net 1:103/503.3
|
||
|
||
There are some FidoNet SysOps on Earth who acquire a warm
|
||
glowing feeling by blowing friends and users into highly
|
||
radioactive gas and then gloating about it to any survivors
|
||
there may be.
|
||
|
||
To be fair, many users have treated their SysOps in kind but
|
||
such actions on the part of the user has never, to my
|
||
knowledge, led to the removal of the user in real life.
|
||
|
||
I speak, of course, of Universal Mayhem in FidoNet.
|
||
|
||
There are a little over seventy Universal Mayhem nodes around
|
||
the world running Mayhem as an Outside or Doors program; many
|
||
in Australia, Europe, Canada, and the States, as well as some
|
||
in India, China, and God knows where.
|
||
|
||
Several FidoNews articles have been posted about its progress
|
||
and bug removals and most of them have been "published",
|
||
(some were simply too long so they were E-Mailed out to all
|
||
known Mayhem nodes). If you haven' t seen any of these, I
|
||
offer a short description:
|
||
|
||
Universal Mayhem is a space shoot-em-up game that allows up
|
||
to 250 users on your system to build and command a ship and
|
||
base. By performing interstellar commerce, you acquire
|
||
capital with which to take over the universe. There are
|
||
obstacles, of course, such as the other players, but you can
|
||
always be assured that with some well placed alliance, you
|
||
have a chance to be the universes' Adolf. If you find things
|
||
are not going well and you have fought for and acquired all
|
||
parts of the Slaver Death Weapon, you can always trigger it
|
||
and win the whole puppy, (think before you pull the trigger).
|
||
|
||
The project was started over two years ago when FidoNet was
|
||
just starting to come apart. The political atmosphere was
|
||
just starting and the Alternate people were thinking about
|
||
making the break. I had been with FidoNet in the background
|
||
as a humble and invisible user for a few years and thought I
|
||
would try to make a program which would offer an avenue of
|
||
escape for SysOps and provide an arena in which they might
|
||
let off steam.
|
||
|
||
After a year of development, it went to Alpha testing here in
|
||
California for six months and was greeted with thirty or
|
||
forty regulars. After that time, general distribution took
|
||
place in the form of Version 1.00 and I am now at Version
|
||
1.3, (which will be mailed around the 17'th of June to all
|
||
known Mayhem sites; there is mail coming in all the time from
|
||
nodes that I don't have on my distribution list but have been
|
||
running for a few months).
|
||
|
||
Has the project worked? Is the objective of providing a
|
||
method of symbolic SysOp extermination realized? No, it
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 29 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
hasn't. The reason is mainly because of the bugs in the
|
||
original software which cause SysOps to remove it, the other
|
||
was due to the early versions disk space usage. Both of these
|
||
problems have been solved, with disk space usage dropped to
|
||
some 40 percent of what it was initially. Though the number
|
||
of active Mayhem nodes have increased over the last year, it
|
||
still isn't as widely dispersed as I would like.
|
||
|
||
Mayhem has always been distributed freely and supported
|
||
totally. It's a good thing I use the company phone lines or I
|
||
would have had my phone pulled by the central office long
|
||
ago. When new versions of Mayhem are released, they are
|
||
mailed directly from my California node to all known Mayhem
|
||
nodes. The non-backbone echo AREA:MAYHEM is also distributed
|
||
by my node in a mode where all known nodes are polled every
|
||
other night.
|
||
|
||
It's the Mayhem echo that was to provide the method of inter-
|
||
node communication between Mayhem sites. When you send a
|
||
subspace message in Mayhem, it builds a FidoNet message file
|
||
in your echo mail area. I usually see insults and promises of
|
||
revenge and other nicely evil comments. These get sent to all
|
||
other nodes in the echo conference automatically.
|
||
|
||
There are some things I am looking for and need:
|
||
|
||
o If you would like to get Universal Mayhem and be on my
|
||
distribution list, please contact me through Astro Net
|
||
103/503 in California at (714) 662-2294. I will mail
|
||
MAYHEM13.EXE which is a self-extracting archive containing
|
||
everything needed including a massive mind-boggling +200K
|
||
document file. If you just want the document to look it over
|
||
before deciding you want me to mail the whole thing, let me
|
||
know.
|
||
|
||
o If you would like to get in the MAYHEM echo, let me know so
|
||
I can add you to my list. I will poll every other day. If you
|
||
have questions or problems with Mayhem, I can call your
|
||
system and acquire access through my author back door to fix
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
o I need a product review to be written by a Mayhem Node
|
||
SysOp or one of its users for submission in FidoNews. I
|
||
realize that normally product reviews are of a more serious
|
||
network-related product. Since we need only one, if you want
|
||
the assignment, please let me know so I can get back to you
|
||
to see if you know of the amount of work involved!
|
||
|
||
o It seems as though I will be working the month of August so
|
||
I will not be able to make it to the convention in the San
|
||
Jose area. If there are any exiting Mayhem Nodes going and
|
||
would like to hand out a couple hundred copies of Universal
|
||
Mayhem for me, let me know and I will mail you a box of a
|
||
hundred or so. Let me know what days you plan to be attending
|
||
so I can mail more than one box to several SysOps to cover
|
||
all days. Just hand them out to any SysOp you might see
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 30 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
stumbling down the sidewalk with a taco in hand. <???>
|
||
|
||
Fredric Rice
|
||
1:103/503.3
|
||
(714) 662-2294
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 31 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Stepping Lightly through the Hornet's Nest
|
||
or: Comments and Replies to FidoNews 6-25
|
||
by Daniel Tobias
|
||
1:380/7
|
||
|
||
My FidoNews article on the European situation has brought
|
||
rise to a storm of controversy in FidoNews 6-25. Some of
|
||
those who I have managed to offend actually appear to be
|
||
philosophically on much the same wavelength as myself, so I
|
||
am attempting to make replies in a conciliatory tone rather
|
||
than escalating a battle of words. If some of my opinions
|
||
still disagree with your own, please consider this to be a
|
||
friendly disagreement rather than an acrimonious dispute; I
|
||
honestly have no big axe to grind or power-trip to ride, and
|
||
I don't attribute malice to the actions of anyone else, even
|
||
those with whom I may disagree from time to time. Let's
|
||
keep this hobby FUN, more than anything else!
|
||
|
||
Also, please note that the opinions I express are solely my
|
||
own, and are not by any means intended to be regarded as
|
||
anything else. In particular, European sysops should not
|
||
jump to any conclusion to the effect that I am speaking for
|
||
North America in general, just because I happen to live
|
||
here. It could be that 98% of American sysops disagree with
|
||
me; I didn't take a vote before I expressed my opinion.
|
||
|
||
With all that stated, let me proceed to comment on
|
||
everything in FidoNews 6-25 that I feel needs commenting on
|
||
(including those pieces addressed specifically to me, as
|
||
well as other items in this issue).
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Vince Perriello RE Editorial:
|
||
|
||
It isn't necessary to expand the Current Versions page to
|
||
cover EVERY utility that any FidoNet sysop is using, but I'm
|
||
not sure, on the other hand, that you're justified in
|
||
excluding ALL non-SEA archivers. That might be construed as
|
||
favortism, regardless of whatever the true motive may be. I
|
||
think several other archivers (PKZIP and ZOO, for example)
|
||
are in sufficiently-wide use to justify inclusion. The
|
||
criterion should be the wideness of use within the network
|
||
as a whole; perhaps you should do a survey.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO John Burden RE A European Response:
|
||
|
||
I apologize for depressing you. Actually, I agree fully
|
||
with your concerns. However, you're laboring under some
|
||
misconceptions: for instance, you use "IFNA" constantly in
|
||
a context that implies that it is the governing body of
|
||
FidoNet, while it is my impression from viewing recent
|
||
pronouncements of the BoD, as well as the thoroughly
|
||
IFNAless means that POLICY4 was enacted, that IFNA has
|
||
decided to divorce itself completely from a policymaking or
|
||
administrative role in FidoNet at any level. IFNA is now
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 32 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
regarding itself solely as a service organization aiding the
|
||
"greater FidoNet" consisting of all Fido-compatible nodes
|
||
regardless of net affiliation. They support FTSC, FidoCons,
|
||
and projects regarding use of BBSs by the handicapped, among
|
||
other things. IFNA's copyright notice still appears on the
|
||
nodelist and FidoNews, but they apparently have no intention
|
||
on actually regulating the network; this copyright situation
|
||
exists because FidoNet itself is not a legal entity capable
|
||
of registering a copyright.
|
||
|
||
Your statement that only 152 out of the thousands of nodes
|
||
voted for POLICY4 is misleading as a measure of apathy,
|
||
given that only *C's were allowed to vote at all.
|
||
|
||
I don't view Zone 2 as a "colony" of Zone 1, or vice versa;
|
||
rather, they are both sub-parts of the global FidoNet which
|
||
should be viewed as equally important (and the same is true
|
||
of zones 3 and 4). All of these zones must bear some
|
||
expense to carry the other portions of the nodelist;
|
||
admittedly, this is not very equal given the larger size of
|
||
the Zone 1 portion, but that doesn't mean that the cost to
|
||
Zone 1 of carrying the other zones is nonexistent. My point
|
||
is that the zones are all part of a whole, and hence are not
|
||
thoroughly autonomous, however much all (including myself)
|
||
might want local autonomy at the various levels. To give
|
||
one example, no net, region, or zone can unilaterally change
|
||
the format of its nodelist segment to something that is
|
||
incompatible with that of the others, without global
|
||
agreement.
|
||
|
||
Since you mention dissent within Europe over the proposed
|
||
"node tax," that confirms my statement that such a thing is
|
||
controversial, and should probably be given a vigorous
|
||
debate before it is imposed anywhere. I must note that I
|
||
DID NOT come out against this idea; I only stated, then and
|
||
now, that it is controversial and needs careful examination,
|
||
NOT that it should definitely be squelched. Right now,
|
||
POLICY4 states that zone and local policies may not impose
|
||
requirements on sysops other than additional mail hours, so
|
||
amendment would be required to permit mandatory fees at any
|
||
level. (This is a statement of fact with regard to current
|
||
policy, NOT a statement that I feel FidoNet SHOULD proscribe
|
||
[or prescribe] mandatory fees worldwide; I haven't made up
|
||
my mind on the latter position.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Ron Dwight RE The European Situation, an informed
|
||
perspective:
|
||
|
||
See my comments to John Burden above.
