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September, 1993 [Etext #80]
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The ***Copyrighted*** Project Gutenberg Etext of:
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THE ONLINE WORLD
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The Online World book's text on paper, disk and in any other
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electronic form is (C) copyrighted 1993 by Odd de Presno. All
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The ***Copyrighted*** Project Gutenberg Etext of:
|
||
|
||
THE ONLINE WORLD
|
||
|
||
The Online World book's text on paper, disk and in any other
|
||
electronic form is (C) copyrighted 1993 by Odd de Presno. All
|
||
rights reserved worldwide.
|
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|
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xxxx
|
||
SHAREWARE BOOK
|
||
|
||
*********************
|
||
* THE ONLINE WORLD *
|
||
*********************
|
||
|
||
Version 1.1 - September 1993
|
||
|
||
By Odd de Presno
|
||
4815 Saltrod, Norway (Europe)
|
||
Voice (registrations only): +47 370 31204
|
||
Internet mail: opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
Data/BBS: +47 370 31204
|
||
FAX: +47 370 27111
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
PREFACE
|
||
=======
|
||
This is the ASCII online distribution of the Online World. It deals
|
||
with the practical aspects of using the rapidly growing global online
|
||
information resource.
|
||
The book is distributed in a form that is designed to be easily
|
||
accessible with the maximum range of computers, printer types, and
|
||
search programs. Also, it has been designed to be compatible with
|
||
electronic reading devices for the blind. Therefore, many frills
|
||
(such as fancy formatting, extraneous characters or tags) have been
|
||
omitted.
|
||
The main subject of the book is what you can get out of the
|
||
online resource.
|
||
Expect an outline, not a comprehensive list or directory of all
|
||
available offerings. This book explores selected applications
|
||
across network and service boundaries, to show how these needs may
|
||
be satisfied.
|
||
In the process, it gives access information for a large number
|
||
of specific online offerings.
|
||
The applications range from entertainment and the bizarre to
|
||
databases and special services for professionals and organizations.
|
||
You are not expected to live in the United States or in Norway.
|
||
Emphasis is on major international offerings available through
|
||
services and networks like the Internet, BITNET, CompuServe, Echo,
|
||
FidoNet, Usenet, Dialcom, Dow Jones/News Retrieval, MCI, NewsNet
|
||
and UUCP. These services can be accessed from almost anywhere.
|
||
Talking about the Internet, we do not expect that it will be
|
||
easy for you to get full access. We assume that most people can get
|
||
access to this network by electronic mail only.
|
||
I wrote The Online World for parents and youth, teachers,
|
||
students, business people, social workers, psychologists, young,
|
||
old, for anybody interested in knowing a bit more about our
|
||
current "Global Village."
|
||
You can read it like a novel, to get an idea of what is going
|
||
on. It can be used as a practical guide book to online data bases
|
||
and news sources, or as a book of reference.
|
||
You need not be a computer expert or an experienced "onliner"
|
||
to find it useful.
|
||
While not being a textbook on data communications, it contains
|
||
much information to help novices get started. For an introduction
|
||
to telecommunications, check out appendix 2 and 3 before continuing
|
||
with Chapter 1.
|
||
Before you start, one word of warning. New online offerings are
|
||
born each day, while others are being closed down. Chances are that
|
||
most services in this book will still be around when you read it,
|
||
but I will need to update the text regularly. Therefore, all
|
||
feedback is welcomed with thanks.
|
||
Please do also tell me what you like, what you don't, and what
|
||
you feel I may have missed -- or have gotten hopelessly wrong. Send
|
||
by electronic mail to me at opresno@extern.uio.no .
|
||
|
||
This book is not free
|
||
---------------------
|
||
The Online World book is NOT public domain. It is copyrighted work
|
||
and may be distributed only pursuant to this license.
|
||
You are granted a limited read and use license of the book to
|
||
see if it is for you. Any unregistered use other than to determine
|
||
if the book meets your needs is a violation of this license and is
|
||
forbidden.
|
||
If you like the book, please become a registered reader. Your
|
||
contribution will support further research and development of the
|
||
text.
|
||
The important benefit of registering is that you will receive
|
||
the latest version of the book on diskette (MS-DOS only). This will
|
||
allow you to have current information on your hard disk that you
|
||
can search whenever you want to.
|
||
The online world is dynamic. Services and offerings come and
|
||
go. So read appendix 8 to find out how to stay updated.
|
||
|
||
The registered shareware version of The Online World including
|
||
shipping and handling is
|
||
|
||
NOK 105.00 for payment by credit card
|
||
(around US$ 15.00)
|
||
US$ 20.00 for all other types of payment
|
||
(check or SWIFT bank transfer)
|
||
|
||
As an alternative, you can also register for six updates of the
|
||
book during one year. The updates will be mailed you on computer
|
||
diskette:
|
||
|
||
US$60.00 for all types of payment
|
||
|
||
The special rates for organizations to make the text available to
|
||
employees etc. over a network are explained in appendix 8.
|
||
Please note: As I do not receive any renumeration from vendors
|
||
of shareware disks, you must register your copy to have a legal
|
||
license for use of the book beyond an evaluation period.
|
||
|
||
Please give to others
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Permission is with this granted to reproduce and distribute the
|
||
Online World book so long as:
|
||
|
||
(1) No remuneration of any kind is received in exchange.
|
||
A distribution fee may be charged for the cost of a
|
||
diskette, shipping and handling, as long as the total
|
||
(per disk) does not exceed US$8.00.
|
||
(2) Distribution is without ANY modification to the contents
|
||
of all accompanying text files, including the copyright
|
||
notice and this license. All of the files in this package
|
||
are to be distributed together.
|
||
(3) No publication of the book or individual articles from the
|
||
book in print is permitted, in any language, without the
|
||
express written consent of the author.
|
||
|
||
If archiving this book for BBS use or library use, please include
|
||
all files and use the name ONLINE10, for example, ONLINE10.ZIP, or
|
||
ONLINE10.LZH. This will provide consistency for future updates.
|
||
|
||
No copy of this book may be distributed without including a copy
|
||
of this license. Any other use, including bundling of any of the
|
||
book's chapters or appendixes for your own distribution, is
|
||
prohibited without express, written permission in advance from the
|
||
author.
|
||
|
||
The Online World book is regularly being updated. Information about
|
||
where to get the latest version of the book can be retrieved from
|
||
TOW, a mailing list set up to support the project. For information,
|
||
send electronic mail to LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu (LISTSERV@NDSUVM1 on
|
||
BITNET) containing the command "GET TOW MASTER".
|
||
|
||
How to read the book
|
||
--------------------
|
||
You may read the book using any ASCII viewing or text searching
|
||
program. My private favorites are:
|
||
|
||
LIST - Shareware MS-DOS file viewing program,
|
||
|
||
LOOKFOR - Shareware boolean text search program.
|
||
|
||
Print versions of The Online World
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
The Online World does not cover any specific area of the world.
|
||
Local versions will be printed and published in several countries
|
||
through joint venture partners. These versions of the book will be
|
||
adapted to local conditions, and contain many local examples and
|
||
references.
|
||
|
||
The following local version of the book is available:
|
||
|
||
"Ut i verden fra egen skjerm," Norwegian text, Dataforlaget A/S,
|
||
1992. 220 pages. Phone: +47 22 63 61 62. Fax: +47 22 63 60 09.
|
||
Price: NOK 245,-. ISBN: 82-90628-67-6.
|
||
|
||
Local language versions of the book are due be published soon by
|
||
partners in Denmark and Germany. For information, please contact:
|
||
|
||
Claus Berg (Denmark) at Claus_Berg@SKOLE-KOM.UNI-C.DK
|
||
Publisher: Teknisk Forlag A/S, Skelbaekgade 4, 1780 Kbh.V.,
|
||
Denmark. Fax: +45 31 21 09 83.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Karl Sarnow (Germany) at karl@dadoka.h.ni.schule.de
|
||
Publisher: Verlag Heintz Heise GmbH & Co KB, Helstorfer
|
||
Strasse 7, D-3000 Hannover 61, Germany.
|
||
Fax: +49-511-53 52-129.
|
||
|
||
Do you want to be a partner?
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
If you are interested in becoming the author of a local language
|
||
version of the book in your country, please write me at
|
||
opresno@extern.uio.no to discuss the possibility of a joint-
|
||
venture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Saltrod (Norway), September 1, 1993
|
||
|
||
Yours,
|
||
|
||
Odd de Presno
|
||
|
||
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The Online World book's text on paper, disk and in any other
|
||
electronic form is (C) copyrighted 1993 by Odd de Presno. All
|
||
rights reserved worldwide.
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
INDEX
|
||
=====
|
||
|
||
PREFACE
|
||
|
||
1. Going online will make me rich, right?
|
||
Knowledge is Power. A larger personal network gives you a stronger
|
||
punch. The value of information, and of having a great time. . .
|
||
|
||
2. The online world
|
||
The structure and content of the online offerings. About
|
||
Bulletin Board systems, discussion lists, conferencing systems,
|
||
and online data bases. About packet data services, and network
|
||
services like FidoNet, i-Com, Infonet, Internet, and others.
|
||
A constantly changing environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
3. How to use online services
|
||
Short introduction. How to use menus, and how to navigate like
|
||
an expert. Tailoring online services to your interests and needs.
|
||
|
||
4. Hobbies, games, and fun
|
||
About computer programs, online adventure games, threatening viruses,
|
||
planning holidays, collecting coins and stamps, genealogy, music,
|
||
shopping and other leisure activities.
|
||
|
||
5. Home, education, and work
|
||
Tips for house owners, for those more concerned about money, about
|
||
education and the exchange of knowledge, electronic conferences.
|
||
Building a personal network. Job hunting by modem, and about
|
||
working from home.
|
||
|
||
6. Your personal healthnet
|
||
About support for diseases like AIDS, cancer, and kidney diseases.
|
||
Forums for people with physical or mental disabilities, like
|
||
hearing impairments, learning disabilities, vision impairment,
|
||
mobility problems.
|
||
|
||
7. Electronic mail, telex, and fax
|
||
How to communicate globally at a ridiculously low cost, with
|
||
notes about how to address your global electronic mail.
|
||
|
||
8. Free expert assistance
|
||
How to get free advice about your computer, software and
|
||
other things.
|
||
|
||
9. Your electronic daily news
|
||
Read national and global news before getting it through the
|
||
traditional media. Get those interesting background facts.
|
||
Read special interest news that the media never bother to print.
|
||
|
||
10. Looking for a needle in a bottle of hay
|
||
Notes about searching data bases. How to locate interesting
|
||
books and articles.
|
||
|
||
11. Getting an edge over your competitor
|
||
Using the networks to manage projects. Monitor competitors,
|
||
prospects, suppliers, markets, technologies, and trends.
|
||
Marketing and sales by modem.
|
||
|
||
12. Practical tips
|
||
How to get more out of the time spent online.
|
||
|
||
13. Cheaper and better communications
|
||
Using packet data services or competing data
|
||
transport services like Tymnet Outdial, Infonet,
|
||
Internet, PC Pursuit, and others.
|
||
|
||
14. Keep what you find.
|
||
Build your local personal data base. Strategies for
|
||
locating interesting information. What separates good
|
||
from bad information.
|
||
|
||
15. You pay little for a lot!
|
||
How to figure out costs.
|
||
|
||
16. Automatic communication
|
||
Get a lead on your competitors.
|
||
Avoid duplication of effort.
|
||
Reduce costs.
|
||
Reduce boring repetitive work.
|
||
No need to remember all the "tricks" of communications
|
||
anymore.
|
||
|
||
17. Gazing into the future.
|
||
Thoughts about things to come.
|
||
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
Appendices:
|
||
|
||
1. List of selected online services
|
||
2. How to get started
|
||
About your personal computer, modem and
|
||
communications program.
|
||
3. Your first online trip
|
||
Getting started. Typical pitfalls and
|
||
simple solutions. Down- and uploading.
|
||
4. Explanation of some frequently used terms
|
||
5. Books and articles for further reading
|
||
6. International standard country codes
|
||
7. About the author
|
||
8. How to register
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
|
||
Chapter 1: Going online will make me rich, right?
|
||
=================================================
|
||
|
||
The number of services is enormous. It takes time to find the
|
||
truly interesting stuff.
|
||
- Knowledge is power.
|
||
- A large personal network gives you a punch.
|
||
- The value of information, and of having a good time.
|
||
|
||
Knowledge is Power
|
||
------------------
|
||
My wife has a rare and dangerous kidney disease. One day her doctor
|
||
joined us on an online research session to look for experiences and
|
||
advice in other countries.
|
||
We sat down in my office in Norway. I turned on my personal
|
||
computer and started a communications program.
|
||
After some keypresses, we could hear the attached modem dial
|
||
the number of CompuServe, a North American information utility. (A
|
||
modem is a piece of equipment that converts computer signals to and
|
||
from sound codes, so that data can be sent by phone.)
|
||
It took just a few seconds to make the connection. Soon, a
|
||
greeting scrolled over our screen, followed by a menu of available
|
||
choices.
|
||
|
||
For an introduction to practical telecommunications, check out
|
||
appendix 2 and 3. Appendix 1 lists major services mentioned in
|
||
this book.
|
||
|
||
We selected "Health" and the "Data Base for Rare diseases." This
|
||
gave the address of an American foundation for "cysts in kidneys,"
|
||
which is the name of her disease. My wife made contact, and has
|
||
since received regular reports of research results and experiences
|
||
gained in the field.
|
||
We sent an open request for help to an electronic forum for
|
||
doctors. The result was several useful responses. We searched a
|
||
magazine data base for medical articles containing the key word
|
||
"kidney." Paper copies of the most interesting finds arrived by
|
||
mail after a few days. My wife gave them to her hospital doctor as
|
||
background reading.
|
||
Kenya Saikawa is paralyzed. He communicates with his PC and
|
||
modem using light key strokes and Morse code. Online communications
|
||
allows Kenya to be in regular contact with people outside the walls
|
||
of his Tokyo hospital.
|
||
We met online in a "Handicap Club" on a computer center called
|
||
TWICS in Tokyo. He was there to exchange experiences with others
|
||
with disabilities. The club is a personal support group for those
|
||
in need of help.
|
||
CompuServe's Cancer Forum has a similar function. "It's a
|
||
blessing that I can visit here 24 hours a day," one visitor said.
|
||
"When I'm unable to sleep at night, I often sit down by the PC to
|
||
read and write messages to others."
|
||
The forum is like a family. The file library is full of
|
||
information about cancer. Members can just go in there and pick
|
||
up whatever they want to read.
|
||
Dave Hughes from Old Colorado Springs, Colorado in the United
|
||
States has had a long career as a professional soldier. He has
|
||
fought in places like the Yalue river in Korea and Vietnam's
|
||
jungle. When he retired, he became a political online force.
|
||
"I'm using the new tools of the individual mind to change the
|
||
world," he says. Native American Indians are among those, who
|
||
have benefited from Dave's energy and knowledge. He has helped them
|
||
show their culture to the outside world in a graphical form.
|
||
Vladimir Makarenkov from the Crimea in the Ukraine is manager
|
||
in a company called VINKO. In early 1993, he distributed an offer
|
||
of partnership with foreign companies through the mailing list E-
|
||
EUROPE. VINKO is into aluminium processing. He wrote:
|
||
"From our own production we can offer some one metals and
|
||
aniline dye for cotton, viscose, wool, silk, leather. We are
|
||
interested in deliveries of chemical production (gamma acid, H-
|
||
acid) and not quickly deteriorating foods (food concentrates,
|
||
canned food etc)."
|
||
George Pavlov is Planning and Reporting manager at an American
|
||
computer manufacturer. Daily, he logs on to online services to
|
||
monitor industry product announcements and daily news from several
|
||
electronic sources. It helps him stay ahead of rapid technological
|
||
developments.
|
||
Semafor A/S in Arendal, Norway, produces modems and other types
|
||
of telecommunications equipment. They operate an electronic bulletin
|
||
board for customers, users and prospects. Anybody can call in to
|
||
get information about products and offerings. If they need help,
|
||
they can leave a message to Semafor A/S day and night. A response
|
||
will be waiting for them, when they call back.
|
||
Eduardo Salom heads Software Plus SA in Buenos Aires,
|
||
Argentina. He discovered the online world in 1988, and uses it to
|
||
find information that can help his company develop industrial
|
||
applications.
|
||
The Norwegian civil engineer Kai Oestreng regularly calls
|
||
specialized online computer clubs to discuss his computational
|
||
needs, fetch programs and monitor developments.
|
||
Mary Lou Rebelo was born in southern Brazil. Today, she is
|
||
married to a Japanese and lives in Tokyo. She teaches Portuguese
|
||
and works as a translator. The modem enables her to keep in touch
|
||
with others around the world interested in Portuguese and Spanish
|
||
language and culture.
|
||
Mike Wright teaches at St. Andrew's College in Grahamstown,
|
||
South Africa. He integrates the online world in his teaching to
|
||
motivate his students. His classes are involved in international
|
||
projects with schools all over the globe.
|
||
In August 1991, the "Old Stalinists" made a coup d'etat in the
|
||
Soviet Union. The news media were silenced, but they forgot the
|
||
country's many bulletin boards. Early one morning, a foreign caller
|
||
picked up the following messages from a Moscow BBS:
|
||
|
||
|
||
From: Valery Koulkov
|
||
To: All Msg #560, 00:42am
|
||
20-Aug-91
|
||
Subject: Moscow, August 19, 23:00
|
||
|
||
Some news from the square news RSFSR white building, 23:00. Local
|
||
inhabitants are very welcome for the people guarding 'white
|
||
building', they carry food and some garments to the square.
|
||
Approx. 8 tanks stand by the house under the RSFSR flags! There is
|
||
an information that 'white house' is surrounded by the soldiers
|
||
from Vysshee Desantnoye uchilische from Ryazan. The people are not
|
||
so desperate than some hours ago. There are more and more people.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From: Stas Stas
|
||
To: Alexey Zabrodin Msg #562, 02:53pm
|
||
20-Aug-91
|
||
Subject: Russia In Agency news
|
||
|
||
I have sent two files RIA4.txt & ria5.txt
|
||
It's msgs of Russia Information Agency
|
||
Spread it as much as you can!!!
|
||
|
||
|
||
From: Andrew Brown
|
||
To: All Msg #563, 06:31pm
|
||
20-Aug-91
|
||
Subject: What's happening?
|
||
|
||
I am a journalist on the London Daily newspaper *The Independent*,
|
||
and I am trying to discover whether this technology, like fax
|
||
machines, is being used for independent communication now that the
|
||
censors have clamped down on everything else.
|
||
|
||
Can people describe what is happening, and what they see?
|
||
Something similar was done on Compuserve during the Gulf War, by
|
||
subscribers who where in Israel and were able to describe Scud
|
||
missile attacks without censorship.
|
||
|
||
Andrew Brown
|
||
|
||
|
||
Select: 564
|
||
From: Valery Koulkov
|
||
To: All Msg #564, 00:52am
|
||
21-Aug-91
|
||
Subject: Moscow events
|
||
|
||
There is shooting near the American embassy and RSFSR state
|
||
building. Informer said (by phone) that he saw several victims
|
||
(shot and killed under the tanks. there is fire near the RSFSR
|
||
building. Moscow, August 21, 1:15 am
|
||
|
||
Telecommunications played a role in this historic event. While CNN
|
||
televised the coup, it was not the images, but the words of men
|
||
like Yeltsin that held sway for Russian citizens.
|
||
Within hours of Yeltsin's statement in defiance of the coup
|
||
leaders, handbills reproducing his statement papered the walls of
|
||
the Moscow metro and Leningrad houses.
|
||
|
||
You can!
|
||
--------
|
||
Online communication is not just for the privileged or those with a
|
||
special interest in computers. It is for you, me, everybody.
|
||
There is much to learn in the "online land," and the medium is
|
||
fascinating. It makes learning fun. You can learn about how to use
|
||
your computer, about your profession, other people's views about
|
||
whatever, and more. Often, you will find reports about experiences
|
||
and know-how that it is hard or impractical to get in other ways.
|
||
Some users go online to learn how to do things better. Teachers
|
||
want to give their students a better and more motivating learning
|
||
environment. Architects, engineers and companies want increased
|
||
competitiveness and sales. They seek timely information about
|
||
competitors, technologies and tools, partners and trends.
|
||
You can take a Masters Degree in Business Administration while
|
||
sitting in front of your computer at home. You can join online
|
||
seminars arranged by local or foreign educational institutes. You
|
||
can even study at night, when the rest of your family has calmed
|
||
down.
|
||
Some build their own educational programs supported by data
|
||
bases, online forums and associations of various kinds.
|
||
You may feel helpless when in hospital, or when visiting your
|
||
doctor. Knowledge about your disease will make you better equipped
|
||
to handle the situation. The online resource is just keypresses
|
||
away, and knowledge is power.
|
||
To get this power, you'll need to know what you can get from
|
||
the online world. This book is filled with examples of what is
|
||
available, and practical tips about how to use the offerings.
|
||
|
||
A large personal network gives strength
|
||
---------------------------------------
|
||
Most of us belong to one or several networks. They consist of
|
||
persons that you can call on whenever you need help. Your network
|
||
may be private, like in your family. You may be member of various
|
||
associations, or be part of a group of people with common interests
|
||
within a company or organization.
|
||
The modem allows you to be part of more personal networks than
|
||
you can possibly cope with in the "real world." Besides, it's much
|
||
easier to develop personal networks in the online world.
|
||
We have used words like "clubs" and "associations." By this we
|
||
mean groups of people interested in helping You and in participating
|
||
in what You happen to be interested in.
|
||
Today's communications technology lets us participate in
|
||
networks in other countries at a very low cost. Many describe it as
|
||
participation "beyond time and space."
|
||
Write a message and send it to a person in your network. It
|
||
arrives in his/her "mailbox" within minutes (sometimes seconds)
|
||
and stays there until the recipient wants to read it. This built-in
|
||
ability to send messages to other people's electronic mailboxes
|
||
reduces the power that time and geographical distances have over
|
||
our lives.
|
||
A friend in a remote country gets out of bed nine hours after
|
||
you, but keeps going well into what, for you, is the next morning.
|
||
No problem. You can send letters when you're awake and receive
|
||
replies when you're asleep.
|
||
You can pick up and read your friend's messages the next day or
|
||
whenever you feel like doing it. That is how two people as far
|
||
apart as Arendal, Norway and Beijing, China could be involved in
|
||
the development of this book.
|
||
Sometimes "real time" discussions are important. Consider the
|
||
following example. CompuServe has a Diabetes Forum. You can call
|
||
there any time, day or night, seven days a week. Whenever you feel
|
||
like it. You will always find someone to chat with who understands
|
||
and shares your problems.
|
||
Real-time chatting may become expensive, but you are free to
|
||
decide your level of involvement. If you think that $10 spent is
|
||
enough, then just stop there.
|
||
|
||
What is the point?
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Thousands of commercial and noncommercial online services offer
|
||
over 5,000 online databases. These infobases are repositories of
|
||
electronic information. They contain full-text and reference books,
|
||
magazines, newspapers, radio and TV shows, reports, and more.
|
||
In 1992, BiblioData (USA) found that around 4,000 titles (i.e.,
|
||
magazines, newspapers, etc.) were available online in full-text.
|
||
You will find facts and figures about almost anything in the online
|
||
world.
|
||
The world has over 100,000 public bulletin board systems
|
||
(1993). Most are small information centers, running on personal
|
||
computers using a simple computer program and modems. People call
|
||
in to read messages and information, retrieve free software, or
|
||
just to have a good time.
|
||
Most BBSes are free. Some charge a small annual fee. The
|
||
largest board has 213 telephone lines, seven gigabytes of storage
|
||
for letters, conferences, computer programs, and more (1993).
|
||
Mind you, 7 gigabytes is a lot. It is equivalent to more than
|
||
7,000,000,000 characters, or a whopping 12,000 copies of this
|
||
book!
|
||
The entrepreneur sees the online world as a new, profitable
|
||
playground. Many of them have made it their profession to search
|
||
for information for others, and they earn a good living doing so.
|
||
Others advertise and sell products and services by modem.
|
||
Some set up their own online services to sell knowledge and know-
|
||
how, be it of aqua culture, wine production, marketing, or about
|
||
the petroleum offshore market.
|
||
In business, it pays to be one step ahead of the competition.
|
||
Early warnings of customers' needs, competitors' moves, and
|
||
emerging opportunities can be turned into fortunes. It can reduce
|
||
potential losses and help develop businesses in more profitable
|
||
directions.
|
||
Turn this to your advantage. Build your own early warning
|
||
system that monitors online information sources and networks.
|
||
|
||
Have fun
|
||
--------
|
||
The online world has an abundance of joke clubs, dramatic adventure
|
||
games with multiple players, and large archives filled with computer
|
||
game software. You can transfer these programs to your personal
|
||
computer and be ready to play in minutes.
|
||
Others may feel more entertained when things get "interesting."
|
||
Surely, those calling Moscow in August 1991 for news about the coup
|
||
must have had a strange sensation in the stomach.
|
||
Some online users react quickly when dramatic events occur.
|
||
They go online to read the news directly from the wires, from
|
||
Associated Press, TASS, Reuters, Xinhua Press, Kyodo News and
|
||
others.
|
||
Usually, the online news is coming directly to you from the
|
||
journalists' keyboards. Often, you heard it here first.
|
||
Other people prefer to socialize. They meet in online "meeting
|
||
places" to debate everything from Africa and the administration of
|
||
kindergartens to poetry, LISP programming and compressed video for
|
||
multimedia applications.
|
||
It has been claimed that increased use of online networking in
|
||
a country can effect social changes within politics, economics,
|
||
communication and science. It can support democratic tendencies,
|
||
the transition to a market economy, the formation and support of
|
||
businesses, the spreading of interpersonal and mass communication,
|
||
the forging of invisible colleges among scientists, and breaking-up
|
||
of traditional and closed information systems developed in some
|
||
societies.
|
||
No matter whether your application is useful or just a pastime,
|
||
online services queue up to help give your life a better content.
|
||
Some people fear that language might be a problem, and in
|
||
particular if English is not their first language. Don't worry. You
|
||
are in the driver's seat. If something is hard to understand, just
|
||
log off to study the difficult text. Take your time. Nobody is
|
||
watching.
|
||
Will you being member of the online world make you rich?
|
||
Probably not. On the other hand, it most certainly provides the
|
||
opportunities to help you achieve such a goal, no matter how you
|
||
define the word "rich."
|
||
|
||
Chapter 2: The online world
|
||
===========================
|
||
|
||
This chapter is about the structure and contents of the online
|
||
world. You will read about Bulletin Board systems, discussion
|
||
lists, conferencing systems, online data bases, packet data
|
||
services, and network services like FidoNet, i-Com, Infonet,
|
||
and the Internet.
|
||
|
||
From papyrus to bits and bytes
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
Around 1500 B.C., the world's first library was established in Tell
|
||
el Amaran, Egypt. Eight hundred years later, the first public
|
||
library opened in Athens, Greece.
|
||
It took another two thousand years for the computer to be
|
||
invented. The first known mention of a possible future online
|
||
information service was printed in the Atlantic Monthly magazine in
|
||
1945.
|
||
Nine years later, the Naval Ordinance Test Station opened their
|
||
online search service in California (U.S.A.) The first full-text
|
||
database came six years later. MEDLARS was a bibliographic database
|
||
containing references to medical literature. From now on, things
|
||
started to roll at a faster pace:
|
||
|
||
* In 1972, DIALOG (U.S.A.) opened their Educational Resources
|
||
Information Center and National Technical Information Service
|
||
databases for online searching. (Appendix 1 contains infor-
|
||
mation about the major online services referred to in this
|
||
book.)
|
||
* In 1974, Dow Jones News/Retrieval (U.S.A.) launched a
|
||
financial information service for stock brokers.
|
||
* In 1978, the first bulletin board was put into operation in
|
||
Chicago (U.S.A.).
|
||
* CompuServe (U.S.A.) launched a service for home users in
|
||
1979.
|
||
|
||
The online world was born in the United States. Little happened in
|
||
the rest of the world until the late 1980s. American companies and
|
||
users still dominate, but they are no longer alone.
|
||
Today, we can access over 5,000 public databases. They are
|
||
available from more than 500,000 online systems ("host computers")
|
||
all over the world.
|
||
With so many online services, it is difficult to find our way
|
||
through the maze of offerings. This book therefore starts with a
|
||
map of the online world.
|
||
|
||
The structure and contents of the online world
|
||
----------------------------------------------
|
||
The online world can be described as a cake with multiple layers,
|
||
where the information sources are the bottom layer. You - the user
|
||
- are the marzipan figure on the top. The online world contains the
|
||
following tiers:
|
||
|
||
(1) Database producers and information providers
|
||
(2) Online service companies
|
||
(3) Gateways and networks
|
||
(4) The services
|
||
(5) The user interface
|
||
(6) The data transport services
|
||
(7) The User.
|
||
|
||
1. Database producers and information providers.
|
||
------------------------------------------------
|
||
I have a bulletin board system in Norway (at +47 370 31378). My BBS
|
||
is running on a small personal computer, and offers shareware and
|
||
public domain software.
|
||
Anybody can call my board to have programs transferred to their
|
||
personal computers by modem (see appendix 2 for how to do this).
|
||
When you call this BBS to "download" a free program for to your
|
||
computer's hard disk, don't expect to find one made by me. I don't
|
||
write programs. All available programs have been written by others.
|
||
When you call Data-Star in Switzerland, or CompuServe in the
|
||
U.S. to read news, you may find some stories authored by these
|
||
companies. Most of their news, however, are written by others.
|
||
InfoPro Technologies delivers Russian scientific and technical
|
||
articles from "Referativnyi Zurnal" through online services like
|
||
Orbit, Pergamon and BRS. InfoPro is not the originator. The text
|
||
has been prepared by VINITI (the Institute for scientific and
|
||
technical information of the xUSSR).
|
||
My BBS (the "Saltrod Horror Show"), Data-Star, NIFTY-Serve,
|
||
Orbit, Pergamon, BRS, and CompuServe are online services. We call
|
||
those who have provided the news and information on these services
|
||
for information providers or database producers.
|
||
The American news agency Associated Press is an information
|
||
provider. They write the news, and sell them to online services
|
||
like Dialog, CompuServe, Nexis and NewsNet. These online services
|
||
let you read the news by modem.
|
||
The information providers sell the right to distribute their
|
||
news. Your news reading charges may be imbedded in the online
|
||
service's standard access rates. Some services will ask you to pay
|
||
a surcharge when reading news.
|
||
Most subscribers pay US$12.80 per hour (1993) to use CompuServe
|
||
at 2400 bits per second (bps). At this speed, you typically receive
|
||
around 240 characters of news per second. If you access at higher
|
||
speeds, you will have to pay more.
|
||
CompuServe pays Associated Press part of what they earn each
|
||
time you read their news. There is no surcharge for reading AP news
|
||
on this service.
|
||
Others charge more. To read Mid-East Business Digest through
|
||
NewsNet, you pay a surcharge of US$72.00 per hour at 2400 bps
|
||
(1993). Scanning newsletter headlines and conducting keyword
|
||
searches are cheaper. You pay the the basic connect charge, which
|
||
is US$90.00 per hour at this speed.
|
||
Thus, your total cost for reading Mid-East Business Digest
|
||
amounts to US$2.70 per minute.
|
||
CompuServe's database service IQuest lets you search NewsNet
|
||
through a gateway to find and read the same articles. Here, reading
|
||
will only set you back US$21.50/hour (provided the articles are
|
||
among the first hits in your search).
|
||
Many information providers also distribute information through
|
||
grassroots bulletin boards. The Newsbytes News Network and the USA
|
||
Today newsletter services (also in full text on Dialog and Nexis)
|
||
are two examples.
|
||
The rates for reading the same article may therefore differ
|
||
considerably depending on what online service you are using. If you
|
||
are a regular reader, shop around for the best price.
|
||
Information providers may have subcontractors. The Ziff-Davis
|
||
service Computer Database Plus, a database with full-text articles
|
||
from magazines like Datamation and Wall Street Computer Review,
|
||
depends on them.
|
||
Datamation pays journalists to write the articles. Ziff-Davis
|
||
pays Datamation for the right to distribute the articles to
|
||
CompuServe's subscribers. CompuServe pays Ziff-Davis part of what
|
||
you pay when reading the text.
|
||
|
||
|
||
2. Online services
|
||
------------------
|
||
The term "online services" refers to information services provided
|
||
by computer systems, large or small, to owners of personal
|
||
computers with modems.
|
||
What is offered, differ by system. It may include access to
|
||
libraries of programs and data, electronic mail, online shopping
|
||
malls, discussion forums, hardware and software vendor support,
|
||
games and entertainment, financial data, stock market quotes, and
|
||
research capabilities.
|
||
You do not always need a phone and a modem when "dialing up."
|
||
Some services can be accessed through leased phone lines, amateur
|
||
radio, or other methods.
|
||
Check out appendix 1 for a list of major services mentioned in
|
||
this book, with addresses, phone numbers, and a short description.
|
||
CompuServe (U.S.A.), Twics (Japan), and Orbit (England) are
|
||
commercial. They charge you for using their services.
|
||
Some online services are priced like magazines and newspapers
|
||
with a flat subscription rate for basic services. You can use this
|
||
part of a service as much as you like within a given period. GEnie,
|
||
CompuServe, BIX, America Online, and Delphi are among those
|
||
offering such pricing options.
|
||
Other online services charge for 'connect time'. They have a
|
||
rate per hour or minute.
|
||
MCI Mail uses "no cure, no pay." You only pay to send or read
|
||
mail. To check for unread letters in your mailbox is free.
|
||
There are all kinds of creative pricing schemes. Some services
|
||
have different rates for access during the day, night and weekends.