|
||
|
||
Please note that my name is spelled with an "e", not an "a".
|
||
You got it right the first time, but somehow messed up in
|
||
later references.
|
||
|
||
I must also note that my comments were based on a FidoNews
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 33 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
article regarding European policy, not on the policy itself.
|
||
I have not seen the European policy, either POLICY-4E or any
|
||
new proposal, since I do not know where these documents may
|
||
be obtained in Zone 1. If you wish, you may send me these
|
||
documents so that I too may give "an informed perspective"
|
||
on them.
|
||
|
||
I apologize if any of my comments were based on an improper
|
||
reading of the situation based on incomplete information.
|
||
The tone of the earlier FidoNews article implied that Zone 2
|
||
had made POLICY-4E supercede both POLICY3 and POLICY4, had
|
||
unilaterally rejected POLICY4 for their territory, and were
|
||
in the process of imposing a "head tax" on their nodes
|
||
despite a prohibition of such a thing in POLICY4; if I'm
|
||
mistaken, I sincerely apologize.
|
||
|
||
As you state, POLICY4 was placed up for the acceptance or
|
||
rejection by the entire *C structure. It passed, despite
|
||
the negative votes of many Zone 2 coordinators. Hence, it
|
||
is now in effect throughout FidoNet. (This is a statement
|
||
of fact, not meant to imply agreement on my part with the
|
||
content of this policy document; as my other FidoNews
|
||
articles have shown, I have many disagreements which I wish
|
||
to address in a POLICY5 proposal.)
|
||
|
||
Later in your piece, you make the puzzling juxtaposition of
|
||
stating first that a mandatory fee has never been in effect
|
||
in Europe, and will not be placed into effect by your new
|
||
proposed policy; but at the same time you state that the
|
||
assembled sysops at EuroCon decided that such a fee should
|
||
be imposed, and you feel that such a thing is an important
|
||
positive step. So which is it? Is a European node fee in
|
||
the offing, or isn't it? (Please note, as I stated in my
|
||
comments to John Burden, that I am NOT at this time
|
||
supporting or opposing the idea of a mandatory fee, only
|
||
pointing out its controversial nature and its contravention
|
||
of current policy.)
|
||
|
||
I did not "spread rumors" regarding this node fee; I simply
|
||
responded to an earlier article on this subject (in FidoNews
|
||
6-22).
|
||
|
||
Thanks for "basically agree"ing with my conclusion; if what
|
||
you want is a minimal POLICYx document giving major autonomy
|
||
to the component parts, go ahead and draft such a document;
|
||
I might even support it. My point is ONLY that all zones of
|
||
FidoNet must, by definition, operate in accordance with the
|
||
POLICYx document presently in effect; that's all that
|
||
distinguishes a FidoNet subportion from one of AlterNet,
|
||
EggNet, or AnyOtherNet. This doesn't imply any specific
|
||
view regarding what POLICYx OUGHT TO say.
|
||
|
||
One closing comment regarding local autonomy vs. central
|
||
control: While on the whole, I feel that preservation of
|
||
individual liberty is best served by decentralization, this
|
||
is not inevitably true in all situations. Local authorities
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 34 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
can sometimes be as authoritarian as any central authority,
|
||
with the major difference being that it's usually easier to
|
||
escape the domain of a local tyrant than a global one.
|
||
However, with the geographical exclusivicity enforced rather
|
||
strictly by POLICY4 (e.g., a node can't join a network
|
||
outside his geographical region without permission of both
|
||
RCs involved), the possibility exists for some local
|
||
subsections of FidoNet to become tyrannies if granted
|
||
absolute autonomy. Perhaps the solution to this would be to
|
||
couple complete local autonomy with the complete abolition
|
||
of geographical exclusivicity; e.g., allow any NC, RC, or ZC
|
||
to admit any node he chooses, regardless of place of
|
||
residence. This would allow nodes to link into the network
|
||
in alternative manners to get around local leaders whom they
|
||
find disagreeable (or local fees and other requirements
|
||
they find burdensome), without requiring global action to be
|
||
taken against the offending coordinators. This would allow
|
||
for maximal individual liberty, at the cost of a bit of
|
||
anarchy which is likely to displease those who wish rigid
|
||
order for the entire network.
|
||
|
||
(Note that some of the proposals I've been kicking around in
|
||
this and other articles could appear to contradict one
|
||
another; this is because I AM in fact just "kicking around"
|
||
these ideas in the hope of hashing out an ideal structure
|
||
for the future of FidoNet. I have not solidified my
|
||
opinion; I'm open to all ideas.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Les Kooyman RE FidoCon '89 Update: Dateline Silicon
|
||
Valley:
|
||
|
||
I tried sending in my reservation for FidoCon a few weeks
|
||
ago, and it was returned by the Post Office stamped
|
||
"Attempted: Not Known." I checked the address; I got the PO
|
||
Box and Zip Code correct, so I don't know why it was
|
||
undeliverable. Maybe the P.O. didn't recognize "FidoCon
|
||
'89" in the address instead of the full title "Silicon
|
||
Valley FidoCon '89". I'll try to send it again using the
|
||
full name, and cross my fingers it gets delivered.
|
||
|
||
I have sent a message to node 1/89 about this, and have yet
|
||
to receive a reply as of this writing (6/20/89).
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Daniel Tobias RE Some More Comments:
|
||
|
||
Oops... that's me. I'm getting so carried away doing this
|
||
reply thing that I was just about to start picking an
|
||
argument with myself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Jack Decker RE Thoughts on the Nodelist:
|
||
|
||
Interesting idea. However, how will you deal with duplicate
|
||
net numbers? Also, the use of your nodelist for echomail
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 35 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
could result in confusing SEEN-BY lines when the messages
|
||
are exported to systems on the VariousNets which are not
|
||
participants in your Public Nodelist.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Randy Bush RE An April Fool joke that wasn't:
|
||
|
||
Well, I guess FidoNet isn't the only network having internal
|
||
political conflicts.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Stuart Henderson RE UK-Modem.Art:
|
||
|
||
That UK bill has some very scary features, such as the
|
||
confiscation of anything construed by the government to be
|
||
related to computer crime (much like some of the "Zero
|
||
Tolerance" and RICO measures being taken in this country
|
||
with regard to drug offenders and sometimes pornographers).
|
||
However, I don't see any outright ban on BBSs in that law,
|
||
unless I read it incorrectly (my grasp of the British legal
|
||
system isn't very great). The intent is to ban
|
||
"unauthorized access" to computer systems, not to ban the
|
||
setting up of computer systems for legal purpose. Which
|
||
clause do you see as banning BBSs which do not engage in
|
||
illegal "hacking" or "phreaking"?
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO Tom Jennings RE European Autonomy and Domestic Meddlers:
|
||
|
||
Though I'm not explicitly named, I presume your article is
|
||
intended as a response to mine.
|
||
|
||
I sincerely apologize if I have in any way offended you;
|
||
since you're the founder of FidoNet, I value your opinion
|
||
highly.
|
||
|
||
I never said that Zone 1 should be the "police force of the
|
||
world"; I simply stated what was (to me) a self-evident fact
|
||
that FidoNet (ALL zones) was a network defined by its
|
||
adherence to whatever POLICYx document is currently in
|
||
effect. This is true regardless of whether POLICYx attempts
|
||
to impose all-encompassing control of every aspect of every
|
||
node's operations, or says nothing at all except that each
|
||
zone is completely autonomous. I expressed no opinion there
|
||
in favor of one or the other state of affairs, or anything
|
||
in between (though I have since made a number of more
|
||
specific statements as regards these areas).
|
||
|
||
Despite your (and my) wish that this be a "bottom-up network
|
||
where sysops choose their net hosts and other /O's", you
|
||
apparently failed to make this sufficiently clear at the
|
||
outset, or else POLICYx-making authority was somehow
|
||
wrenched out of your hands and taken over by people of
|
||
different philosophy. At any rate, to the best of my
|
||
knowledge (going back to when I first became interested in
|
||
FidoNet in 1985), the POLICYx document has always prescribed
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 36 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
a top-down structure completely lacking in democracy.
|
||
Hence, my advocacy of policy change, far from being an
|
||
unsavory move from a bottom-up status quo towards a
|
||
centralist, top-down structure, is in actuality a call for a
|
||
change from a top-down status quo to a bottom-up structure
|
||
which probably agrees with what you want.
|
||
|
||
Hence, we most likely have no reason to disagree at all, and
|
||
I would be most pleased to see your proposal regarding what
|
||
wording POLICY5 ought to have to bring about the structure
|
||
you would have liked to see FidoNet have from the start.
|
||
|
||
(I note that your 1985-era statement of FidoNet policy is in
|
||
the following FidoNews article; it is, as your views imply,
|
||
a non-authoritarian document with local nets being formed
|
||
spontaneously without top-down approval required, and no
|
||
such thing as "regions" to add entangling geographical
|
||
rules. However, by the time the rules became codified in
|
||
POLICY1, there was a fundamental change in the ordering
|
||
principle, probably not your doing; this created the
|
||
precedent for top-down control that has been followed ever
|
||
since. Perhaps you can shed some historical light on this.)
|
||
|
||
I see you'll be a speaker at the FidoCon; I'm planning on
|
||
attending, so I hope we can meet and discuss FidoNet history
|
||
and policy in a friendly manner.
|
||
|
||
|
||
* Whew * This article turned out to be much longer than I
|
||
expected. I hope I haven't bored anyone to death, and I
|
||
further hope that I have cleared up any misunderstandings my
|
||
earlier article may have caused, and haven't made any
|
||
enemies within what really ought to be a FRIENDLY network.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 37 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jack Decker
|
||
Fidonet 1:154/8 (but maybe not for long, if our RC has his way)
|
||
LCRnet 77:1011/8
|
||
|
||
PROPOSAL FOR A PUBLIC NODELIST
|
||
|
||
Last week, in my Fidonews article entitled "Thoughts on the
|
||
Nodelist", I proposed that there be a "public" nodelist in
|
||
which all Fidonet-compatible nodes could be listed. As I
|
||
explained, the Fidonet nodelist is not a public nodelist, but
|
||
rather a private nodelist of Fidonet members. In a situation
|
||
that is somewhat analogous to the chicken and the egg, I'm not
|
||
sure whether being in the nodelist makes you a member of
|
||
Fidonet, or being in Fidonet gives you the right to be in the
|
||
nodelist, but one way or the other, your nodelist listing and
|
||
your membership in Fidonet are inextricably linked. Should you
|
||
fall from the graces of Fidonet (and more and more Sysops are
|
||
finding themselves in this situation), you will lose your
|
||
nodelist listing.