|
||
Others have different rates for users living far away. Sometimes
|
||
the remote subscriber pays more, in other cases less than ordinary
|
||
subscribers.
|
||
Still, most online services are free. This is particularly true
|
||
for the over hundred thousand bulletin board systems around the
|
||
world. The owners of these services often regard them as a hobby, a
|
||
public service, a necessary marketing expense, or do it for other
|
||
reasons.
|
||
The cost of setting up and operating a bulletin board system
|
||
is low. Consequently, the BBS systems are as varied as the people
|
||
who run them. Each BBS has its own character.
|
||
My BBS is also free. I consider it an online appendix to this
|
||
book and the articles I write.
|
||
National Geographic BBS in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. (tel.: +1-
|
||
202-775-6738) is run by the magazine of the same name. This board
|
||
is also free. They regard it as a part of their marketing strategy.
|
||
It provides them with input to the editors, and it is an easy way
|
||
of maintaining contacts with schools.
|
||
Semaforum BBS in Norway is run by a company. Its purpose is
|
||
customer support and to give information to prospective customers.
|
||
The cost is a marketing expense.
|
||
Some large, international online services on the Internet,
|
||
BITNET, and UUCP are almost free. They address research and
|
||
educational institutions and are financed by public funds. These
|
||
services are now being made available to other users at very
|
||
moderate rates.
|
||
Some users fear that using online services will increase their
|
||
telephone costs dramatically, and especially when using services in
|
||
other countries. This is often unjustified. Read chapter 13 and 15
|
||
for tips about how to keep your communications costs down.
|
||
|
||
3. Gateways and networks
|
||
------------------------
|
||
CompuServe users select the Computer Database Plus from a menu.
|
||
This prompts CompuServe to dial another online service and lets you
|
||
use this, as if you were still using CompuServe. You hardly notice
|
||
the difference. You are using Computer Database Plus through a
|
||
gateway.
|
||
CompuServe users searching the IQuest databases get the
|
||
following welcome message:
|
||
|
||
One moment please...
|
||
|
||
Connected to 19EASYN
|
||
|
||
Welcome to IQuest
|
||
|
||
(c) 1991 Telebase Systems, Inc.
|
||
U.S. Patent No. 4,774,655
|
||
|
||
Through another gateway, CompuServe connects you to the online
|
||
service Telebase Systems, Inc. Telebase lets you go through other
|
||
gateways to search in databases on online services like BRS,
|
||
MEDLINE and NewsNet.
|
||
While searching, you may get similar progress reports:
|
||
|
||
Dialing BRS
|
||
Connect BRS
|
||
Scanning .... Please wait
|
||
Dialing Medline
|
||
Connect Medline
|
||
Scanning .... Please wait
|
||
|
||
All the time, your modem is connected to CompuServe. You are
|
||
mentally using IQuest and not other online services. Technically,
|
||
you are going through various gateways to reach the information
|
||
libraries. You pay CompuServe for the privilege. In turn, they pay
|
||
a fee to Telebase, and others.
|
||
You can read The New York Times on Down Jones News/Retrieval
|
||
through gateways from MCI Mail and GEnie.
|
||
Accessing information through a gateway is often simpler than
|
||
logging on to several online systems. Calling several systems
|
||
often costs more, and it certainly takes time.
|
||
Users of BBSes connected to RelayNet or FidoNet can join in
|
||
global discussions. Participants in other countries also call their
|
||
favorite local systems. To the individual user, it looks as if they
|
||
all use the same bulletin board system.
|
||
The networks that tie these boards together regularly send new
|
||
discussion items to the other participating boards. Write "This is
|
||
not correct!" in a distributed conference on a Norwegian FidoNet
|
||
BBS, and others may soon read your line on San Bernardino BBS in
|
||
Colton (Canada), Wonderland Board in Macau or the HighTech BBS in
|
||
Sidney (Australia).
|
||
SciLink (Canada) administers a network for distribution of
|
||
conferences between systems using the Caucus software system.
|
||
Participants in Tokyo, Toronto and San Francisco can discuss as
|
||
if they were all logged on to the same online service.
|
||
The main purpose may not be to make it simpler or cheaper
|
||
for the user. One typical motive is to reduce an online service's
|
||
own communications costs.
|
||
KIDLINK is a global project for children between 10 - 15 years
|
||
of age. It allows kids to discuss through a system of electronic
|
||
mail.
|
||
Part of the dialog takes place by the children sending email to
|
||
a recipient called KIDCAFE. A message to 'the cafe' goes through
|
||
the international networks to a host computer in North Dakota
|
||
(U.S.A.). There, a computer program called LISTSERV distributes
|
||
copies of the message to names on an electronic address list.
|
||
(Conferences administered by a LISTSERV are called 'discussion
|
||
lists'.)
|
||
SciLink in Toronto is one recipient. Messages forwarded from
|
||
North Dakota are made available for users as entries in a 'local'
|
||
conference called KIDCAFE. A user in Tokyo can read a message, as
|
||
if it had been entered locally. If she wants to reply, her answer
|
||
is sent back to the LISTSERV for redistribution to the world.
|
||
Western Michigan University (U.S.A.) is also a recipient. Here,
|
||
another LISTSERV program is in charge of forwarding the mail to yet
|
||
another list of (local) addresses. We call it a 'mail exploder'.
|
||
This mailing list has been set up by local administrators to
|
||
reduce costs. The individual user is not allowed to receive copies
|
||
of messages all the way from North Dakota.
|
||
One Michigan recipient may be a local area network. You will
|
||
find many smart technical solutions in the online world.
|
||
Actually, this is how the online world got started. Two systems
|
||
were interconnected for exchange of electronic mail. Then, another
|
||
system was added, and another. One day it was a global network of
|
||
computer systems.
|
||
Some network systems are connected by leased telephone lines.
|
||
Other networks, like FidoNet, depend mainly on dial-up using
|
||
regular voice-grade telephone service. Each BBS dial regularly to
|
||
other computers in the network to send or receive mail and files.
|
||
They may do it once per day, twice per day or whatever.
|
||
Then someone got the idea of interconnecting networks. FidoNet
|
||
was connected to the UUCP network, which was connected to the
|
||
Internet, which in turn was connected to the Bergen By Byte BBS in
|
||
Norway, CompuServe, SciLink, MCI Mail, and various local area
|
||
networks.
|
||
Today, the online world is a global web of networks. The world
|
||
is 'cabled'. You, me and all the other modem users stand to benefit
|
||
enormously.
|
||
|
||
4. The services
|
||
---------------
|
||
The most popular online services are electronic mail, chat, file
|
||
transfers, conferences and discussion forums, news, reading of
|
||
online journals and grassroots publications, database searching,
|
||
entertainment. The online world has an infinite number of niches,
|
||
things that people are interested in and have fun doing.
|
||
|
||
Electronic mail
|
||
---------------
|
||
is not just like paper mail. Email is faster, easier to edit and
|
||
use in other applications.
|
||
Your mail may be private, or public. It can be 'broadcasted' to
|
||
many by a mailing list. The principle is the same on all systems.
|
||
Typically, an email message is sent to your mailbox in the
|
||
following form:
|
||
|
||
To: Odd de Presno
|
||
Subject: Happy Birthday
|
||
Text: I wish you well on your birthday. -Ole
|
||
|
||
The mailbox systems automatically add your name (i.e., the sender's
|
||
return email address), the creation date, and forward it to the
|
||
recipient. If the recipient's mailbox is on another system, the
|
||
message is routed through one or several networks to reach its
|
||
destination.
|
||
Several email services offer forwarding to fax, telex or
|
||
ordinary postal service delivery. Some offer forwarding to paging
|
||
services. When new mail arrives in your mailbox, messages with text
|
||
like 'MAIL from opresno@extern.uio.no' will be displayed on your
|
||
beeper's small screen.
|
||
Soon, you can send electronic mail to anyone. By the turn of
|
||
the century, it probably will be difficult to tell the difference
|
||
between fax messages and email. The services will automatically
|
||
convert incoming faxes to computer-readable text and pictures, so
|
||
that you can use them in word processing and other computer
|
||
applications.
|
||
Automatic language translation is another trend. You will soon
|
||
be able to send a message in English, and have it automatically
|
||
translated into Spanish for Spanish-reading recipients, or into
|
||
other languages. Conference systems with automatic translation are
|
||
already being used in Japan (English to/from Japanese).
|
||
One day we may also have a global email address directory.
|
||
"What is the address of Nobuo Hasumi in Japan." Press ENTER, and
|
||
there it is.
|
||
Today, the largest commercial players email vendors are MCI,
|
||
Dialcom, Telemail, AT&T Mail and CompuServe. The fight for
|
||
dominance goes on.
|
||
|
||
'Chat'
|
||
------
|
||
Email has one important disadvantage. It may take time for it to be
|
||
picked up and read by the recipient. The alternative is real-time
|
||
conferencing, a form of direct keyboard-to-keyboard dialog between
|
||
users. We call it 'chat'.
|
||
Most large systems let you chat with many users simultaneously.
|
||
Even small bulletin boards usually have a chat feature.
|
||
Chat is set up in several ways. On some systems, you see each
|
||
character on the screen once it is entered by your dialog partners.
|
||
Other systems send entries line by line, that is, whenever you
|
||
press ENTER or Return. Here, it may be difficult to know whether
|
||
the other person is waiting for you to type, or if he is actively
|
||
entering new words.
|
||
You will find regular chat conferences in CompuServe's forums.
|
||
Often, they invite a person to give a keynote speech before opening
|
||
'the floor' for questions and answers. John Sculley of Apple
|
||
Computers and various politicians have been featured in such
|
||
'meetings'.
|
||
In May 1991, the KIDLINK project arranged a full-day chat
|
||
between kids from all over the world. Line, a 12-year old Norwegian
|
||
girl, started the day talking with Japanese kids at the Nishimachi
|
||
and Kanto International School in Tokyo. When her computer was
|
||
switched off late at night, she was having an intense exchange with
|
||
children in North America.
|
||
The chats took place on various online services and networks,
|
||
including Internet Relay Chat (IRC), BITNET's Relay Chat, Cleveland
|
||
Free-Net (U.S.A.), TWICS in Tokyo, the global network Tymnet, and
|
||
the Education Forum on CompuServe.
|
||
The discussions had no moderator. This made the encounters
|
||
chaotic at times. The kids enjoyed it, though! One-line messages
|
||
shot back and forth over the continents conveying intense
|
||
simultaneous conversations, occasionally disrupted by exclamations
|
||
and requests for technical help.
|
||
Speed is a problem when chatting. It takes a lot of time since
|
||
most users are slow typists.
|
||
If individual Messages span more than one line, there is always
|
||
a risk that it will be split up by lines coming from others. It
|
||
takes time to understand what goes on.
|
||
Users of SciLink (Canada) use a method they call 'semi-sync
|
||
chat'. The trick is to use ordinary batch-mode conferences for
|
||
chatting. Instead of calling up, reading and sending mail and then
|
||
log out, they stay online waiting for new messages to arrive.
|
||
This approach allows you to enter multiple-line messages
|
||
without risking that it to broken up by other messages. The flow
|
||
of the discussion is often better, and each person's entries easier
|
||
to understand.
|
||
|
||
File transfers
|
||
--------------
|
||
The availability of free software on bulletin boards brought the
|
||
online world out of the closet. Today, you can also retrieve books
|
||
and articles, technical reports, graphics pictures, files of
|
||
digitized music, weather reports, and much more.
|
||
Millions of files are transferred to and from the online
|
||
services each day. File transfers typically represent over 75
|
||
percent of the bulletin boards' utilization time. Downloading free
|
||
software is still the most popular service.
|
||
In June 1991, users of my BBS (which has only one phone line)
|
||
downloaded 86 megabytes' worth of public domain and shareware
|
||
programs. (86MB equals around 86,000,000 bytes.) In May 1993, users
|
||
downloaded 108 megabytes distributed over 1,446 files.
|
||
Add to this the megabytes being downloaded from hundreds of
|
||
thousands of other bulletin boards. The number is staggering.
|
||
|
||
If you want to download free software: read in appendix 3
|
||
about how to do it.
|
||
|
||
Downloading is simple. Just dial an online service, order transfer
|
||
of a given file, select a file transfer protocol (like XMODEM), and
|
||
the file comes crawling to you through the phone line.
|
||
Services on the Internet offer file transfer through gateways
|
||
using a command called FTP (File Transfer Protocol). It works like
|
||
this:
|
||
|
||
Say you're logging on to the ULRIK service at the University of
|
||
Oslo in Norway. Your objective is to download free programs
|
||
from a large library in Oakland, U.S.A.
|
||
After having connected to Ulrik, you enter the command
|
||
'ftp OAK.Oakland.Edu' to connect to the computer in California.
|
||
A few seconds later, the remote host asks for your logon
|
||
id. You enter 'anonymous', and supply your email address as
|
||
password. This will give you access.
|
||
You use the cd command (change directory) to navigate to
|
||
the desired library catalog on the remote hard disk. You locate
|
||
the desired file, and use a GET command to transfer the file
|
||
to your file area on Ulrik.
|
||
When done, you logout from the remote computer to be
|
||
returned to Ulrik's services. Your final job is to transfer
|
||
the file from Ulrik to your personal computer using traditional
|
||
methods.
|
||
|
||
Being able to send Internet mail does not guarantee access to the
|
||
ftp command. If ftp is unavailable, you may transfer the file by
|
||
email using a technique called UUENCODEing.
|
||
Here, the file is converted before transfer into a format that
|
||
can be sent as ordinary mail (into a seven bits, even character
|
||
code).
|
||
When the file arrives in your mailbox, you 'read' it as an
|
||
ordinary message and store the codes in a work file on your disk.
|
||
Finally, you decode the file using a special utility program (often
|
||
called UUDECODE). Read more about this in Chapter 12.
|
||
|
||
Conferences and discussions
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
Online conferences have many things in common with traditional face-
|
||
to-face conferences and discussions, except that participants don't
|
||
physically meet in the same room. They 'come' by modem and discuss
|
||
using electronic messages (sometimes also through "Chat").
|
||
There are discussions about any conceivable topic, from How to
|
||
start your own company, Brainstorming, Architectural design, The
|
||
Future of Education and Investments, to AIDS, The Baltic States,
|
||
Psychology, and Cartoons.
|
||
Instead of calling these discussions "online conferences," some
|
||
services use terms like echos, discussion or mailing lists, clubs,
|
||
newsgroups, round tables, SIGs (Special Interest Groups), and
|
||
forums. They use other terms in an attempt to make their offerings
|
||
more attractive and exclusive.
|
||
Others refer to "conferences" by using the name of the software
|
||
used to administer the discussions, like LISTSERV, PortaCom, News,
|
||
Usenet, Caucus, or PARTIcipate.
|
||
On the bottom line, we're still talking email. However, while
|
||
private mail is usually read by one recipient only, 'conference
|
||
mail' may be read by thousands of people from the whole world.
|
||
All of them can talk and discuss SIMULTANEOUSLY. It is almost
|
||
impossible for one single individual to dominate. The number of
|
||
active participants can therefore be far larger than in 'face-to-
|
||
face' conferences.
|
||
The conferencing software automatically records all that is
|
||
said. Every character. Each participant can decide what to read and
|
||
when. He may even use the messages in other applications later on.
|
||
Opinions and information can easily be selected and pasted into
|
||
reports or new responses.
|
||
Some conferences are public and open for anybody. Others are
|
||
for a closed group (of registered) participants.
|
||
They are normally structured by topic and the structure is
|
||
influenced by the participants' behavior. If the topic is limited,
|
||
like in "The football match between Mexico and Uruguay," it may
|
||
start with an introduction followed by comments, questions, and
|
||
answers like pearls on a thread. After some time the conference is
|
||
'finished'.
|
||
Conferences called 'IBM PC' or 'MS-DOS' often contain so many
|
||
different sub-topics that they seem chaotic to the outsider. The
|
||
message subject headings typically have references to computer
|
||
equipment (like in 'Wyse 050 or TVI 925'), requests for help (like
|
||
in 'Need Xywrite help!'), experience reports, equipment for sale,
|
||
news reports, etc. The sequence of messages are often illogical.
|
||
|
||
The contents and the quality of the discussion are what
|
||
separates one online conference from others.
|
||
|
||
How a conference grows into something useful, depends in part on
|
||
the features of the software used by the online service. But this
|
||
is much less important than the kind of people you meet there and
|
||
their willingness to contribute.
|
||
Messages in the IBM Hardware Forum on CompuServe are divided
|
||
into 11 sections. Section 2 is called Printers' utilities. If you
|
||
have problems with an old Epson FX-80 printer, send requests for
|
||
help to "All" (=to everybody) and store it in this section.
|
||
CompuServe has over one million subscribers (1993). They call
|
||
in from all over the place to join the IBM Hardware forum. Some are
|
||
there to show off competence (read: to sell their expertise).
|
||
Others visit to find solutions to a problem, or simply to learn.
|
||
A conference with many users increases your chances of meeting
|
||
others with relevant know-how. As always, the quality of the
|
||
people is the first requirement of a good conference.
|
||
Professional 'Sysops' moderate the discussion in IBMHW. They
|
||
get up to 15 percent of what you pay CompuServe for using their
|
||
forum. To them, being a sysop is a profession. They use a fair
|
||
amount of time trying to make the forum a lively and interesting
|
||
place.
|
||
The Printers/utilities section is not just about Epson FX-80.
|
||
Its members have hundreds of different printers, each with their
|
||
own set of user problems. Let's use this to explain differences
|
||
between some conferencing systems.
|
||
Each message in CompuServe's forums contains the sender's name
|
||
(his local email address), subject, date, and the text itself. We
|
||
call this the 'bulletin board model'. Here, a message typically
|
||
looks like this:
|
||
|
||
#: 24988 S10/Portable Desktops
|
||
22-Jul-91 10:05:38
|
||
Sb: #T5200 425meg HDD
|
||
Fm: Gordon Norman 72356,370
|
||
To: Menno Aartsen 72611,2066 (X)
|
||
|
||
Menno-
|
||
|
||
Can you share the HD specs on that 425'er...random access time,
|
||
transfer rate, MTBF, etc.?
|
||
|
||
Gordon
|
||
|
||
This message may not be of interest to you. Each day, hundreds of
|
||
messages OUTSIDE your area of interest are being posted. You do NOT
|
||
want to read these messages.
|
||
CompuServe allows selective reading of messages. You can select
|
||
all messages containing a given word or text string in the subject
|
||
title ('Sb:' above). You can read threads of messages from a given
|
||
message number (replies, and replies to replies). You can read all
|
||
messages to/from a given person, from a given message number, and
|
||
from a given date. There are many options.
|
||
The PARTIcipate conferencing software functions diametrically
|
||
different from CompuServe's forum software. PARTI is used on TWICS
|
||
(Japan), Unison (U.S.A.), NWI (U.S.A.), and The Point (can be
|
||
accessed through a gateway from CompuServe).
|
||
PARTI lets the user log on using an alias. For example, he can
|
||
use the identity 'BATMAN'. You may never get to know the true name
|
||
of the other person. On the other hand, this allows people to talk
|
||
about controversial topics, which they would otherwise not want to
|
||
have their names associated with.
|
||
Anyone can start a conference. It can be public, private or a
|
||
combination. Combination conferences allow public review of the
|
||
messages in the conference, but restrict the number of people who
|
||
can contribute to the discussion.
|
||
Enter 'write', and PARTI will prompt you with "Enter the text
|
||
of your note, then type .send or .open to transmit." Enter the
|
||
welcome text for your new conference, like in this example:
|
||
|
||
"This conference is based on a series of articles about
|
||
shareware and public domain programs for MSDOS computers, which
|
||
I wrote for publication in England.
|
||
Since the editor cheated me and they never reached the printing
|
||
press, I've decided to make them available online instead of
|
||
letting them rot on my hard disk. Join to read, discuss or
|
||
(hopefully) enjoy! "
|
||
|
||
When done, I entered ".open odd de presno", added the name of the
|
||
conference ("MSDOS TIPS") and a short description ("GOOD PD AND
|
||
SHAREWARE PROGRAMS").
|
||
|
||
The conference was presented to the other PARTI users on TWICS like
|
||
this:
|
||
|
||
"MSDOS TIPS" by ODD DE PRESNO, Feb. 23, 1990 at 11:57 about
|
||
GOOD PD AND SHAREWARE PROGRAMS (7 notes)
|
||
|
||
Few systems of the bulletin board model let users start their own
|
||
conferences at will. All new topics must be stored in a given
|
||
structure. The administrators (sysops) of the service manage the
|
||
evolution of the 'conference room'. After a while, old messages may
|
||
even be deleted to make room for new.
|
||
In PARTI, conference messages are organized under a topic, or
|
||
any sub-topics that can be derived from the main topic.
|
||
Conferences are modeled after their counterparts in the face-
|
||
to-face world. They start with an introduction followed by a
|
||
discussion about a narrow topic, like here:
|
||
|
||
"SMART PEOPLE" by MACBETH on Jan. 4, 1992 at 12:27, about WHO ARE
|
||
THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST (504 characters and 17 notes).
|
||
|
||
In this example above, the welcome message is 504 characters long.
|
||
Following that, there are 17 other messages (called notes).
|
||
Notes are stored without individual subject headers and the
|
||
name of a recipient. Everything is posted to 'the group'.
|
||
If CompuServe message above had been posted on PARTI, then the
|
||
first five lines might have been reduced to:
|
||
|
||
12 (of 12) SHABBY DOG Jul. 22, 1991 at 10:05 (119 characters)
|
||
|
||
On PARTI, all participants read all notes. Selective reading must
|
||
be done in other ways (by searching conference contents).
|
||
These two conferencing models seem to attract different types
|
||
of discussions. PARTI has given birth to more discussions on topics
|
||
like these (from PARTI on The Point, January 1992):
|
||
|
||
"HELLO BEEP" by THE SHADOW on Sept. 17, 1991 at 19:20, about
|
||
BEEP'S ADVENTURES IN JAPAN, AND THE LIKE (840 characters and 22
|
||
notes).
|
||
|
||
"MEMORIES" by LOU on Dec. 21, 1991 at 12:31, about .......I
|
||
REMEMBER WHEN...... (423 characters and 1 notes).
|
||
|
||
"AMENDMENT II 1991" by PASSIN THRU on Dec. 25, 1991 at 20:55,
|
||
about OUR RIGHTS TO OWN AND POSSESS FIREARMS, AND THE MYTH
|
||
REGARDING ASSAULT WEAPONS. (3036 characters and 38 notes).
|
||
|
||
"TV SHOWS" by THE SHADOW on Nov. 16, 1990 at 18:00, about
|
||
DISCUSSION OF TELEVISION SHOWS (105 characters and 37 notes).
|
||
|
||
"PHILOSOPHY FOR AMATEURS" by MACBETH on April 13, 1990 at 10:08,
|
||
about TALKING ABOUT THINKING (187 characters and 97 notes).
|
||
|
||
"HAPPY BIRTHDAY TOTO" by PONDER on Jan. 2, 1992 at 14:34, about
|
||
AND I BET HE THOUGHT I FORGOT. (86 characters and 15 notes).
|
||
|
||
"ONLINE LOTTERY" by DEEDUB on Jan. 3, 1992 at 07:40, about
|
||
MULTIPLYING OUR CHANCES TO WIN THE LOTTERY (1238 characters and
|
||
62 notes).
|
||
|
||
"WHO SHOT KENNEDY" by MATT on Jan. 3, 1992 at 22:29, about THE
|
||
ASSASINATION OF JOHN F. KENNEDY; THOUGHTS, COMMENTS, QUESTIONS
|
||
AND THEORIES! (529 characters and 83 notes).
|
||
|
||
"THE ECONOMY" by LOU on Jan. 5, 1992 at 16:40, about THE ECONOMY,
|
||
AS IT AFFECTS US ALL. (167 characters and 49 notes).
|
||
|
||
"PUERTO RICO" by PACKER on Jan. 18, 1992 at 20:47, about PARA
|
||
DISCUTIR ASUNTOS PUERTORIQUENA (166 characters and 9 notes).
|
||
|
||
Systems using the bulletin board model rarely have conferences like
|
||
"MEMORIES." In PARTI, one-note conferences are allowed to stay. In
|
||
the bulletin board environment, they soon disappear.
|
||
You can probably still join MEMORIES on the Point to add your
|
||
own feelings or point-of-views.
|
||
In larger PARTI conferences, the notes can be read like a
|
||
book. Often, side discussions appear like 'branches' on a 'tree'.
|
||
Join and read them, if you want to. Or just pass.
|
||
The bulletin board systems (including CompuServe's forums) and
|
||
PARTIcipate are at two extremes of the spectrum of conference
|
||
systems. Toward the BBS model, there are systems like FidoNet Echo,
|
||
RBBS-PC, and PortaCom. Toward the PARTI side, there are systems like
|
||
Caucus.
|
||
|
||
Many companies set up bulletin board systems to provide technical
|
||
support to customers. McAfee Associates, Inc. in California is one
|
||
example. They offer technical information, help, upgrade software,
|
||
list of agents, technical bulletins with lists of products, and new
|
||
products through agents' support BBSes all over the world. For
|
||
example, when in Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago call the Opus
|
||
Networx BBS at (819) 628-4023.
|
||
Setting up a professional BBS is not very expensive. You can
|
||
easily have 32 people online to the same conference simultaneously
|
||
on a standard 80386-based PC, running Xenix and Caucus conferencing
|
||
software. This is what the Washington Information Service Corp. in
|
||
U.S.A. did. There's an abundance of software to choose from.
|
||
Many companies rent private 'conference rooms' on commercial
|
||
online services rather than doing it in-house. The advantage is
|
||
easier access to an established multi-user system and user base.
|
||
Microsoft, Toshiba, Quarterdeck, Digital Research, Tandy,
|
||
Novell and hundreds of others rent public support forum space on
|
||
CompuServe to keep in touch with customers all over the world.
|
||
Others rent space on regional bulletin boards.
|
||
Other corporate applications of such services include internal
|
||
organizational development and communications, and coordination of
|
||
projects.
|
||
On Norwegian bulletin boards the main language is Norwegian. In
|
||
France, expect French. Local systems usually depend on messages in
|
||
the local language.
|
||
Services catering to a larger geographical area often have a
|
||
different policy. English is the most common language for
|
||
international discussions. Spanish possibly number two. Example:
|
||
TWICS in Japan is an English language system. Its Spanish language
|
||
conference ESPANOL has participants from Japan, Mexico and Norway.
|
||
On MetaNet (Arlington, U.S.A.) the conferences are divided into
|
||
conference areas. One area was called The Salon. The welcome
|
||
message said: 'All conferences and responses posted here may freely
|
||
be ported to other conferencing systems'. MetaNet regularly 'ports'
|
||
(exchanges) conference notes with systems in Europe, Asia and North
|
||
America.
|
||
Exchanging conferences have long traditions in the bulletin
|
||
board world. To some, it is routine to call Thunderball Cave BBS in
|
||
Oslo to discuss photography with people in California. New messages
|
||
are exchanged daily across country boundaries.
|
||
The global web of connections between computers enables us to
|
||
discuss with people living in other parts of the world, as if they
|
||
were living next door.
|
||
|
||
Things Take Time!
|
||
-----------------
|
||
How long does it take a message to get from Hyougo in Japan to
|
||
Saltrod in Norway? Or to Dominique Christian in Paris?
|
||
Sometimes, mail travels from mailbox service to mailbox service
|
||
in seconds. That is usually the case with messages from my mailbox
|
||
in Norway to KIDLINK's LISTSERV in North Dakota, U.S.A.
|
||
Messages that must go through many gateways may take more time.
|
||
How long it takes, depends on the degree of automation in the mail
|
||
systems involved, and how these systems have been connected to the
|
||
global matrix of networks.
|
||
Speed is high if the computers are interconnected with fixed,
|
||
high-capacity lines. This is not so for mail from Oslo to Dominique
|
||
in Paris. His mail is routed through a system in London and is
|
||
forwarded once per day through a dial-up connection. It usually
|
||
takes at least one day to reach the destination.
|
||
|
||
News
|
||
----
|
||
Most large news agencies have online counterparts. You can often
|
||
read their news online before it appears in print. This is the case
|
||
with news from sources like NTB, Agence France-Presse, Associated
|
||
Press, Kyodo News Report (Japan), Reuters, Xinhua English Language
|
||
News Service (China) and TASS. Some news is only made available in
|
||
electronic form.
|
||
News may be read in several ways, depending on what online
|
||
service you use:
|
||
* From a list of headlines. Enter a story's number to receive
|
||
its full text. The news may be split up into groups, like Sports,
|
||
International news, Business, and Entertainment.
|
||
* Some services let you hook directly into a news agency's
|
||
'feed line' to get news as it is being made available. At 11.02,
|
||
11.04, 11.15, etc.
|
||
* News may be 'clipped' and stored in your mailbox twenty-four
|
||
hours a day, seven days a week. Clipping services search articles
|
||
for occurrences of your personal keyword phrases while you're
|
||
offline. In this way, you can monitor new products, companies,
|
||
people, and countries, even when you're not online.
|
||
NewsFlash is NewsNet's electronic clipping service, a powerful
|
||
resource that lets you monitor NewsNet's newsletters for topics of
|
||
interest.
|
||
On the Executive News Service (CompuServe), you can search for
|
||
words in story headlines. You can also search for first three lines
|
||
of text from 8,000 stories/day from Washington Post, OTC NewsAlert,
|
||
Associated Press, United Press International and Reuters Financial
|
||
News Wire.
|
||
Newspapers used to receive news through the wires before the
|
||
online user. This built-in delay has now been removed on many
|
||
services. Industry and professional news is usually available
|
||
online long before it appears in print.
|
||
|
||
Databases
|
||
---------
|
||
Some years ago, most databases just contained references to
|
||
articles, books and other written or electronic sources of
|
||
information. The typical search result looked like this:
|
||
|
||
0019201 02-88-68
|
||
TRIMETHOPRIM-SULFAMETHOXAZOLE in CYST Fluid from Autosomal
|
||
Dominant POLYCYSTIC KIDNEYS.
|
||
Elzinga L.W.; et al. W.M. Bennett, Dept. of Med., Oregon Hlth.
|
||
Sci. Univ., 3101 Southwest Sam Jackson Park Rd., Portland,
|
||
OR 97201.
|
||
|
||
Kid. Int. 32: 884-888. Dec. 1987
|
||
|
||
Subfile: Internal Medicine; Family Practice; Nephrology;
|
||
Infectious Disease; Clinical Pharmacology; Highlights of General
|
||
Medicine
|
||
|
||
You had to take the reference to a library to get a print copy of
|
||
the article. Some services let you to order a copy while online, to
|
||
be sent you by mail from a copying service.
|
||
Full-text searching is now the rule. When you find an article
|
||
of interest, you can have the full text displayed on your screen at
|
||
once (normally without accompanying pictures and tables, though).
|
||
The search commands are simpler and more powerful.
|
||
|
||
Just for fun
|
||
------------
|
||
Many online services focus on your leisure time. They offer reviews
|
||
and news about movies, video, music, and sport. There are forums
|
||
for stamp and coin collectors, travel maniacs, passionate cooks,
|
||
wine tasters, and other special interest groups. Besides, many
|
||
services are entertaining in themselves.
|
||
Large, complex adventure games, where hundreds of users can
|
||
play simultaneously, are popular choices. People sit glued to the
|
||
computer screen for hours.
|
||
'Chat', this keyboard-to-keyboard contact-phone type of
|
||
simultaneous conversation between from two and up to hundreds of
|
||
persons, is also popular. It works like a combination of a social
|
||
activity and a role-playing/strategy/fantasy/skill-improving game.
|
||
Shopping is the online equivalent of traditional mail order
|
||
business. The difference is that you can buy while browsing. Some
|
||
commercial services distribute colorful catalogues to users to
|
||
support sales. Some distribute pictures of the merchandise by
|
||
modem.
|
||
You can buy anything from racer fitness equipment and diamonds
|
||
to cars. Enter your credit card number and the Chevrolet is yours.
|
||
The online mail order business is becoming increasingly global.
|
||
|
||
Level 5: The user interface
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
This term describes how the online service is presented to you,
|
||
that is, in what form text, pictures and sound appear on your
|
||
personal communications computer.
|
||
Most online services offer the first three of these four
|
||
levels. Some offer more:
|
||
|
||
1. Menus for novices. The user can select (navigate) by
|
||
pressing a figure or a letter.
|
||
2. Short menus or lists of commands for the intermediate user.
|
||
The user knows some about how the service works, and just
|
||
wants a short reminder to help navigate.
|
||
3. A short prompt (often just a character, like a "!"), which
|
||
tells the expert user where he is in the system right now.
|
||
Those knowing the service inside out, don't need reminders
|
||
about what word or command to enter at this point.
|
||
4. Some services offer automatic access without any menus or
|
||
visible prompts at all. Everything happens in a two-way
|
||
stream of unintelligent data. The only menus that the user
|
||
sees, are those belonging to the program running on his
|
||
personal computer.
|
||
|
||
Some services emphasize colors, graphics and sound. They may
|
||
require that users have certain hardware or special add-on cards
|
||
in their communications computer. Often, a special communications
|
||
program is also needed.
|
||
Other services use methods for presenting colors and graphics
|
||
already built into their users' computers (and programs).
|
||
Colors, graphics and sound are highly desirable in some
|
||
applications, like online games and weather forecasts. But even
|
||
where it is not important, there will always be many wanting it.
|
||
To the professional on a fact-gathering mission, these features
|
||
may give slower data transfer and problems when saving text to disk
|
||
for later use. Therefore, many prefer ASCII text with no extras.
|
||
Sports cars are nice, but for delivering furniture they're
|
||
seldom any good. The same applies to the user interfaces. No one is
|
||
perfect for all applications.
|
||
|
||
Level 6: The data transporters
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
When the online service's host computer is far away, the user often
|
||
faces the challenges of:
|
||
|
||
1. Noise on the line, which may result in unreadable text or
|
||
errors in the received material.
|
||
2. Expensive long distance calls
|
||
|
||
There are many alternatives to direct long distance calling. Some
|
||
offers better quality data transfers and lower costs.
|
||
The regional packet data services used to be a popular option.
|
||
In Scandinavia, the offerings of the local PTTs are called Datapak.
|
||
Similar services are offered in most countries, often by a national
|
||
telephone monopoly.
|
||
Competitively priced alternatives are appearing in many
|
||
countries as national telecom monopolies are brought to an end. For
|
||
example, Infonet, TRI-P, and i-Com compete successfully with former
|
||
monopolies for transport of data to and from North America.
|
||
The Internet is a global network serving millions of mailboxes.
|
||
It provides very cost-efficient mail exchange with private and
|
||
public networks throughout the world.
|
||
IXI is a packet data network operated by European Research
|
||
centers. DASnet offers transport of mail between mail systems that
|
||
have no direct connection with each others. (More about this in
|
||
Chapter 13.)
|
||
|
||
Level 7: The user
|
||
-----------------
|
||
This is you and me. Turn the page to the next chapter and read
|
||
about how to use the online services.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 3: How to use the online services
|
||
=========================================
|
||
|
||
The user interface refers to what you get on your computer screen
|
||
and how, when you call an online service. It includes menus and
|
||
help screens, and various options to tailor the service to your
|
||
personal preferences.
|
||
|
||
Navigating by menus is simpler
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
Most online services have menus to make them easier for novices to
|
||
use. A typical menu looks like this:
|
||
|
||
R)ead messages
|
||
Q)uick search available messages
|
||
W)rite messages
|
||
C)omments to Sysop
|
||
D)ownload programs
|
||
?) for help
|
||
G)oodbye. This is enough!
|
||
|
||
Enter a letter (or ?) to select a function. Enter R to read
|
||
messages. There is hardly any need to read the documentation to
|
||
use this service.
|
||
CompuServe greets European users with this menu:
|
||
|
||
|
||
CompuServe Europe EUROPE
|
||
|
||
COMPUSERVE EUROPE MAIN MENU
|
||
|
||
1 About CompuServe
|
||
2 What's New
|
||
3 Member Assistance
|
||
4 Electronic Mail
|
||
5 Personal Computer Support
|
||
6 Company Information
|
||
7 Logon Instructions (Europe)
|
||
8 CompuServe Information Service (U.S.)
|
||
|
||
Enter '8' to get another menu:
|
||
|
||
CompuServe TOP
|
||
|
||
1 Member Assistance (FREE)
|
||
2 Find a Topic (FREE)
|
||
3 Communications/Bulletin Bds.
|
||
4 News/Weather/Sports
|
||
5 Travel
|
||
6 The Electronic MALL/Shopping
|
||
7 Money Matters/Markets
|
||
8 Entertainment/Games
|
||
9 Hobbies/Lifestyles/Education
|
||
10 Reference
|
||
11 Computers/Technology
|
||
12 Business/Other Interests
|
||
|
||
You can "go" to Associated Press' newswires or the section for
|
||
home-schooling in the Education Forum by entering numbers listed in
|
||
menus. The service is like a tree with menus by every set of
|
||
branches.
|
||
A code in the upper right-hand corner of each screen tells you
|
||
exactly where you are. The last menu has the code 'TOP' meaning
|
||
that this menu is at the 'top of the tree'.
|
||
By each CompuServe system prompt, the command GO followed by a
|
||
destination code will take you directly to a desired location.
|
||
Enter GO IBMHW to go directly to the IBM Hardware Forum.
|
||
The GO command will save you time and money. Similar codes and
|
||
commands are used on several other online services.
|
||
On many systems, the first menu encountered when logging on is
|
||
a list of announcements and new offerings. The following is from
|
||
GEnie, General Electric's Consumer Information Service (U.S.A.):
|
||
|
||
GEnie Announcements (FREE)
|
||
|
||
1. July 1991 GEnie Billing Completed. To review yours, type:....*BILL
|
||
2. Hot Summer Nights continues to SIZZLE.........................*HSN
|
||
3. NEW...Quality Product and Amazing Value in....................SOFTCLUB
|
||
4. LAST CHANCE---Blue GEnie Sweatshirts..........................*ORDER
|
||
5. Color hypermedia in Apple II world. HyperStudio RTC in........A2
|
||
6. Meet the Product Manager, FREE RTC............................SFRT
|
||
7. "Future of Online Gaming" RTC with GEnie Game Designers in....MPGRT
|
||
8. A Revolutionary Credit Service - TRW CREDENTIALS..............TRWCREDIT
|
||
9. 900 Numbers: Ripoff or Good Business Sense - RTC 8/11 9PM.....RADIO
|
||
10. Air Warrior Convention set for Sept.26-29. in Washington......AIR
|
||
11. SEARS Fall/Winter Catalog On-line NOW.........................SEARS
|
||
12. How to Sell your CRAFTS for Profit............................HOSB
|
||
13. Stellar Warrior Campaign starts with a FREE weekend...........WARRIOR
|
||
14. Followup Investment RTC with Mickey Friedman in...............REAL ESTATE
|
||
15. Federation II, the adult space fantasy........................FED
|
||
|
||
Enter #, <H>elp, or <CR> to continue?
|
||
|
||
At the 'Enter #' prompt, enter '7' to go directly to the "Future of
|
||
Online Gaming" conference (RTC=Round Table Conference). Enter H for
|
||
Help, or press Return to get to the systems' main menu.
|
||
You can "go" to selected services by entering a videotext page
|
||
number code or a number (selected from the menu). Type 'mail' to
|
||
get to your mailbox, 'backgammon' to play, or 'SEARS' to visit the
|
||
online version of this North American shoppers' paradise.
|
||
'Mail' has page number 200. Enter 'm 200' to go there directly.
|
||
To go to NewsBytes' technical news reports by subject, select "5"
|
||
from menu page number 316.
|
||
GEnie even has a faster way. Like some other services, it let
|
||
you stack commands. Instead of issuing one command, and then wait
|
||
for the system to respond before issuing the next command, stacking
|
||
allows you to put all commands on one line. The command "m 316;5"
|
||
will take you directly to choice 5 from the menu on page 316
|
||
without displaying intermediate menus.
|
||
Many online services use the same template. They have commands
|
||
like GO SERVICE-NAME, JOIN SERVICE-NAME (or just J), DELTA SERVICE-
|
||
NAME, or just the code or name of the offering as in 'mail' and
|
||
'sears' above.
|
||
Entering H or ? (for help) usually give you assistance. Few
|
||
services are fussy about whether you use lower or capital letters
|
||
in commands.
|
||
On some services, and especially if a selection requires just
|
||
a letter or a number, you don't even have to press return to make
|
||
it happen. This method is used on many bulletin boards.
|
||
Some codes are standard. This is particularly the case with "?",
|
||
H, or Help for more information.
|
||
|
||
Test drive
|
||
----------
|
||
Several commercial systems let you try the service for free or at
|
||
lower rates. You can check what's out there without paying for the
|
||
exploratory connect time, and get some free training in how to use
|
||
the service.
|
||
CompuServe's Practice Forum (GO PRACTICE) does not carry any
|
||
connect charges, but applicable communication surcharges are still
|
||
in effect. They also have a free 'Guided Tour'.
|
||
Free trials are particularly useful before a search in an
|
||
expensive database. Use DialIndex on Dialog. Orbit has DBIN (The
|
||
database Index), and Data-Star has CROS. They are master indexes to
|
||
the databases on the system. First, select a general subject area,
|
||
then enter your search terms. The systems will respond with lists
|
||
of databases and hit counts.
|
||
Note: You must go to the 'real' databases for results. You
|
||
cannot retrieve actual information during a test drive.
|
||
|
||
Selecting an expert level
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
Most services regard all new users as novices. The software
|
||
designers assume that users don't want (or are unable) to read
|
||
lengthy explanations. They think that most users prefer navigation
|
||
by going from menu to menu.
|
||
Commercial services may support this view for financial
|
||
reasons, and especially when charging for access by the minute.
|
||
(Some of them let you read their help screens for free, though.)
|
||
Menus are important when browsing new offerings, or accessing
|
||
services that we seldom use. Frequent users of a service, however,
|
||
quickly learn how to do things. Menus may soon begin to annoy
|
||
rather than please. Reading them costs money, and it slows our
|
||
communications down.
|
||
We do not need menus when accessing online services in fully
|
||
automated mode. Your communications program remembers exactly what
|
||
to do, and does all the typing for you.
|
||
There is no point in paying extra for having menus. You'll not
|
||
read them anyway. The objective is to access the service at maximum
|
||
speed and the lowest possible cost.
|
||
Most online services can be tailored to your personal needs and
|
||
preferences. Many let you choose between:
|
||
|
||
* Full menus
|
||
* Short menus
|
||
* A prompt line with a list of the most often used
|
||
commands,
|
||
* a prompt character or word (see "prompt" in appendix 4
|
||
for examples). Prompts can be used by automatic
|
||
communication script files to trigger the next action.
|
||
|
||
If concerned about costs, note that you can use expert mode without
|
||
being a true expert. Just print the menus, and keep them by your
|
||
keyboard while moving around.
|
||
Some users draw 'road maps' of the services to navigate more
|
||
quickly. Others automate the process using automatic communications
|
||
scripts.
|
||
|
||
Tailoring your services
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
The need to tailor the online service's prompts and menus differs
|
||
considerably from user to user, as they use all kinds of computers
|
||
for communication.
|
||
Some screens are large. Other screens can only display a few
|
||
lines of text at a time. One user of my BBS even used a Hewlett
|
||
Packard pocket calculator with a tiny, tiny screen.
|
||
Many online services allow you to tailor the way information
|
||
is sent to you.
|
||
If you are satisfied with how things are, skip the next couple
|
||
of pages and read from "Connecting the first time." If curious of
|
||
your options, read on for a somewhat brief and technical overview.
|
||
Besides a selection of various types of menus, you can usually
|
||
also set the following preferences:
|
||
|
||
* What menu is to be the first, when you access the service?
|
||
* The first menu is to be a tailored menu containing your
|
||
favorite offerings, and nothing else.
|
||
* Colors, graphics, or no colors/graphics.
|
||
* Preferred file transfer protocol (to avoid a question each
|
||
time you want to transfer a file).
|
||
* Desired terminal emulator, like TTY, VT-100 or VT-52.
|
||
* CAPITAL LETTERS or Mixed Case.
|
||
* What ASCII character code to use for the DELETE function.
|
||
* How many spaces to insert when expanding TABs in your mail.
|
||
* Number of lines per screen (for example, 24 on an IBM PC, or
|
||
eight on a TRS-80 Model 100. Whether scrolling is to pause
|
||
after each screenful or not.)
|
||
* Number of characters per line (for example, 80 lines on a PC,
|
||
or 40 on a TRS-80 Model 100.
|
||
* If the linefeed character is to be sent or not.
|
||
* If blank lines are to be sent.
|
||
* Whether the service is to check when you log on to see if
|
||
you're using special software (as in 'Inquire for VIDTEX' on
|
||
CompuServe).
|
||
* The use of 'echo'. Is the service to return the characters
|
||
that you enter on your keyboard?
|
||
* Use of delay when sending linefeeds. (Useful if capturing
|
||
text to a dumb printing terminal. If text scrolls too fast
|
||
for the printer, you risk losing some of it.)
|
||
* Choice of prompt character, or prompt text string. This is
|
||
useful when communicating by script files. On CompuServe, I
|
||
have asked the system to add the BackSpace character (ASCII
|
||
character number 8) to the end of all forum prompts. Since
|
||
this character is rarely found in messages or other texts,
|
||
I can safely let scripts depend on this prompt character for
|
||
unattended communication.
|
||
|
||
Displaying information on the screen
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
An 'A' is not an 'A' no matter what service you use. If you call
|
||
Tocolo BBS in Japan (Tel.: +81-3-205-9315. 1200 bps, 8,N,1.) with a
|
||
non-Japanese MS-DOS computer, chances are that the welcome text
|
||
will look like this:
|
||
|
||
*--------------------------------------------------------------*
|
||
* D0:[ BBS (<^/9] 7.8) *
|
||
* 62>] =3 ---> 3 (@^2K.3 03-205-9315) *
|
||
* 3]V3 <^6] ---> 24 <^6] 6D^3 C=D A-3 *
|
||
* (Wed 9:00-17:00 J R]C I @R 5T=P C^=) *
|
||
*--------------------------------------------------------------*
|
||
|
||
You'll need a Japanese ROM (Read-Only Memory) in your computer, a
|
||
special graphics program, or a Japanese language operating system
|
||
to have the Kanji characters displayed properly on your screen.
|
||
The characters that you see on your computer's screen are based
|
||
on a code. The computer finds the characters to display from a
|
||
table built into your system's hardware or software.
|
||
Most personal computers can be preset to use various tables
|
||
depending on your needs. When communicating in English, you may
|
||
want it to show Latin characters. When writing in Japanese, you
|
||
may want it to display Kanji characters.
|
||
Those writing in Norwegian, often want to use the special
|
||
Scandinavian characters . If the first two of these Nordic
|
||
characters read like the symbols for Yen and Cent, you're not set
|
||
up for Scandinavian characters. If your system is set up correctly,
|
||
they should look like an 'o' and an 'O' overwritten by a '/'.
|
||
The code telling your computer what to display, may also
|
||
contain information about where to put characters and what colors
|
||
to use.
|
||
Thus, an online service may order your computer to display a
|
||
given character in column 10 on line 2, and to print it in blinking
|
||
red color. If you're not set up correctly, these codes may show as
|
||
garbage on your screen rather than as a colorful character in a
|
||
given position.
|
||
If you call a service set to display text in VT-52 format, and
|
||
your communications program is set accordingly, then you should be
|
||
OK. VT-52 is a setup that makes a program or a service 'behave'
|
||
like a DEC VT-52 terminal.
|
||
Being able to view VT-52 coded text on your screen, does not
|
||
guarantee that you can capture this 'picture' to a file on your
|
||
disk. Your communications program may need special features to do
|
||
that. If these features are missing, you are in for a surprise. The
|
||
text in your capture file may look like in this example (it came on
|
||
a single, long line on my computer):
|
||
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
*H*J*Y"4 Innhold*Y%> *Y&4Emneoversikt
|
||
1 Brukerprofil 6*Y)4Stikkord A-] 2 Bruker- *Y*4
|
||
veiledning 7*Y,4Informasjons- *Y-
|
||
4leverand|rer A-] 3 Teledatanytt*Y.W 8*Y04Personlig indeks
|
||
4*Y2H *Y34Meldingstjenesten 5 Avslutte
|
||
9*Y64 ]pningsside *00# *Y 4TELEDATA
|
||
880823-1538*Y74 NTA01-00a*Y74 *Y74*Y74
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The character '*' in this example refers to the ESCape character
|
||
(ASCII number 27). ESC is used to tell your computer that what
|
||
follows is a VT-52 display command.
|
||
The codes following the ESC say where text is to be printed on
|
||
your screen (from line number x and column number y).
|
||
If your communications program cannot save VT-52 coded text in
|
||
a readable way, you'll need auxiliary programs to remove or convert
|
||
the codes. Some communication programs let you take snapshots of
|
||
the screen, and store the result in a file. This usually gives good
|
||
results, but it may be a cumbersome approach.
|
||
Prestel (British Telecom, England) belongs to a group of online
|
||
services called videotex (or viewdata). Minitel (in France and the
|
||
U.S.), Alex (Canada), and Prodigy (U.S.A.) are also in this group.
|
||
They believe that beautiful color graphics, large characters, and
|
||
menus give them a competitive advantage.
|
||
CompuServe is often called a videotex service because of its
|
||
emphasis on menus. However, most call it 'ASCII videotex' as it is
|
||
not depending on special display formats. Their philosophy is that
|
||
'plain text' is required to attract many users across hardware
|
||
platforms.
|
||
The viewdata services use graphical display standards with
|
||
names like Prestel, CEPT, Captain (Character and Pattern Telephone
|
||
Access Information Network System, in Japan), Telidon (Canada),
|
||
Minitel, Teletel (France), GIF (the Graphics Interchange Format),
|
||
Viewdata, and NAPLPS (The North American Presentation Level
|
||
Protocol Syntax).
|
||
You often need special terminal machines to use some viewdata
|
||
services. On other services, you must use special software plus an
|
||
emulator card in your computer.
|
||
Users of the communications program Procomm Plus can buy a
|
||
Viewdata module for conversion of Prestel videotex text to plain
|
||
ASCII, i.e., plain text without imbedded special codes.
|
||
Many MS-DOS based bulletin boards let you set access defaults
|
||
to colors and graphics. Most of them use ANSI graphics in welcome
|
||
texts and menus. Users of Procomm must set their program to ANSI
|
||
BBS to take advantage.
|
||
Capture these welcome texts and menus to a file on your hard
|
||
disk, and view them with an editor. They are filled with ANSI
|
||
escape codes, and thus hard to read (and search). The good news is
|
||
that conference and forum mail only rarely contains such codes.
|
||
Many users routinely keep captured online information on their
|
||
hard disks for later reference. If this is your intention, make
|
||
sure that text is sent to you in plain ASCII, or TTY mode.
|
||
|
||
TTY sends one line at a time, and only uses the codes TAB,
|
||
BackSpace, Carriage Return and LineFeed during the transfer.
|
||
The rest is 'plain text'.
|
||
|
||
Most online services offer TTY format. You can use the setting
|
||
almost everywhere. Even the videotex service Prestel offers an
|
||
option called 'TTY Teletype'.
|
||
If 'TTY' or 'ASCII' is not on your online services' list of
|
||
options, try 'Others' or 'Other computers'. These settings usually
|
||
identify your computer as unable to handle 'standard' colors, sound
|
||
and graphics.
|
||
Viewdata pages may provide "selling pictures," but the screens
|
||
often have a low contents of information compared with TTY-based
|
||
services. They are therefore not my favorite services for news in
|
||
full-text.
|
||
In other applications, like games, colorful graphics are a
|
||
definite advantage.
|
||
|
||
Connecting the first time
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
If you have unlimited financial resources, go ahead and call up
|
||
services all over the world. Learning by doing is exciting.
|
||
If resources are limited, start by reading user information
|
||
manual. Or, go online to capture key menus and help texts. Print
|
||
them out on paper for further study before going online again for
|
||
a 'real' visit.
|
||
I always hurry slowly during my first visits to a new online
|
||
service. I call up, capture information about how to use it, and
|
||
disconnect. It may take me days to study the material. My objective
|
||
is to find what the service has to offer in order to plan how to
|
||
use it most efficiently.
|
||
The first important command to look up is the logoff command.
|
||
There is nothing more frustrating than entering "bye" only to get
|
||
an error message. If lost, try "quit", "exit", "logoff", "off" and
|
||
"G", in the hope of finding the correct command. These are the
|
||
most usual variations. You should also try HELP or "?".
|
||
If you really can't figure out how to get off a system, just
|
||
hang up on it. Be careful, though. Some systems will continue to
|
||
charge for a period, even after you have disconnected by hanging up.
|
||
One of the first things that I do, is set my options to expert
|
||
status, though I am obviously an amateur at this stage.
|
||
Often, I also start automating the process during my first
|
||
visits. I write script files for automatic access and quick
|
||
navigation to key offerings. Another good strategy is to look for
|
||
automated offline readers or systems (see Chapter 16 for details).
|
||
Others prefer paper and pencil. They write a list of required
|
||
commands on a piece of paper, like this:
|
||
|
||
Call 0165
|
||
At CONNECT: ENTER @SP ENTER
|
||
At the NUI prompt: Nxxxxxppppp-a170041
|
||
At Enter 'dix' and <Enter>: dix
|
||
At -- More --: ENTER
|
||
At Your name: Odd de Presno
|
||
At Password: hemmelig
|
||
At What do you want to do:
|
||
- when no unread mail goodbye
|
||
- when mail to read ENTER
|
||
|
||
Put the list by your keyboard before calling the service. Follow it
|
||
carefully. After a while you may remember the procedure, and can
|
||
throw away your notes.
|
||
|
||
Good luck!
|
||
|
||
Chapter 4: Hobby, games and fun
|
||
===============================
|
||
|
||
* Programs, game and fun
|
||
Online adventure games. The virus threat.
|
||
* Hobbies. Holiday travels. Collecting stamps or coins.
|
||
Roots, music, and online shopping.
|
||
|
||
Online services have one thing in common with newspapers, magazines
|
||
and books. What they offer, varies from provider to provider.
|
||
The next chapters will focus on the contents of the offerings.
|
||
Appendix 1 has details about how to access the major service
|
||
providers.
|
||
Small online services often have interesting offerings in
|
||
specialized areas, and especially when they are based on local
|
||
phenomena or events. They tend to be more personal. They often
|
||
present their 'wares' in a local language, and offer very large
|
||
collections of free software.
|
||
The large online services have hundreds of thousands of users.
|
||
The activity is often high. They usually attract interesting (and
|
||
competent) participants to their conferences and forums, have more
|
||
programs available for download and more news sources and databases
|
||
to search. They generally give you a wider choice.
|
||
We will focus on the large international services. These are
|
||
available from anywhere without too much effort, and using them
|
||
comes surprisingly cheap. Therefore, please remember that this book
|
||
just covers the top of the iceberg. Cheaper services may be found
|
||
elsewhere, and they may even be better tuned to your particular
|
||
areas of interest.
|
||
|
||
Locating game software
|
||
----------------------
|
||
The fastest, easiest and cheapest is to call an online service to
|
||
download game programs. You'll find an overwhelming number of
|
||
programs for all types of microcomputers.
|
||
Many games are free. We call them "Public Domain" or "Freeware"
|
||
programs. Others are distributed free. You do not have to pay to
|
||
get them and try them out. If you want to use them, however, the
|
||
copyright owner expects you to pay a fee. We call them "shareware"
|
||
or "user supported" programs.
|
||
When the game has been transferred to your personal computer,
|
||
you can play without worries about communications costs, or the
|
||
busy signal on your phone line.
|
||
My favorite game is shareware. The name is Arachnid. It is an
|
||
MS Windows solitaire game (patience) made by SP Services, P.O. Box
|
||
456, Southampton, SO9 7XG, England. The desired registration fee is
|
||
UKP 15.00 (English pounds). You can download the program from my
|
||
board as WINCARD.EXE. The file is 106 kilobytes large.
|
||
WINCARD.EXE is a special distribution file, which contains
|
||
three games and all supporting files. The EXE extension may fool
|
||
you into thinking that it is a program, and in a way it is. The
|
||
file is a self-extract file, meaning that you just enter "WINCARD"
|
||
on an MS-DOS computer to extract the game files from the "package."
|
||
Games are usually distributed in such distribution files. All
|
||
files used by a game (or several games) is put into one file by
|
||
special software, and compressed in size. This makes retrieval of
|
||
programs easier and cheaper. You do not have to download many
|
||
related files individually. The transfer takes less time. (Read
|
||
about how to extract programs from distribution files in appendix
|
||
3).
|
||
You will find some of the largest collections of games on the
|
||
North American services CompuServe and EXEC-PC BBS. You will also
|
||
find many throughout the Internet.
|
||
|
||
| TRICKLE is a large collection of public domain and shareware |
|
||
| programs for MS-DOS, CPM, and other computers. For information |
|
||
| about how to use TRICKLE, send a message through Internet to |
|
||
| |
|
||
| LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU |
|
||
| |
|
||
| In the TEXT of the message write |
|
||
| |
|
||
| /pdget pd:<msdos.starter>simtel20.inf |
|
||
| |
|
||
| An information file will be sent to your electronic mailbox. |
|
||
| (Read the chapter about electronic mail and appendix 1 for |
|
||
| more information.) |
|
||
| |
|
||
| If TRICKLE is not enough, try Archie. It is the Internet |
|
||
| archive server listing service. The Archie database maintains |
|
||
| a list of roughly 1.5 million files containing 100 Giga- |
|
||
| bytes (that is, 100,000,000,000 bytes) of information |
|
||
| available from over 800 anonymous FTP archive sites. |
|
||
| You can search this database by email to find where files |
|
||
| are located. Some Archie systems maintain a list of libraries |
|
||
| all over the world, while others concentrate on a more limited |
|
||
| geographical area. |
|
||
| Once Archie has told you where desired programs and files |
|
||
| are located, you can retrieve them by telnet, anonymous FTP, |
|
||
| of FTPmail. Read "File transfers through the Internet" in |
|
||
| chapter 12 for details. |
|
||
| For information about using Archie, send mail to one of the|
|
||
| following addresses (see appendix 4 for more options): |
|
||
| |
|
||
| archie@cs.mcgill.ca (Canada) |
|
||
| archie@nic.funet.fi (Finland) |
|
||
| archie@plaza.aarnet.edu.au (Australia) |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Put the word HELP in the body of the mail |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Getting programs by email is a three-step process: |
|
||
| (1) Use Archie to find file names and where they are stored, |
|
||
| (2) Send a message to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com to have them |
|
||
| retrieved and forwarded to you by email, and |
|
||
| (3) Use a utility program to convert the file to a useful |
|
||
| format. (See chapter 12.) |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Check out JVArcServ for an Archie-alike service on FidoNet. |
|
||
|
||
Chances are that online services in your area also have many
|
||
programs to offer. Most free bulletin boards have more software
|
||
than you'll ever get around to try.
|
||
Usually, there is a natural specialization between boards.
|
||
Those using the Unix operating system, have the largest number of
|
||
programs for such machines. Those running on MS-DOS computers, have
|
||
more programs for such computers.
|
||
Some games are trite and bad. Others are brilliant. There are
|
||
ladder games, games challenging your responses (racer car driving,
|
||
flight control, war games, subsea games), electronic versions of
|
||
traditional games like Backgammon, Yatzy, chess and bridge,
|
||
educational games (geography, mathematics and history), puzzles,
|
||
fractal programs (drawing beautiful pictures on your screen),
|
||
psychological tests, text-based adventure games, and other strange
|
||
and funny creations. Here is something for any taste or belief.
|
||
If you want to get rich in a hurry, pick programs that increase
|
||
chances of winning horse race bets, or other "real world" money
|
||
winning games.
|
||
If you're into beautiful girls, fill your hard disk with
|
||
picture files in GIF, PCX or other graphics formats. (Sorry ladies,
|
||
there are not many pictures of naked boys around.) You'll also find
|
||
software that will display the pictures that you just retrieved.
|
||
Keen users of the more popular games often want to swap tricks
|
||
and discuss experiences: Super Nintendo players regularly meet on
|
||
the SNES mailing list (on SNES@spcvxa.spc.edu). To join, send your
|
||
subscription request to: SNES-Request@spcvxa.spc.edu .
|
||
For chess, try the Chess Discussion List (CHESS-
|
||
L@GREARN.BITNET) unless Chinese Chess (on XIANGQI@INDYCMS.BITNET)
|
||
is what you're looking for. CompuServe has a Chess forum (GO
|
||
CHESSFORUM) with message sections called: Chess Basics, Theory &
|
||
Analysis, News Wire, Hardware/Software, Casual Games, Electronic
|
||
Knights, Oriental/Variants, Tourneys (Open), USCF Rated Games, Team
|
||
Play, and Time Out.
|
||
Usenet excels when it comes to games:
|
||
|
||
rec.gambling Articles on games of chance & betting.
|
||
rec.games.board Discussion and hints on board games.
|
||
rec.games.board.ce The Cosmic Encounter board game.
|
||
rec.games.bridge Hobbyists interested in bridge.
|
||
rec.games.chess Chess & computer chess.
|
||
rec.games.design Discussion of game design related issues.
|
||
rec.games.empire Discussion and hints about Empire.
|
||
rec.games.frp Discussion about Role Playing games.
|
||
rec.games.go Discussion about Go.
|
||
rec.games.hack Discussion, hints, etc. about the Hack game.
|
||
rec.games.misc Games and computer games.
|
||
rec.games.moria Comments, hints, and info about the Moria game.
|
||
rec.games.mud Various aspects of multi-users computer games.
|
||
rec.games.pbm Discussion about Play by Mail games.
|
||
rec.games.pinball Discussing pinball-related issues.
|
||
rec.games.programmer Discussion of adventure game programming.
|
||
rec.games.rogue Discussion and hints about Rogue.
|
||
rec.games.trivia Discussion about trivia.
|
||
rec.games.video Discussion about video games.
|
||
rec.games.video.arcade Discussions about coin-operated video games.
|
||
|
||
With so many games and programs around, it is difficult to stay
|
||
current about new programs and new versions of old ones. Consider
|
||
subscribing to the MS-DOS Archive Additions (one-way) information
|
||
service. Internet MS-DOS archive managers use it to announce new
|
||
additions to their collections.
|
||
To subscribe, send a message to LISTSERV@TACOM-EMH1.Army.Mil
|
||
with this command in the body of the message:
|
||
|
||
|
||
subscribe msdos-ann
|
||
|
||
These announcements are also posted to the Usenet newsgroup called
|
||
comp.archives.msdos.announce .
|
||
|
||
| It is probably easier for you to relate to references like |
|
||
| "rec.games.video on Usenet," than to XIANGQI@INDYCMS.BITNET. |
|
||
| References to BITNET mailing lists are made in various ways |
|
||
| throughout the book, just as it is online. This is the basic |
|
||
| rule: |
|
||
| |
|
||
| All BITNET mailing lists are 'managed' by a LISTSERV program, |
|
||
| which handles all subscription requests. When you read a |
|
||
| reference like XIANGQI@INDYCMS.BITNET, then that means that |
|
||
| a subscription request must be set to the LISTSERV at the |
|
||
| INDYCMS computer on BITNET. Mail to the forum, however, must |
|
||
| be sent to XIANGQI@INDYCMS.BITNET to be forwarded to the |
|
||
| other members. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| For more information about these strange address codes, and |
|
||
| how to use them, read about BITNET in appendix 1. You may |
|
||
| find it useful to read about email addresses in Chapter 7. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| All BITNET mailing lists can be used by email through the |
|
||
| Internet. Several BITNET hosts also have Internet addresses. |
|
||
| Example: LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET can also be reached as |
|
||
| LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu . When dual addresses are given, |
|
||
| Internet users should use the Internet address, while BITNET |
|
||
| users should use the BITNET address. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Note: In cases where a BITNET mailing list has dual addresses, |
|
||
| we have usually given the Internet address. If you are on |
|
||
| BITNET, and using these addresses are difficult or impossible, |
|
||
| ask your local postmaster for help. |
|
||
|
||
Computer viruses
|
||
----------------
|
||
Few online users ever live to see or experience a computer virus,
|
||
but they do exist. So, read this:
|
||
A virus is a small, hidden computer program that can cause
|
||
the loss or alteration of programs or data, and can compromise
|
||
their confidentiality. It can spread from program to program, and
|
||
from system to system, without direct human intervention.
|
||
|
||
The chance of your computer being infected is small, but you're
|
||
never safe. Therefore, download a program for virus detection and
|
||
identification, like VIRUSSCAN from McAffee Associates, 4423
|
||
Cheeney Street, Santa Clara, CA 95054-0253, U.S.A. They also have
|
||
virus disinfection programs (for MS-DOS computers).
|
||
For more about viruses, subscribe to VIRUS-L@LEHIGH.EDU.
|
||
CompuServe has the Mac New Users Forum (with a a Virus Clinic
|
||
section), the McAfee Virus Help Forum, the Symantec AntiVirus
|
||
Forum, and more. FidoNet has a VIRUS echo. ILINK has VIRUS-I.
|
||
Usenet has bit.listserv.valert-l (Virus Alert List), and
|
||
comp.virus .
|
||
|
||
Online games
|
||
------------
|
||
If you're into games, why not investigate online adventure games?
|
||
There are many alternatives. Prestel (England) offers TRASH, an
|
||
environmental multi-user game with a futuristic theme and full of
|
||
humor. Up to 64 persons can play simultaneously.
|
||
" ...Callers play out the role of pandimensional refuse
|
||
disposal officers, whose primary aim in life is to clean up the
|
||
multiverse, as the Trash environment is called."
|
||
"With a diverse range of 'psionic powers', which vary from
|
||
the nasty (pyrokinesis) to the gentle (faith healing), at their
|
||
command, Trash players roam across dimensions and universes,
|
||
completing various tasks."
|
||
Bulletin boards throughout the world invite you to role playing
|
||
games. Some have graphics, music and sound effects. Dungeons &
|
||
Dragons is a popular choice.
|
||
On EXEC-PC, play Startrek. Select an identity and "play it out"
|
||
according to its character. If you're a real afficionado, check out
|
||
rec.arts.startrek.info on Usenet or the list RASI-L@ncc1701e.uucp
|
||
(write LISTSERV@ncc1701e.uucp to subscribe).
|
||
Advanced players swap tricks on STARGAME@PCCVM.BITNET. On many
|
||
BBSes, MUD is a most popular game.
|
||
|
||
| Multi-User Dungeons (MUD) is a structured and user-modifiable |
|
||
| online environment, which allows users not only to interact |
|
||
| with each other, but to do role-playing, build and furnish |
|
||
| living areas and interaction areas, extend and create the |
|
||
| interactive "space" and the rules for using that space. |
|
||
|
||
Popular choices on CompuServe are strategy games like The Island of
|
||
Kesmai and Megawars. One game can last for weeks at a time. On CIX
|
||
(England), many prefer the multi-user dungeon game DiscWorld.
|
||
If you prefer sport fantasies in the armchair, check out GEnie.
|
||
They offer Rotisserie League Baseball. Decide what team player to
|
||
be, and join in a match of American baseball.
|
||
Nintendo offers online games through the Famicom Networks in
|
||
Japan and the U.S. Your PC must have a special graphics card to
|
||
play games like GO and Shogi, a Japanese game of chess.
|
||
|
||
Chat
|
||
----
|
||
Chat, or "keyboard talking," is a popular attraction, and in
|
||
particular on the large online services.