|
||
|
||
This week I would like to present a somewhat more concrete
|
||
proposal for a "public" nodelist. I will call this nodelist
|
||
"The Official Public Computer Network Nodelist" for now
|
||
(although, as with anything here, I'm open to suggestions for a
|
||
better way of doing things), and offer some thoughts on what
|
||
this nodelist should be, and how it should be implemented:
|
||
|
||
1) The "prime directive" would be that this list is NOT to be
|
||
used for disciplinary or political purposes. A node is
|
||
presumed to have the right to be listed in the list (with the
|
||
approval of their Net Coordinator), unless proven otherwise.
|
||
|
||
2) There will be NO CHARGE for being listed in this nodelist,
|
||
nor for receiving nodelist updates (except for any telephone
|
||
toll charges you may incur in polling for this nodelist). This
|
||
might be considered "prime directive #2".
|
||
|
||
3) A "Nodelist Distribution Network" will be used to
|
||
distribute these nodelists. These will simply be people who
|
||
agree to poll once a week to get the nodediffs, and then make
|
||
them available for file request on their systems, or at their
|
||
option, deliver them to other Nets or nodes. The NDN members
|
||
may also assist with the collection and/or processing of
|
||
nodelist segments from individual nets.
|
||
|
||
4) The minimum standard for being listed in this nodelist is
|
||
that a node be able to complete a minimum Fidonet Standards
|
||
Committee FSC-0001 mail session with other nodes during the
|
||
appropriate mail handling period (which initially will be the
|
||
same as the Fidonet Zone Mail Hour). If it is discovered that
|
||
a particular type of software is incapable of completing such a
|
||
mail session, we reserve the right to place nodes utilizing
|
||
that software on "hold", or to drop them from the nodelist,
|
||
until the problem is resolved. This is a purely technical
|
||
standard, and may not be "selectively enforced" as a roundabout
|
||
way of using this nodelist for political purposes. In the
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 38 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
future, we may permit the use of nodelist flags to indicate a
|
||
variance from the minimum standard, or we may modify the
|
||
standard (these items are open for discussion). Private,
|
||
unlisted nodes are specifically exempted from this requirement,
|
||
since it is assumed that their Net Coordinator will know when
|
||
and how to pass mail to them (making it in effect a private
|
||
matter, HOWEVER, a Net Coordinator MAY enforce this requirement
|
||
against unlisted nodes in his network if there is good reason
|
||
to do so).
|
||
|
||
5) The purpose of the list would be to provide a common
|
||
"directory" for NETS, and for the nodes in those nets. This
|
||
statement has several implications:
|
||
|
||
a) One does not get dropped from a directory for bad
|
||
behaviour. There are other ways of dealing with "rogue" nodes,
|
||
such as using a password to prevent them from connecting with
|
||
your system.
|
||
|
||
b) The only people who may request that a node be removed from
|
||
the list are the operator of the node itself, and the Net
|
||
Coordinator for the net. If the Net Coordinator makes the
|
||
request, the node is perfectly free to be listed under another
|
||
Net, if the Coordinator of that Net will agree to take on that
|
||
node (one NC's "rotten apple" may be another NC's "star
|
||
Sysop").
|
||
|
||
c) Because the purpose of the list is to list NETS, no REGION
|
||
listings will be permitted (yes, that could be construed as a
|
||
political statement, but it's about as political as we intend
|
||
to get). ZONE listings (now used in current nodelists) and
|
||
POINT listings (now NOT used in current nodelists) are open to
|
||
discussion (if we do allow points to be listed, we may still
|
||
make available nodelists with points omitted, for those using
|
||
software that can't process the point listings and/or those who
|
||
have limited disk space).
|
||
|
||
d) Our intent is that no independent regional nodes be listed,
|
||
however, if we can be shown a persuasive reason to allow
|
||
independent nodes, we may consider allowing them in a specific
|
||
portion of the nodelist (except that if we use ZONES, they
|
||
would be listed under the proper ZONE).
|
||
|
||
e) A "Net" is defined as a group of three or more nodes, NOT
|
||
including private, unlisted nodes. Nodes with the same
|
||
telephone number count as only one node. A net that drops
|
||
below the three node figure will have 60 days to make
|
||
arrangements to become part of another net (or to increase
|
||
their node count). We reserve the right to make exceptions to
|
||
the minimum node count rule where unusual conditions exist.
|
||
Note that we are deliberately not using any geographical
|
||
considerations in our definition of a "Net".
|
||
|
||
6) There will be NO GEOGRAPHIC RESTRICTIONS on nets. A net
|
||
may accept and list nodes located anywhere! While in most
|
||
cases it will make sense for nets to be formed based on
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 39 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
geographic, calling area, or cost considerations, this is NOT
|
||
required. Our intent is to accept nodelist fragments from Net
|
||
Coordinators and process them as received, without getting
|
||
involved in passing judgement on whether listed nodes should or
|
||
should not be in that net.
|
||
|
||
7) If two (or more) different people claim to be Net
|
||
Coordinator for a given net, and both send us nodelist
|
||
fragments for that net, we will continue to use the fragments
|
||
provided by the previous NC (that is, the person who has
|
||
previously been sending us the nodelist fragments for that net)
|
||
unless and until it can be proven to our satisfaction that the
|
||
NC position has been transferred in a valid manner. However,
|
||
we cannot and will not be held liable for an incorrect decision
|
||
in this regard. If all else fails, we reserve the right to
|
||
conduct an independent poll of the members of that net, to
|
||
determine the majority choice of NC, but we are not REQUIRED to
|
||
take this action, and generally will not do so except in the
|
||
most extreme circumstances.
|
||
|
||
8) We will generally try to allow the use of all nodelist
|
||
flags currently used in other nets' nodelists, except where a
|
||
usage conflict exists between two nets, and then we will make a
|
||
determination as to which flags are allowed. We may also add
|
||
some additional approved flags from time to time. Generally we
|
||
will try not to restrict the use of nodelist flags
|
||
unnecessarily, unless the proliferation of nodelist flags
|
||
becomes a serious problem (even the phone company will
|
||
sometimes restrict the length and specificity of address that
|
||
you can put in the phone book!).
|
||
|
||
9) By sending a network's nodelist fragment to us, the Network
|
||
Coordinator or person sending the fragment certifies that a)
|
||
the nodelist fragment is in the Public Domain, OR b) any
|
||
copyright claimed on the nodelist fragment is held by the Net
|
||
sending the nodelist fragment, and that we are granted
|
||
permission to use this nodelist fragment.
|
||
|
||
10) For a limited time (through 9/30/89) we will reserve
|
||
current Fidonet Net numbers so that any current Fidonet net can
|
||
be listed under the same net number that they use in Fidonet.
|
||
After that date, net numbers will be assigned on a first come,
|
||
first served basis. Please note that current Fidonet nets do
|
||
NOT have to be listed under the same net number that they use
|
||
in Fidonet, nor does their configuration or Net Coordinator
|
||
need to be the same as is used in Fidonet (for example, they
|
||
may wish to add additional nodes that would not be acceptable
|
||
for geographic or other reasons under Fidonet policy). But,
|
||
prior to 9/30/89, we will only accept applications for Net
|
||
numbers currently in use in Fidonet from the Net Coordinators
|
||
of those Fidonet networks.
|
||
|
||
If, prior to the 9/30/89 cutoff date, a Fidonet Net Coordinator
|
||
indicates in some way that he does NOT wish to be listed in
|
||
this nodelist, but a number of nodes within his net DO wish to
|
||
be included, we will consider listing those nodes and allowing
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 40 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
one of those nodes to be placed in the nnn/0 position for the
|
||
purposes of this nodelist. Any node so placed in the nnn/0
|
||
position must be willing to forward any inbound routed netmail
|
||
to others in his net that are also listed in this nodelist (not
|
||
necessarily at his expense, however).
|
||
|
||
Please note that this reserving of Fidonet node numbers is
|
||
offered only as a courtesy to existing Fidonet networks, so
|
||
that they can be included in both nodelists with a minimum of
|
||
confusion among their nodes (that is, without the need for
|
||
nodes to have "dual identities"). However, Fidonet and the
|
||
Official Public Computer Network Nodelist are not to be thought
|
||
of as being in any way connected. If a net chooses to be
|
||
listed in both the Fidonet nodelist and the Official Public
|
||
Computer Network Nodelist, this should be thought of in a
|
||
manner somewhat analogous to two separate organizations that
|
||
just happen to have the same individuals in the same positions
|
||
on the board of directors. Legally, the organizations are
|
||
still separate and totally unrelated.
|
||
|
||
Where possible, we will also try to list Nets that are part of
|
||
other (non-Fidonet) networks under their existing Net numbers,
|
||
except where such net numbers are already used by existing
|
||
Fidonet Nets. However, since we do not know the net numbers
|
||
currently in use by non-Fidonet nets, we would encourage those
|
||
who think that they may wish to be included in this nodelist to
|
||
at least let us know what their existing net number is, so that
|
||
we will not prematurely assign it to another network. Where
|
||
conflicts occur among existing non-Fidonet net numbers, we will
|
||
assign them on a first-come, first-served basis.
|
||
|
||
With the exception of Net numbers that are already in use by
|
||
other nets, we do not intend to assign Net numbers under 100
|
||
except in special situations.
|
||
|
||
11) At this point in time, we feel that IF Zones are utilized,
|
||
they should be used only for the original purpose of sending
|
||
mail between widely separated and distinct geographic areas
|
||
(e.g. continents). Therefore, if Zones are used, we will
|
||
usually place Nets as follows: all North American Nets will be
|
||
listed under Zone 1, all European Nets under Zone 2, all Asian,
|
||
Australian, and Pacific Rim Nets under Zone 3, and all South
|
||
American Nets under Zone 4. These territories may be modified
|
||
from time to time as conditions warrant. If a Net Coordinator
|
||
wishes to be listed under a different Zone, and can make the
|
||
necessary arrangements to receive any netmail from that Zone's
|
||
Zonegate(s) (if one exists, and at no cost to the Zonegate
|
||
operator), we will permit it (although we don't encourage it!).