|
||
Your first attempt will probably be a strange experience.
|
||
When may people talk simultaneously in chat mode, incoherent
|
||
sentences seem to fly over your computer screen. It takes some
|
||
training to be able to read what each of them is saying.
|
||
CompuServe's Citizen Band Simulator (GO CB) is an electronic
|
||
version of the hams' short-wave radio. It has 72 CB Simulator
|
||
channels. You can chat with anonymous members, have fun and find
|
||
new keypals.
|
||
On EXEC-PC's Chat and Entertainment System up to 64 users can
|
||
talk simultaneously. GEnie calls their service Livewire CB. On BIX,
|
||
look for CBIX.
|
||
Some users are serious about chatting. Several large companies
|
||
are heavy users. Although this kind of talking is a slow process,
|
||
it has advantages. It is easy to document the discussion. People
|
||
from places geographically far apart can meet at a low cost to
|
||
discuss.
|
||
Some online services charge less for chats than for other
|
||
services.
|
||
|
||
My hobby
|
||
--------
|
||
There are online forums for most hobbies: collection of stamps and
|
||
coins, genealogy, music, holiday travels, skiing, purchase of
|
||
consumer electronics, video, filming, and more.
|
||
Those you meet in the clubs share your interests. They come to
|
||
exchange information and experiences, to listen, swap stamps or
|
||
coins, participate in club auctions, and exploit favorable group
|
||
discounts when buying things for their hobby.
|
||
In these clubs, the main attraction is the open messages that
|
||
people write to each other. Many clubs also have libraries filled
|
||
with special software (like data base programs for collectors) and
|
||
information files.
|
||
Coins (on Coins@rocky.er.usgs.gov) is a forum for discussion of
|
||
Numismatics, the study of coins, American and International. Paper
|
||
currency is also a welcome topic, but trading is not allowed. To
|
||
subscribe, send a message to robert@whiplash.er.usgs.gov .
|
||
|
||
Music
|
||
-----
|
||
ILINK, an international exchange of conferences between bulletin
|
||
boards, has a forum for country music lovers. It presents itself
|
||
in these words:
|
||
|
||
|
||
COUNTRY MUSIC
|
||
Country & Western music including bluegrass and other related
|
||
forms. Discussion of artists, techniques, instruments &
|
||
musicians. Host: John Stewart
|
||
|
||
|
||
One oasis of civility in the BBS maelstrom is the 150-board
|
||
ILINK network -- recently renamed from InterLink. Unlike most
|
||
BBS networks, ILINK carefully evaluates each board before
|
||
permitting membership. "We are very selective -- some say
|
||
overly selective," says ILINK's international host Andy Keeves.
|
||
Choosiness keeps ILINK small but upholds the decorum of its
|
||
message bases.
|
||
|
||
Usenet has rec.music.country.western . FidoNet has 60S_70S_PROGROCK
|
||
about the progressive rock music of the 60's and 70's, gospel music
|
||
in CHR_GSPL_MUSIC, a club for selling and buying between musicians
|
||
(MUSICIAN'S_SERVICES), and (MUSIC_COMP_101) for aspiring composers.
|
||
CompuServe has a bunch of forums. Check out the Music/MIDI
|
||
sections in the Amiga and Atari ST Arts forums. The latter is a
|
||
full Music/MIDI forum. The Coin/Stamp/Collectibles Forum has a
|
||
section for music collectors.
|
||
CompuServe's RockNet forum has the following structure:
|
||
|
||
Available message sections: Available file libraries:
|
||
0 General/Misc. 0 General Misc
|
||
1 Rock Music 1 Rock Music
|
||
2 Rock Radio 2 Rock Radio
|
||
3 Reviews/LK 3 Reviews
|
||
4 Q&A/Help 4 Q&A/Help
|
||
5 Rock Film & Video 5 Rock Film & Video
|
||
6 RockLetters 6 RockLetters
|
||
7 Trends 7 Trends
|
||
8 Heavy Metal 8 Heavy Metal
|
||
9 Old Wave 9 Old Wave
|
||
10 New Music 10 New Music
|
||
11 CD Hotline 11 Compact Discs
|
||
12 Green, Village 12 Graphics/Programs
|
||
|
||
You can tailor your visits to RockNet to your personal interests.
|
||
If you're into Heavy Metal, limit your readings of messages to
|
||
those in section 8, and possibly 3 and 7.
|
||
The Music and Performing Arts Forum (GO MUSICARTS) is another
|
||
interesting place on CompuServe. Converse with fellow music fans
|
||
about on topics like classical, jazz/blues, Big Band, country/folk
|
||
and religious music, ballet/dance, drama and more.
|
||
MIDI is discussed on several bulletin boards, including in
|
||
conferences distributed by RelayNet.
|
||
Classical music forums can be found on most larger services.
|
||
Try CLASSM-L on LISTSERV@BROWNVM.BITNET.
|
||
For jazz, try the ILINK conference JAZZ, rec.music.bluenote on
|
||
Usenet, MILES on LISTSERV@HEARN.NIC.SURFNET.NL (about Miles Davis),
|
||
or BLUES-L at LISTSERV@BROWNVM.BROWN.EDU .
|
||
Another jazz oriented list, SATURN on LISTSERV@HEARN.BITNET, is
|
||
for discussing the free-jazz big band leader, Sun Ra.
|
||
Network-Audio-Bits is an electronic magazine bringing reviews
|
||
and information about rock, pop, new age, jazz, funk, folk music
|
||
and other genres. (Write Murph@Maine.BITNET to join.)
|
||
The Music Newsletter offers reviews and interviews. Subscribe
|
||
by email to LISTSERV@VM.MARIST.EDU using the command "SUBSCRIBE
|
||
UPNEWS Your-full-name."
|
||
|
||
| On BITNET mailing lists, you subscribe by using the command |
|
||
| "SUB <mailing-list-name> Your-full-name" in the body of your |
|
||
| email. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| There are also mailing lists on Unix workstations, PCs, and |
|
||
| microVaxen. These may require that you write the subscribe |
|
||
| command in full ('SUBSCRIBE'), or use other commands. |
|
||
|
||
To get the "Music List of Lists," an overview of music oriented
|
||
mailing lists, send email to mlol-request@wariat.org .
|
||
GRIND (write grind-request@unh.edu) focuses on discussions
|
||
about grindcore/death metal/heavy thrash music. PRIMUS is about the
|
||
funk/rock band Primus (write to primus-request@unh.edu).
|
||
KLARINET (on LISTSERV@VCCSCENT.BITNET) is a network bringing
|
||
news, information, research and teaching items of interest, and
|
||
other related information for clarinet players, teachers, students,
|
||
and enthusiasts.
|
||
"Backstreets" on UUCP is for those who love the music of Bruce
|
||
Springsteen (backstreets-request@virginia.edu). "Eclipse" (eclipse-
|
||
request@beach.cis.ufl.edu) focuses on Pink Floyd and his music. If
|
||
a fan of Jimi Hendrix, join "hey-joe" (hey-joe-request@ms.uky.edu).
|
||
In "brass," the topic is brass band music (write to brass-
|
||
request@geomag.gly.fsu.edu for access).
|
||
"J-Pop" (jpop-request@wystan.bsd.uchicago.edu via UUCP) has
|
||
discussions about Japanese pop/rock of today.
|
||
|
||
Wine and food
|
||
-------------
|
||
Some people would rather fill their stomachs than their ears. They
|
||
call CompuServe for the Cooks Online forum (for gourmets) and the
|
||
Bacchus Wine Forum (for their throats).
|
||
BITNET has the mailing list "Eat" (EAT-L@VTVM2), a club for
|
||
FoodLore/Recipe Exchange. In J-FOOD-L (J-FOOD-L@JPNKNU10 on BITNET)
|
||
they discuss Japanese food and culture.
|
||
If your interest is more academic, subscribe to FOODWINE (on
|
||
LISTSERV@CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU). It is for those seriously interested
|
||
in the academic study of food and its accompaniments in the 1990's,
|
||
including a variety of disciplines, such as marketing,
|
||
communications, hospitality, consumer affairs, hotel and catering
|
||
management.
|
||
Usenet has rec.food.cooking, rec.food.recipes, rec.food.drink,
|
||
rec.food.restaurants, and rec.food.veg for vegetarians. On FidoNet,
|
||
check out INTERCOOK for words of wisdom on International Cooking.
|
||
On ILINK and RelayNet, look for CUISINE. That is where we found
|
||
the following recipe for Mexican Meatloaf:
|
||
|
||
2 lb Ground Beef
|
||
1 ea Bell Pepper, Diced
|
||
10 1/2 oz Cream Chicken Soup
|
||
10 oz Cheddar Cheese
|
||
4 oz Green Chilies, Diced
|
||
1 ea Onion, Chopped
|
||
8 oz Taco Sauce
|
||
1 pk Tortillas
|
||
4 oz Mushrooms (fresh optional)
|
||
2 ea Jalapen"'s (to taste)
|
||
|
||
1. Brown ground beef and drain.
|
||
2. Mix onions, green peppers, mushrooms, green CHILIES, taco
|
||
sauce, jalapen"'s and cream chicken soup into skillet with
|
||
ground beef.
|
||
3. Simmer until vegetables are soft.
|
||
4. Shred cheddar cheese.
|
||
5. In crock pot or dish, layer meat mixture, cheese, and
|
||
tortillas; heat until cheese melts.
|
||
|
||
Bon apetit!
|
||
|
||
Outdoor life
|
||
------------
|
||
CompuServe's Great Outdoors SIG is for those preferring nature for
|
||
the computer screen. Its sections are called:
|
||
|
||
General/Photography, Scouting, Power Boating, TROUT UNLIMITED,
|
||
Fishing, Hunting, Cycling, AUDUBON/Birding, Canoe/Kayak/Raft,
|
||
Camp/Hike/Walk/RV, Snow Sports/Climb, OWAA, CIS/Computers,
|
||
Firearms, NRA, Environmnt/Wildlife, OUTDOOR LIFE mag.
|
||
|
||
If you dream of visiting Alaska to hunt, fish and explore the
|
||
wilderness by canoe, then this is the place. Add the Outdoor
|
||
Cooking section of the Cooks Online Forum to make it perfect.
|
||
Scandinavian bulletin boards exchange the "JAKT_FRILUFT"
|
||
conference (Through MIX). ILINK offers OUTDOORS, which focuses
|
||
on outdoor hobbies.
|
||
As usual, Usenet has a lot. These are some examples:
|
||
|
||
rec.aviation Aviation rules, means, and methods.
|
||
rec.backcountry Activities in the Great Outdoors.
|
||
rec.bicycles Bicycles, related products and laws.
|
||
rec.birds Hobbyists interested in bird watching.
|
||
rec.boats Hobbyists interested in boating.
|
||
rec.boats.paddle Talk about any boats with oars, paddles,
|
||
etc.
|
||
rec.climbing Climbing techniques, competition
|
||
announcements, etc.
|
||
|
||
Scouts participate in SCOUTER on FidoNet (International SCOUTING
|
||
Conference) and SCOUTS-L (SCOUTS-L@NDSUVM1) on BITNET. Golfers meet
|
||
in GOLF-L (on LISTSERV@ubvm.bitnet).
|
||
Photo enthusiasts will track down PHOTO-L@BUACCA.BITNET,
|
||
CompuServe's Photography Forum and its SCUBA Forum's sections for
|
||
underwater photography. For more, there's "Photography" on EXEC-PC
|
||
and The Well, PHOTO on RelayNet, PHOTOSIG on ILINK and rec.photo on
|
||
Usenet.
|
||
If you're into 3-d (stereo) photography, enroll in "3d" on
|
||
UUCP:
|
||
|
||
Contact: 3d-request@bfmny0.bfm.com (Tom Neff)
|
||
Purpose: Discussion of 3-D (stereo) photography. General info,
|
||
hints, experiences, equipment, techniques, and stereo
|
||
"happenings." Anyone interested is welcome to join.
|
||
|
||
There are clubs for all popular outdoor hobbies.
|
||
|
||
Roots
|
||
-----
|
||
On ROOTS-L@NDSUVM1.BITNET and soc.roots on Usenet, the emphasis is
|
||
on genealogy. Here, you'll get tips about tools and techniques. You
|
||
can exchange information about ancestors and find new friends and
|
||
partners for joint research.
|
||
On CompuServe, it is called The Genealogy Forum. One message
|
||
section is called Overseas Ancestry. Remember to check out the
|
||
Family History Library, a newsletter bringing news from the library
|
||
for genealogical research in Salt Lake City, U.S.A. (stored in
|
||
Library 10.)
|
||
The North American bulletin boards ROOTS-BBS (San Francisco)
|
||
and THE FAMILY ROOTS (Oklahoma) are connected to FidoNet.
|
||
GEnie has the Genealogy Knowledgebase. FidoNet has
|
||
|
||
GENDATA Genealogy Database
|
||
GENEALOGY:_WGW Who's Got What (WGW) Data Base
|
||
GENSOFT Genealogy software
|
||
SE_GENEALOGY South Eastern US Genealogy Conference
|
||
|
||
Since FidoNet has links all over the world, these conferences can
|
||
give contacts in countries that you might otherwise have problems
|
||
in reaching.
|
||
On most of these services, you'll find interesting genealogy
|
||
programs and files with practical hints about how to write a book
|
||
about your family.
|
||
|
||
Him and Her
|
||
-----------
|
||
Members of the female sex have their favorite meeting places, like
|
||
Cleopatra on Bergen By Byte. Men do not have admission.
|
||
Usenet has soc.feminism. Those with limited access to Usenet,
|
||
may subscribe to "feminism-digest." Send email to feminism-
|
||
digest@ncar.ucar.edu to get on the mailing list.
|
||
|
||
"Contact feminism-digest@ncar.ucar.edu" above means that you
|
||
need to write a message to this Internet email address with a
|
||
subscription request, or to receive further information about
|
||
how to join. This mailing list does not have automatic
|
||
subscriptions.
|
||
|
||
To join the mailing list "feminists," write Patricia Collins on
|
||
collins@hplabs.hp.com . She presents the conference's purpose in
|
||
this way:
|
||
|
||
The feminist mailing list is intended to provide a forum
|
||
for discussion of issues of interest to women, in a friendly
|
||
atmosphere. The basic tenets of feminism and the day-to-day
|
||
experiences of women do not have to be explained or defended.
|
||
Men and women can join, but everyone requesting to be added to
|
||
the mailing list MUST provide the moderator with: (1) a full
|
||
name; (2) a complete UUCP path to a well-known host or a fully
|
||
specified Internet address; (3) the correspondent's gender (for
|
||
records and statistics only). NO exceptions.
|
||
|
||
While we're at it, let's move on to other topics associated with
|
||
the term sex:
|
||
Bisexuals can participate in "sappho" on UUCP. Contact
|
||
sappho-request@mc.lcs.mit.edu. On BITNET, you'll find BIFEM-L
|
||
(BIFEM-L@BROWNVM), BISEXU-L (BISEXU-L@BROWNVM) and others.
|
||
Spanish speaking users can subscribe to ARENAL (Lista de
|
||
discussion para hispanos/as que desean acabar con la homofobia).
|
||
Subscribe by email to LISTSERV@LUT.FI .
|
||
Usenet has tons of it: soc.motss, alt.politics.homosexuality,
|
||
alt.sex.bestiality, alt.sex, alt.sex.bondage, alt.sex.pictures.d,
|
||
clari.news.group.gays, alt.sex.pictures, alt.sex.motss,
|
||
clari.feature.kinsey (Sex Q&A and Advice from Kinsey Institute),
|
||
clari.news.law.crime.sex and clari.news.sex.
|
||
Conferences called "SEXUALITY" are alive on FidoNet and The
|
||
Well. CompuServe has a Human Sexuality Adult Forum and a Human
|
||
Sexuality Open Forum. STOPRAPE@BROWNVM.BITNET is a Sexual Assault
|
||
Activist List.
|
||
Finally, there are a large number of pictures of nudes in all
|
||
possible and impossible positions. Most of them are childish, some
|
||
are decidedly pornographic, a few are beautiful and erotic.
|
||
The online services' policies vary about what kind of
|
||
pictures and picture programs to make available. The larger the
|
||
service, the more conservative they tend to be.
|
||
|
||
Programs for hobbyists
|
||
----------------------
|
||
It's no rule that a service need to have a conference about a
|
||
hobby, to have interesting programs available for downloading.
|
||
Programs float around from service to service much easier than
|
||
conference items. Still, the best programs for a given hobby are
|
||
normally found on services where hobbyists meet to discuss.
|
||
You will find:
|
||
|
||
Chess and bridge programs,
|
||
Morse code training programs for ham amateurs,
|
||
Astrology programs,
|
||
Data base systems for keeping track of music cassettes or
|
||
records, video cassettes, books, stamps, coins, etc.
|
||
Information systems for wine lovers,
|
||
Recipe programs (tell me what you've got, and I'll tell
|
||
you what you can make), and much more.
|
||
|
||
Online shopping
|
||
---------------
|
||
You can buy almost anything online: video cameras, books, music,
|
||
Bonsai plants, golf equipment, canned cakes from Gimmee Jimmy's
|
||
Cookies, Levi's trousers for men, computer equipment, a four-door
|
||
Nissan Pathfinder SE-V6 car, and air tickets for Mexico.
|
||
Shoppers who let their modem do the "walking" are already a few
|
||
steps ahead of people Still stuck shopping the old-fashioned way.
|
||
Experienced online shoppers know that you can tap a world of stores
|
||
without ever leaving your keyboard, and that you can browse and buy
|
||
with very little effort.
|
||
Some services present their wares "for your information only."
|
||
It's like reading newspaper ads. You must contact the seller to
|
||
buy. Other services have large online supermarkets with many
|
||
stores, and you can by while you visit.
|
||
Subscribers to CompuServe get a monthly magazine by mail. "Go
|
||
Mall Shoppers' Guide" is a regular insert with color photos and
|
||
descriptions of selected products. Type GO MALL, order a product,
|
||
enter your credit card number, and have it sent you by mail.
|
||
What if used goods are good enough? ILINK, the international
|
||
conference exchange system, has GARAGESALE. Here you can buy and
|
||
sell for hobby or home: Photo, video, audio, sound/music and midi
|
||
equipment, and all kinds of other domestic items. ILINK also has
|
||
a conference called BUY-SELL.
|
||
HAM-SALE on the FidoNet is for ham amateurs wanting to swap, by
|
||
or sell. The American computer magazine PC Week is operating a
|
||
Buyer's Forum on CompuServe.
|
||
UUCP's "muscle-cars" is where "muscle car" enthusiasts offer
|
||
advice, share problems and solutions, discuss technical issues,
|
||
racing, buying or selling parts, cars, or services, or just discuss
|
||
cars and swap stories with others. (Contact: muscle-cars-
|
||
request@sorinc.PacBell.COM).
|
||
Similar experiences are waiting for you in "BMW" (Write: bmw-
|
||
request@sol.crd.ge.com), "british-cars" (Write: british-cars-
|
||
request@encore.com), "italian-cars" (Write: italian-cars-
|
||
request@sol.crd.ge.com) and "Z-cars" (the topic is Z-cars from
|
||
Datsun/Nissan. Write: rsiatl!z-car-request).
|
||
Vintage VW (at VintageVW@rocky.er.usgs.gov) is about Vintage
|
||
Volkswagens. This includes the Beetle, Bus (Types II and II/IV),
|
||
Ghia, Squareback, Kubelwagen (Thing), bajas, buggies, Schwimmwagen,
|
||
rails and any VW (air-cooled) powered vehicle including aircraft.
|
||
Beginners, gurus, mechanics and non-mechanics, restorers and
|
||
daily drivers are welcomed. This is where you can discuss how-to
|
||
stuff, parts availability, answer mechanical questions, list show
|
||
dates, swap meets, club addresses, favorite stories, etc. To
|
||
subscribe, send a message to robert@whiplash.er.usgs.gov .
|
||
The newsletter NEWSBYTES brings you regular reports about
|
||
prices on used computers from The Boston Computer Exchange (BOCO).
|
||
The newsletter is available through GEnie, ZiffNet on CompuServe,
|
||
NewsNet, Dialog, and others.
|
||
ZiffNet also offers the Computer Directory, an online
|
||
encyclopedia with information about more than 75,000 hardware
|
||
and software products sold in North America (1993). The data base
|
||
is updated monthly.
|
||
|
||
Planning your holidays
|
||
----------------------
|
||
CompuServe invites you to read reviews of theater performances,
|
||
books, movies and restaurants, opera, symphonies, ballets, dance,
|
||
museums and art galleries. They have information about airline
|
||
schedules and prices, hotels and the latest ski weather forecast.
|
||
Televerket's Datatorg in Norway offers air tickets and hotel
|
||
reservations through SMART LINK, a self-serve system operated by
|
||
the Norwegian travel agencies. Entertainment and travel are also
|
||
popular on Prestel. Most British tour operators have an "office"
|
||
there.
|
||
Several international services, including CompuServe and Dow
|
||
Jones News/Retrieval, offer OAG (The Official Airline Guide) and
|
||
Eaasy Sabre (the American Airlines reservation system).
|
||
Worldscan/Travel shopper is on CompuServe and Delphi. The
|
||
Travel Forum on CompuServe administers a member travel discount
|
||
program. Download HOTEL.SAV in Library 0 for information about
|
||
lower rates on hotel room and car-rental rates.
|
||
It's often possible to book hotel rooms and rent cars online.
|
||
Travelshopper has a built-in hotel guide, searchable by city around
|
||
the world. OAG has a database of over 40,000 hotels worldwide
|
||
(1992). It has the AA Rated European Hotels & Restaurants menu,
|
||
which covers trips from Andorra to Yugoslavia. Accu-Weather
|
||
provides three-day weather forecasts for 450 cities worldwide,
|
||
updated hourly.
|
||
Travel agents are also operative through the Internet. One
|
||
alternative is at TRAVEL@delphi.com . Telnet lib.dartmouth.edu for
|
||
a World Factbook on countries.
|
||
Is this your first visit to Japan? Why not prepare your visit
|
||
through the online service TWICS in Tokyo. It presents itself like
|
||
this:
|
||
|
||
"Japan is an island nation, full of communities in villages,
|
||
towns, and cities squeezed in between the mountains and the sea,
|
||
with ports of various sizes and shapes through which communication
|
||
flows between communities.
|
||
|
||
Our own online community is organized in the same terms, an
|
||
island community "BEEJIMA" (Bee Island), with our village
|
||
("MURA"), a port ("MINATO"), and our very own volcanic mountain
|
||
("YAMA").
|
||
|
||
In the village, there is a village office ("YAKUBA"), a community
|
||
meeting place ("YORIAI"), a high-tech corner ("AKIHABARA") named
|
||
after the famous electronics district in Tokyo, a health center
|
||
("EMEDICA"), a place to hang around and read things ("HON YA"), a
|
||
school ("GAKKOU"), and a market ("ICHIBA"). The port has holding
|
||
areas and leads to other parts of Japan ("NIPPON") and the world
|
||
("SEKAI"). The mountain has a hot springs ("ONSEN") recreational
|
||
area, and a lively outdoor bath ("IN THE OFURO") which has become
|
||
the social center of our island.
|
||
|
||
Add to this soc.culture.japan on Usenet, the BITNET discussion list
|
||
JAPAN@NDSUVM1, the Japan Forum on CompuServe, and "JAPAN" on
|
||
RelayNet.
|
||
Did you say the former "Soviet Union?" Here are phone numbers
|
||
to some "local" bulletin board systems:
|
||
|
||
Moscow Fair (Moscow): +7 095 366 5209
|
||
SUEARN NIC BBS (Moscow): +7 095 938 3618
|
||
Kreit BBS (Leningrad): +7 812 112 2611
|
||
Amber Way BBS (Vilnius, Lithuania): +7 012 222 7194
|
||
UFO BBS (Riga, Latvia): +7 013 232 3983
|
||
Post Square #1 (Kiev, Ukrain): +7 044 417 5700
|
||
|
||
BITNET club TRAVEL-L (TRAVEL-L@TREARN) for those interested in
|
||
tourism. ILINK and The Well have conferences under the name TRAVEL.
|
||
Many conferences in online land concentrate on particular parts
|
||
of the world. BALT-L@UBVM.BITNET is focusing on the Baltic states.
|
||
In AFRICA-L@BRUFPB.BITNET they discuss Africa. On Usenet, the news
|
||
group is called soc.culture.african.
|
||
To brush up your Portuguese, consider joining BRAS-NET, It is a
|
||
Brazilian mailing list/network. Send your subscription request to
|
||
bras-net-request@cs.ucla.edu . For general information about other
|
||
Brazilian interest groups, write LISTSERV@FAPQ.FAPESP.BR .
|
||
For those who are into Spanish, why not check out CHILE-L
|
||
(at LISTSERV@USACHVM1.BITNET), or FOLLAC, a mailing list about
|
||
'Folklore Latino, Latinoamericano y Caribeno'. To join, write Emily
|
||
Socolov at owner-follac@ccwf.cc.texas.edu .
|
||
Here are some other African sources: the French language
|
||
Algeria News List (ALGNEWS) is on LISTSERV@gwuvm.gwu.edu. TUNISNET
|
||
(on LISTSERV@psuvm.psu.edu) is The Tunisia Network. EGYPT-NET
|
||
(write: egypt-net-request@das.harvard.edu) is the Egypt Discussion
|
||
and News forum.
|
||
Send mail to mcgee@epsilon.eecs.nwu.edu to get a list of
|
||
Internet/Bitnet mailing lists that focus on African, African-
|
||
American, African-Caribbean or African-Latin issues, and a list of
|
||
African information sites.
|
||
In the soc.culture hierarchy on Usenet, you'll find area codes
|
||
like asian, african, arabic, asean, australian, bangladesh,
|
||
british, canada, china, celtic, europe, filipino, french, german,
|
||
greek, hongkong, indian, iranian, italian, jewish, korean, latin-
|
||
american, lebanon, magyar, nepal, new-zealand, nordic, pakistan,
|
||
polish, soviet, spain, sri-lanka, taiwan, thai, turkish, vietnamese
|
||
and yugoslavia.
|
||
In "argentina," you can read about how to make empanadas while
|
||
sharpening up your Spanish before visiting Buenos Aires. (Contact:
|
||
argentina-request@ois.db.toronto.edu).
|
||
CompuServe's Travel Forum has sections called United States,
|
||
Canada, Mexico/Central America, Caribbean, South America, Oceania,
|
||
Asia, Europe, Africa/Middle East and Hawaii.
|
||
If you're off to London, check out the UK Travel section in
|
||
CompuServe's UK Computing Forum. Its library contains files with
|
||
tips about affordable hotels, British road signs, and a list of
|
||
London theatre shows with ticket-buying tips.
|
||
If your destination is Germany, practice Deutch in the Deutches
|
||
Forum (GO GERNET).
|
||
Search for additional background information using CompuServe's
|
||
Magazine Database Plus, if you don't mind paying a wee surcharge.
|
||
Look up places to stay in the ABC Worldwide Hotel Listing.
|
||
On America Online, you can research National Geographic and
|
||
National Geographic Traveler Magazines online. You can look up your
|
||
destination in the electronic Comptons Encyclopedia.
|
||
GEnie has a Japan RoundTable and a Deutchland RoundTable.
|
||
Both provide for interaction with users from those respective
|
||
countries.
|
||
If you are responsible for your company's business travels,
|
||
check out the following newsletters on NewsNet: BUSINESS TRAVEL
|
||
NEWS, and TOUR & TRAVEL NEWS. (You can also search NewsNet's
|
||
newsletters through CompuServe's IQuest, Dialog, and others).
|
||
NewsNet has searchable newsletters focusing on the conditions
|
||
in particular countries or parts of the world (news, travel and
|
||
political risk analysis, political stability, etc.).
|
||
|
||
Politics
|
||
--------
|
||
Many of these conferences and forums are filled to the brim with
|
||
political discussions. For information about the United Nations,
|
||
subscribe to UN (on LISTSERV@INDYCMS.IUPUI.EDU).
|
||
|
||
Chapter 5: Home, education and work
|
||
===================================
|
||
|
||
House, garden and finances
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
FidoNet has a long list of interesting conferences:
|
||
|
||
HOME-N-GRDN Home and Garden Questions
|
||
HOMEAUT Home Automation
|
||
HOMESCHL Homeschooling support
|
||
HOME_IMP Improvements around the house.
|
||
HOME_OFFICE Home Office
|
||
HOME_REPAIR Home Repair and Remodelling
|
||
ZYMURGY Beer Homebrewing
|
||
|
||
The EXEC-PC BBS has "Home Repair." The FUTUREHOME TECHNOLOGY NEWS
|
||
newsletter is available through NewsNet. On ILINK, you will find the
|
||
HOMEGARDEN conference. Usenet has misc.consumers.house . Here they
|
||
discuss anything related to owning and maintaining a house. On the
|
||
Well, check out "Homeowners."
|
||
In Ziff-Davis' Magazine Database Plus you can search and read
|
||
articles from the Good Housekeeping Magazine. This full-text
|
||
article database is available from CompuServe and other services.
|
||
Through UUCP you can get to the conference "Antiques" (Contact:
|
||
antiques-request@swbatl.sbc.com).
|
||
CompuServe also has the Gardening Forum. It is operated by the
|
||
National Gardening Association, which publishes National Gardening
|
||
magazine.
|
||
The various services' software libraries contain many great
|
||
shareware and public domain programs. You can download software that
|
||
will help you prepare tax return forms, plan next year's taxes,
|
||
calculate interests and down-payments on your loans. You'll find
|
||
double-entry money-managing systems for non-accountants that will
|
||
help you with personal bookkeeping and checkbook balancing.
|
||
Other programs will help you plan and maintain your house.
|
||
There are personal inventory programs (to help you keep track of
|
||
belongings), and programs that can help you plan allocation of the
|
||
space in your home. . .
|
||
Join CompuServe's Investors Forum to learn how to play the
|
||
stock and money markets, and other moneymaking 'instruments'.
|
||
Discuss investment techniques with others, read reports about
|
||
economical trends, and retrieve useful programs for your personal
|
||
computer.
|
||
RelayNet offers the international conference INVESTOR. Usenet
|
||
has misc.invest .
|
||
If you want to adopt a child, check out ADOPTION on FidoNet,
|
||
or subscribe to a UUCP conference of the same name. For access,
|
||
write adoption-request@think.com . The National Issues Forum on
|
||
CompuServe has a message section called "Adoption Today."
|
||
Addicted TV-viewers may be interested in alt.tv.twin-peaks or
|
||
alt.tv.muppets on Usenet. "Mystery" on FidoNet and UUCP is for
|
||
those preferring mystery novels by the fire place in the living
|
||
room.
|
||
There are even offerings for "the perfect house wife." I can
|
||
think of no better pastime than origami, the traditional Japanese
|
||
art of folding paper. (Contact: origami-request@cs.utexas.edu on
|
||
UUCP).
|
||
Oh, I almost forgot: The BONSAI conference is essential (on
|
||
LISTSERV@CMS.CC.WAYNE.EDU). This is where to discuss the art and
|
||
craft of Bonsai and related art forms. Bonsai is the Oriental Art
|
||
of miniaturizing trees and plants into forms that mimic nature.
|
||
|
||
Education, teaching and the exchange of knowledge
|
||
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
The list of conferences, forums, clubs, and other services
|
||
focusing on education - in its broadest meaning of the word -
|
||
is long. You are offered online courses, workshops, and seminars
|
||
for students of all ages, databases to help you select a school for
|
||
yourself or your kids, and all kinds of discussion forums for
|
||
educators.
|
||
Usenet, BITNET, Internet, and UUCP have long traditions in
|
||
education. You'll find offerings for teachers within all subject
|
||
areas, from finance and accounting, through history, languages and
|
||
geography to technical subjects on all levels.
|
||
Two guides listing forums of interest to Educators can be
|
||
retrieved by anonymous FTP from the pub/ednet directory at
|
||
nic.umass.edu . Use the following commands (see "FTP by email" at
|
||
the end of Chapter 12):
|
||
|
||
get educatrs.lst
|
||
get edusenet.gde
|
||
|
||
KIDSPHERE (subscribe through JOINKIDS@vms.cis.pitt.edu) is a
|
||
discussion forum for teachers of students from the age of
|
||
kindergarten through high school and higher.
|
||
This is a selection of other BITNET discussion lists to
|
||
suggest the span of topics:
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHEMED-L (CHEMED-L@UWF) Chemistry Education Discussion
|
||
CHRONICL (CHRONICL@USCVM) On-Line Chronicle of Higher Ed
|
||
CIVIL-L (CIVIL-L@UNBVM1) Civil Engineering Research & Ed.
|
||
COMLAW-L (COMLAW-L@UALTAVM) Computers and Legal Education
|
||
DRUGABUS (DRUGABUS@UMAB) Drug Abuse Education Information
|
||
JOURNET (JOURNET@QUCDN) Discussion List for Journalism Ed
|
||
MEDIA-L (MEDIA-L@BINGVMB) Media in Education
|
||
MULTI-L (MULTI-L@BARILVM) Language and Education in Multi-
|
||
Lingual Settings
|
||
MUSIC-ED (MUSIC-ED@UMINN1) MUSIC-ED Music Education
|
||
PANET-L (PANET-L@YALEVM) Medical Education and Health Info
|
||
TAG-L (TAG-L@NDSUVM1) TAG-L Talented and Gifted Ed
|
||
WORLD-L (WORLD-L@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU)
|
||
Non-Eurocentric World History
|
||
|
||
Here are some Usenet conferences:
|
||
|
||
comp.edu Computer science education
|
||
sci.edu The science of education
|
||
comp.ai.edu Applications of Artificial Intelligence to
|
||
Education
|
||
|
||
There are many similar offerings on the commercial services and
|
||
free bulletin boards.