|
||
Also, individual nodes within a net may be located ANYWHERE, so
|
||
long as the Net Coordinator will take them, since it is assumed
|
||
that any netmail destined for those nodes can be host routed.
|
||
Sysops that do not wish to place international calls should be
|
||
careful to make sure that their systems are programmed to
|
||
disallow such calls based on telephone number (e.g. something
|
||
other than "1" as the first digit in North America) and/or cost
|
||
of the call, rather than relying on the fact that all nodes in
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 41 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
a given Zone will be located in a particular geographic area
|
||
(we feel that most systems are configured in this manner
|
||
already).
|
||
|
||
Again, we don't encourage Nets to be listed in a different Zone
|
||
than the one in which they normally should be in. The only
|
||
reason we propose to allow it is so that Nets located in border
|
||
areas (e.g. Central America) could choose the Zone that is most
|
||
economical for them to affiliate with, OR so that Nets that can
|
||
be best serviced from another Zone via private circuits,
|
||
telephone tie-lines, etc. can be listed in the Zone from which
|
||
they receive their NetMail and Echomail. Because your Net will
|
||
not be deleted from the nodelist for political or disciplinary
|
||
reasons, you should not need to be listed in another Zone for
|
||
these reasons. Please try to exercise good judgement before
|
||
requesting to be placed in another zone, or consider having the
|
||
Net Coordinator (only) dual-listed in both Zones.
|
||
|
||
12) IF Zones are utilized, and IF someone wishes to be listed
|
||
as a Zonegate in this nodelist, they must agree to forward mail
|
||
to all systems listed in this nodelist that are geographically
|
||
located within their Zone. They are not required to forward
|
||
mail to Nets that are geographically located in another Zone
|
||
(see #11), unless that Net has a telephone number that is
|
||
geographically located within the zone (e.g. a "Foreign
|
||
Exchange" type line), or has notified the Zonegate to forward
|
||
netmail through another Net or Node that has a telephone number
|
||
within the Zone, or has agreed to poll the Zonegate
|
||
periodically to receive Zonegated netmail. A Zonegate may not
|
||
refuse to forward netmail to a system for disciplinary or
|
||
punitive reasons. A Zonegate may require a Net Coordinator to
|
||
poll the Zonegate if unusually large amounts of Netmail are
|
||
being received by a particular Net.
|
||
|
||
13) It should be kept in mind that this nodelist is simply a
|
||
directory listing compatible Nets, and the nodes in those Nets.
|
||
The primary responsibility for determining whether or not a
|
||
given node does or does not belong in this nodelist rests with
|
||
the Net Coordinator. In cases where we may be asked to remove
|
||
a Net or a Node, we will consider doing so ONLY for technical
|
||
reasons (e.g. the node's inability to communicate with other
|
||
Official Public Computer Network compatible systems), and then
|
||
only after consultation with the Network Coordinator.
|
||
|
||
14) We will initially try to resolve all disputes in a fair
|
||
and friendly manner. However, should there be a dispute that
|
||
is otherwise unresolvable, we reserve the right to put the
|
||
matter to a vote of Network Coordinators. A notification of
|
||
the dispute, and the time limits for voting, will be placed in
|
||
the nodelist comments for at least two consecutive weeks, with
|
||
the last notification at least two weeks before the votes are
|
||
due in. This procedure should only rarely be used, and only to
|
||
resolve disputes over technical matters. An example of a
|
||
matter that might be put to such a vote is whether a particular
|
||
mailer program is compatible enough to interface properly with
|
||
other nodes listed in this nodelist. WE WILL NOT ENTERTAIN
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 42 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
DISPUTES REGARDING DISCIPLINARY OR POLITICAL MATTERS.
|
||
|
||
15) If at some point the need is felt for a more formal method
|
||
of resolving disputes, or to otherwise amend this document, a
|
||
committee will be appointed to make recommendations for
|
||
amendment to this document. These recommendations will be
|
||
voted on by all Net Coordinators. Where possible, such
|
||
recommendations shall be considered on a "line item" basis, so
|
||
that votes are not taken for an entire package of changes on a
|
||
"take it or leave it" basis (although related items MAY be
|
||
grouped together). During this process, ALL suggestions from
|
||
Sysops and Net Coordinators shall be given serious
|
||
consideration, and no person's suggestions shall be dismissed
|
||
out of hand due to personality conflicts with members of the
|
||
committee. In no case may the "prime directive" stated in item
|
||
#1 be altered, nor may any cost or charge be instituted for
|
||
being listed in the nodelist. Any amendments to this document
|
||
must be made primarily for the purpose of resolving technical
|
||
problems and disputes, and NOT for the reason of giving any one
|
||
group of Sysops a dominant position over another group.
|
||
|
||
Also, it should be recognized that technology changes as time
|
||
passes, and nothing is gained by insisting on adherence to
|
||
outdated standards. Therefore, if there are good reasons to
|
||
modify the minimum standard for being listed in the nodelist,
|
||
and if such a change will not adversely affect the vast
|
||
majority of those listed, such modifications should not be
|
||
dismissed out of hand. At the same time, it should be the goal
|
||
that any changes in the minimum standards should not force any
|
||
existing nodes out of the nodelist, unless it's simply a matter
|
||
of those nodes stubbornly refusing to upgrade their software to
|
||
the latest versions. However, in NO case should any action be
|
||
taken that would force any Sysop to abandon a Public Domain (or
|
||
other zero-cost) software program in favor of a commercial
|
||
program (or a "shareware" type program that demands a
|
||
registration fee from all users).
|
||
|
||
[Editorial Note: I feel that I should make some statement
|
||
regarding the fact that I feel that the Fidonet Technical
|
||
Standards Committee is often far too unwilling to consider
|
||
proposals for new and innovative ideas that would save money
|
||
for all Sysops. If, heaven help us, we ever feel the need to
|
||
have a "Technical Standards Committee" to resolve issues
|
||
pertaining to the OPCN nodelist, it should be composed of
|
||
people who generally look at new ideas and proposals and ask
|
||
"why not?", instead of people who are so resistant to any
|
||
change that it takes them two years to act on a simple request
|
||
to allow some additional nodelist flags. It should also be
|
||
composed of people who realize that not all Sysops have money
|
||
to burn, and who believe that any ideas that would help save
|
||
money for Sysops should be given speedy and thorough
|
||
consideration. And above all, these must be people who would
|
||
not stoop to using "technical standards" as a smokescreen for
|
||
kicking people out of the nodelist for other reasons that have
|
||
nothing to do with the technical ability to send and receive
|
||
mail.]
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 43 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
16) Finally, it must again be emphasized that although this
|
||
nodelist is a directory of nodes that utilize software that is
|
||
also commonly used in Fidonet, this nodelist is not in any way
|
||
connected with Fidonet, or International FidoNet Association,
|
||
or their nodelist. We do not take nodelist fragments from the
|
||
Fidonet nodelist. All Net updates must be sent directly to us,
|
||
or to one of the Nodelist Distribution Nodes.
|
||
|
||
Final comments: In order to make this work, we have need for
|
||
people that are able to perform one or more of three different
|
||
jobs:
|
||
|
||
a) A person or persons that will actually compile the nodelist
|
||
each week, from nodelist fragments received from Net
|
||
Coordinators. This must be someone who is capable of doing
|
||
this job every week (or, perhaps, every two weeks) faithfully.
|
||
It must also be someone who is willing to try and learn how to
|
||
generate nodediffs, rather than simply issuing a complete full
|
||
nodelist each week. It would also be great if the completed
|
||
nodelist could be made available on a PC Pursuitable node, to
|
||
minimize expenses for those who have to poll for it. The
|
||
person currently maintaining the nodelist for one of the
|
||
"alternative" networks might be an ideal choice for this
|
||
position, provided that person has figured out how to generate
|
||
nodediffs.
|
||
|
||
b) People who are willing to be in the Nodelist Distribution
|
||
Network. This basically involves polling for the nodediffs on
|
||
a weekly basis, then making them available for file request on
|
||
your system. You may also be asked to help collect nodelist
|
||
fragments from individual Nets and pass them upwards. In no
|
||
case should this require more than one or two calls per week
|
||
(one to pass collected fragments upstream, and one to receive
|
||
the completed nodelist).
|
||
|
||
c) Net Coordinators who are willing to send their nodelist
|
||
fragments up for inclusion in the nodelist.
|
||
|
||
If anyone would like to volunteer for any of these positions,
|
||
please send netmail to me at 154/8, or to LCRnet node 1011/8.
|
||
I will hold this information for forwarding to whoever winds up
|
||
doing the job described under a) above. Please note that due
|
||
to the current situation between Net 154 and the Region 11 RC,
|
||
we may be out of the Fidonet nodelist shortly, so I would again
|
||
advise those who may wish to communicate with Net 154 nodes to
|
||
use a text editor to clip the listing for Net 154 from a
|
||
current Fidonet nodelist, so that you can place it in your
|
||
private nodelist if necessary, at least until we can get the
|
||
OPCN nodelist up and running.
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX
|
||
|
||
The following nodelist flags would initially be approved for
|
||
use in the OPCN nodelist. Note that there are a few minor
|
||
differences from the Fidonet nodelist, e.g. Continuous Mail is
|
||
considered the default condition rather than the exception,
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 44 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
although use of the CM flag is still permitted; the file
|
||
request flags should only be used by nodes that support file
|
||
requests 23 hours a day, not including mail hour (don't you
|
||
hate calling for a file request only to find that you've called
|
||
during a period when file requests aren't allowed?), and some
|
||
additional flags are allowed (in particular, flags that let you
|
||
indicate what types of compressed mail packets your board can
|
||
receive and process).
|
||
|
||
The following codes are used to define operating hours:
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
DA Daily
|
||
WD Week days
|
||
WE Week ends
|
||
SU Sundays
|
||
SA Saturday
|
||
|
||
The following codes define special operating conditions:
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
CM Accepts mail 24 hours per day (optional - the default)
|
||
NC Does NOT accept continuous mail (required where true)
|
||
MO Node does not accept human callers
|
||
|
||
The following codes define modem protocols supported:
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
V21 CCITT V21 300 bps full duplex
|
||
V22 CCITT V22 1200 bps full duplex
|
||
V23 CCITT V23 1200/75 split baud rate view data mode
|
||
V29 CCITT V29 9600 bps half duplex
|
||
V32 CCITT V32 9600 bps full duplex
|
||
V33 CCITT V33
|
||
V34 CCITT V34
|
||
H96 Hayes V9600
|
||
HST USR Courier HST
|
||
MAX Microcom AX/96xx series
|
||
PEP Packet Ensemble Protocol (Telebit Trailblazer)
|
||
|
||
NOTE: Many V22 modems also support Bell 212
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following codes define type of error correction available.
|
||
A separate error correction code should not be used when the
|
||
error correction type can be determined by the modem flag. For
|
||
instance, a modem code of HST implies MNP.