|
||
K12Net is a decentralized network for schools available on
|
||
FidoNet and Usenet. Write janet.murray@f23.n105.z1.fidonet.org for
|
||
information.
|
||
FidoNet also has
|
||
|
||
A_THEIST A_Theism Education and Enlightenment
|
||
HIGH_ED Education, Post Secondary
|
||
HISTORY International History
|
||
MAC_GAMES Macintosh Entertainment & Education
|
||
|
||
CompuServe has 12 forums focusing on education. Among these you'll
|
||
find the Disabilities Forum, Computer Training Forum, Education
|
||
Forum, Education Research forum, Science/Math Educational Forum,
|
||
Foreign Language Forum, LOGO and Students Forum.
|
||
Ken and Carrie Loss-Cutler are coordinating the section for
|
||
Home/Alternative Education in CompuServe's Education Forum. They
|
||
educate their two children at home instead of sending them to a
|
||
public school.
|
||
The Foreign Language Forum has the sections Potpourri/Polyglot,
|
||
Spanish/Portuguese, French, German/Germanic, Latin/Greek, Slavic/E.
|
||
European, English, East Asian, Esperanto, Others, FL Education,
|
||
Translators, Computers/CAI-CALL, The Directory, Jobs/Careers, New
|
||
Uploads and Using the Forum.
|
||
If you're into reading/writing the African language Kiswahili
|
||
(Swahili), write kuntz@macc.wisc.edu to get onto the SWAHILI-L
|
||
mailing list.
|
||
The more occupational oriented forums include Communications
|
||
Industry Forum, Environmental Forum, Firenet (for volunteer fire
|
||
brigades), Industrial Hygiene Forum, AAMSI Medical Forum, ASCMD
|
||
Forum, HealthNet, OP-Net Forum, the MICRO MD Network, Legal SIG,
|
||
Aviation SIG, CB Society and CEMSIG (computers and electronics).
|
||
Bergen By Byte has the Norwegian language conference Schools.
|
||
This conference is for validated users only.
|
||
|
||
| There are many private conferences in the online world. All |
|
||
| conferences referred to in this book are open for anybody to |
|
||
| join, unless explicitly told to be private. |
|
||
|
||
RelayNet has EDUCATION. NewsNet offers the newsletters EDUCATION
|
||
DAILY, and the HELLER REPORT ON EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY.
|
||
Many online services (including schools and universities) offer
|
||
students accredited courses by modem. Connected Education at the
|
||
New School for Social Research in the United States is one example,
|
||
as is the University of Phoenix in Arizona. (Ask in CompuServe's
|
||
Education Forum for more information.)
|
||
The EDUPAGE newsletter is a twice-weekly summary of news items
|
||
on information technology, provided by a consortium of colleges and
|
||
universities "seeking to transform education through the use of
|
||
information technology." Compact and informative. I like it.
|
||
To subscribe, send a note to edupage@educom.edu with your name,
|
||
institution name and email address. (EDUPAGE is also available for
|
||
Gopher, WAIS and anonymous FTP access on EDUCOM's host machine,
|
||
educom.edu .)
|
||
INFOBITS (at listserv@gibbs.oit.unc.edu) is a monthly service
|
||
reporting from a number of information and instruction technology
|
||
sources.
|
||
The Internet Resource Directory for Educators is available by
|
||
anonymous FTP from tcet.unt.edu in the pub/telecomputing-info/IRD
|
||
subdirectory. File names include:
|
||
|
||
IRD-telnet-sites.txt (226KB ASCII text)
|
||
IRD-ftp-archives.txt ( 73KB)
|
||
IRD-listservs.txt (201KB)
|
||
IRD-infusion-ideas.txt (202KB)
|
||
|
||
Example: KIDLINK
|
||
----------------
|
||
Many parents and teachers regard the online world as a learning
|
||
opportunity for their kids. Some of them turn to KIDLINK, a global
|
||
service for children between 10 - 15 years of age. The service is
|
||
operated by a grassroots network of volunteers.
|
||
The objective is to get as many children as possible involved
|
||
in a global dialog.
|
||
Participation is free. Before joining the discussion, however,
|
||
each child must respond to the following four questions:
|
||
|
||
1. Who am I?
|
||
2. What do I want to be when I grow up?
|
||
3. How do I want the world to be better when I grow up?
|
||
4. What can I do Now to make this come true?
|
||
|
||
The kids can write in any language. Most answers are sent through
|
||
the Internet to a large online database in North America. Anyone
|
||
with an email connection to the Internet can search this database
|
||
at will.
|
||
When they have submitted their responses, they are invited to
|
||
'meet' the others in several KIDCAFEs. The cafes are split up by
|
||
language. Here, they can discuss anything from pop music to how it
|
||
is to live in other countries.
|
||
KIDLINK grew from an idea in 1990 to over 10,000 participating
|
||
children in 50 countries by May 1993.
|
||
Schools all over the globe are integrating KIDLINK with their
|
||
classes in languages, geography, history, environment, art, etc.
|
||
To the kid participant, KIDCAFE may be the beginning of a personal
|
||
network of international friends.
|
||
For more information, send mail to LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU with
|
||
the following command in the TEXT of your message:
|
||
|
||
GET KIDLINK GENERAL
|
||
|
||
|
||
Your personal network
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Network is a word with many meanings. It can be a system set up to
|
||
transport data from one computer to another. It can be an online
|
||
service with many conferences, and a friendly connection between
|
||
people (like in "old boys' network"). Here, we use it in the latter
|
||
meaning of the word.
|
||
We use our personal networks more than most of us think of.
|
||
We have a chain of people that we call on to ask for advice, help,
|
||
and who we invite to participate in projects or parties. When they
|
||
ask us for assistance, we lend a hand.
|
||
The online world has some interesting characteristics. One is
|
||
that most participants in online conferences already have received
|
||
so much help from others that they feel obliged to pay back. They
|
||
do this by helping others.
|
||
Those who help, know that helping others will be rewarded. The
|
||
reward, however, may not come directly from the persons that they
|
||
help. They contributions help maintain and develop the online world
|
||
as one giant personal network.
|
||
A typical example: I wanted to buy a 425 megabyte hard disk for
|
||
my Toshiba 5100 personal computer. I discover the existence of such
|
||
a drive, when a user told about his experiences in CompuServe's
|
||
Toshiba Forum. Before placing an order, I wrote to check if he was
|
||
still satisfied with the disk.
|
||
The happy user did more than reply. He told about other sellers
|
||
and offered to help out with return shipment of my computer when
|
||
done. He made it clear that he had no financial interest in the
|
||
companies selling the upgrade. We had no previous contact with
|
||
each other.
|
||
The online world is full of similar examples. The list of what
|
||
people do to help others is very, very long.
|
||
In most conferences and forums you get help, just like that.
|
||
There is always someone prepared to help.
|
||
Still, the best long range strategy to build chances of getting
|
||
help when you need it, is to be visually present in conferences,
|
||
that matter to you. 'Being visually present' means that you should
|
||
contribute in the discussions and help others as much as you can.
|
||
The p o s i t i v e contributors get a lot of friends and a
|
||
disproportional amount of help from others.
|
||
That is all it takes to build a personal network. One day you
|
||
may need it. It will give you an incredible advantage. I have seen
|
||
people get jobs, partners and clients through such contacts. The
|
||
online world is full of opportunities.
|
||
|
||
Watch your words
|
||
----------------
|
||
Written communications are deprived of the body language and tone
|
||
of voice that convey so much in face-to-face meetings and even in
|
||
telephone conversations. Therefore, it makes sense to work much
|
||
harder to build in humor, sarcasm, or disagreement and avoid your
|
||
words come across as stupidity, rudeness, or aggressiveness.
|
||
One way of defusing misunderstanding is to include cues as to
|
||
your emotional state. One popular technique is to use keyboard
|
||
symbols like :-). We call these symbols emoticons.
|
||
What :-) means? Tilt your head to the left and look again. Yes,
|
||
it's a smiling face.
|
||
Here are some other examples to challenge your imagination: ;-)
|
||
(Winking Smiley), :-( (Sad), 8-) (User wears glasses), :-o (Shocked
|
||
or surprised), and :-> (Hey hey).
|
||
A bracketed <g> is shorthand for grin, and <g,d&r> means
|
||
grinning, ducking, and running. Some people prefer to write their
|
||
emotional state in full text, like in these two examples: *grin*
|
||
and *smile*.
|
||
Do not misunderstand. You still should not allow yourself to
|
||
write the most appallingly insulting things to other people, and
|
||
then try to shrug it off with a <smile>.
|
||
Watch your words. They are so easy to store on a hard disk.
|
||
|
||
Religion and philosophy
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
CompuServe's Religion Forum (GO RELIGION) has many message sections
|
||
with associated file libraries. You can get into serious discussion
|
||
about topics ranging from Christianity, Judaism, Eastern Religions,
|
||
Islam, Interfaith Dialog, Limbo, Pagan/Occult, to Religion and
|
||
Science, Liturgical Churches, Mormonism, Ethics and Values, and
|
||
more. You may also want to check out the New Age Forum.
|
||
Usenet's offerings include these:
|
||
|
||
soc.culture.jewish Jewish culture & religion.
|
||
soc.religion.christian Christianity and related topics.
|
||
soc.religion.eastern Discussions of Eastern religions.
|
||
soc.religion.islam Discussions of the Islamic faith.
|
||
talk.religion.misc Religious, ethical, & moral implications.
|
||
talk.religion.newage Esoteric and minority religions &
|
||
philosophies.
|
||
alt.pagan Discussions about paganism & religion.
|
||
alt.religion.computers People who believe computing is
|
||
"real life."
|
||
clari.news.religion Religion, religious leaders,
|
||
televangelists.
|
||
|
||
The BITNET/Internet arena has The Islamic Information & News Net on
|
||
MUSLIMS (available through LISTSERV@ASUVM.INRE.ASU.EDU). ISLAM-L
|
||
(on LISTSERV@ULKYVM.LOUISVILLE.EDU) is a non-sectarian forum for
|
||
discussion, debate, and the exchange of information by students and
|
||
scholars of the history of Islam.
|
||
BUDDHA-L (on LISTSERV@ULKYVM.LOUISVILLE.EDU) provides a means
|
||
for those interested in Buddhist Studies to exchange information
|
||
and views. BUDDHIST (on LISTSERV@JPNTUVM0.BITNET) is for non-
|
||
academic discussions.
|
||
BAPTIST (LISTSERV@UKCC.UKY.EDU) is the Open Baptist Discussion
|
||
List. THEOLOGY (contact U16481%UICVM.BITNET@VM1.NODAK.EDU) is a
|
||
mailing list dedicated to the intellectual discussion of religion.
|
||
In its self-presentation, it says:
|
||
|
||
Intellectual is stressed as opposed to the "personal," the
|
||
inspirational, or evangelistic. This does not mean one cannot
|
||
evangelize, but rather that participants should persuade rather
|
||
than brow-beat or attack those they disagree with. Arguments
|
||
are inevitable, but they ultimately should resolve into mutual
|
||
understanding or at least a truce.
|
||
|
||
Pagan (Contact: pagan-request@drycas.club.cc.cmu.edu) is set up
|
||
to discuss the religions and philosophies of paganism. BELIEF-L (on
|
||
LISTSERV@BROWNVM.BITNET) is designed to be a forum where personal
|
||
ideologies can be discussed, examined, and analyzed.
|
||
The discussion list PHILCOMM@RPIECS.BITNET is where you debate
|
||
the philosophy of communication. PHILOSOP@YORKVM1.BITNET is the
|
||
Philosophy Discussion Forum.
|
||
Several sacred texts and primary texts of religious interest
|
||
are available by anonymous FTP or LISTSERV. The Bible, the Book of
|
||
Mormon and the Koran (also spelled Quran) are available at many
|
||
sites and in a variety of file formats.
|
||
The Bible (King James Version) is available as bible10.zip and
|
||
bible10.txt via FTP to mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu (128.174.201.12) in the
|
||
/extext/etext92/ directory.
|
||
M.H. Shakir's translation of the Koran is available as 114
|
||
individual ASCII text chapters via FTP to quake.think.com
|
||
(192.31.181.1) in the /pub/etext/koran/ directory.
|
||
A short file containing quotes from the Koran is available via
|
||
LISTSERV from LISTSERV@asuacad as PAKISTAN AL_QURAN.
|
||
A collection of Sanskrit texts is available via FTP to
|
||
ftp.bcc.ac.uk in the /pub/users/ucgadkw/indology/ directory.
|
||
You may use the Archie service (see Appendix 4) to find other
|
||
religious texts that are also available through the Internet. On
|
||
FidoNet, check out JVArcServ.
|
||
|
||
Job-hunting by modem
|
||
--------------------
|
||
Unemployment is a global problem, and losing a job is often a bad
|
||
experience. If this ever should happen to you, consider checking
|
||
out the BITNET discussion list LAIDOFF@ARIZVM1 - "So, you've been
|
||
laidoff?"
|
||
Maybe you already have a job, but are constantly searching for
|
||
something better.
|
||
There are many forums and conferences devoted to help you get a
|
||
new job. FidoNet has the JOBS conference, for those not in a hurry,
|
||
and JOBS-NOW (Job & Employment offerings/listings) for those who
|
||
have no more time to wait.
|
||
On Bergen By Byte, it is called 'Job_market', and on ILINK
|
||
CAREER. In many countries there are local bulletin boards operated
|
||
by public employment agencies.
|
||
On Televerket's Datatorg (Norway), you can browse jobs from the
|
||
following menu (translated):
|
||
|
||
|
||
VACANT JOBS
|
||
|
||
Select desired profession Number
|
||
01 Technical, natural sciences ( 182)
|
||
02 Education, etc. ( 601)
|
||
03 Media,art ( 58)
|
||
04 Medicine, health care, etc. ( 951)
|
||
05 Social care ( 307)
|
||
06 Adm.,management, organization ( 348)
|
||
07 Finance,computers ( 100)
|
||
08 Secretarial, office work ( 138)
|
||
09 Sale,purchasing, advertising ( 576)
|
||
10 Agriculture,forestry,fishing ( 56)
|
||
11 Oil and gas, mining ( 38)
|
||
12 Transport,communication ( 68)
|
||
13 Workshop,fine mechanics,electro( 126)
|
||
14 craft,building and construction( 93)
|
||
15 Industry,ware-house,mechan. ( 68)
|
||
16 Hotel,restaurant,domestic work ( 133)
|
||
17 Service,surveillance,safety ( 170)
|
||
|
||
If your potential employers have an email address, you can send
|
||
dozens of job resumes - while going for a cup of coffee!
|
||
WORK-AT-HOME on FidoNet is for those planning to start their
|
||
own business ("Take this job and shove it! I'll work at home!")
|
||
CompuServe has the Working-From-Home Forum under the sysopship
|
||
of online gurus Paul and Sarah Edwards. Its file library contains
|
||
back issues of the electronic magazine "Making It on Your Own."
|
||
GEnie has the Home Office Small Business forum (HOSB).
|
||
Home based business opportunities may exist within areas such
|
||
as desktop publishing, desktop video, high-tech equipment repair,
|
||
import and export management, and professional practice management.
|
||
Learn from others in forums or conferences on related topics.
|
||
The good news is that many organizations are having problems
|
||
finding qualified candidates for their vacant positions, and that
|
||
some of them are turning to The Online World for help. One of them
|
||
did it like this (from an online announcement):
|
||
|
||
Because it is difficult to locate qualified candidates for
|
||
positions in special libraries and information centers, and to
|
||
assist special librarians and information specialists to locate
|
||
positions, the student chapter of the Special Libraries
|
||
Association at Indiana University has formed a LISTSERV, SLAJOB,
|
||
in connection with the Indiana Center for Database Systems.
|
||
The LISTSERV, which is available on both the Internet and
|
||
Bitnet, will help special libraries and information centers in
|
||
the sciences, industry, the arts and within public and academic
|
||
libraries to have a central location for announcing special
|
||
library and information science positions.
|
||
The LISTSERV is available to individuals or organizations
|
||
that have an Internet or Bitnet network connection. For those
|
||
on the network, subscribe by sending an email message to:
|
||
|
||
"LISTSERV@iubvm.bitnet" or "LISTSERV@iubvm.ucs.indiana.edu".
|
||
Leave the subject line blank and then type the following in the
|
||
message of the text:
|
||
|
||
subscribe SLAJOB [firstname] [lastname]
|
||
|
||
The Israelis have the mailing list CJI, Computer Jobs in Israel.
|
||
Send mail to LISTSERV@JERUSALEM1.DATASRV.CO.IL with the usual "SUB
|
||
CJI Your-Full-Name" in the text of your message. This will give you
|
||
monthly updated lists of open computer jobs.
|
||
When you get tired of hunting for a job, why not relax with
|
||
HUMOR at LISTSERV@UGA.CC.UGA.EDU. This mailing list distributes
|
||
humor of all types, topics and tastes. To subscribe, send the
|
||
following command to the LISTSERV:
|
||
|
||
SUB HUMOR [firstname] [lastname]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chapter 6: Your personal HealthNet
|
||
==================================
|
||
|
||
Health is a concern in most families. Where a family member or a
|
||
friend is suffering from cancer, AIDS, a serious disability, or a
|
||
rare disease, finding help is imperative.
|
||
Fortunately, there are many sources of information for those
|
||
who want to know more. There are clubs and forums, where you can
|
||
meet others with the same disease or problem. They are open 24
|
||
hours a day. Those who cannot sleep at night, can log in any time
|
||
to "talk" with others.
|
||
The social aspect of joining a club is important. However, it
|
||
may be equally important to learn from other people's experiences
|
||
with alternative treatment methods, doctors, medicines, and to get
|
||
practical medical advice.
|
||
Here are some examples to illustrate the width of the offering:
|
||
|
||
AIDS
|
||
----
|
||
You may start with "The Fog City Online Information Service" in San
|
||
Francisco, the world's largest bulletin board of AIDS information.
|
||
The cost of using this BBS from afar may be reduced considerably by
|
||
using i-Com or similar data transport services (see chapter 13).
|
||
CompuServe has a Human Sexuality Forum and a MEDSig with
|
||
associated file libraries. It also has a surcharged ZiffNet
|
||
database with full-text articles about health topics (Health
|
||
Database Plus). On the Well, enter "g aids".
|
||
NewsNet has the newsletters "AIDS Weekly" and "AIDS Therapies."
|
||
The latter is a directory, updated monthly, with descriptions of
|
||
standard and experimental treatments for AIDS, along with a guide
|
||
to treatments for the opportunistic infections (OI) of AIDS. It
|
||
incorporates all existing and potential new AIDS treatments in one
|
||
place.
|
||
On BITNET, check out "AIDS/HIV News" (AIDSNEWS@EB0UB011) and
|
||
the mailing list on AIDS@EB0UB011.
|
||
Usenet has sci.med.aids (AIDS: treatment, pathology/biology of
|
||
HIV, prevention), bionet.molbio.hiv, clari.tw.health.aids (AIDS
|
||
stories, research, political issues), and bit.listserv.aidsnews.
|
||
If you do not have access to Usenet, send a message to aids-
|
||
request@cs.ucla.edu for articles from AIDSNEWS, statistics and news
|
||
summaries.
|
||
Aids-stat-request@wubios.wustl.edu is another source of current
|
||
AIDS statistics. Send a request to info-aids@rainbow.UUCP. It is a
|
||
clearinghouse of information, and discussion about alternative
|
||
treatment methods, political implications, and more.
|
||
|
||
Example: Kidney disease
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
In chapter 1, I told you that my wife has a rare disease called
|
||
Polycystic Kidneys. Here are more details about what happened
|
||
during the "online health trip" to CompuServe with her doctor:
|
||
|
||
The command "GO HEALTH" gave the following menu:
|
||
|
||
1 HealthNet
|
||
2 Human Sexuality
|
||
3 Consumer Health
|
||
4 NORD Services/Rare Disease
|
||
Database
|
||
5 PaperChase (MEDLINE)
|
||
6 Information USA/Health
|
||
7 Handicapped User's Database
|
||
8 Disabilities Forum
|
||
9 Aids Information
|
||
10 Cancer Forum
|
||
|
||
Another menu, which listed available "PROFESSIONAL FORUMS," had
|
||
choices like AAMSI Medical Forum and Health Forum. Besides visiting
|
||
these, we searched several medical databases.
|
||
Menu selection five gave us The National Library of Medicine's
|
||
database (MEDLINE), which is full of references to biomedical
|
||
literature. This database had more than five million references to
|
||
articles from 4.000 magazines from 1966 and up to date, when we
|
||
searched it in 1991. It increases by some 25.000 new references per
|
||
month. Easy navigation by menus. Easy to search.
|
||
The AAMSI Medical Forum (MedSIG) is sponsored by The American
|
||
Association for Medical Systems and Informatics (AAMSI). It is a
|
||
forum for professionals within health care, people within associated
|
||
technical fields, and ordinary CompuServe users. The members meet
|
||
to find, develop and swap information.
|
||
MedSIG has a library full of programs and information files.
|
||
This is an example of what you can find there:
|
||
|
||
ATLAS.ARC 21-Sep-88 30161
|
||
|
||
Keywords: STEREOTAXIC STEREOTACTIC STEREOTAXIS ATLAS THALAMOTOMY
|
||
MAP FUNCTIONAL GIF
|
||
|
||
This contains several of the most useful stereotaxic maps from
|
||
the Schaltenbrand and Wahren Atlas in GIF format. If you can
|
||
get GIF into your CAD or drawing program, you can scale the maps
|
||
to fit your individualized patient's AC-PC distance, thereby
|
||
generating a customized map for your patient.
|
||
|
||
CompuServe has many programs for reading GIF files, and converting
|
||
GIF files to other graphical formats.
|
||
Through IQuest, we searched medical databases. Simple menus
|
||
helped define relevant search terms. When done, IQuest searched
|
||
selected databases for us, and presented the finds on our local
|
||
computer screen.
|
||
The basic rate for completing the search was US$9.00. In
|
||
addition, we paid the normal fees for using CompuServe. From
|
||
Norway, this amounted to around US$ 40/hour at 2400 bps when
|
||
logging on through the local Infonet node at that time. Today, it
|
||
costs less.
|
||
This gave us up to 10 article headlines, when searching in
|
||
bibliographic databases. Abstracts of selected articles were
|
||
displayed on our screen for an additional US$2.00.
|
||
We used the search mode "SmartScan" in the area "Medical
|
||
research." IQuest searched several databases with a minimum of
|
||
manual intervention.
|
||
First, it told us that the following databases would be
|
||
included in the search:
|
||
|
||
BRS databases:
|
||
Ageline - Contains references to and abstracts of materials on
|
||
aging and the elderly. Covers psychological, medical, economic,
|
||
and political concerns.
|
||
AIDS Database - Includes critically selected articles covering
|
||
all aspects of AIDS, (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome), and
|
||
AIDS-related research.
|
||
AIDS Knowledge Base - Provides an online textbook of the most
|
||
current information on AIDS available from San Francisco General
|
||
Hospital.
|
||
Combined Health Information Database - For professionals,
|
||
patients, and the general public, CHID contains references to a
|
||
variety of materials on arthritis, diabetes, health education,
|
||
digestive diseases, and high blood pressure. Provides abstracts.
|
||
Embase - Includes extensive abstracts of articles related to
|
||
biomedicine from medical journals worldwide. About 40% of the
|
||
references are online only.
|
||
Rehabdata - Covers articles, books, reports, and audiovisual
|
||
materials dealing with the rehabilitation of the physically and
|
||
mentally handicapped. References only.
|
||
Sport Database - Indexes publications dealing with sports,
|
||
including training, medicine, education, and history. Drawn
|
||
mostly from English and French with technical articles from
|
||
other languages.
|
||
|
||
Dialog databases:
|
||
BioBusiness - Deals with the business aspects of biotechnology and
|
||
biomedical research. Draws from BIOSIS and MANAGEMENT CONTENTS.
|
||
BIOSIS Previews - Provides international coverage of all
|
||
aspects of biological science.
|
||
Cancerlit - Monitors articles from journals and other technical
|
||
publications dealing with all aspects of cancer research
|
||
throughout the world. Includes abstracts.
|
||
Clinical Abstracts - Covers human clinical study articles of major
|
||
importance selected from leading medical journals. Includes all
|
||
aspects of clinical medicine. Corresponds to Abstracts in
|
||
Internal Medicine. Abstracts available.
|
||
Life Sciences Collection - Abstracts technical literature in the
|
||
life sciences from journals and other scientific publications
|
||
worldwide.
|
||
Medline (1966 - to date) - Indexes articles from medical journals
|
||
published worldwide. Corresponds to Index Medicus, International
|
||
Nursing Index and Index to Dental Literature. Includes abstracts
|
||
in roughly 40% of the records.
|
||
SciSearch - Monitors worldwide literature across a wide range of
|
||
scientific and technological disciplines. Produced by the
|
||
Institute for Scientific Information (ISI).
|
||
|
||
Then we entered our search term: "LIVER AND CYST/". The search word
|
||
"CYST/" signified that "cyst" should match any words starting with
|
||
these four characters.
|
||
While searching, IQuest gave the following progress report:
|
||
|
||
Scanning BRS databases.
|
||
|
||
Accessing Network...........Completed.
|
||
Accessing Database Host.....Completed.
|
||
Logging on..................Completed.
|
||
Logging on (second step)....Completed.
|
||
Selecting Databases.........Completed.
|
||
|
||
Each period equals one line
|
||
of scanned data. This may take
|
||
several minutes................................
|
||
|
||
It continued in the same way with a "Scanning Dialog databases."
|
||
When the search results were presented, we glanced quickly at
|
||
the article abstracts, ordered two articles to be sent us by mail
|
||
and typed BYE.
|
||
CompuServe reported "Off at 09:12 EST 17-Nov-88 Connect time =
|
||
0:35." The two articles arrived Norway by mail a few weeks later.
|
||
The whole trip, including visits in medical forums, took 35
|
||
minutes. The cost, including local telephone and network charges,
|
||
was US$95. Of this total cost, the extra cost of searching through
|
||
IQuest amounted to US$54.00. We all felt that the costs were well
|
||
justified.
|
||
|
||
| A note about the costs: The online tour was done manually, |
|
||
| using full menus. We discussed our search strategy while |
|
||
| connected, which is more expensive than logging off to plan |
|
||
| the next moves. Also, note that the extra cost of searching |
|
||
| IQuest ($54) was not time dependent. |
|
||
|
||
Right now? I have promised to donate one kidney to my wife when the
|
||
time comes. This has prompted me (1993) to join a mailing list for
|
||
"Organ transplant recipients and anyone else interested in the
|
||
issues" (TRNSPLNT@WUVMD.BITNET).
|
||
|
||
Cancer
|
||
------
|
||
FidoNet has the forum CARCINOMA (Cancer Survivors). BITNET has the
|
||
discussion lists CANCER-L@WVNVM and CLAN (Cancer Liaison and Action
|
||
Network on CLAN@FRMOP11). CompuServe has a Cancer Forum. NewsNet
|
||
offers the newsletter CANCER RESEARCHER WEEKLY.
|
||
In September 1992, the following message was posted on CANCER-
|
||
L by a member from Brazil:
|
||
|
||
"A close friend was just diagnosed with acute leukemia of a type
|
||
called calapositive pre-B linphoplastic. It is supposedly an
|
||
early diagnosis since he is not anemic. We are very shocked but
|
||
he is reacting quite bravely and all he wants is to have access
|
||
to literature on his condition. Are there any new genetic
|
||
engineering developments effectively clinically available? What
|
||
is the present state of knowledge regarding this specific form of
|
||
leukemia?
|
||
|
||
He was diagnosed three hours ago, is 48 yrs old, and will start
|
||
chemotherapy tomorrow. He was informed that chemotherapy is quite
|
||
effective in this type of leukemia. But we wonder if there isn't
|
||
a possibility to use gene therapy.
|
||
|
||
Any help will be greatly appreciated. - Dora."
|
||
|
||
There were several helpful replies. This came from a member in the
|
||
United States:
|
||
|
||
"In response to the request for information on treatment for
|
||
leukemia, I recommend that you access CancerNet, the National
|
||
Cancer Institute's mail server on the Internet which provides
|
||
current information on treatment for leukemia. To request the
|
||
Contents List and Instructions, send a mail message to
|
||
|
||
cancernet@icicb.nci.nih.gov (Internet address)
|
||
cancernet%icicb.nci.nih.gov@nihcu ( BITNET)
|
||
|
||
Leave the subject line blank, and in the body of the mail
|
||
message, enter "HELP". When you receive the Contents list,
|
||
request the statement for Adult Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia
|
||
(cn-101024).
|
||
|
||
There are also News and General Information items, under the
|
||
Heading PDQ Database Information in the Contents List which
|
||
provide information on centers which have access to Physician
|
||
Data Query, NCI's database of cancer treatment information which
|
||
includes clinical trials information for leukemia. - Cheryl."
|
||
|
||
CancerNet is the U.S. National Cancer Institute's international
|
||
information center. It is a quick and easy way to obtain, through
|
||
electronic mail, recommended treatment guidelines from the National
|
||
Cancer Institute's Physician Data Query system.
|
||
To access CancerNet, send email to:
|
||
|
||
cancernet@icicb.nci.nih.gov
|
||
|
||
Leave the subject line blank. In the body of the mail message, enter
|
||
HELP to receive instructions and the current contents list.
|
||
The National Cancer Center in Tokyo Japan has a gopher service
|
||
at gopher.ncc.go.jp. The World Health Organization (WHO) has one at
|
||
gopher.who.ch.
|
||
|
||
Disabilities
|
||
------------
|
||
Bulletin boards and online conferences give equal access to all
|
||
persons. Everybody is treated the same way, regardless if they sit
|
||
in a wheel chair, have a hearing impairment, stutter, cannot speak
|
||
clearly, have difficulties in thinking or acting quickly, or just
|
||
have a different looks.
|
||
You need not worry about typing errors. Those who read them
|
||
will never know whether it's because you never learned how to write
|
||
on a computer, or if it is because you have difficulties in
|
||
controlling your movements.
|
||
You alone decide if others are to know about your personal
|
||
disability. If you want it to be a secret, then it will remain a
|
||
secret.
|
||
Nobody can possibly know that you are mute and lame from the
|
||
neck and down, that computer communication is your main gate into
|
||
the outer world, and that you are writing messages with a stick
|
||
attached to your forehead. Therefore, the online world has changed
|
||
the lives of many people with disabilities.
|
||
Computer communications have opened a new world for those who
|
||
are forced to stay at home, or thinks that it is too difficult to
|
||
travel. Those who can easily drive their car to the library, often
|
||
have difficulties in understanding the significance of this.
|
||
Usenet has alt.education.disabled and misc.handicap. It covers
|
||
all areas of disabilities, technical, medical, educational, legal,
|
||
etc. UUCP has handicap. It is presented in the following words:
|
||
|
||
Contact: wtm@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
|
||
Purpose: The Handicap Digest provides an information/discussion
|
||
exchange for issues dealing with the physically/mentally
|
||
handicapped. Topics include, but are not limited to: medical,
|
||
education, legal, technological aids and the handicapped in
|
||
society.
|
||
|
||
CompuServe's Disabilities Forum has the following sections: General
|
||
Interest, Develop. Disabilities, Emotional Disturbances, Hearing
|
||
Impairments, Learning Disabilities, Vision Impairments, Mobility
|
||
Impaired, Rights/Legislation, Education/Employment and Family
|
||
Life/Leisure.
|
||
AUTISM@SJUVM.BITNET is devoted to the developmentally disabled,
|
||
their teachers, and those interested in this area. The list BLIND-
|
||
L@UAFSYSB.BITNET focuses on "Computer Use by and for the Blind."
|
||
COMMDIS@RPIECS.BITNET is a mailing list discussing "Speech
|
||
disorders."
|
||
DEAF-L@SIUCVMB.BITNET is the "Deaf Discussion List," and
|
||
DEAFBLND@UKCC.UKY.EDU the "Deaf-Blind Discussion List." STUT-HLP
|
||
(LISTSERV@BGU.EDU) is a support forum for people who stutter and
|
||
their families.
|
||
On L-HCAP@NDSUVM1.BITNET, the focus is on Technology for the
|
||
handicapped. BACKS-L@UVMVM.BITNET discusses research on low back
|
||
pain disability.
|
||
The Handicap Digest is an electronic mail only digest of
|
||
articles relating to all types of issues affecting the handicapped.
|
||
The articles are taken from the Usenet newsgroup, the Handicap
|
||
News. (misc.handicap) and various FidoNet conferences such as
|
||
ABLED, BlinkTalk SilentTalk, Chronic Pain, Spinal Injury, Rare
|
||
Conditions, and several others. Subscribe by email to
|
||
|
||
wtm@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
|
||
|
||
Handicap.shel.isc-br.com (129.189.4.184) is the email address to an
|
||
anonymous ftp site that has disability-related files and programs.
|
||
The disk has some 40 directories with 500 or so files covering all
|
||
types of disabilities. (This service can be used through FTPMail.
|
||
See chapter 12 about how to do this.)
|
||
|
||
Getting old
|
||
-----------
|
||
BITNET has the "BIOSCI Ageing Bulletin Board" on AGEING@IRLEARN .
|
||
Usenet has bionet.molbio.ageing, while CompuServe's Issues Forum
|
||
has a message section called "Seniors."
|
||
Ageline on Dialog is a database produced by the American
|
||
Association of Retired Persons. It does an excellent job covering
|
||
research about older persons, particularly on consumer issues and
|
||
health care, by summarizing journal articles and the contents of
|
||
other published reports.
|
||
While our "face-to-face" world sometimes makes it difficult for
|
||
older people to participate in discussions between young people,
|
||
this is not so in the Online World. All people are treated the same
|
||
way. It is impossible for others to know your age, unless someone
|
||
tells them.
|
||
|
||
Holistic Healing and Health
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
HOLISTIC on LISTSERV@SIUCVMB.SIU.EDU is dedicated to "providing
|
||
information and discussion on holistic concepts and methods of
|
||
living which provide a natural way of dealing with the challenges
|
||
of life." Here are some topics dealt with in this forum:
|
||
|
||
Various Dimensions of Holistic Healing and Health
|
||
States of Consciousness
|
||
Meditation and the role it plays in spiritual/physical health
|
||
The impact of a healthy diet - including Herbs and Vitamins
|
||
Bodywork - such as Rolfing, Trager bodywork, Reichian, etc.
|
||
Acupuncture/pressure
|
||
Hypnosis and Biofeedback
|
||
Visualizations and Affirmations
|
||
Spiritual Healing - Psychic healing methods
|
||
Bioenergetics
|
||
The holistic connection between mind and body
|
||
Honest discussion of topics relevant to personal/spiritual
|
||
growth - And anything else within context for the betterment
|
||
of the world.
|
||
|
||
The following message is typical:
|
||
|
||
From: Helen
|
||
Subject: Re: Asthma and Sinus Problems
|
||
To: Multiple recipients of list HOLISTIC
|
||
|
||
My condolences to fellow people allergic to cats. Cats and
|
||
strawberries are two of the most allergenic substances.
|
||
Behavorial changes have proven to be EVERYTHING to me. The
|
||
techniques I've employed have helped many others. First, try
|
||
sleeping at a 45 degree angle. This usually requires piling up
|
||
pillows. The elevation of the head facilitates drainage from the
|
||
sinuses. When the situation gets really bad, I've slept sitting
|
||
up on a couch or arm chair propped up by numerous pillows and
|
||
cushions. This technique can take some getting used to, but, it
|
||
works like a charm and is kinder to your system than drug
|
||
therapy.
|
||
Second, try "ephedra" tea. This is an herb found in Chinese
|
||
herb shops. Ask the herbalist how to prepare it.
|
||
I highly recommend the book "Natural Health, Natural Medicine"
|
||
by Andrew Weil, M.D. of U of A Med School in Tucson. See pages
|
||
253-256 for more information on asthma.
|
||
Fourth, stay hydrated. This means not only drinking PLENTY of
|
||
fluids, but humidifying the house (that is if you're not also
|
||
allergic to molds).
|
||
Basic behavorial techniques are important....diet, exercise,
|
||
etc. etc, ...but this is the holistic network...I'm preaching to
|
||
the choir...
|
||
|
||
Finally, take heart! Being allergic to cats is not well
|
||
received by cat lovers...often we're cat lovers ourselves.
|
||
Depending on the breed of cat, there is a good chance you will
|
||
eventually habituate to those you are around over the long term.
|
||
Good luck, the advice about sleeping with your head significantly
|
||
elevated is the best I have ever given out to fellow sinus
|
||
problem sufferers. It really works!!
|
||
|
||
Helen.
|
||
|
||
HomeoNet, a service of the Institute of Global Communications
|
||
(IGC), is for those interested in homeopathic medicine.
|
||
|
||
List of health science resources
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
The Bitnet/Internet online list of health science resources is
|
||
available by email from: LISTSERV@TEMPLEVM.BITNET . Send the
|
||
following command:
|
||
|
||
GET MEDICAL RSCRS
|
||
|
||
This will give a long list of BITNET, Internet, and Usenet forums,
|
||
data archives, electronic newsletters and journals devoted to
|
||
health science.
|
||
Here are some examples from the list that may be of interest to
|
||
people not working in the health profession:
|
||
|
||
* ALCOHOL@LMUACAD.BITNET - a discussion list for Alcohol and
|
||
Drug Studies,
|
||
* BEHAVIOR@ASUACAD.BITNET - Behavioral and Emotional Disorders
|
||
in Children,
|
||
* DIABETIC@PCCVM.BITNET is the "Open Discussion forum for
|
||
DIABETIC patient counseling,"
|
||
* DIARRHOE@SEARN.BITNET (or DIARRHOE@SEARN.SUNET.SE through the
|
||
Internet) is a forum for information exchange and discussions
|
||
on all aspects related to diseases, disorders, and chemicals
|
||
that cause diarrhoea in humans and animals,
|
||
* DIET@INDYCMS.BITNET - Support and Discussion of Weight Loss
|
||
* DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET - Drug Abuse Education Information and
|
||
Research,
|
||
* FAMCOMM@RPIECS.BITNET - Marital/family & relational
|
||
communication.
|
||
* FIT-L@ETSUADMN.BITNET - Wellness, Exercise, Diet, for
|
||
exchanging ideas, tips and any type of information about
|
||
wellness, exercise, and diet.
|
||
* GRANOLA@BROWNVM.BITNET - Vegetarian Discussion.
|
||
* HERB@TREARN.BITNET - Medicinal and Aromatic Plants discussion.
|
||
* MSLIST-L@NCSUVM.BITNET - Multiple Sclerosis Discussion and
|
||
Support.
|
||
* RZAMAL-L@DKAUNI11.BITNET - Dental Amalgam Fillings and
|
||
chronic mercury poisoning.
|
||
* SPORTPSY@TEMPLEVM.BITNET - Exercise and Sports Psychology.
|
||
* talk.abortion on Usenet.
|
||
|
||
These mailing lists usually let you search old messages for topics
|
||
of interest. They are both living discussion forums and interesting
|
||
searchable databases!
|
||
Mednews is a weekly electronic newsletter. Its columns bring
|
||
regular medical news summaries from USA Today, Center for Disease
|
||
Control MMWR, weekly AIDS Statistics from CDC, and more. Send the
|
||
following command to LISTSERV@ASUACAD.BITNET to subscribe:
|
||
|
||
SUB MEDNEWS Your-first-name Your-last-name
|
||
|
||
Chapter 7: Electronic mail, telex, and fax
|
||
==========================================
|
||
|
||
Electronic mail is one of the most popular online services. People
|
||
living thousands of miles apart can exchange messages and documents
|
||
very quickly.
|
||
International Resource Development, Inc., an American research
|
||
organization, claimed (1992) that we can send electronic mail to
|
||
more than 10 million personal mailboxes. We believe the figure to
|
||
be much higher. The Matrix News (Texas, U.S.A.) claims the number
|
||
is over 18 million (March 1993).
|
||
The Boardwatch Magazine (U.S.A.) believes that new callers are
|
||
coming online for their first time at a rate of close to 10,000 per
|
||
day (January 1993).
|
||
Electronic Mail & Micro Systems (New Canaan, Conn., U.S.A.)
|
||
estimated an average of 27.8 million messages sent per month in
|
||
1990. Mail through the Internet and grassroots services on free
|
||
bulletin boards (like FidoNet) is not included in their figure.
|
||
The annual rate of increase in the number of messages is over
|
||
30% and increasing.
|
||
If a given email service charges you US$30 per hour, it will
|
||
cost you a meager US$0.075 to send one typewritten letter (size A-
|
||
4, or around 2,200 characters). See chapter 15 for a breakdown of
|
||
this cost.
|
||
If you live in Norway, and send the letter by ordinary mail to
|
||
a recipient in Norway, postage alone is US$0.53 (1992). The cost is
|
||
seven times higher than using email.
|
||
To send the same letter from Norway to the United States by
|
||
ordinary mail will cost 11 times more. This letter takes several
|
||
days to reach the destination, while email messages arrive almost
|
||
instantly.
|
||
Often, you can send email messages to several recipients in one
|
||
operation - without paying extra for the pleasure. Compare this to
|
||
sending to several parties by fax!
|
||
You do not have to buy envelopes and stamps, fold the sheet,
|
||
put it into the envelope, and bring it to a mailbox. Just let the
|
||
computer call your favorite email service to send the letter.
|
||
The recipient does not have to sit by the computer waiting for
|
||
your mail. Upon receipt, it will be automatically stored in his
|
||
mailbox. He can read it when he has time.
|
||
The recipient can print it locally, and it will be a perfect
|
||
document, no different to one typed in locally. He can also make
|
||
corrections or comments, and email onwards to a third party. In
|
||
this way several people can work jointly on a report, and no time
|
||
is it re-typed from scratch.
|
||
When you receive several messages in the morning, you can very
|
||
quickly create replies to them one at the time at your keyboard,
|
||
and then send them in one go. No need to feed five different pieces
|
||
of paper into a fax machine or envelopes for five different people.
|
||
Where you can find a telephone, you can also read mail. In most
|
||
countries, communicating through email is easy and economical.
|
||
By the way, the simple but miraculous thing about email is that
|
||
you can quote easily and exactly the point to which you are
|
||
replying. This is a revolution in communication, no?
|
||
|
||
How to send email?
|
||
-------------------
|
||
This is what it normally takes for a CompuServe user to send me
|
||
a message:
|
||
|
||
Type GO MAIL to get to the "post office," and then type
|
||
COMPOSE.
|
||
"Start writing," says CompuServe. Type your message
|
||
manually, or send a file (text or binary). Type /EXIT when
|
||
done.
|
||
"To whom?" asks CompuServe. You enter: "Odd de Presno
|
||
75755,1327," or just my mailbox number (75755,1327).
|
||
CompuServe asks you to enter Subject. You type: "Hello,
|
||
my friend!" Your message has been sent.
|
||
A few seconds later, the message will arrive in my
|
||
mailbox. If I am online to CompuServe at the moment, I will
|
||
probably read it right away. If not, it will stay there until I
|
||
get around to fetch it.
|
||
|
||
Above, we used the term "normally takes to send." Please note that
|
||
many users never ever TYPE these commands! They use various types
|
||
of automatic software to handle the mechanics of sending and
|
||
receiving mail (see Chapter 16).
|
||
Other systems require different commands to send email. Ulrik
|
||
at the University of Oslo (Norway) is a Unix system. So is The Well
|
||
in San Francisco. On such systems, mail is normally sent using
|
||
these commands:
|
||
|
||
Type "mail opresno@extern.uio.no". When the computer asks for
|
||
"Subject:," enter "Hello, my friend!"
|
||
Type your message or send it. When done, enter a period
|
||
(.) in the beginning of a line. Ulrik will reply with "Cc:" to
|
||
allow you to 'carbon copy' the message to other people. If you
|
||
don't want that, press ENTER and the message is on its way.
|
||
While I wrote this book, I had to go to Japan. A simple
|
||
command allowed me to redirect all incoming mail to CompuServe.
|
||
As a result I could read and send mail by calling a local
|
||
CompuServe number in several Japanese cities.
|
||
|
||
Though the commands for sending email differ between systems, the
|
||
principle is the same. All systems will ask you for an address and
|
||
the text of your message. On some, the address is a code, on others
|
||
a name (like ODD DE PRESNO).
|
||
Most systems will ask for a Subject title. Many will allow you
|
||
to send copies of the message to other recipients (Cc:).
|
||
Some services allow you to send binary files as email. Binary
|
||
files contain codes based on the binary numeration system. Such
|
||
codes are used in computer programs, graphics pictures, compressed
|
||
spreadsheets and text files, and sound files.
|
||
Many online services let you send messages as fax (to over 15
|
||
million fax machines), telex (to over 1.8 million telex machines),
|
||
and as ordinary paper mail. We have tested this successfully on
|
||
CompuServe, MCI Mail and other services.
|
||
On CompuServe, replace "Odd de Presno 75755,1327" with ">FAX:
|
||
4737027111". My fax number is +47 370 27111.
|
||
On MCI Mail type "CREATE:". MCI asks for "To:," and you type
|
||
"Odd de Presno (Fax)". MCI asks for "Country:". You enter "Norway".
|
||
By "RECIPIENT FAX NO" enter "37027111" (the code for international
|
||
calls). The country code for Norway, 01147, is added automatically.
|
||
By "Options?," press ENTER. When MCI Mail asks for more recipients,
|
||
press ENTER. Type your message and have it sent.
|
||
To send a telex, you'll need the recipient's telex number, an
|
||
answerback code, and the code of the recipient's country. If the
|
||
message is meant for telex number 871161147, answerback ZETO, and
|
||
country Russia (country code SU), enter ">TLX:871161147 ZETO SU"
|
||
when sending from CompuServe.
|
||
By entering ">POSTAL", CompuServe will send your mail to a
|
||
business associate in California or Brazil as a professional laser-
|
||
printed letter. It will take you through the process of filling out
|
||
the various address lines. The letter may well arrive faster than
|
||
through ordinary mail.
|
||
|
||
When the recipient is using another mailbox system
|
||
--------------------------------------------------
|
||
When the recipient is using your mailbox service, writing addresses
|
||
is simple. Not so when your email has to be forwarded to mailboxes
|
||
on other online services.
|
||
The inter-system email address consists of a user name, a
|
||
mailbox system code, and sometimes also routing information. The
|
||
problem is that there is no universal addressing format. Finding
|
||
out how to write a given address may be surprisingly difficult.
|
||
Some services are not set up for exchange of email with other
|
||
services. This is the case with my bulletin board, the Saltrod
|
||
Horror Show. To send mail to a user of this system, you'll have to
|
||
call it directly and enter it there. This bulletin board is not
|
||
connected to the outside world for exchange of mail.
|
||
If your favorite system lets you send mail to other services,
|
||
make a note about the following:
|
||
|
||
* You need to know the exact address of your recipient, and
|
||
whether he's using this mailbox regularly. Many users have
|
||
mailboxes that they use rarely or never. For example, don't
|
||
try to send mail to my mailbox on Dow Jones/News Retrieval.
|
||
I only use this service sporadically.
|
||
Think of the easiest way for a recipient to respond
|
||
before sending a message to him or her.
|
||
|
||
* You need to know how to rewrite the recipient's address to
|
||
fit your system. For example, you may have to use a domain
|
||
address to send through Internet, and a different form when
|
||
sending through an X.400 network. (More about this later.)
|
||
|
||
* The recipient's mailbox system may be connected to a network
|
||
that does not have a mail exchange agreement with your
|
||
system's network(s). Sometimes, you can use a commercial mail
|
||
relay service to get your message across (see chapter 9).
|
||
Users of the Internet can send messages to recipients on the
|
||
Dialcom network through the DASnet relay service.
|
||
|
||
* Sometimes, you need to know how to route a message through
|
||
other systems to arrive at its destination. For example, a
|
||
message sent from the Ulrik computer in Oslo must be routed
|
||
through a center in London to get to Dominique Christian on
|
||
the Difer system in Paris (France),
|
||
|
||
Internet
|
||
--------
|
||
is the name of a computer network (here called "INTERNET"), and
|
||
a term used of a global web of systems and networks that can
|
||
exchange mail with each other (here called "Internet").
|
||
INTERNET is a very large network that has grown out of ARPANET,
|
||
MILNET, and other American networks for research and education.
|
||
This core network has many gateways to other systems, and it's when
|
||
we include these systems and their connections that we call it the
|
||
Internet. Others call it WorldNet or the Matrix.
|
||
Internet users can exchange mail with users on networks like
|
||
EUnet, JANET, Uninett, BITNET, UUCP, CompuServe, MCI Mail, EcoNet,
|
||
PeaceNet, ConflicNet, GreenNet, Web, Pegasus, AppleLink, Alternex,
|
||
Nicarao, FredsNaetet, UUNET, PSI, Usenet, FidoNet and many others.
|
||
We therefore say that these networks are also "on the Internet."
|
||
If you have access to the Internet, you can send email to users
|
||
of online services all over the world. You can send to people using
|
||
Bergen By Byte and Telemax in Norway, TWICS in Tokyo, and Colnet in
|
||
Buenos Aires.
|
||
Now is the time to take a closer look at the art of addressing
|
||
mail through the Internet.
|
||
|
||
Domain name addressing
|
||
----------------------
|
||
On the Internet, the general form of a person's email address is:
|
||
|
||
user-name@somewhere.domain
|
||
|
||
My main, international Internet mailbox address is:
|
||
|
||
opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
|
||
You read the address from left to right. First, the local name of
|
||
the mailbox (my name abbreviated). Next, the name of the mailbox
|
||
system or another identification code (in this case EXTERN, to
|
||
show that I have no affiliation with the University), the name of
|
||
the institution or company (here UIO or "Universitetet i Oslo"),
|
||
and finally the country (NO for Norway).
|
||
People have sent mail to my mailbox from New Zealand, Zimbabwe,
|
||
Guatemala, Peru, India, China, Greece, Iceland, and Armenia using
|
||
this address.
|
||
Some users must send their messages through a gateway to the
|
||
Internet. In these cases, the address may have to be changed to
|
||
reflect this:
|
||
Users of AppleLink use opresno@extern.uio.no@INTERNET# . Those
|
||
on JANET use opresno%extern.uio.no@eanrelay.ac.uk. On SprintMail,
|
||
use ("RFC-822": <opresno(a)extern.uio.no>, SITE:INTERNET) .
|
||
CompuServe subscribers use >INTERNET:opresno@extern.uio.no .
|
||
The core of these address formats is "opresno@extern.uio.no",
|
||
in one way or the other.
|
||
We call this basic addressing format a Domain Naming System.
|
||
"EXTERN.UIO.NO" is a domain. The domain may also contain reference
|
||
to the name of a company or an organization, like in twics.co.jp,
|
||
compuserve.com, or IGC.ORG. The CO, COM, and ORG codes identify
|
||
TWICS, CompuServe and IGC as companies/organizations.
|
||
To send mail from the Internet to my CompuServe mailbox, use:
|
||
|
||
75755.1327@compuserve.com
|
||
|
||
Normally (except on AppleLink), a domain address can only contain
|
||
one @-character. When an address has to be extended with gateway
|
||
routing information, replace all @-characters to the LEFT in the
|
||
address by %-characters. Here is an example:
|
||
BITNET uses a different addressing method (USER@SYSTEM). Let's
|
||
assume that you are subscribed to the club for lovers of Japanese
|
||
food (J-FOOD-L@JPNKNU10.BITNET, see chapter 6). You have a mailbox
|
||
on INTERNET, and want to send a recipe to the other members using
|
||
the address J-FOOD-L.
|
||
On some Internet systems, you can simply use the address:
|
||
J-FOOD-L@JPNKNU10.BITNET , and your mailbox system will take care
|
||
of the routing for you.
|
||
If this addressing method doesn't work, you can use different
|
||
gateways into BITNET depending on where you live. The preferred
|
||
method is to route through a gateway near to you. If living in
|
||
North America, you may route CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU using the following
|
||
address:
|
||
|
||
J-FOOD-L%JPNKNU10.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
|
||
|
||
The rightmost @ in this address is maintained. The one to the LEFT
|
||
has been replaced with a %. The term ".BITNET" tells the gateway
|
||
machine where to forward the message.
|
||
The following will happen: First, the message will be sent to
|
||
system CUNYVM at the EDUcation site CUNY. CUNYVM investigates the
|
||
address, and discovers that the message is for BITNET. It cuts off
|
||
all text to the right of "JPNKNU10," and replaces the % with an @.
|
||
The message is forwarded to the mailbox J-FOOD-L on the BITNET
|
||
system JPNKNU10 at the Kinki University in Japan.
|
||
|
||
Bang addressing
|
||
---------------
|
||
"Bang" is American for "exclamation point" (!). The UUCP network
|
||
uses this variation of the domain addressing scheme.
|
||
Example: User Jill Small on Econet in San Francisco used to
|
||
have the address pyramid!cdp!jsmall . Read this address from right
|
||
to left. The name of her mailbox is to the right. The name of the
|
||
organization is in the middle. "Pyramid" is the name of the
|
||
network.
|
||
Some email systems can use bang addresses directly. (Note that
|
||
the ! character has a special function on Unix computers. Here, you
|
||
may have to type the address as pyramid\!cdp\!jsmall to avoid
|
||
unwanted error messages. The \ character tells Unix to regard the
|
||
next character as a character, and not as a system command. This
|
||
character may also have to precede other special characters.)
|
||
Other systems do not accept bang addresses directly. Here, the
|
||
users must send such messages through a gateway. The American host
|
||
UUNET is a frequently used gateway. If routing through UUNET, you
|
||
may write the address like this:
|
||
|
||
pyramid!cdp!jsmall@uunet.uu.net
|
||
|
||
If your system absolutely refuses to accept exclamation points in
|
||
addresses, try to turn the address into a typical Internet address.
|
||
Write the address elements in the Internet sequence (left to
|
||
right). Replace the exclamation points with %-s, like this:
|
||
|
||
jsmall%cdp%pyramid@uunet.uu.net
|
||
|
||
This method works most of the time. When it works, use this
|
||
addressing form. Bang paths may fail if an intermediate site in the
|
||
path happens to be down. (There is a trend for UUCP sites to
|
||
register Internet domain names. This helps alleviate the problem of
|
||
path failures.)
|
||
Some messages must be routed through many gateways to reach
|
||
their destination. This is the longest address that I have used,
|
||
and it did work:
|
||
|
||
hpda!hplabs!hpscdc!hp-lsd.cos.hp.com!oldcolo!dave@uunet.uu.net
|
||
|
||
It used to be the Internet address of a user in Colorado, U.S.A..
|
||
Today, he can be reached using a much shorter address.
|
||
|
||
If you are on UUCP/EUnet, you may use the following address to send
|
||
email to Odd de Presno:
|
||
|
||
extern.uio.no!opresno.
|
||
|
||
Addressing international electronic mail sometimes looks like black
|
||
magic. To learn more, read some of the books listed in appendix 5.
|
||
We have found "The Matrix" by John S. Quarterman to be particularly
|
||
useful.
|
||
The conference INFONETS (General network forum) is another
|
||
source. Here, the INTERNET postmasters discuss their addressing
|
||
problems. Activity is high, and you will learn a lot about the
|
||
noble art of addressing. (This is not the place to ask for Olav
|
||
Janssen's Norwegian email address, though. This question should be
|
||
sent to a Norwegian postmaster.)
|
||
You can subscribe to Infonets by sending the following mail:
|
||
|
||
To: LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET
|
||
Subject: (You can write anything here. It will be ignored.)
|
||
TEXT: SUB INFONETS Your-first-name Your-last-name
|
||
|
||
If your mailbox is on another network, alter the address to route
|
||
your subscription correctly to this LISTSERV.
|
||
|
||
| Hint: You can search the database of old INFONETS messages by |
|
||
| email to LISTSERV@DEARN.BITNET. See "Directories of services |
|
||
| and subscribers" below for information about how to search |
|
||
| LISTSERV databases. |
|
||
|
||
While the global matrix of networks grows rapidly, it is still
|
||
behind in some lesser-developed nations and poorer parts of
|
||
developed nations. If interested in these parts of the world, check
|
||
out GNET, a library and a journal for documents about the efforts to
|
||
bring the net to lesser-developed nations.
|
||
Archived documents are available by anonymous ftp from the
|
||
directory global_net at dhvx20.csudh.edu (155.135.1.1). Chapter 12
|
||
has information on how to use FTP if you only have mail access to
|
||
the Internet.
|
||
To subscribe to a conference discussing these documents, send
|
||
a request to gnet_request@dhvx20.csudh.edu.
|
||
|
||
cc:Mail gateways
|
||
----------------
|
||
Many Local Area Networks have been connected to the global Matrix
|
||
of networks. CompuServe offers a cc:Mail gateway. Lotus cc:Mail is
|
||
a PC Lan based email system used in corporate, government and other
|
||
organizations.
|
||
When sending from CompuServe Mail to a cc:Mail user through
|
||
this gateway, a typical address may look like this:
|
||
|
||
>mhs:pt-support@performa
|
||
|
||
To send to this user from the Internet through CompuServe's MHS
|
||
gateway, write the address like this:
|
||
|
||
pt-support@performa.mhs.compuserve.com
|
||
|
||
Other vendors of LAN gateways use other addressing methods.
|
||
|
||
X.400 addressing
|
||
----------------
|
||
X.400 is a standard for electronic mail developed by CCITT. It is
|
||
used on large networks like AT&T Mail, MCI Mail, Sprintnet, GE
|
||
Information System, Dialcom, and Western Union, and on other public
|
||
and private networks throughout the world.
|
||
EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) uses X.400 as a transport
|
||
mechanism for coordination of electronic part ordering, stock
|
||
control and payment. X.400 is used to connect EDI systems between
|
||
companies and suppliers.
|
||
The X.400 addressing syntax is very different from domain
|
||
addressing. To send a message from an X.400 mailbox to my address
|
||
(opresno@extern.uio.no), you may have to write it like this:
|
||
|
||
(C:NO,ADMD:uninett,PRMD:uninett,O:uio,OU:extern,S:opresno)
|
||
|
||
Alas, it's not so standard as the domain addressing schemes. On
|
||
other X.400 networks, the address must be written in one of the
|
||
following formats - or in yet other ways:
|
||
|
||
(C:US,A:Telemail,P:Internet,"RFC-822":<opresno(a)extern.uio.no>)
|
||
|
||
("RFC-822": <opresno(a)extern.uio.no>, SITE:INTERNET)
|
||
|
||
'(C:USA,A:TELEMAIL,P:INTERNET,"RFC-822":<opresno<a>extern.uio.no>) DEL'
|
||
|
||
(site: INTERNET,ID: <opresno<a>extern.uio.no>)
|
||
|
||
"RFC-822=opresno(a)extern.uio.no @ GATEWAY]INTERNET/TELEMAIL/US"
|
||
|
||
To send an Internet message to a mailbox I once had on the X.400
|
||
host Telemax in Norway, I had to use the following address:
|
||
|
||
/I=D/G=ODD/S=PRESNO/O=KUD.DATASEKR/@PCMAX.telemax.no
|
||
|
||
To send from Internet to Telemail in the US, I have used this
|
||
address:
|
||
|
||
/PN=TELEMAIL.T.SUPPORT/O=TELENET.MAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/@sprint.com
|
||
|
||
If you need to route your message through gateways, then complexity
|
||
increases. One Norwegian UUCP user had to use the following address
|
||
to get through:
|
||
|
||
nuug!extern.uio.no!"pcmax.telemax.no!/I=D/G=ODD/S=PRESNO/O=KUD.DATASEKR/"
|
||
|
||
To send a message from an X.400 system to my CompuServe mailbox,
|
||
I have used the following address elements:
|
||
|
||
Country = US
|
||
ADMD = CompuServe
|
||
PRMD = CSMail
|
||
DDA = 75755.1327
|
||
|
||
The addressing methods used on X.400 systems vary. Another example:
|
||
Some use the code C:USA rather than the ISO country code C:US. MCI
|
||
Mail uses C:NORWAY, C:USA, and C:SWEDEN.
|
||
Here are some important X.400 codes:
|
||
|
||
C the ISO country code (on most services)
|
||
ADMD domain code for public system (abbreviation A)
|
||
PRMD domain code for connected private system
|
||
(abbreviation P)
|
||
O organization name
|
||
OU organization unit
|
||
S surname (last name)
|
||
G given name (first name)
|
||
I initials (in the name)
|
||
DDA domain-defined attributes, keywords defined and
|
||
used by the individual systems to specify mailboxes
|
||
(user name, list, station, user code, etc.), direct
|
||
delivery devices (attention name, telex addresses,
|
||
facsimile, etc.)
|
||
PN personal name
|
||
(a) the character @ cannot be used when routing messages
|
||
from X.400 to Internet. Try (a) instead.
|
||
(p) the character % cannot be used when routing messages
|
||
from X.400 to Internet. Try (p) instead.
|
||
(b) the character ! (used in "bang" addresses).
|
||
(q) the character " used in email addresses.
|
||
RFC-822 this code tells X.400 that an Internet domain address
|
||
follows. Does not work on all X.400 systems.
|
||
|
||
Returned mail
|
||
-------------
|
||
When an email address is incorrect in some way (the system's name
|
||
is wrong, the domain doesn't exist, whatever), the mail system will
|
||
bounce the message back to the sender.
|
||
The returned message will include the reason for the bounce. A
|
||
common error is addressing mail to an account name that doesn't
|
||
exist.
|
||
Let's make an error when sending to LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu.
|
||
Enter "pistserv@vm1.nodak.edu" instead of "LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu".
|
||
This address is wrong. Below, we've printed the complete
|
||
bounced message. It contains a lot of technical information. Most
|
||
lines have no interest. Also, the message is much larger than the
|
||
original message, which contained three lines only.
|
||
When browsing the bounced message, note that it has three
|
||
distinct parts: (1) The mail header of the bounced message itself
|
||
(here, the 13 first lines), (2) The text of the error report (from
|
||
line 14 until the line "Original message follows:"), and (3) the
|
||
mailer header and text of your original message (as received by
|
||
computer reporting the error):
|
||
|
||
From MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU Fri Dec 18 12:54:03 1992
|
||
Return-Path: <MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU>
|
||
Received: from vm1.NoDak.edu by pat.uio.no with SMTP (PP)
|
||
id <07610-0@pat.uio.no>; Fri, 18 Dec 1992 12:53:54 +0100
|
||
Received: from NDSUVM1.BITNET by VM1.NoDak.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2)
|
||
with BSMTP id 9295; Fri, 18 Dec 92 05:53:27 CST
|
||
Received: from NDSUVM1.BITNET by NDSUVM1.BITNET (Mailer R2.07)
|
||
with BSMTP id 3309; Fri, 18 Dec 92 05:53:26 CST
|
||
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 92 05:53:26 CST
|
||
From: Network Mailer <MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU>
|
||
To: opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
Subject: mail delivery error
|
||
Status: R
|
||
|
||
Batch SMTP transaction log follows:
|
||
|
||
220 NDSUVM1.BITNET Columbia MAILER R2.07 BSMTP service ready.
|
||
050 HELO NDSUVM1
|
||
250 NDSUVM1.BITNET Hello NDSUVM1
|
||
050 MAIL FROM:<opresno@extern.uio.no>
|
||
250 <opresno@extern.uio.no>... sender OK.
|
||
050 RCPT TO:<pistserv@NDSUVM1>
|
||
250 <pistserv@NDSUVM1>... recipient OK.
|
||
050 DATA
|
||
354 Start mail input. End with <crlf>.<crlf>
|
||
554-Mail not delivered to some or all recipients:
|
||
554 No such local user: PISTSERV
|
||
050 QUIT
|
||
221 NDSUVM1.BITNET Columbia MAILER BSMTP service done.
|
||
|
||
Original message follows:
|
||
|
||
Received: from NDSUVM1 by NDSUVM1.BITNET (Mailer R2.07) with BSMTP id 3308;
|
||
Fri, 18 Dec 92 05:53:25 CST
|
||
Received: from pat.uio.no by VM1.NoDak.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP;
|
||
Fri, 18 Dec 92 05:53:23 CST
|
||
Received: from ulrik.uio.no by pat.uio.no with local-SMTP (PP)
|
||
id <07590-0@pat.uio.no>; Fri, 18 Dec 1992 12:53:24 +0100
|
||
Received: by ulrik.uio.no ; Fri, 18 Dec 1992 12:53:18 +0100
|
||
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 1992 12:53:18 +0100
|
||
From: opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
Message-Id: <9212181153.AAulrik20516@ulrik.uio.no>
|
||
To: pistserv@vm1.nodak.edu
|
||
Subject: test
|
||
|
||
index kidlink
|
||
|
||
The first part of the bounced message is usually of no interest.
|
||
Hidden in the second part you'll find the following interesting
|
||
line:
|
||
|
||
554 No such local user: PISTSERV
|
||
|
||
Ah, a typo!
|
||
If your original message was long, you're likely to be pleased
|
||
by having the complete text returned in the third part of the
|
||
bounced message. Now, you may get away with a quick cut and paste,
|
||
before resending it to the corrected address.
|
||
The text and codes used in bounced messages vary depending on
|
||
what type of mailbox system you're using, and the type of system
|
||
that is bouncing your mail.
|
||
Above, MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU returned the full text of my bounced
|
||
mail. Some systems just send the beginning of your original text,
|
||
while others (in particular some X.400 systems) send nothing but a
|
||
note telling you the reason for the bounce.
|
||
|
||
| Note: When you fail to understand why a message is being |
|
||
| bounced, contact your local postmaster for help. Send him |
|
||
| a copy of the complete text of the bounced message up to |
|
||
| and including the line "Subject:" at the bottom. |
|
||
| You do not have to send him the text of your original |
|
||
| message! |
|
||
|
||
Replying to an Internet message
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
On the Internet, electronic messages have a common structure that
|
||
is common across the network. On some systems, you can reply by
|
||
using a reply command. If this feature is not available, use the
|
||
sender's address as given in the mail header.
|
||
The bounced message contained two mail headers: the header of
|
||
my original message (in part three), and the header of the bounced
|
||
message (in part one).
|
||
The 'good' reply address is laid out in the 'From:' header.
|
||
Thus, this message contains the following two 'good' addresses:
|
||
|
||
From: Network Mailer <MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU>
|
||
From: opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
|
||
The Network Mailer located the second address line above in my
|
||
original message, and used this address when sending the bounced
|
||
message. (Note: there is no point in sending a message back to
|
||
MAILER@VM1.NoDak.EDU since this is the address of an automatic mail
|
||
handling program. Write to Postmaster@VM1.NoDak.EDU to talk to a
|
||
"real person" at this computer center.)
|
||
The exact order of a message's header may vary from system to
|
||
system, but it will always contain the vital 'From:' line.
|
||
|
||
| Note: Exercise caution when replying to a message sent by |
|
||
| a mailing list. If you wish to respond to the author only, |
|
||
| make sure that the only address you're replying to is that |
|
||
| person's. Don't send it to the entire list! |
|
||
|
||
Directories of services and subscribers
|
||
---------------------------------------
|
||
There is no complete global directory of available electronic
|
||
addresses. On many systems, however, you can search lists of local
|
||
users.
|
||
|
||
| Normally, you'd be better off by calling the recipient for |
|
||
| his or her email address. |
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, the information given you by the recipient is not enough.
|
||
Maybe the address needs an extension for the message to be routed
|
||
through gateways to the destination.