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
MNP Microcom Networking Protocol error correction
|
||
V42 LAP-M error correction w/fallback to MNP
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 45 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following codes define the type(s) of compression that may
|
||
be used on mail packets sent TO a node.
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
MN No compression supported
|
||
MC:x[...x] Method of Compression. The letters following
|
||
the colon (which may be in any order) indicate
|
||
one or more of the following:
|
||
|
||
C = unCrushing supported (PAK) - implies unSquashing &
|
||
unCrunching also supported
|
||
S = unSquashing supported (PKUNPAK, PKXARC, newer versions
|
||
of ARCE) - implies unCrunching also supported
|
||
N = unCrunching NOT supported (not valid with C or S)
|
||
D = extraction of DWC packets supported
|
||
L = extraction of LHARC packets supported
|
||
R = extraction of PKZIP ("Reduced") packets supported
|
||
Z = extraction of ZOO packets supported
|
||
|
||
Limitations:
|
||
|
||
C implies unSquashing and unCrunching, so C and S should
|
||
NOT be used together
|
||
|
||
N implies unCrunching NOT supported, therefore it's not
|
||
valid in combination with either C or S. MN and MC:N
|
||
are equivalent.
|
||
|
||
If NONE of these flags are used, it implies that only
|
||
unCrunching is supported (this is the default).
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following codes define the dedicated mail periods
|
||
supported. They have the form "#nn" or !nn where nn is the UTC
|
||
hour the mail period begins, # indicates Bell 212
|
||
compatibility, and ! indicates incompatibility with Bell 212:
|
||
|
||
#02 European mail hour (02:30 - 03:30 UTC)
|
||
#09 North American mail hour (09:00 - 10:00 UTC)
|
||
#18 Western Pacific mail hour (18:00 - 19:00 UTC)
|
||
|
||
NOTE: When applicable, the mail period flags may
|
||
be strung together with no intervening commas, e.g.
|
||
"#02#09". Only mail hours other than that standard
|
||
within a node's zone should be given.
|
||
|
||
The following codes are used to facilitate netmail and echomail
|
||
routing:
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
AKA:net[/node][|net[/node]|net[/node]...] Also Known As
|
||
AI:net[/node][|net[/node]|net[/node]...] Alternate Inbound
|
||
PC:city code[extra access digits] PC Pursuitable
|
||
SL:[reserved - to be defined] StarLinkable
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 46 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
A sample PC flag usage would be as follows:
|
||
|
||
PC:WIMIL Node accessible via PC Pursuit in Milwaukee
|
||
PC:ILCHI1815 Chicago area node in 815 area code that
|
||
requires "1-815" to be dialed in front of
|
||
number. Hyphens are ALWAYS omitted.
|
||
|
||
The following codes indicate the types of file/update requests
|
||
supported 23 hours per day (Mail Hour excepted).
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
XA Bark and WaZOO file/update requests
|
||
XB Bark file/update requests, WaZOO file requests
|
||
XC Bark file requests, WaZOO file/update requests
|
||
XP Bark file/update requests
|
||
XR Bark and WaZOO file requests
|
||
XW WaZOO file requests
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following code defines user-specific values. If present,
|
||
this code MUST be the last code present in a nodelist entry.
|
||
|
||
Code Meaning
|
||
|
||
Ux..x A user-specified string, which may contain any
|
||
alphanumeric character except blanks. This string
|
||
may contain one to thirty-two characters of
|
||
information that may be used to add user-defined
|
||
data to a specific nodelist entry.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 47 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Claude F. Witherspoon
|
||
Fido 1:288/525 (Home of KidsNews)
|
||
|
||
PUBLIC BROADCAST DELIVERS CLASSROOM COMPUTING IDEAS
|
||
|
||
Its that time of year again. Computer Learning Month will be upon
|
||
us before we know it. With that in mind, we at KidsNews would
|
||
like to share the following information in hopes to make this
|
||
year even better than last year:
|
||
|
||
PALO ALTO, Calif., (March 7, 1989) -- The Computer Learning
|
||
Foundation (CLF), a non-profit organization dedicated to
|
||
advancing computer literacy, announced today its sponsorship of a
|
||
weekly public broadcast television series entitled School Vision
|
||
focusing on the integration of technology into elementary and
|
||
secondary classroom curricula.
|
||
|
||
"School Vision addresses the critical need of preparing our
|
||
teachers to more effectively integrate technology into every
|
||
child's learning experience," said Sally Bowman, CLF director.
|
||
"From special education to high school science and math teachers,
|
||
our educators face the challenge - and opportunity - of making
|
||
computers as critical as textbooks are to classroom learning. The
|
||
School Vision broadcasts will share ideas and provide ppractical
|
||
information for educators."
|
||
|
||
According to U.S. Department of Education, there are more than 45
|
||
million elementary and secondary students in schools in the
|
||
United States. For every 32 students, there is currently one
|
||
microcomputer available. As the number of computers in schools
|
||
increases - it is expected to nearly double by 1990 - educators
|
||
anticipate that computers will become as fundamental to learning
|
||
as text books and traditional visual aids. To prepare the
|
||
country's more than three million educators, the weekly School
|
||
Vision segments will show exiting examples of how technology has
|
||
been brought into the classroom learning environment.
|
||
|
||
The School Vision show will be broadcasts via local PBS stations,
|
||
with dates and times varying depending on location. Parents and
|
||
educators are encouraged to contact their local public broadcast
|
||
station program managers and ask that the School Vision
|
||
broadcasts be picked up, via satelitte, from the Central
|
||
Education Network for local viewing. All educators are invited to
|
||
send videotapes highlighting how computers are being used at
|
||
their schools. Schools submitting videos selected to air on
|
||
School Vision will receive free software programs courtesy of the
|
||
Computer Learning Foundation sponsors. All video submissions and
|
||
inquiries should be addressed to the Foundation at P.O. Box
|
||
60400, Palo Alto, Calif., 94306-0400.
|
||
|
||
CLF is also sponsoring a national teacher training competition
|
||
and plans to award developers of computer/teaching programs with
|
||
computer systems donated by CLF industry sponsors. Recognition
|
||
will be given to top teacher programs developed for the early
|
||
childhood education area, special education, curriculum
|
||
integration (combining social studies, foreign languages,
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 48 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
writing, art/music, math, science), and the "at risk" population.
|
||
Educators interested in receiving more information about the
|
||
teacher training competition should write to the Foundation at
|
||
P.O. Box 60007, Palo Alto, Calif., 94306-0007.
|
||
|
||
Spearheading the development and production of the weekly School
|
||
Vision programs is a coalition of industry and educational
|
||
organizations, including the Central Education Network (CEN),
|
||
Software Communications Services (SCS) and the CLF. The School
|
||
Vision video briefings will be presented through WCET, Cincinnati
|
||
and the Ohio Network Broadcasting Network Commission.
|
||
|
||
The Computer Learning Foundation sponsors Computer Learning Month
|
||
programs each October. The non-profit organization, based in Palo
|
||
Alto, Calif., is supported by leading software publishers and
|
||
computer manufacturers including, Apple, Commodore, IBM and
|
||
Tandy, as well as 52 U.S. State Departments of Education and
|
||
Canadian Ministries of Education, and more than 20 national
|
||
non-profit organizations.
|
||
|
||
Published with permission of the Computer Learning Foundation
|
||
(CLF), Palo Alto, Calif.
|
||
|
||
I have initiated a National Computer Learning Month echo
|
||
available on Fido 1:288/525 by request. If you are interested in
|
||
carrying the echo which uses the name NCLM, please send a request
|
||
to Butch Witherspoon, Fido 1:288/525 (Continuous Mail (CM)), and
|
||
I will be happy to tie you into the echo and send it to your
|
||
system. You must be able to accept continuous Mail for this
|
||
request. This offer is good for the U.S. only until someone
|
||
offeres to gateway the echo to other regions. I would like to see
|
||
the echo carried on the Backbone if folks are interested enough.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 49 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
SAPMFC&LP
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Come one, come all, to the SECOND ANNUAL POOR MAN'S FIDOCON &
|
||
LAKE PARTY !!! Join us for the fun of it, July 14-16 1989, West
|
||
Towakani, Texas.
|
||
|
||
Nets 124 and 130 are pleased to announce the sequel to last
|
||
year's PMFC&LP, which was a smashing success! We hope to again
|
||
see our good friends from around Region 19 and all of FidoNet.
|
||
|
||
Admission is FREE TO ALL, with camping, fishing, and a
|
||
Texas-Style PARTY all included in the price! Bring the family!
|
||
|
||
WARNING! Any person found in possession of a computer (or any
|
||
device even remotely resembling a computer) at this event will
|
||
be summarily thrown into the lake, per PMFC&LP tradition.
|
||
Those in possession of floppy disks and/or DOS or programming
|
||
manuals may be subject to similar disciplinary action.
|
||
|
||
Map/Instructions/Info follows -- not meant for monitor display,
|
||
please print!
|
||
|
||
---------------------------Tear Here---------------------------
|
||
|
||
1989 Second Annual Poor Man's FidoCon & Lake Party
|
||
July 15-16, 1989
|
||
West Towakani, Texas
|
||
Hosted by Nets 124 and 130
|
||
|
||
===============================================================
|
||
|
||
NAVIGATIONAL HELP
|
||
|
||
===============================================================
|
||
|
||
From DALLAS:
|
||
|
||
Take I-30 EAST approximately 25 miles from downtown Dallas to
|
||
the junction with State Highway 205 (Exit 68, Milepost 69).
|
||
There is a large "76" Truck Stop at this exit.
|
||
|
||
Take Exit 68, and follow State Highway 205 SOUTH for 1/10 mile.
|
||
Make the FIRST LEFT (happens quickly) onto State Highway 276.