|
||
Another typical problem is that the syntax of the address is
|
||
wrong. Perhaps you made a mistake, when you wrote it down (KIDCAFE
|
||
became KIDSCAFE).
|
||
The return address in the received messages' mailer headers may
|
||
be wrong. It may use a syntax that is illegal on you email system,
|
||
or it may suggest a routing that is unknown to your system. When
|
||
trying to send mail to this address, the Mailer-Daemon complains:
|
||
"This is a non-existent address."
|
||
Again, the first person to contact for help is your local
|
||
postmaster. On most Internet hosts this is simple. If you have a
|
||
mailbox on the ULRIK computer at the University of Oslo, send a
|
||
request for help to postmaster@ulrik.uio.no . If you are on COLNET
|
||
in Buenos Aires, send to postmaster@colnetr.edu.ar .
|
||
POSTMASTER is also the address to turn to on BITNET. Users of
|
||
FidoNet or RelayNet, should write to SYSOP.
|
||
It may not be that simple to locate the postmaster on UUCP.
|
||
The postmaster ID may exist on some systems, but often he's just a
|
||
name or a user code.
|
||
You can get the email address of known Internet systems by
|
||
sending a message to SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL . In the subject of the
|
||
message, write the command WHOIS host-machine-name. Do not write
|
||
anything in the text (will be ignored). You will get a report of
|
||
the desired mailbox computer, and the address of the local
|
||
postmaster. Example:
|
||
|
||
To: SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL
|
||
Subject: WHOIS AERO.ORG
|
||
Text:
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, you just don't know the name of a recipient's mailbox
|
||
computer. When this is the case, start at the "top of the pyramid."
|
||
Say your desired recipient lives in Germany. The ISO country
|
||
code for Germany is DE (see appendix 6). Send the message
|
||
|
||
To: SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL
|
||
Subject: WHOIS DOMAIN DE
|
||
Text:
|
||
|
||
This will give you the email addresses of the main postmasters for
|
||
this country. Most postmasters are willing to help, but please note
|
||
that most of them are very busy people. It may take days before
|
||
they get around to respond to your inquiry.
|
||
There are over 100 other "whois-servers" in more than 15
|
||
countries. The systems whois.nic.ad.jp and whois.ripe.net cover
|
||
Japan and Europe. The rest of them provide information about local
|
||
users. (A list is available via anonymous FTP from sipb.mit.edu in
|
||
the file /pub/whois/whois-servers.list . Chapter 12 has information
|
||
about how to get this list by email).
|
||
If your recipient is on UUCP, try netdir@mcsun.eu.net . To
|
||
locate the postmaster of the mailbox system "amanpt1", use the
|
||
following format (write nothing in the text):
|
||
|
||
To: netdir@mcsun.eu.net
|
||
Subject: amanpt1
|
||
Text:
|
||
|
||
BITNET provides information about connected systems through many
|
||
sources. Scandinavian users use LISTSERV@FINHUTC.BITNET in Finland.
|
||
Try a LISTSERV on a host closer to where you live. For example,
|
||
North American users may use LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET, which is a
|
||
host in North Dakota. Japanese users should write to the host
|
||
LISTSERV@JPNKNU10.BITNET.
|
||
When retrieving for BITNET host information mail, your search
|
||
will have to be done in two steps. Here, your commands are NOT to
|
||
be entered on the Subject line. Enter all commands in the TEXT
|
||
field (text on the Subject line will be ignored). Example:
|
||
|
||
You want information about the BITNET computer FINHUTC (called
|
||
a "node in the network"). Your first message should have the
|
||
following text:
|
||
|
||
|
||
// job echo=no
|
||
database search dd=rules
|
||
//rules dd *
|
||
search * in bitearn where node = FINHUTC
|
||
index
|
||
|
||
LISTSERV sends you the following report:
|
||
|
||
> search * in bitearn where node = FINHUTC
|
||
--> Database BITEARN, 1 hit.
|
||
|
||
> index
|
||
Ref# Conn Nodeid Site name
|
||
---- ---- ------ ---------
|
||
0910 85/11 FINHUTC Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
|
||
|
||
Send a new search message to the LISTSERV containing the same
|
||
commands as above. Add one line in which you ask for database
|
||
record number 0910 (given in the column Ref#).
|
||
Like this:
|
||
|
||
// job echo=no
|
||
database search dd=rules
|
||
//rules dd *
|
||
search * in bitearn where node = FINHUTC
|
||
index
|
||
print 0910
|
||
|
||
LISTSERV will return a report with a lot of information.
|
||
Here is part of it:
|
||
|
||
Node: FINHUTC
|
||
Country: FI
|
||
Internet: FINHUTC.hut.fi
|
||
Net: EARN
|
||
Nodedesc: Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
|
||
P_hsalmine: Harri Salminen;LK-HS@FINHUTC;+358 0 4514318
|
||
P_pautio: Petri Autio;POSTMAST@FINHUTC;+358 0 4514318
|
||
P_vvoutila: Vuokko Voutilainen;OPR@FINHUTC;+358 0 4514342
|
||
Routtab: RSCS (NETSERV,POSTMAST@FINHUTC)
|
||
|
||
For more information about searching BITNET databases, send this
|
||
message to your favorite LISTSERV, or use the address below:
|
||
|
||
To: LISTSERV@FINHUTC.BITNET
|
||
Subject: nothing
|
||
TEXT: GET LISTDB MEMO
|
||
|
||
X.400 systems are developing an address directory according to
|
||
CCITT standard X.500. The plan is to connect several directories.
|
||
The developers hope that routing of X.400 messages may eventually
|
||
be done automatically without the user needing to know the identity
|
||
of the recipient's mailbox computer.
|
||
X.500 will certainly help X.400 users. The problem is that
|
||
most email is still carried by other types of systems, and that
|
||
X.500 has no concern for mail transported through "foreign
|
||
systems."
|
||
|
||
Dialcom
|
||
-------
|
||
is a commercial, global online service, which have many nodes in
|
||
Africa and Latin America. To send mail from Dialcom to the Internet
|
||
you must use commercial gateway-services like DASnet (see appendix
|
||
1).
|
||
To send mail from one Dialcom system to another, use the syntax
|
||
6007:EWP002. This address points to mailbox EWP002 on system number
|
||
6007.
|
||
To send mail from Internet to Dialcom user YNP079 on system
|
||
10001, use the following address when sending through DASnet:
|
||
|
||
10001_ynp079@dcdial.das.net
|
||
|
||
Note: Only registered users with DASnet can use this method.
|
||
|
||
FidoNet
|
||
-------
|
||
Users of this global network can send and receive mail to/from the
|
||
Internet. For example, a FidoNet user may use the following method
|
||
to send to my Internet address:
|
||
|
||
Send the message to user UUCP at 1:105/42. The first line of
|
||
the TEXT of the message should contain:
|
||
|
||
To: opresno@extern.uio.no
|
||
|
||
Add a blank line after the address before entering the text
|
||
of your message.
|
||
|
||
FidoNet addresses are composed by three or four numbers;
|
||
|
||
zone:net/node
|
||
or
|
||
zone:net/node.point
|
||
|
||
The FidoNet address 1:105/42 has three elements. "1:" tells that
|
||
the recipient lives in Zone number 1 (North America). "105/42"
|
||
refers to Node number 42, which receives mail through Net number
|
||
105. This node has an automatic gateway to the Internet.
|
||
Another example: Jan Stozek is sysop of "Home of PCQ" in
|
||
Warsaw, Poland. The Node number of his BBS is 10. He receives mail
|
||
through Net number 480. Poland is a country in Europe, Zone number
|
||
2. The address to his system is: 2:480/10. His user name is Jan
|
||
Stozek.
|
||
You can send an Internet message to anyone in FidoNet by using
|
||
the following template:
|
||
|
||
<firstname>.<lastname>@p<point>.f<node>.n<net>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
|
||
|
||
Where <firstname> is the person's first name
|
||
<lastname> is the person's last name
|
||
|
||
To send a message from the Internet to Jan, use this address:
|
||
|
||
Jan.Stozek@f10.n480.z2.fidonet.org
|
||
|
||
One final example: Ola Garstad in Oslo has the FidoNet address
|
||
2:502/15. Use the address Ola.Garstad@f15.n502.z2.fidonet.org ,
|
||
when sending mail to him through the Internet.
|
||
An updated list of global FidoNet nodes can be retrieved from
|
||
most connected BBS systems.
|
||
|
||
For more information
|
||
--------------------
|
||
If you have access to BITNET or Internet mail, get "The Inter-
|
||
Network Mail Guide." It describes how to send mail between
|
||
electronic mail systems like AppleLink, BITNET, BIX, CompuServe,
|
||
Connect-USA, EasyNet, Envoy, FidoNet, GeoNet, Internet, MCI,
|
||
MFENET, NasaMail, PeaceNet, Sinet, Span, SprintMail, and more.
|
||
Send a message to the BITNET address LISTSERV@UNMVM.BITNET. In
|
||
the TEXT of the message enter:
|
||
|
||
GET NETWORK GUIDE
|
||
|
||
This list is also posted monthly to the Usenet newsgroups
|
||
comp.mail.misc and news.newusers.questions.
|
||
The document "FAQ: How to find people's E-mail addresses" is
|
||
regularly posted to the Usenet group news.answers. It is also
|
||
available by email from mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu . To get a copy,
|
||
put the command "send usenet/news.answers/finding-addresses" in the
|
||
body of your message.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 8: Free expert assistance
|
||
=================================
|
||
|
||
This may sound too good to be true. Many computer experts are ready
|
||
to help YOU without asking a dollar in return. The same is the case
|
||
with experts in other areas.
|
||
You have an impossible decision to make. A lawyer has a dotted
|
||
line that requires your signature, or a surgeon has a dotted line
|
||
in mind for your upper abdomen. You're not comfortable with the
|
||
fine print or the diagnosis and wonder if a second opinion is in
|
||
order. Just ask, and get help.
|
||
If you have problems with your communications program, post a
|
||
message on a bulletin board. Do the same thing if you want to sell
|
||
equipment. Learn from other people's experiences with computers or
|
||
software that you plan to buy.
|
||
You will get a reply - if the subject or you attract interest.
|
||
In the process, you'll get new friends, and be able to follow the
|
||
development in a dynamic marketplace.
|
||
The following message from CompuServe is typical:
|
||
|
||
|
||
16-Nov-91 15:16:14
|
||
Sb: Back & Forth software
|
||
Fm: Joan Healy
|
||
To: John Nelson
|
||
|
||
Changed my mind about GrandView:
|
||
|
||
1. Learning curve like Mt. Everest. Give me intuitive or give me
|
||
death.
|
||
2. Lack of patience with " ".
|
||
3. Lack of time.
|
||
4. It may be unsuited for what I wanted (outlining a book). Since
|
||
becoming a born-again Galaxian, I've started using that for the
|
||
outline, and I'm happy. There's nothing like a decision and a
|
||
permanent bonding and lifelong commitment to make a woman
|
||
happy. Remember that, you louts. :-)
|
||
|
||
Many users prefer open conference messages to private email for
|
||
their technical discussions. This gives "the group" a chance to
|
||
read, comment, provide additional facts, and return with new
|
||
questions.
|
||
The reactions to one simple question may be overwhelming, but
|
||
most of the time the contributions are useful and educational.
|
||
Since the discussion is public, regard it as your personal online
|
||
university. Offer opinions when you have something to contribute,
|
||
or keep silent.
|
||
In most conferences, some members are critical to "lurkers." A
|
||
"lurker" is someone who read without ever contributing. Don't let
|
||
them get to you. Do not feel bad about being silent. Most other
|
||
members are there only to watch and learn as well.
|
||
If you consider buying a newly released computer program, tune
|
||
in to the section of your favorite online service that deals with
|
||
products from this manufacturer. Count messages with complaints
|
||
of the new program before buying.
|
||
When you have received your new program, return to read other
|
||
users' experiences and to pick up practical advice. It will never
|
||
hurt to offer your own two cents' worth in the process.
|
||
|
||
| Visit online services that have many users who know more than |
|
||
| most. There, you will usually get faster and better replies to |
|
||
| your questions. It is far cheaper to ask than to search. |
|
||
|
||
Start with bulletin boards. If you have never visited a BBS, call
|
||
one in your neighborhood to get a feel for what this is. Most of
|
||
them can be accessed free. Usually, their only requirement is that
|
||
you answer some self-presentation questions before being granted
|
||
full access to their system.
|
||
Most bulletin boards offer conferencing and archives filled
|
||
with shareware and public domain software. Many also have files or
|
||
bulletins listing telephone numbers of other boards in your country
|
||
or area.
|
||
The trick is to find know-how. The larger the online service,
|
||
the more skilled people are likely to "meet" there regularly.
|
||
Therefore, if local bulletin boards fail to satisfy your needs,
|
||
visit the large commercial services. CompuServe and EXEC-PC are two
|
||
services in the top league. BIX is another good source of
|
||
information for professional computer specialists.
|
||
One exception: When you need contact with ONE particular
|
||
person, who knows YOUR problem in detail, go where he uses to go.
|
||
Examples: If you need top advice about the communications
|
||
program GALINK, call Mike's BBS in Oslo (at +472 -416588). If you
|
||
buy modems from Semafor A/S, the best place for expert advice is
|
||
Semaforum BBS (tel. +4741-370-11710). If you have a Novell local
|
||
area network, visit the Novell forums on CompuServe.
|
||
|
||
For users of MS-DOS computers
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
I visit the following CompuServe forums regularly:
|
||
|
||
IBM Communication - about communication software for MS-DOS
|
||
computers.
|
||
IBM Hardware - about new IBM compatibles, expansion cards,
|
||
displays, hard disks, IBM PS/2, software for performance
|
||
evaluation, printers, etc.
|
||
IBM Systems/Utilities - about DOS, utilities, shells, file
|
||
utilities, and much more. A large software library.
|
||
IBM Applications - about all kind of applications. The forum
|
||
has a large file library full of shareware and public
|
||
domain software.
|
||
|
||
Many CompuServe forums are operated or sponsored by software and
|
||
hardware vendors, like:
|
||
|
||
Adobe Systems Inc., Aldus Corp., Ashton-Tate Corp., Autodesk
|
||
Inc., Borland International, Broderbund Software Inc., Buttonware
|
||
Inc., Cadkey Inc., Crosstalk Communications, Customs Technologies,
|
||
Enable Software, Datastorm Technologies Inc., Microsoft Systems,
|
||
Nantucket Corp., Lotus Development Corp., Novell Inc., Peter Norton
|
||
Computing, Quarterdeck Office Systems, Quicksoft, Sun Microsystems
|
||
(TOPS Division), Symantec Corp., Toshiba, Turbopower Software, and
|
||
WordPerfect Corp.
|
||
|
||
CompuServe has hundreds of other forums with associated libraries
|
||
of files and programs.
|
||
FidoNet has the PC_TECH and PCUG conferences, and a long list
|
||
of product specific echos like QUICKBBS, PCTOOLS, ZMODEM, DESQVIEW
|
||
and WINDOWS.SHAREW .
|
||
BITNET has CLIPPER (CLIPPER@BRUFPB), I-IBMPC (I-IBMPC@UIUCVMD),
|
||
PC-L (PC-L@UFRJ), and the abstract service INFO-IBMPC (IBMPC-
|
||
L@BNANDP11). On EXEC-PC, look under MS-DOS systems. Usenet has
|
||
many offerings including the following:
|
||
|
||
comp.sys.ibm.pc.misc Discussion about IBM personal computers.
|
||
comp.sys.ibm.pc.digest The IBM PC, PC-XT, and PC-AT. (Moderated)
|
||
comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware XT/AT/EISA hardware, any vendor.
|
||
comp.sys.ibm.pc.rt Topics related to IBM's RT computer.
|
||
comp.sys.ibm.ps2.hardware Microchannel hardware, any vendor.
|
||
|
||
For help with Lotus 1-2-3, there are two CompuServe forums. There
|
||
is a LOTUS conference on RelayNet. WordPerfect Corp. has a support
|
||
forum on CompuServe. WORDPERF is the equivalent offering on
|
||
RelayNet. On ILINK, visit WORDPERFECT. For support about Ami Pro,
|
||
visit CompuServe's LDC Word Processing Forum.
|
||
|
||
For owners of Amiga computers
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
FidoNet has a long list of conferences for Amiga users:
|
||
|
||
AMIGA Amiga International Echo
|
||
AMIGAGAMES Amiga Gaming
|
||
AMIGA_COMMS Amiga Communications Software and Hardware
|
||
AMIGA_DESKTOP Amiga Desktop Publishing
|
||
AMIGA_INFO AMIGA_INFO
|
||
AMIGA_LC Amiga Lattice/SASC C Echo
|
||
AMIGA_NET_DEV Amiga Network Developers.
|
||
AMIGA_PDREVIEW Amiga PD Reviews & Requests
|
||
AMIGA_PERFECT Amiga Word Perfect & Word Processing
|
||
AMIGA_PROG Amiga Programmer's International Conference
|
||
AMIGA_SYSOP Amiga SysOp's Discussion/ADS Echo
|
||
AMIGA_UG Amiga User's Groups
|
||
AMIGA_VIDEO Amiga Video and Animation
|
||
|
||
EXEC-PC has the Amiga Hardware and Amiga Software conferences, and
|
||
a large library with shareware and public domain files. ILINK has
|
||
the AMIGA conference.
|
||
Usenet's com.sys.amiga hierarchy has entries like advocacy,
|
||
announce applications, audio, datacomm, emulations, games,
|
||
graphics, hardware, introduction, marketplace, multimedia, misc,
|
||
programmer, reviews and more.
|
||
Abstracts of comp.sys.amiga conferences are available through
|
||
several BITNET mailing lists, like AMIGAHAR@DEARN, AMIGA-D@NDSUVM1,
|
||
and AMIGA-S@NDSUVM1.
|
||
Most online services have "Find this File" commands. The most
|
||
powerful ones are often found on free bulletin boards.
|
||
On CompuServe, type GO AMIGA to get to CBMNET and get the
|
||
following welcome menu:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Amiga Forums
|
||
1 Amiga Arts Forum
|
||
2 Amiga Tech Forum
|
||
3 Amiga User's Forum
|
||
4 Amiga Vendor Forum
|
||
5 Amiga File Finder
|
||
|
||
Commodore Forums
|
||
6 Commodore Arts and Games
|
||
7 Commodore Applications Forum
|
||
8 Commodore Service Forum
|
||
9 Commodore Newsletter
|
||
|
||
A while ago, we visited CBMNET to find a communications program.
|
||
From the menu above, selection five took us to The Amiga File
|
||
Finder service, and this menu:
|
||
|
||
File Finder AMIGA
|
||
|
||
1 About File Finder
|
||
2 Instructions For Searching
|
||
3 How to Locate Keywords
|
||
|
||
4 Access File Finder
|
||
|
||
5 Your Comments About File Finder
|
||
|
||
Choice four lets us search for files using keywords, file creation
|
||
dates, forum names, file types, file name extension, file name or
|
||
author. Our choice was searching by keywords. The result was a long
|
||
list of alternatives:
|
||
|
||
Enter Search Term: comm
|
||
|
||
Amiga File Finder
|
||
|
||
1 AMIGATECH/C Programming COMSRC.ARC
|
||
2 AMIGATECH/C Programming PMDSRC.LZH
|
||
3 AMIGATECH/C Programming PNTSRC.LZH
|
||
4 AMIGAUSER/Communications BBSIND.LZH
|
||
5 AMIGAUSER/Communications INTOUC.ARC
|
||
etc.
|
||
|
||
By entering numbers, we asked for short descriptions of file number
|
||
4 through 13. Here is one of them:
|
||
|
||
Filename : INTOUC.ARC Forum: AMIGAUSER
|
||
Lib: Communications Lib #: 5
|
||
Submitter: [76702,337] 24-Mar-89
|
||
Size: 51200 Accesses: 157
|
||
|
||
This is a modified Comm1.34. It supports both VT100 and ANSI.
|
||
The VT100 emulation is based on Dave Wecker's VT100 program.
|
||
There is automatic dialer, split screen that is configurable,
|
||
phone book, and other nice features.
|
||
|
||
This is what we were looking for. First, enter GO AMIGAUSER to get
|
||
to the forum. Enter "DL 5" to get to Downloading Library number 5.
|
||
INTOUCH.ARC was retrieved using the CompuServe Quick B transfer
|
||
protocol. This protocol is usually the most efficient choice on
|
||
this service.
|
||
There are also active Amiga forums on BIX, GEnie, and CIX
|
||
(England).
|
||
|
||
Apple users
|
||
-----------
|
||
FidoNet has an APPLE conference. BITNET has APPLE2-L (APPLE2-
|
||
L@BROWNVM). CompuServe has Apple II Programmers Forum, Apple II
|
||
Users Forum, Apple II Vendor Forum, Mac Community Clubhouse Forum,
|
||
Mac Developers Forum, Mac Fun/Entertainment Forum, Mac Hypertext
|
||
Forum, Mac New Users/Help Forum, Mac System 7.0 Forum, Mac System
|
||
Software Forum, MacUser Forum and MacWEEK Forum.
|
||
Similar services are found on many other online services. You
|
||
will also find conferences devoted to support of popular commercial
|
||
software for Apple computers.
|
||
|
||
Other computers
|
||
---------------
|
||
There are so many types of computers: Atari computers, the TRS-80
|
||
series and others from Tandy, DEC computers, mainframes from IBM,
|
||
Hewlett-Packard computers, CP/M machines, users of LDOS/TRSDOS or
|
||
OS9, Apricot, Z88, Timex/Sinclair, Archimedes, Psion, and Armstrad.
|
||
Even so, there is a high probability that you can find online
|
||
support for almost all of them. This is so even if the vendor is
|
||
out of business long ago. CompuServe is a good place to start.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 9: Your electronic daily news
|
||
=====================================
|
||
|
||
Read national and global news before they are announced by
|
||
the traditional media. Get those interesting background
|
||
facts. Read special interest news stories that seldom
|
||
appear in print.
|
||
|
||
Sure, you read newspapers, watch TV, and listen to radio. But did
|
||
you know how limited their stories are?
|
||
Traditional news media just give you a small part of the news.
|
||
Their editors are not concerned about YOUR particular interests.
|
||
They serve a large group of readers, viewers or listeners with
|
||
different interests in mind.
|
||
Go online to discover the difference. The online news has an
|
||
enormous width and depth. Besides "popular" news, you will find
|
||
stories that few editors bother to print. This may give you better
|
||
insight in current developments, and in as much details as you can
|
||
take.
|
||
Most commercial online services offer news. Most of their
|
||
stories come from large news agencies and newspapers. You can also
|
||
read and search articles from magazines, newsletters and other
|
||
special publications.
|
||
The online users' ability to search today and yesterday's news
|
||
makes these offerings particularly useful.
|
||
The cost of reading a given news item varies by online service.
|
||
What will set you back 20 cents on one service, will cost you two
|
||
dollars on another.
|
||
It may be many times more expensive (or cheap) to read the same
|
||
article from the same news provider on another online service. So,
|
||
professional online users compare prices.
|
||
|
||
National news
|
||
-------------
|
||
In Norway, we have long been able to read local language news from
|
||
print media like Aftenposten, Dagens Naeringsliv, Kapital, and news
|
||
wires from NTB and other local sources. Similarly, local language
|
||
news is available online in most countries.
|
||
The cost of reading local news on national online services
|
||
tends to be more expensive than on major global online services. As
|
||
competition among global news providers increases, however, this is
|
||
bound to change.
|
||
|
||
International news
|
||
------------------
|
||
"The Global Village" is an old idea in the online world. News from
|
||
most parts of the world has long been globally available.
|
||
A while ago, a well-known Norwegian industrialist visited my
|
||
office. I showed off online searching in NewsNet newsletters and
|
||
stumbled over a story about his company. "Incredible!" he said. "We
|
||
haven't even told our Norwegian employees about this yet."
|
||
Often, American online services give news from other countries
|
||
earlier you can get it on online services from these countries.
|
||
Besides, the stories will be in English.
|
||
|
||
| In 1991, the United States had 56 percent of the world's online |
|
||
| databases (Source: the research company IQ, September 1991). |
|
||
|
||
Sure, most Norwegians prefer to read news in Norwegian. The
|
||
Japanese want news in their language, and the French in French. If
|
||
they can get the news earlier than their competitors, however, most
|
||
are willing to read English.
|
||
Few master many languages. Unless you live in a country where
|
||
they talk Arabic, Chinese or French, chances are that you cannot
|
||
read news in these languages. English, however, is a popular second
|
||
choice in many countries, and it has become the unofficial language
|
||
of the online world.
|
||
Another thing is that reading local language news is risky.
|
||
Translators often make mistakes. One reason is time pressure,
|
||
another poor knowledge of the source language.
|
||
The risk of inaccuracies increases when a story, for example
|
||
initially translated from Spanish into English, then are being
|
||
translated into a third language.
|
||
Avoid news that has been translated more than once. If not,
|
||
you may experience something like this:
|
||
|
||
On September 19, 1991, Norwegian TV brought news from Moscow.
|
||
They told that Russian president Boris Yeltsin had a heart
|
||
attack.
|
||
|
||
The online report from Associated Press, which arrived 7.5
|
||
hours earlier, talked about "a minor heart attack" with the
|
||
following additional explanation: "In Russian, the phrase
|
||
'heart attack' has a broader meaning than in English. It is
|
||
commonly used to refer to a range of ailments from chest pains
|
||
to actual heart failure."
|
||
|
||
Your "personal online daily newspaper" will often give you the news
|
||
faster and more correctly than traditional print media. Some news
|
||
is only made available in electronic form.
|
||
|
||
Seven minutes in 1991
|
||
---------------------
|
||
On September 19, I called CompuServe to read news and gather
|
||
information about online news sources.
|
||
According to my log, I connected through Infonet in Oslo (see
|
||
Chapter 13). The total cost for seven minutes was US$6.00, which
|
||
included the cost of a long distance call to Oslo.
|
||
I read some stories, while they scrolled over the screen. All
|
||
was captured to a file on my hard disk for later study. The size
|
||
of this file grew to 32.000 characters, or almost 15 single-spaced
|
||
typewritten pages (A-4 size). If I had spent less time reviewing
|
||
the lists of available stories, seven minutes would have given a
|
||
larger file.
|
||
When I had entered my user ID and password, a menu of stories
|
||
came up on my screen. The headline read "News from CompuServe."
|
||
The two first items caught my attention, and I requested the
|
||
text. One had 20 lines about an easier method of finding files in
|
||
the forum libraries. The other had ten lines about how to write
|
||
addresses for international fax messages.
|
||
The command GO APV brought me directly to Associated Press News
|
||
Wires. You'll find such tricks by reading the online services' user
|
||
manuals. This command produced the following menu:
|
||
|
||
AP Online APV-1
|
||
|
||
1 Latest News-Updated Hourly
|
||
2 Weather
|
||
3 Sports
|
||
4 National
|
||
5 Washington
|
||
6 World
|
||
7 Political
|
||
8 Entertainment
|
||
9 Business News
|
||
10 Wall Street
|
||
11 Dow Jones Average
|
||
12 Feature News
|
||
13 Today in History
|
||
|
||
I entered "9" for business news, and got a new list of stories:
|
||
|
||
AP Online
|
||
|
||
1 Women, Minority Businesses Lag
|
||
2 Child World Accuses Toys R Us
|
||
3 UPI May Cancel Worker Benefits
|
||
4 Drilling Plan Worries Florida
|
||
5 UK Stocks Dip, Tokyo's Higher
|
||
6 Dollar Higher, Gold Up
|
||
7 Farm Exports Seen Declining
|
||
8 Supermarket Coupons Big Bucks
|
||
9 Cattlemen Tout Supply, Prices
|
||
0 Tokyo Stocks, Dollar Higher
|
||
|
||
MORE !
|
||
|
||
The screen stopped scrolling by "MORE !". Pressing ENTER gave a new
|
||
list. None of them were of any interest.
|
||
Pressing M (for previous menu) returned me to the APV-1 menu
|
||
(the videotext page number is given in the upper right corner of
|
||
each menu display). I selected "World" for global news, which gave
|
||
me this list:
|
||
|
||
|
||
AP Online
|
||
|
||
6 Two Killed In Nagorno Karabakh
|
||
7 Yugoslavia Fighting Rages On
|
||
8 Storm Kills Five In Japan
|
||
9 Afghan Rebels Going To Moscow?
|
||
0 19 Killed in Guatemala Quakes
|
||
|
||
MORE !8
|
||
|
||
Oh, a storm in Japan! Interesting. I was due to leave for Japan in
|
||
a couple of weeks, and entered 8 at the MORE ! prompt to read. A
|
||
screenful of text was transferred in a few seconds.
|
||
"This is for later study," I said, pressed M to return to the
|
||
menu, and then ENTER to get the next listing:
|
||
|
||
|
||
AP Online
|
||
|
||
1 Bomblets Kill American Troops?
|
||
2 No Movement On Hostage Release
|
||
3 Baker Plans Return To Syria
|
||
4 Baker, King Hussein To Confer
|
||
5 Madame Chiang Leaving Taiwan?
|
||
6 Baker Leaves Syria for Jordan
|
||
7 Klaus Barbie Hospitalized
|
||
8 Iraq Denounces U.S. Threat
|
||
9 Yelstin Said Resting At Home
|
||
0 SS Auschwitz Guard Found Dead
|
||
|
||
MORE !
|
||
|
||
Here, I used another trick from the user manual. Entering "5,6,9"
|
||
gave three stories in one batch with no pauses between them. Five
|
||
screens with text. If I had read the menu more carefully, I might
|
||
probably also have selected story 0. It looked like an interesting
|
||
item.
|
||
"This is enough of the Associated Press," I thought, and typed
|
||
G NEWS. This gave me an overview of all available news sources ("G
|
||
NEWS" is an abbreviation for "GO NEWS," or "GO to the main NEWS
|
||
menu"):
|
||
|
||
|
||
News/Weather/Sports NEWS
|
||
|
||
1 Executive News Service ($)
|
||
2 NewsGrid
|
||
3 Associated Press Online
|
||
4 Weather
|
||
5 Sports
|
||
6 The Business Wire
|
||
7 Newspaper Library
|
||
8 UK News/Sports
|
||
9 Entertainment News/Info
|
||
10 Online Today Daily Edition
|
||
11 Soviet Crisis
|
||
|
||
First, a quick glance at 6. The service presented itself in these
|
||
words: "Throughout the day The Business Wire makes available press
|
||
releases, news stories, and other information from the world of
|
||
business. Information on hundreds of different companies is
|
||
transmitted daily to The Business Wire's subscribers."
|
||
Then #7: "This database contains selected full-text stories
|
||
from 48 newspapers from across the United States. Classified ads
|
||
are NOT included in the full-text of each paper."
|
||
The list of newspapers included Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune
|
||
and San Francisco Chronicle (known for many interesting inside
|
||
stories from Silicon Valley).
|
||
Choice 8 gave news from England. There, I selected UK News
|
||
Clips, which gave the following options:
|
||
|
||
U.K. News Clips
|
||
|
||
93 stories selected
|
||
|
||
1 RTw 09/19 0818 YUGOSLAV AIR FORCE HITS CROATIAN COMMUNICATIONS
|
||
2 RTw 09/19 0755 CROATIA BATTLES CONTINUE AS EC PONDERS PEACE FORCE
|
||
3 RTw 09/19 0753 ARAB PAPERS SAY MOSCOW WANTS MIDEAST PARLEY DELAYED
|
||
4 RTw 09/19 0749 DOLLAR STANDS STILL, SHARES DRIFT LOWER IN ...
|
||
5 RTw 09/19 0729 EARNINGS GLOOM REVERSES LONDON STOCKS' EARLY GAINS
|
||
6 RTw 09/19 0716 SOVIETS NEED 14.7 BILLION DOLLARS FOOD AID, EC SAYS
|
||
7 RTw 09/19 0707 IRA SAYS IT KILLED TIMBER YARD WORKER IN BELFAST DOCKS
|
||
8 RTw 09/19 0706 BRITISH CONSERVATIVE CHIEF PLAYS DOWN TALK OF ...
|
||
9 RTw 09/19 0630 FINANCE RATES
|
||
10 RTw 09/19 0603 REUTER WORLD NEWS SCHEDULE AT 1000 GMT THURSDAY ...
|
||
|
||
The numbers in column four are the release times of the stories.
|
||
They flow in from the wires in a continuous stream.
|
||
Next stop was the UK Newspaper Library. Here, you can search in
|
||
full-text stories from The Daily and Sunday Telegraph, Financial
|
||
Times, The Guardian, UK News (with selected stories from The Daily
|
||
& Sunday Telegraph, Financial Times, The Guardian, The Times/Sunday
|
||
Times, Today, The Independent, Lloyd's List and The Observer).
|
||
Searching the UK Newspaper Library costs US$6.00 for up to ten
|
||
hits. You get a selection menu of the first ten stories found. A
|
||
menu with an additional ten stories costs another $6.00, etc. You
|
||
pay US$6.00 to read the full text of selected stories. These rates
|
||
are added to CompuServe's normal access rates.
|
||
The news service Soviet Crisis was my final destination. This
|
||
was just a few weeks after the attempted coup in Moscow, and I was
|
||
eager for reports.
|
||
I found the following interesting story from OTC NewsAlert:
|
||
|
||
OTC 09/19 0750 FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE SOVDATA DAILINE IS LAUNCHED
|
||
|
||
This selection gave me three screens with information about a new
|
||
online service. Briefly, this is what it said:
|
||
|
||
"The SovData DiaLine service includes an on-line library of more
|
||
than 250 Soviet newspapers, business and economic periodicals,
|
||
profiles of more than 2,500 Soviet firms and key executives that
|
||
do business with the West, legislative reports and other
|
||
information."
|
||
|
||
It also said that part of the database was available through Mead
|
||
Data Central (Nexis/Lexis), and that it would be made available
|
||
through like Data-Star, FT Profile, Reuters, Westlaw, and GBI.