|
||
|
||
Follow State Highway 276 EAST for 19.5 miles until it dead ends
|
||
at the junction with State Highway 34 in the town of Quinlan,
|
||
Tx. (There will be a Dairy Queen right in front of you)
|
||
|
||
Turn RIGHT (South) onto State Highway 34 and proceed 1/2 mile
|
||
to the junction with State Highway 35 (traffic light).
|
||
|
||
Turn LEFT (East) onto State Highway 35 and proceed 7.1 miles to
|
||
the large "Anchor Inn" sign on the left. Directly across the
|
||
road on the RIGHT is the entrance to the campground. (Note for
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 50 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
late arrivals: Sign is well lighted)
|
||
|
||
Turn RIGHT just past the "Catfish Inn" Restaurant and follow
|
||
the gravel road (blacktop in places) back into the campground.
|
||
|
||
IMPORTANT!!! Please check in at the office upon arrival, as all
|
||
vehicles will require a pass/permit. Tell them you're with the
|
||
DFW Sysops Group.
|
||
|
||
Anchor Inn phone: (214) 447-2256
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From POINTS EAST using I-30:
|
||
|
||
Take I-30 WEST to the junction with State Highway 34 at Canton,
|
||
Tx.
|
||
|
||
Take the State Highway 34 Exit and turn SOUTH onto State
|
||
Highway 34. Follow State Highway 34 for approximately 19 miles
|
||
into the town of Quinlan, Tx.
|
||
|
||
As you are coming into Quinlan, you will pass a large Dairy
|
||
Queen on the left. From the Dairy Queen, continue straight
|
||
ahead for 1/2 mile to the junction with State Highway 35
|
||
(traffic light).
|
||
|
||
Turn LEFT (East) onto State Highway 35 and follow the "From
|
||
Dallas" instructions listed above.
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From POINTS EAST USING I-20:
|
||
|
||
Follow I-20 WEST to the junction of State Highway 34 at
|
||
Terrell, Tx.
|
||
|
||
Turn NORTH onto State Highway 34 and proceed approximately 17
|
||
miles to the junction of State Highway 35 (traffic light) in
|
||
the town of Quinlan, Tx.
|
||
|
||
Turn RIGHT (East) onto State Highway 35 and follow the "From
|
||
Dallas" instructions listed above.
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From POINTS SOUTH:
|
||
|
||
Because I-20 and I-30 "merge" just east of Dallas, if you are
|
||
coming in via I-35, I-45, or U.S. 67 (or a similar route), your
|
||
best route is to get on I-20 and follow it EAST to the junction
|
||
with I-30, then take I-30 EAST and follow the "From Dallas"
|
||
instructions listed above.
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 51 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
|
||
|
||
The campground has a marina, store, tent sites, RV/trailer
|
||
sites, electric and water hookups, picnic tables, showers, and
|
||
sanitary facilities. It is located in the small town of West
|
||
Towakani, TX, with restauarants, stores, shops, gas, and
|
||
medical facilities within a 5 mile radius. Beer/Wine/Liquor
|
||
are available locally.
|
||
|
||
Full RV Hookups (water/electric/sewer/parking) will be
|
||
available to members of our group for $6.00 per night, which is
|
||
half the going rate. The RV spaces are about 200 yards from
|
||
the area we have reserved. RV parking (no hookups) is free to
|
||
members of our group.
|
||
|
||
We have reserved a large area right on the water, including a
|
||
real nice area for those who choose to pitch tents.
|
||
|
||
There are several picnic tables at the site we've reserved,
|
||
including several which are under a nice ramada near the water.
|
||
This ramada will likely become the "center" of activity.
|
||
|
||
There is no electricity available at the site, so bring lots of
|
||
batteries for your boom box.
|
||
|
||
Restrooms are less than 100 yards away.
|
||
|
||
There is no fresh water at the site, but it is available within
|
||
150 yards.
|
||
|
||
We've had a rainy year in North Texas -- bring plenty of insect
|
||
repellant!
|
||
|
||
The owners of the campground say that prior campers have
|
||
destroyed their BBQ grills -- they have new ones on order, but
|
||
they may not arrive by our party date. Anyone with a LARGE
|
||
grill, please let us hear from you, otherwise, a Hibachi/Weber
|
||
might be a good thing to bring...
|
||
|
||
The site we're using will allow the landing of most any boat...
|
||
|
||
For anyone unfamiliar with Texas' archaic "Blue Laws" -- hard
|
||
liquor cannot be purchased legally on Sunday, though beer is
|
||
available 7 days a week... (?!?!?) Also, liquor stores close by
|
||
law at 9:00 p.m. daily, Mon-Sat.
|
||
|
||
Beer can be purchased legally in many food/convenience stores 7
|
||
days per week until 2:00 a.m. daily.
|
||
|
||
For those who wish to help, the following items will be surely
|
||
be needed:
|
||
|
||
Friendly folks
|
||
Good will
|
||
Fellowship
|
||
Fresh water
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 52 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Lawn/Beach Chairs
|
||
Ice
|
||
Charcoal/Propane
|
||
Coleman lanterns
|
||
Firewood
|
||
Paper supplies (Paper plates, Napkins, Paper towels, T.P.)
|
||
Condiments (Mustard, Catsup, Relish, Salt, Pepper)
|
||
Side dishes (Potato salad, Cole slaw, desserts)
|
||
Beer (Should this have been *first*?) :-)
|
||
First Aid Supplies
|
||
Dishwashing/Laundry soap
|
||
Duct Tape - It's hamster season in TX... Pa-Pa-Ooh-Maow-Maow!
|
||
|
||
|
||
PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY! REMEMBER -- DEAD SYSOPS DON'T READ
|
||
ECHOMAIL!
|
||
|
||
|
||
---------------------------Tear Here---------------------------
|
||
|
||
Last year's "First Annual Poor Man's FidoCon & Lake Party" was
|
||
a real blast, with folks from all over Region 19 in attendance
|
||
-- we're hoping this year's blowout will be even bigger and
|
||
better.
|
||
|
||
Families are encouraged to attend, so bring the spouse and
|
||
kids!
|
||
|
||
Hope to see you there!
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 53 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
COLUMNS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE LOST FIDONET ARCHIVES
|
||
VOLUME FOUR
|
||
|
||
Compiled by various members of FidoNet
|
||
Edited by Vince Perriello
|
||
|
||
|
||
This is the fourth article in a series which reprints documents
|
||
of historical significance to FidoNet. This week we feature Tom
|
||
Jennings' second FidoNet History document, which added more
|
||
history and amended the "original policy", from August 1985.
|
||
|
||
Please note that most if not all of the FidoNet addresses, data
|
||
line phone numbers, and company names and/or addresses mentioned
|
||
in this or any of the other articles in this series are not to
|
||
be considered reliable for current use in locating something or
|
||
someone mentioned here. Refer to the current nodelist if you
|
||
want to try to find any of the above.
|
||
|
||
Following is the contents of FIDONET.DC2:
|
||
|
||
|
||
This is Part Two in the history of FidoNet. It turned out that
|
||
the original FIDOHIST.DOC (now called FIDOHIST.DC1, or just "Part
|
||
One") was useful, and many people read it. Unfortunately, by the
|
||
time everyone read it, it became totally obsolete. Oh well.
|
||
Here is Part Two.
|
||
|
||
FIDOHIST.DOC covered the early history of FidoNet, why it was
|
||
done, how it was done, and the reasons for the organization and
|
||
obscure rituals surrounding node numbers. If you havent read it
|
||
yet, I suggest you do now, because I'll probably refer to things
|
||
that won't make any sense otherwise.
|
||
|
||
The original FidoNet was organized very simply; each FidoNet
|
||
system (each node) had a number that served like a phone number,
|
||
uniquely identifying it. The NODELIST, generated by the folks in
|
||
St. Louis that had all FidoNet nodes in it, contains information
|
||
on all known FidoNet systems. Every system in FidoNet had a
|
||
current copy of the NODELIST, which served as the directory of
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
(In the interests of brevity I'm leaving out huge amounts of
|
||
information; I hope you have read FIODHIST.DOC by now ...)
|
||
|
||
FidoNet has been growing steadily since it started by accident in
|
||
May 84 or so. The node list continued to get out of hand; the
|
||
original FIDOHIST.DOC was written to try and help smooth things
|
||
out. It is impossible to overemphasize the amount of work
|
||
involved in keeping the node list accurate. Basically, the guys
|
||
in St. Louis were keeping track of hundreds of FidoNet systems
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 54 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
in Boston, Los Angeles, London, Stockholm and Sweden, and
|
||
publishing the results weekly. There has never been such a
|
||
comprehensive and accurate list of bulletin board systems
|
||
generated.
|
||
|
||
|
||
We talked for many months as to how we could possibly find a
|
||
solution to the many problems; it was at the point where if a
|
||
solution was not found in a few months (by Aug. 85 or so) that
|
||
FidoNet would collapse due to the sheer weight of it's node list.
|
||
|
||
The newsletter, FidoNews, was, and still is, an integral part of
|
||
the process of FidoNet. FidoNews is the only thing that unites
|
||
all FidoNet sysops consistently; please keep up to date on it,
|
||
and stock it for your users if you have the disk space. And
|
||
contribute if you can! [Thanks, Tom. Never hurts to make that
|
||
point again -- ed.]
|
||
|
||
There were many constraints on the kind of things we could do;
|
||
we had no money, so it had to be done for zero cost.
|
||
Centralization was out, so obviously localization was in; just
|
||
how to do it was a total unknown. We thought of going back to
|
||
having people in different areas handle new node requests in
|
||
their area, but that always generated confusion as to who a
|
||
person should go to, how to avoide having someone requesting a
|
||
node number from different people simultaneously, etc etc.
|
||
|
||
The old method of routing was very different than the current
|
||
method, and much more complex; instead of Fido automatically
|
||
routing to hosts, each sysop had to specify (via the ROUTE.BBS
|
||
file) how all routing was done in the system. The was done
|
||
originally by hand, later by John Warren's (102/31) NODELIST
|
||
program.
|
||
|
||
Then of course there was the problem that no matter what we did,
|
||
it would not be done overnight. (ha ha.) It would take many
|
||
weeks at the least, possibly months, so that whatever we did had
|
||
to be compatible with the old method as well.
|
||
|
||
We went through probably hundreds of ideas in the next few
|
||
months, some possibly useful, some insane. Eventually the
|
||
insanity boiled down to a pretty workable system. We chatted by
|
||
FidoNet and by voice telephone. Eventually, we settled on the
|
||
two part number scheme, like the phone company does with area
|
||
codes and exchanges. It accomodated backwards compatibility (you
|
||
can keep your present node number) and the new "area code" (net
|
||
number) could be added into an existing field that had been set
|
||
to zero. (This is why everyone was originally part of net #1).
|
||
|
||
|
||
When a fortunate set of circumstances was to bring Ezra Shapiro
|
||
and me to St. Louis to speak to the McDonnell Douglas
|
||
Recreational Computer Club on XXXX 11th, we planned ahead for a
|
||
national FidoNet sysops meeting that weekend. [Note -- this was
|
||
the first FidoCon -- ed.] Ken and Sally Kaplan were kind enough
|
||
to tolerate having all of us in their living room.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 55 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The people who showed up were (need that list) The meeting lasted
|
||
ten continuous hours; it was the most productive meeting I (and
|
||
most others) had attended. When we were done, we had basically
|
||
the whole thing layed out in every detail.
|
||
|
||
We stuck with the area code business (now known as net and region
|
||
numbers) and worked out how to break things up into regions and
|
||
nets. It was just one of those rare but fortunate events;
|
||
during the morning things went "normally", but in the afternoon
|
||
solutions fell into place one by one, so that by late afternoon
|
||
we had the entire picture laid out in black and white. Two or
|
||
three months of brainstorming just flowed smoothly into place in
|
||
one afternoon ...
|
||
|
||
What we had done was exactly what we have now, though we changed
|
||
the name of "Admin" to "Region", and added the "alternate" node
|
||
and net numbers. (We still seem to be stuck with that terrible
|
||
and inaccurate word, "manager". Any ideas?) I previously had a
|
||
buggy test hack running using area codes, and the week after the
|
||
meeting it was made to conform to what we had talked about that
|
||
Saturday.
|
||
|
||
When version 10C was done, it accomplished more or less
|
||
everything we wanted, but it sure did take a long time. 10C was
|
||
probably the single largest change ever made to Fido/FidoNet, and
|
||
the most thoroughly tested version. At 10M, there are STILL bugs
|
||
left from that early version, in spite of the testing.
|
||
|
||
Once the testing got serious, and it looked like we had a
|
||
shippable version, St. Louis froze the node list, and started
|
||
slicing it into pieces, to give to the soon-to-be net and region
|
||
managers. (That word again.) This caused a tremendous amount of
|
||
trouble for would-be sysops; not only was it difficult enough to
|
||
figure out how on earth to get a node number, once they did they
|
||
were told node numbers weren't being given out just yet.
|
||
Explaining why was even harder, since FIDOHIST.DC2 (ahem) wasn't
|
||
written yet. (I have to agree, this thing is a little bit late)
|
||
It was a typical case of those who already knew were informaed
|
||
constantly of updates, but thse in the dark had a hard time.
|
||
Things were published fairly regularly (am I remembering
|
||
"conveniently" or "accurately" on this part?)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Eventually, 10C was released, and seemed to work fairly well,
|
||
ignoring all the small scale disasters due to bugs, etc. We
|
||
couldn't just swap over to the new area code business until very
|
||
close to 100% of all Fidos were using the new version. This was
|
||
(for me) an excruciating period, basically a "hurry up and wait"
|
||
situation. There had not been a node list release for a month or
|
||
two, and for all practical purposes it looked like FidoNet had
|
||
halted ...
|
||
|
||
Finally, on June 12th, we all swapped over to the new system;
|
||
that afternoon, sysops were to set their net number (it had been
|
||
"1" for backwards compatibility), copy in the new node list
|
||
issued just for this occasion, and go. I assumed the result was
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 56 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
going to be perpetual chaos, bringing about the collapse of
|
||
FidoNet. Almost the exact opposite was true; things went very
|
||
smoothly (yes, there were problems, but when you consider that
|
||
FidoNet consists of microcomputers owned by almost 300 people who
|
||
had never even talked to each other ...)
|
||
|
||
Within a month or so, just about every Fido had swapped over to
|
||
the area code, or net/node architecture. With a few exceptions,
|
||
things went very smoothly. No one was more suprised than
|
||
pessimistic I. At this time, August, I don't think there is a
|
||
single system still using the old node number method.
|
||
|
||
This is all well and fine as far as the software goes, but it
|
||
made a mess for new sysops. For us sysops who have been around
|
||
for a while, there was no great problem, as we saw the changes
|
||
happen one by one. However, new sysops frequently came out of
|
||
the blue; armed with a diskette full of code, they attempted to
|
||
set up a FidoNet node.
|
||
|
||
Actually, I don't understand how anyone does it. The information
|
||
needed is not recorded in any place that a non sysop could find.
|
||
On top of that, most of it is now totally wrong! If you follow
|
||
the original instructions, it said "call Fido #1 ..." if you
|
||
found a real antique, or "calling Fido #51 ..." if it is more
|
||
current. Of course now it tells you to find your region manager.
|
||
"Region manager???" Well, a list of region managers was published
|
||
in FidoNews, but unless you read FidoNews, how does anyone ever
|
||
find out? I'll probably never know.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ANYWAYS ... the original reason for all the changes was to
|
||
DECENTRALIZE FidoNet. It just wasn't possible for Ken Kaplan to
|
||
keep accurate, up to date information on every Fido in the US and
|
||
Europe. The decentralization has been more or less a total
|
||
success. The number of problems introduced were negligable
|
||
compared to the problems solved, and even most new problems are
|
||
by this time solved.
|
||
|
||
It is interesting to note that with the hundreds of systems there
|
||
are today, the national FidoNet hour is less crowded than it was
|
||
when there were only 50 nodes.
|
||
|
||
Please, keep in mind that no one has done anything like this
|
||
before, we are all winging it, and learning (hopefully) as we go.
|
||
Please be patient with problems, none of us is paid to do this,
|
||
and it is more and more work as time goes on. Somehow it seems
|
||
to all get done ...
|
||
|
||
HOW TO GET A NODE NUMBER AND ALL THAT
|
||
|
||
20 August 1985
|
||
|
||
This is by necessity a very general idea of how it's done, and
|
||
you were warned earlier that this may be obsolete this very
|
||
minute; with that, here's the "current" process for starting up
|
||
a new FidoNet node.
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 57 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
You can of course skip all or part of this if you've done this
|
||
before; if you haven't, well, be prepared for a lot of searching
|
||
and asking questions.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Of course, you need to have your Fido BBS system running first.
|
||
It's probably best that you play with it for a while, and get
|
||
some experience with how it all works, and whether you have the
|
||
patience to run a BBS. It can get exasperating, and you will
|
||
never find time to use the computer ever again.
|
||
|
||
Obtain the most recent copy of the nodelist possible; thi may
|
||
take some searching. If you get totally lost, you can always
|
||
contact Fido 125/1 or Fido 100/51; though these are very busy
|
||
systems, they both usually have the very latest of anything, and
|
||
can direct you to the right place.
|
||
|
||
The big problem here is to find out if oyu are in a net or not,
|
||
and if not, then who your region manager is. If you are in a
|
||
lrge city (Los Angeles, Cincinnati, etc) then there is probably a
|
||
net in your area. Look through the node list (use the N)odebook
|
||
command in Fido, or a text editor) for the right area code or
|
||
city.
|
||
|
||
If there is no net in your area, then you are part of a region.
|
||
This is a little harder, because regions are large, and sometomes
|
||
cover many states. Look at all the regions in the node list, you
|
||
should find a region that fits you.
|
||
|
||
Once you find this, you have to contact the net or region manager
|
||
to get your node number. Exactly how this is done depends on who
|
||
the manager is, and how sticky they are fir details. A near
|
||
universal requirement is that you send your request via FidoNet,
|
||
not by manully; this isn't done to make you life difficult, but
|
||
to ensure that your system is really working right. IF you
|
||
manage to get a FidoNet message to the manager, its usually safe
|
||
to assume that you're system is working OK. If you get a reply
|
||
in return, then you know both directions work.
|
||
|
||
It is usually each sysops' responsibility to go get the latest
|
||
nodelist and newsletters; they are not distributed to all
|
||
systems because of the expense. (Though, I'm trying to get them
|
||
distributed to more places than they are now, it's sometimes very
|
||
difficult to get a copy of the nodelist!)
|
||
|
||
Again, read the FidoNew newsletter regularly; it is about the
|
||
only way to stay in contact with the rest of the net. Programs,
|
||
problems, services, bugs and interesting announcements can always
|
||
be found there. FidoNews articles don't come out of thin air;
|
||
send in anythnig you think might be of interest. They don't have
|
||
to be lifetime masterpieces, or even well written.
|
||
|
||
Please remember the entire network is made of the sysops; there
|
||
is no central location from which good things come, the net
|
||
consists entirely of the sysops and their contributions. If you
|
||
don't do it, chances are no one else will!
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 58 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Tom Jennings
|
||
20 Aug 85
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ken Kaplan Fido 100/51 314/432-4129
|
||
Tom Jennings Fido 125/1 415/864-1418
|
||
Ben Baker Fido 100/10 314/234-1462
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 59 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
LATEST VERSIONS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Latest Software Versions
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
Fido 12m+* Phoenix 1.3 TBBS 2.1
|
||
Lynx 1.30 QuickBBS 2.03 TComm/TCommNet 3.4
|
||
Opus 1.03b+ RBBS 17.2A* TPBoard 5.2*
|
||
|
||
+ Netmail capable (does not require additional mailer software)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Network Node List Other
|
||
Mailers Version Utilities Version Utilities Version
|
||
|
||
BinkleyTerm 2.20 EditNL 4.00 ARC 6.02*
|
||
D'Bridge 1.18 MakeNL 2.12 ARCmail 2.0
|
||
Dutchie 2.90C ParseList 1.30 ConfMail 4.00
|
||
FrontDoor 2.0 Prune 1.40 EMM 2.02*
|
||
PRENM 1.47* XlatList 2.90 GROUP 2.10*
|
||
SEAdog 4.51* XlaxDiff 2.32 MSG 3.3*
|
||
XlaxNode 2.32 MSGED 1.99
|
||
TCOMMail 2.2*
|
||
TMail 1.11*
|
||
TPBNetEd 3.2*
|
||
UFGATE 1.03
|
||
XRS 2.2
|
||
* Recently changed
|
||
|
||
Utility authors: Please help keep this list up to date by
|
||
reporting new versions to 1:1/1. It is not our intent to list
|
||
all utilities here, only those which verge on necessity.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 60 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
NOTICES
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
The Interrupt Stack
|
||
|
||
|
||
9 Jul 1989
|
||
FidoNet's Zone 4 (Latin America) adopts 0800 GMT as new Zone
|
||
Mail Hour, replacing the North American 0900 GMT schedule.
|
||
|
||
15 Jul 1989
|
||
Start of the SAPMFC&LP (Second Annual Poor Man's FidoCon and
|
||
Lake Party) to be held at Silver Lake Park on Grapevine Lake
|
||
in Arlington, Texas. This started as an R19-only thing last
|
||
year, but we had so much fun, we decided to invite everybody!
|
||
We'll have beer, food, beer, waterskiing, beer, horseshoes,
|
||
beer, volleyball, and of course beer. It's an overnighter,
|
||
so bring your sleeping bag and plan to camp out. Contact one
|
||
of the Furriers (Ron Bemis at 1:124/1113 or Dewey Thiessen at
|
||
1:130/24) for details and a fantastic ASCII map.
|
||
|
||
2 Aug 1989
|
||
Start of Galactic Hacker Party in Amsterdam, Holland. Contact
|
||
Rop Gonggrijp at 2:280/1 for details.
|
||
|
||
24 Aug 1989
|
||
Voyager 2 passes Neptune.
|
||
|
||
24 Aug 1989
|
||
FidoCon '89 starts at the Holiday Inn in San Jose,
|
||
California. Trade show, seminars, etc. Contact 1:1/89
|
||
for info.
|
||
|
||
5 Oct 1989
|
||
20th Anniversary of "Monty Python's Flying Circus"
|
||
|
||
11 Oct 1989
|
||
First International Modula-2 Conference at Bled, Yugoslavia
|
||
hosting Niklaus Wirth and the British Standards Institution.
|
||
Contact 1:106/8422 for more information.
|
||
|
||
11 Nov 1989
|
||
A new area code forms in northern Illinois at 12:01 am.
|
||
Chicago proper will remain area code 312; suburban areas
|
||
formerly served with that code will become area code 708.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 61 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
OFFICERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL FIDONET ASSOCIATION
|
||
|
||
Mort Sternheim 1:321/109 Chairman of the Board
|
||
Bob Rudolph 1:261/628 President
|
||
Matt Whelan 3:3/1 Vice President
|
||
Bill Bolton 3:711/403 Vice President-Technical Coordinator
|
||
Linda Grennan 1:147/1 Secretary
|
||
Kris Veitch 1:147/30 Treasurer
|
||
|
||
|
||
IFNA COMMITTEE AND BOARD CHAIRS
|
||
|
||
Administration and Finance Mark Grennan 1:147/1
|
||
Board of Directors Mort Sternheim 1:321/109
|
||
Bylaws Don Daniels 1:107/210
|
||
Ethics Vic Hill 1:147/4
|
||
Executive Committee Bob Rudolph 1:261/628
|
||
International Affairs Rob Gonsalves 2:500/1
|
||
Membership Services David Drexler 1:147/47
|
||
Nominations & Elections David Melnick 1:107/233
|
||
Public Affairs David Drexler 1:147/47
|
||
Publications Rick Siegel 1:107/27
|
||
Security & Individual Rights Jim Cannell 1:143/21
|
||
Technical Standards Rick Moore 1:115/333
|
||
|
||
|
||
IFNA BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
||
|
||
DIVISION AT-LARGE
|
||
|
||
10 Courtney Harris 1:102/732 Don Daniels 1:107/210
|
||
11 Bill Allbritten 1:11/301 Mort Sternheim 1:321/109
|
||
12 Bill Bolton 3:711/403 Mark Grennan 1:147/1
|
||
13 Irene Henderson 1:107/9 (vacant)
|
||
14 Ken Kaplan 1:100/22 Ted Polczyinski 1:154/5
|
||
15 Scott Miller 1:128/12 Matt Whelan 3:3/1
|
||
16 Ivan Schaffel 1:141/390 Robert Rudolph 1:261/628
|
||
17 Neal Curtin 1:343/1 Steve Jordan 1:206/2871
|
||
18 Andrew Adler 1:135/47 Kris Veitch 1:147/30
|
||
19 David Drexler 1:147/47 (vacant)
|
||
2 Henk Wevers 2:500/1 David Melnik 1:107/233
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 62 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
__
|
||
The World's First / \
|
||
BBS Network /|oo \
|
||
* FidoNet * (_| /_)
|
||
FidoCon '89 in San Jose, California _`@/_ \ _
|
||
at The Holiday Inn Park Plaza | | \ \\
|
||
August 24-27, 1989 | (*) | \ ))
|
||
______ |__U__| / \//
|
||
/ Fido \ _//|| _\ /
|
||
(________) (_/(_|(____/ (tm)
|
||
|
||
|
||
R E G I S T R A T I O N F O R M
|
||
|
||
|
||
Name: _______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Address: ____________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
City: _______________________ State: ____ Zip: ______________
|
||
|
||
Country: ____________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Phone Numbers:
|
||
|
||
Day: ________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Evening: ____________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Data: _______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Zone:Net/
|
||
Node.Point: ___________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Your BBS Name: ________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
BBS Software: _____________________ Mailer: ___________________
|
||
|
||
Modem Brand: _____________________ Speed: ____________________
|
||
|
||
At what hotel will you be staying: ____________________________
|
||
|
||
Do you want an in room point? (Holiday Inn only) ______________
|
||
|
||
Are you a Sysop? _____________
|
||
|
||
Are you an IFNA Member? ______
|
||
|
||
Additional Guests: __________
|
||
(not attending conferences)
|
||
|
||
Do you have any special requirements? (Sign Language translation,
|
||
handicapped, etc.)
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 63 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Comments: ______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Costs How Many? Cost
|
||
--------------------------- -------- -------
|
||
|
||
Conference fee $60 .................... ________ _______
|
||
($75.00 after July 15)
|
||
|
||
Friday Banquet $30.00 ................ ________ _______
|
||
|
||
======== =======
|
||
|
||
Totals ................................ ________ _______
|
||
|
||
You may pay by Check, Money Order, or Credit Card. Please send
|
||
no cash. All monies must be in U.S. Funds. Checks should be
|
||
made out to: "FidoCon '89"
|
||
|
||
|
||
This form should be completed and mailed to:
|
||
|
||
Silicon Valley FidoCon '89
|
||
PO Box 390770
|
||
Mountain View, CA 94039
|
||
|
||
|
||
You may register by Netmailing this completed form to 1:1/89 for
|
||
processing. Rename it to ZNNNXXXX.REG where Z is your Zone
|
||
number, N is your Net number, and X is your Node number. US Mail
|
||
confirmation is required within 72 hours to confirm your
|
||
registration.
|
||
|
||
If you are paying by credit card, please include the following
|
||
information. For your own security, do not route any message
|
||
with your credit card number on it. Crash it directly to 1:1/89.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Master Card _______ Visa ________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Credit Card Number _____________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Expiration Date ________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Signature ______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
No credit card registrations will be accepted without a valid
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 64 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
signature.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Rooms at the Holiday Inn may be reserved by calling the Hotel at
|
||
408-998-0400, and mentioning that you are with FidoCon. Rooms
|
||
are $60.00 per night double occupancy. Additional rollaways are
|
||
available for $10.00 per night. To obtain these rates you must
|
||
register before July 15.
|
||
|
||
The official FidoCon '89 airline is American Airlines. You can
|
||
receive either a 5% reduction in supersaver fares or a 40%
|
||
reduction in the regular day coach fare. San Jose is an American
|
||
Airlines hub with direct flights to most major cities. When
|
||
making reservations, you must call American's reservation number,
|
||
800-433-1790, and reference Star number S0289VM.
|
||
|
||
The official FidoCon '89 automobile rental agency is Alamo Rent a
|
||
Car. Rates are as described below. All rates include automatic
|
||
transmission, air conditioning, radio, and unlimited mileage.
|
||
|
||
Economy car (example: Geo Metro) $32 day/$109 week.
|
||
Compact car (example: Chevy Cavalier) $34 day/$120 week.
|
||
Midsize car (example: Pontiac Grand Am) $36 day/$135 week.
|
||
Standard car (example: Buick Regal) $38 day/$165 week.
|
||
Luxury car (example: Buick LeSabre) $40 day/$239 week.
|
||
|
||
To take advantage of this rate, call Alamo at 1-800-327-9633 and
|
||
request the convention rate. Mention FidoCon '89, the location
|
||
and dates.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-26 Page 65 26 Jun 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
__
|
||
The World's First / \
|
||
BBS Network /|oo \
|
||
* FidoNet * (_| /_)
|
||
_`@/_ \ _
|
||
| | \ \\
|
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______ |__U__| / \//
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/ Fido \ _//|| _\ /
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(________) (_/(_|(____/ (tm)
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Membership for the International FidoNet Association
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Membership in IFNA is open to any individual or organization that
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pays a specified annual membership fee. IFNA serves the
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international FidoNet-compatible electronic mail community to
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increase worldwide communications.
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Member Name _______________________________ Date _______________
|
||
Address _________________________________________________________
|
||
City ____________________________________________________________
|
||
State ________________________________ Zip _____________________
|
||
Country _________________________________________________________
|
||
Home Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
||
Work Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Zone:Net/Node Number ____________________________________________
|
||
BBS Name ________________________________________________________
|
||
BBS Phone Number ________________________________________________
|
||
Baud Rates Supported ____________________________________________
|
||
Board Restrictions ______________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Your Special Interests __________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
In what areas would you be willing to help in FidoNet? __________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
Send this membership form and a check or money order for $25 in
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US Funds to:
|
||
International FidoNet Association
|
||
PO Box 41143
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St Louis, Missouri 63141
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USA
|
||
|
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Thank you for your membership! Your participation will help to
|
||
insure the future of FidoNet.
|
||
|
||
Please NOTE that IFNA is a general not-for-profit organization
|
||
and Articles of Association and By-Laws were adopted by the
|
||
membership in January 1987. The second elected Board of Directors
|
||
was filled in August 1988. The IFNA Echomail Conference has been
|
||
established on FidoNet to assist the Board. We welcome your
|
||
input to this Conference.
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