|
||
Undoubtedly, the name has changed by the time you read this.
|
||
Finally, a fresh story about the fate of KGB. I read another
|
||
fifty lines, entered OFF (for "goodbye CompuServe"), and received
|
||
the following verdict:
|
||
|
||
Thank you for using CompuServe!
|
||
|
||
Off at 09:03 EDT 19-Sep-91
|
||
Connect time = 0:07
|
||
|
||
Seven minutes. Fifteen typed pages of text. US$6.00. Not bad!
|
||
|
||
An overwhelming choice
|
||
----------------------
|
||
I am confident that your "daily online newspaper" will contain
|
||
other stories. If you're into computers, you may want to start with
|
||
Online Today, CompuServe's daily newspaper. It brings short,
|
||
informative news stories about the computer industry.
|
||
NewsBytes is another interesting source for computer news. It
|
||
offers global headline news from its bureaus around the world. The
|
||
articles are sorted in sections called APPLE, BUSINESS, GENERAL,
|
||
GOVERNMENT, IBM, REVIEW, TELECOM, TRENDS and UNIX. A favorite!
|
||
Newsnet is also available through Genie, ZiffNet on CompuServe,
|
||
NewsNet, Dialog, in the newsgroup clari.nb on Usenet, and various
|
||
BBS systems around the world. I read it through a Norwegian BBS
|
||
(EuroNet in Haugesund).
|
||
For general news, start with major newswires, like Associated
|
||
Press, Agence France-Presse, Xinhua, Reuters, and the like. You
|
||
will find them on many commercial services including NewsNet,
|
||
CompuServe, and Dialog.
|
||
|
||
FROGNET - The French Way
|
||
------------------------
|
||
If you know French, check out FROGNET. This French language service
|
||
brings daily news from Agence France Press, and often has added
|
||
excerpts from the French dailies.
|
||
FROG is distributed by the services of the French embassy in
|
||
Washington. It covers world affairs, European and French items,
|
||
assembled, naturally, from a French point of view.
|
||
The service is free. To subscribe, send a message through the
|
||
Internet to FROG@GUVAX.GEORGETOWN.EDU . It should contain your
|
||
answers to the following electronic application form. Replace the
|
||
%s with your inputs (This is French, right?):
|
||
|
||
NOM: %
|
||
PRENOM: %
|
||
NAISSANCE:../../..%
|
||
ARRIVEE:../../..%
|
||
DEPART:../../..%
|
||
EMAIL: %
|
||
ECOLE D'ORIGINE: %
|
||
QUALITE: %
|
||
ADRESSE DE RECHERCHE: %
|
||
PAYS: %
|
||
STATE: %
|
||
UNIVERSITE: %
|
||
RECHERCHE: %
|
||
MOTSCLES: %
|
||
DOMAINE: %
|
||
|
||
Complicated? OK, here's some instructions in "French ASCII":
|
||
|
||
* Pour les dates veuillez utiliser le format Francais
|
||
(DD/MM/YY). Arrivee: c'est la date d'arrivee dans le pays
|
||
ou vous etes actuellement.
|
||
* QUALITE: Etes vous VSN, PHD, MASTER, INGENIEUR, POST-DOC ...?
|
||
* ECOLE D'ORIGINE: Diplome obtenu en France
|
||
* PAYS: US, Australie ....
|
||
* STATE: pour les US en 2 lettres (NY, TX, CA)
|
||
* UNIVERSITE: actuelle ou societe
|
||
* RECHERCHE: Soyez explicite !
|
||
* MOTSCLES: (ex: Neuronaux, polymeres, TVHD...)
|
||
* DOMAINE: En 3 lettres confere nomenclature ci-dessous
|
||
|
||
|
||
Nomenclature de la National Science Foundation.
|
||
|
||
AGR AGRICULTURE
|
||
BIO BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
|
||
HES HEALTH SCIENCES
|
||
ENG ENGINEERING
|
||
CIS COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SC.
|
||
MAT MATHEMATICS
|
||
PHY PHYSICAL SCIENCES
|
||
AST Astronomy
|
||
ATM Atmospheric & Meteorological Sciences
|
||
CHE Chemistry
|
||
GEO Geological Sciences
|
||
PHS Physics
|
||
OPH Other Physical Sciences
|
||
PSY PSYCHOLOGY
|
||
SOS SOCIAL SCIENCES
|
||
HUM HUMANITIES
|
||
HIS History
|
||
LET Letters
|
||
FLL Foreign Languages & Literature
|
||
OHU Other Humanities
|
||
EDU EDUCATION
|
||
EDG Education General
|
||
TED Teacher Education
|
||
TEF Teaching fields
|
||
PRF PROFESSIONAL FIELDS
|
||
BUS Business & Management
|
||
COM Communications
|
||
PFO Other Professional Fields
|
||
OTH OTHER FIELDS
|
||
|
||
News is more than news
|
||
----------------------
|
||
After some time, your definition of the notion "news" may change.
|
||
Since so many conferences are interesting sources, they should also
|
||
be a part of your news gathering strategy. Check in regularly to
|
||
read what members report about what they have seen, done, heard, or
|
||
discovered.
|
||
By the way, professional news hunters have also discovered
|
||
this. Online conferences are popular hunting grounds for reporters
|
||
of the traditional press.
|
||
FidoNet has many conferences with specialized news contents:
|
||
|
||
ANEWS News of the US and World
|
||
BBNS BBS News Service
|
||
BIONEWS Environmental News
|
||
EL_SALVADOR Analysis and News About El Salvador
|
||
NICANET Analysis and News About Nicaragua
|
||
PACIFIC_NEWS Pacific News
|
||
PANAMA Analysis and News About Panama
|
||
|
||
BITNET has mailing lists like:
|
||
|
||
CHINA-NN CHINA-NN@ASUACAD China News Digest (Global News)
|
||
CURRENTS CURRENTS@PCCVM South Asian News and Culture
|
||
INDIA-L INDIA-L@TEMPLEVM The India News Network
|
||
PAKISTAN PAKISTAN@ASUACAD Pakistan News Service
|
||
SEDSNEWS SEDSNEWS@TAMVM1 News about Space from SEDS
|
||
TSSNEWS TSSNEWS@PSUVM Tunisian Scientific Society News
|
||
|
||
RFERL-L (on LISTSERV@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU) distributes the RFE/RL
|
||
Research Institute Daily Report. It is a digest of the latest
|
||
developments in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. The
|
||
report is published Monday through Friday by the RFE/RL Research
|
||
Institute, a division of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty Inc. in
|
||
Germany.
|
||
Some mailing lists bring a steady flow of news from various
|
||
sources. SEASIA-L@MSU - The Southeast Asia Discussion List - is one
|
||
example. The list is "designed to facilitate communication between
|
||
researchers, scholars, students, teachers, and others interested in
|
||
Southeast Asian studies with an emphasis on current events."
|
||
SEASIA-L defines Southeast Asia loosely as Burma/Myanmar across
|
||
to Hong Kong and down through Australia and New Zealand. Regularly,
|
||
it brings full-text news stories from Inter Press Service, regional
|
||
news agencies, and newspapers/radio. Some examples:
|
||
On Jul. 30, 1992, a full-text story from IPS: "PHILIPPINES:
|
||
RAMOS URGES REPEAL OF ANTI-COMMUNIST LAW." On Aug. 13, 1992, full-
|
||
text story from The New Straits Times (Singapore): "Schoolgirs
|
||
involved in flesh trade, says Farid." On Aug. 31, "ANTI-VIETNAMESE
|
||
FORCE TURNS UP IN CAMBODIA" (Reuter).
|
||
SEASIA-L also brings "underground" reports like "The Burma
|
||
Focus," a bimonthly newsletter published by the All Burma Students'
|
||
Democratic Front.
|
||
ECUADOR brings news from Ecuador. Daily news bulletins from
|
||
"Diario Hoy" are posted to the list. Send rone@skat.usc.edu your
|
||
subscription request.
|
||
Many CompuServe forums have news sections. If you're into Hot
|
||
News and Rumors about Amiga Computers, read messages in section 3
|
||
of the Amiga Tech Forum.
|
||
Consumer Electronics Forum has the section "New Products/News."
|
||
The Journalist Forum has "Fast Breaking News!" The Motor Sports
|
||
Forum has "Racing News/Notes." The Online Today Forum has "In the
|
||
News."
|
||
NewsNet's list of newsletters that you can read or search
|
||
online is long, and back issues are also available. For example:
|
||
|
||
Africa News, Agence France-Presse International News, Applied
|
||
Genetics News, Asian Economic News, Asian Political News,
|
||
Business Travel News, Catholic News Service, CD Computing
|
||
News, Computer Reseller News, Electronic Materials Technology
|
||
News, Electronic Trade & Transport News, Electronic World
|
||
News, High Tech Ceramics News, Inter Press Service
|
||
International News, International Businessman News Report,
|
||
News From France, Northern Ireland News Service, Online
|
||
Product News, Sourcemex -- economic news on Mexico, and
|
||
XINHUA English language news service (China).
|
||
|
||
The Inter Press Service's newsletter International News focuses
|
||
on Third World countries, and news from Europe/North America of
|
||
interest to these countries (also available through Impress on
|
||
Nexis).
|
||
Usenet brings news from Bangladesh, India and Nepal in
|
||
misc.news.southasia. The ClariNet hierarchy gateways newsgroups
|
||
from commercial news services and "other official" sources, like:
|
||
|
||
biz.commodity Commodity news and price reports.
|
||
feature Feature columns and products
|
||
canada.briefs Regular updates of Canadian News in Brief.
|
||
biz.economy Economic news and indicators
|
||
biz.top Top business news
|
||
books Books & publishing.
|
||
briefs Regular news summaries.
|
||
bulletin Major breaking stories of the week.
|
||
consumer Consumer news, car reviews etc.
|
||
demonstration Demonstrations around the world.
|
||
disaster Major problems, accidents & natural disasters.
|
||
economy General economic news.
|
||
entertain Entertainment industry news & features.
|
||
europe News related to Europe.
|
||
fighting Clashes around the world.
|
||
hot.east_europe News from Eastern Europe.
|
||
hot.iraq The Gulf Crisis
|
||
hot.panama Panama and General Noriega.
|
||
news.top Top US news stories.
|
||
news.top.world Top international news stories.
|
||
news.trends Surveys and trends.
|
||
news.urgent Major breaking stories of the day.
|
||
|
||
A feed of ClariNet news is available for a fee and execution of a
|
||
license. (Write info@clarinet.com for information.)
|
||
UUCP has which brings regular news bulletins from Poland
|
||
(Contact: przemek@ndcvx.cc.nd.edu).
|
||
|
||
Behind the news
|
||
---------------
|
||
In an effort to garner new subscribers and retain current readers,
|
||
magazine publishers turn to online services to create an ancillary
|
||
electronic version of their print product.
|
||
Their readers are being transformed from passive recipients of
|
||
information into active participants in publishing.
|
||
You can "talk" to BYTE's writers on BIX, and with PC Magazine's
|
||
writers through ZiffNet on CompuServe. Their forums function as
|
||
expert sources. Here, you will often learn about products and trends
|
||
sometimes before the magazines hit the newsstand.
|
||
InfoWorld, an American computer magazine, runs the InfoWorld
|
||
OnLine service on CompuServe. Enter GO INF to get to the following
|
||
menu:
|
||
|
||
InfoWorld On-Line INFOWORLD
|
||
|
||
WELCOME TO INFOWORLD
|
||
1 About InfoWorld Online
|
||
2 Read Current Week's News - 1/13/92
|
||
3 Read Prior Week's News - 1/06/92
|
||
4 Download Current Week's Reviews,
|
||
Comparisons and Test Drives ($)
|
||
5 Download Prior Week's Reviews,
|
||
Comparisons and Test Drives ($)
|
||
6 Searching Help
|
||
7 Search Review/Comparisons/
|
||
Impressions/Test Drives
|
||
8 Comments to InfoWorld
|
||
|
||
InfoWorld highlights comprehensive computer product comparisons and
|
||
reports. You can browse this or previous weeks' comparisons and
|
||
reviews, or search the entire collection. You can search by company
|
||
name, product, software and hardware category.
|
||
Britain's two best-selling PC magazines share the PC Plus/PC
|
||
Answers Online forum on CompuServe (GO PCPLUS).
|
||
PC Magazine, another American magazine, has several forums on
|
||
CompuServe. They also operate a bulletin board. People from AI Expert
|
||
Magazine can be encountered in the AI Expert Forum. Dr. Dobb's
|
||
Journal is in the Dr. Dobb's Journal Forum.
|
||
The Entrepreneur's Small Business Forum (CompuServe) is managed
|
||
by representatives from the magazine. Live Sound!, a magazine devoted
|
||
to the MIDI sound field, occupies section and library 9 of the MIDI B
|
||
Vendor Forum.
|
||
Time magazine has a forum on America Online. There, readers can
|
||
discuss with magazine reporters and editors, and even read the text
|
||
of entire issues of Time electronically before it is available on
|
||
newsstands.
|
||
The Online World shareware book, the one you're reading just now,
|
||
also has a forum. For information about how to join, send email to
|
||
LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu (or LISTSERV@NDSUVM1 on BITNET). In the text
|
||
of your message, write the command "GET TOW MASTER".
|
||
|
||
Chapter 10: Looking for a needle in a bottle of hay
|
||
===================================================
|
||
|
||
Experienced users regularly clip news from online services, and
|
||
store selected parts of it on their personal computers' hard disks.
|
||
They use powerful tools to search their data, and know how to use
|
||
the information in other applications.
|
||
Regular clipping of news is highly recommended. It is often
|
||
quicker and easier to search your own databases than to do it
|
||
online.
|
||
Since your data is a subset of previous searches, your stories
|
||
are likely to have a high degree of relevancy.
|
||
There are many powerful programs for personal computers that
|
||
let you search your personal data for information. Read Chapter 14
|
||
for more on this.
|
||
While secondary research can never replace primary information
|
||
gathering, it often satisfies most information needs related to any
|
||
task or project. Besides, it points in the direction of primary
|
||
sources from where more in-depth information may be elicited.
|
||
|
||
When your personal database fails to deliver
|
||
--------------------------------------------
|
||
Regular "clipping" can indeed help you build a powerful personal
|
||
database, but it will never satisfy all your information needs.
|
||
Occasionally, you must go online for additional facts.
|
||
When this happens, you may feel like Don Quixote, as he was
|
||
looking "for a needle in a bottle of hay." The large number of
|
||
online offerings is bewildering. To be successful, you must have
|
||
a sound search strategy.
|
||
Your first task is to locate useful SOURCES of information. The
|
||
next, to decide how best to find that specific piece of information
|
||
online. You must PLAN your search.
|
||
Although one source of information, like an online database, is
|
||
supposed to cover your area of interest, it may still be unable to
|
||
give you what you want. Let me explain with an example:
|
||
|
||
You're tracking a company called IBM (International Business
|
||
Machines). Your first inclination is to visit forums and clubs
|
||
concerned with products delivered by this company. There, you
|
||
plan to search message bases and file libraries.
|
||
|
||
What is likely to happen, is that the search term IBM gives so
|
||
many hits that you almost drown. To find anything of interest
|
||
in these forums, your search terms must be very specific.
|
||
|
||
General news providers, like Associated Press, may be a better
|
||
alternative. Usually, they just publish one or two stories on
|
||
IBM per week. Don't expect to learn about details that are not
|
||
of interest to the general public.
|
||
|
||
AP's stories may be too general for you. Maybe you'll be more
|
||
content with industry insiders' expert views, as provided by
|
||
the NewsNet newsletters OUTLOOK ON IBM, or THE REPORT ON IBM.
|
||
|
||
The level of details in a given story depends in part on the news
|
||
providers' readers, and the nature of the source. The amount of
|
||
"noise" (the level of irrelevancy) also varies. In most public
|
||
forums, expect to wade through many uninteresting messages before
|
||
finding things of interest.
|
||
We suggest the following strategy:
|
||
|
||
Step 1: Locate sources that provide relevant information,
|
||
|
||
Step 2: Check if the information from these sources is at a
|
||
satisfactory level of details, and that the volume
|
||
is acceptable (not too much, neither too little).
|
||
|
||
Step 3: Study the service's search commands and procedures,
|
||
PLAN, and then SEARCH.
|
||
|
||
Start by asking others!
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
Step 1 is not an easy one. Start by asking other online people for
|
||
advice. This may be the fastest way to interesting sources.
|
||
If looking for information about agriculture and fisheries,
|
||
visit conferences about related topics. Ask members there what they
|
||
are using.
|
||
If you want information about computers or electronics, ask in
|
||
such conferences.
|
||
|
||
| When you don't know where to start your search, ask others! |
|
||
| Their know-how is usually the quickest way to the sources. |
|
||
|
||
If this doesn't help, check out GEnie's Home Office/Small Business
|
||
RoundTable, a hangout of online searchers. Visit CompuServe's
|
||
Working From Home Forum, which has a section for information
|
||
professionals (#4), and the section for new librarians in the
|
||
Journalism Forum.
|
||
Patent searchers are a very specialized group. They discuss
|
||
common problems on Dialog's DialMail. Their bulletin board is named
|
||
PIUG.
|
||
|
||
Buy user manuals
|
||
----------------
|
||
Some online services send free user information manuals to their
|
||
users. Others charge extra for them. If they do, buy! They're worth
|
||
their weight in gold.
|
||
The user manuals from Dialog, Dow Jones News/Retrieval and
|
||
CompuServe make good reading. The last two also publish monthly
|
||
magazines full of search tips, information about new sources, user
|
||
experiences, and more. Dialog distributes the monthly newsletter
|
||
Chronolog.
|
||
NewsNet customers periodically receive a printed listing of
|
||
available newsletters by subject area, and a presentation of their
|
||
information providers. The NewsNet Action Letter (monthly) is also
|
||
distributed by mail.
|
||
On some services, you can retrieve the help texts in electronic
|
||
form. Doing that is not a bad idea. It is often quicker to search a
|
||
help file on your disk, than to browse through a book.
|
||
|
||
Monitor the offerings
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Professional information searchers monitor the activity in the
|
||
online world. They search databases for information about new
|
||
sources of information, and regularly read about new services.
|
||
On most online services, you can search databases of available
|
||
offerings, and a section with advertisements about their own
|
||
'superiorities'. Keep an eye on what is being posted there.
|
||
NewsNet lets you read and search the following newsletters:
|
||
Worldwide Videotex Update, Worldwide Databases (#PB44), Online
|
||
Newsletter, The Online Newsletter, and The Online Libraries and
|
||
Microcomputers.
|
||
The last two are also available as a database from Information
|
||
Intelligence, Inc., (P.O. Box 31098, Phoenix, AZ 85046, U.S.A.
|
||
Tel.: +1-602-996-2283). You can read the text on NewsNet about one
|
||
week before it appears in print.
|
||
These two newsletters can also be read and searched on Dialog
|
||
and Data-Star, as part of the Information Access PTS Newsletter
|
||
Database. Information Access is a full-text database with many
|
||
specialized newsletters for business and industry.
|
||
On CompuServe, you can get to Information Access through the
|
||
IQuest gateway to NewsNet.
|
||
Subscribing to THE ONLINE NEWSLETTER costs US$50.00 per year
|
||
(10 issues) for companies, and US$35.00 for personal use (1991).
|
||
For both newsletters, the price is US$75.00.
|
||
These newsletters are also available on CD-ROM. The disk
|
||
contains four databases: the Online Newsletter, Online Hotline,
|
||
Online Libraries and Microcomputers, Major Online Vendors and
|
||
*Joblines* with more than eight thousand full-text articles from
|
||
January 1980 until today.
|
||
The CD-ROM version is delivered with a menu-driven searching
|
||
program. Each word in every article and headline has been indexed
|
||
and can be located in all databases. The price for subscriptions
|
||
of the printed version is US$99.95. Price for nonsubscribers:
|
||
US$199.95.
|
||
The September 1991 issue of The Online Newsletter had the
|
||
following index (partial):
|
||
|
||
*****************************
|
||
*NEW & FORTHCOMING DATABASES*
|
||
*****************************
|
||
|
||
10) MULTIMEDIA CIA WORLD FACT BOOK (CD-ROM) [REVIEW]
|
||
11) NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS ON CD-ROM (CD-ROM) [REVIEW]
|
||
12) WORLD CERAMICS ABSTRACTS (ORBIT)
|
||
13) GENE-TOX (TOXNET/NLM)
|
||
14) UK TRADEMARKS (ORBIT) [RENAMED]
|
||
15) BRS ADDS DATABASES TO ITS OFFERINGS
|
||
16) CURRENT PATENTS (ORBIT)
|
||
17) NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE ON CD-ROM (CD-ROM)
|
||
18) ALUMINUM STANDARDS DATABASE [AAASD] (STN
|
||
19) PLASNEWS (STN INTERNATIONAL)
|
||
20) EPIC ANNOUNCES NEW DATABASES
|
||
21) DISCLIT: AMERICAN AUTHORS (CD-ROM - OCLC)
|
||
22) CROSS-CULTURAL: CRIME AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS (CD-ROM)
|
||
23) INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL ABSTRACTS (CD-ROM)
|
||
24) RINGDOC (CD-ROM - SILVERPLATTER)
|
||
25) CODUS (ESA-IRS)
|
||
26) MOODY'S COMPANY DATA (CD-ROM)
|
||
27) FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE (DIALOG)
|
||
28) INPADOC DATABASE TO BE MADE AVAILABLE IN JAPAN (DIALOG)
|
||
29) SOFTWARE CD: DESCRIPTIONS & REVIEWS (CD-ROM)
|
||
30) MONARCH NOTES ON CD-ROM (CD-ROM)
|
||
|
||
An earlier issue of the newsletter reviewed The Encyclopedia of
|
||
Information Systems and Services, a three-volume "bible" for online
|
||
users and producers (9th edition):
|
||
EISS covers more than 30,000 organizations, systems, services,
|
||
more than five thousand databases, publications, software products,
|
||
etc. Their international listing covers 1,350 information
|
||
organizations in 70 countries, and has 535 pages.
|
||
Topics: online host services, videotex/teletext information
|
||
services, PC oriented services, data collection and analysis
|
||
services, abstracting and indexing services, computerized
|
||
searching services, software producers, magnetic tape/diskette
|
||
providers, micrographic applications and services, library and
|
||
information networks, library management systems, information on
|
||
demand services, transactional services (new category), document
|
||
delivery services, SDI/current awareness services, consultants,
|
||
associations, research and research projects, and electronic mail
|
||
applications.
|
||
Contact: Gale Research Company, 645 Griswold, Detroit, MI
|
||
48226, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-313-961-2242. Price per set: US$ 420.00.
|
||
|
||
The European Common Market
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
Many services bring news and information from the European Common
|
||
Market. The Common Market's free database service, I'M-GUIDE, is
|
||
a good place to start.
|
||
I'M-GUIDE is available through ECHO in Luxembourg by telnet to
|
||
echo.lu . At the question "PLEASE ENTER YOUR CODE," enter ECHO and
|
||
press Return.
|
||
You can search I'M-GUIDE for information sources, send email
|
||
inquiries to ECHO, and more. Searches can be done in English,
|
||
French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Danish, and Portuguese.
|
||
If you have problems using I'M-GUIDE, call the ECHO Help Desk
|
||
in Luxembourg at +352-34 98 11.
|
||
|
||
More sources about sources
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
The "Internet-Accessible Library Catalogs and Databases" report is
|
||
available by email from LISTSERV@UNMVM.BITNET. Put the following
|
||
command in the TEXT of your message:
|
||
|
||
GET LIBRARY PACKAGE
|
||
|
||
Cuadra/Elsevier (Box 872, Madison Square Station, New York, NY
|
||
10159-2101, U.S.A. Tel.: +1 212 633 3980) sells a Directory of
|
||
Online Databases, which lists databases available around the world.
|
||
The catalog can be searched on Orbit and Data-Star.
|
||
The Online Access Publishing Group Inc. (Chicago) sells "The
|
||
Online Access Guide." Annual subscription for this printed manual
|
||
costs US$18.95 (six issues - 1992).
|
||
The LINK-UP magazine is another interesting source. If living
|
||
in North America, contact Learned Information Inc., 143 Old Mariton
|
||
Pike, Medford, NJ 08055-8707, U.S.A.. If living elsewhere, contact
|
||
Learned Information (Europe) Ltd., Woodside, Hinskey Hill, Oxford
|
||
OX1 5AU, England, if you live outside North America. Tel.: +44 865
|
||
730 275. Price: US$25.00 for six issues/year (1993). An online
|
||
version is available through ZiffNet's Business Database Plus on
|
||
CompuServe.
|
||
Two monthly magazines, Information World Review (price: GBP
|
||
30/year) and FULLTEXT SOURCES ONLINE from BiblioData Inc. in the
|
||
United States, is also available through Learned Information.
|
||
(BiblioData, P.O. Box 61, Needham Heights, MA 02194, U.S.A.)
|
||
FULLTEXT SOURCES ONLINE publishes their listing of full-text
|
||
databases twice per year. The price is GBP 50 GBP per booklet or
|
||
GBP 90 per year.
|
||
The newsletter SCANNET TODAY (c/o Helsinki University of Techn.
|
||
Library, Otnaesvaegen 9, SF-02150 ESBO, Finland) presents news of
|
||
Scandinavian databases by country. Subscription is free.
|
||
Computer Readable Databases from Gale Research is available
|
||
both in print and online through Dialog. Write to Gale Research
|
||
Company, 645 Griswold, Detroit, MI 48226, U.S.A.
|
||
Many electronic journals and newsletters are available through
|
||
the Internet, covering fields from literature to molecular biology.
|
||
For a complete list, send a message to LISTSERV@ACADVM1.UOTTAWA.CA
|
||
with the following commands in the BODY of your text:
|
||
|
||
GET EJOURNL1 DIRECTRY
|
||
GET EJOURNL2 DIRECTRY
|
||
|
||
Practical hints about online searching
|
||
--------------------------------------
|
||
We cannot give a simple, universal recipe valid for all online
|
||
services. What is the best approach on one service, may be useless
|
||
on others.
|
||
Most services offer full online documentation of their search
|
||
commands. You can read the help text on screen while connected, or
|
||
retrieve it for later study.
|
||
Make a note about the following general tricks:
|
||
|
||
In conferences and forums:
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
Many services have commands for selective reading of messages.
|
||
For example, on CompuServe you can limit your search to given
|
||
sections. You can also select messages to be read based on
|
||
text strings in the subject titles. The command
|
||
|
||
rs;s;CIS Access from Japan;62928
|
||
|
||
displays all messages with the text "CIS Access from Japan"
|
||
in their subject titles starting with message number 62928.
|
||
|
||
Online searching often starts by selecting databases. The
|
||
next step is to enter search words (or text strings), and
|
||
a valid time frame (as in "between 1/1/90 and 1/1/91").
|
||
|
||
The following sample search terms are used on NewsNet:
|
||
|
||
VIDEO* search for all words starting with
|
||
VIDEO. "*" is a wild-card character
|
||
referring to any ending of the word.
|
||
VIDEO* matches words like VIDEOTEXT
|
||
and VIDEOCONFERENCE.
|
||
|
||
SONY AND VIDEO The word SONY and the word VIDEO. Both
|
||
words must be present in the document
|
||
to give a match.
|
||
|
||
SONY WITHIN/10 VIDEO Both words must be present in the text,
|
||
but they must not be farther apart than
|
||
ten words. (Proximity operators)
|
||
|
||
IBM OR APPLE Either one word OR the other.
|
||
|
||
Many services let you reuse your search terms in new search
|
||
commands. This can save you time and money, if there are too
|
||
many hits. For example: if IBM OR APPLE gives 1,000 hits,
|
||
limit the search by adding "FROM JANUARY 1st.," or by adding
|
||
the search word "NOTEBOOK*".
|
||
|
||
In file libraries
|
||
-----------------
|
||
The commands used to find files are similar to those used in
|
||
traditional databases. Often, you can limit the search by
|
||
library, date, file name, or file extension. You can search for
|
||
text strings in the description of the contents of a file, or
|
||
use key words.
|
||
|
||
Example: You're visiting a bulletin board based on the BBS
|
||
program RBBS-PC. You want a program that can show GIF graphics
|
||
picture files. Such files are typically described like this:
|
||
|
||
VUIMG31.EXE 103105 07-15-91 GIF*/TIFF/PCX Picture Viewer/Printer
|
||
|
||
From left to right: file name, size in bytes, date available,
|
||
and a 40 character description.
|
||
|
||
You can search the file descriptions for the string "gif". You
|
||
do this by entering the term "s gif all". This will probably
|
||
give you a list of files. Some will have the letters GIF in
|
||
the file name. Others will have them in the description field.
|
||
|
||
Using ANDs and ORs
|
||
------------------
|
||
Boolean searching may seem confusing at first, unless you already
|
||
understand the logic. There are three Boolean operators that
|
||
searchers use to combine search terms: AND, OR, and NOT.
|
||
Use the Boolean operator AND to retrieve smaller amounts of
|
||
information. Use AND when multiple words must be present in your
|
||
search results (MERCEDES AND VOLVO AND CITROEN AND PRICES).
|
||
Use OR to express related concepts or synonyms for your search
|
||
term (FRUIT OR APPLES OR PEARS OR BANANAS OR PEACHES).
|
||
Be careful when using the NOT operator. It gets rid of any record
|
||
in a database that contains the word that you've "notted" out. For
|
||
example, searching for "IBM NOT APPLE" drops records containing the
|
||
sentence, "IBM and Apple are computer giants." The record will be
|
||
dropped, even if this is the only mention of Apple in an article,
|
||
and though it is solely about IBM.
|
||
Use NOT to drop sets of hits that you have already seen. Use
|
||
NOT to exclude records with multiple meanings, like "CHIPS Not
|
||
POTATO" (if you are looking for chips rather than snack foods).
|
||
Often, it pays to start with a "quick-and-dirty" search by
|
||
throwing in words you think will do the trick. Then look at the
|
||
first five or 10 records, but look only at the headline and the
|
||
indexing. This will show you what terms are used by indexers to
|
||
describe your idea and the potential for confusion with other
|
||
ideas.
|
||
Use proximity operators to search multiword terms. If searching
|
||
for "market share," you want the two words within so many words of
|
||
another. The order of the words, however, doesn't matter. You can
|
||
accept both "market share" and "share of the market."
|
||
|
||
Searching by email
|
||
------------------
|
||
MCI Mail and MCI Fax have a program called Information Advantage,
|
||
under which online services and newsletters can deliver search
|
||
results and other information over the online services. Dialog,
|
||
Dun & Bradstreet, NewsNet, and Individual Inc. have signed up for
|
||
the program.
|
||
You can request a search by direct email to say Dialog. The
|
||
search results will be returned to you via MCI Mail or MCI Fax.
|
||
With Dun and Bradstreet, you call them for a credit report and
|
||
they send it to you. With History Associates, you send them a
|
||
message via MCI Mail, and they report to you.
|
||
|
||
Using BITNET discussion lists through Internet
|
||
----------------------------------------------
|
||
To get a directory of Internet/BITNET mailing lists, send the
|
||
following email message:
|
||
|
||
To: LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU
|
||
Subject: (keep this blank)
|
||
Text:
|
||
LIST GLOBAL
|
||
|
||
You will receive a LONG list of available sources of information. A
|
||
recent copy had over two thousand lines of text. Each mailing list
|
||
is described with one line. All these mailing lists can be used by
|
||
email through the Internet. Here is a random selection:
|
||
|
||
Network-wide ID Full address List title
|
||
--------------- ------------ ----------
|
||
AESRG-L AESRG-L@UMCVMB Applied Expert Systems Research Group List
|
||
AGRIC-L AGRIC-L@UGA Agriculture Discussion
|
||
AIDSNEWS AIDSNEWS@EB0UB011 AIDS/HIV News
|
||
ANIME-L ANIME-L@VTVM1 Japanese animedia and other animation news.
|
||
BANYAN BANYAN-L@AKRONVM Banyan Networks Discussion List
|
||
BRIDGE BRIDGE@NDSUVM1 Bridge Communication products
|
||
CHEM-L CHEM-L@UOGUELPH Chemistry discussion
|
||
EJCREC EJCREC@RPIECS Electronic Journal of Communication
|
||
FAMCOMM FAMCOMM@RPICICGE Marital/family & relational communication
|
||
SOVNET-L SOVNET-L@INDYCMS USSR electronic communication list
|
||
|
||
The column "Network-wide ID" contains the names of the mailing
|
||
lists. "Full address" contains their BITNET email addresses. "List
|
||
title" is a short textual description of each conference.
|
||
Keep the list on your hard disk. This makes it easier to find
|
||
sources of information, when you need them.
|
||
|
||
Subscribing to mailing lists
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
Each line in the list above refers to a mailing list, also often
|
||
called 'discussion list'. They work like online conferences or
|
||
message sections on bulletin boards, but technically they are
|
||
different. (Read about KIDLINK in Chapter 2 for background
|
||
information.)
|
||
All BITNET mailing lists are controlled by a program called
|
||
LISTSERV on the host computer given in column two above (for
|
||
example @UMCVMB). They offer "conferencing" with the following
|
||
important functions:
|
||
|
||
* All "discussion items" (i.e., electronic messages sent to the
|
||
lists' email address) are distributed to all subscribers.
|
||
* All messages are automatically stored in notebook archives.
|
||
You can search these log files, and you can have them sent
|
||
to you as electronic mail.
|
||
* Files can be stored in the lists' associated file libraries
|
||
for distribution to subscribers on demand.
|
||
|
||
Where to send a subscription request, depends on where you are
|
||
communicating from relative to the host running the LISTSERV. If
|
||
this host is your nearest BITNET LISTSERV, then send the request
|
||
to the address in column two by replacing the list name by LISTSERV.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
AESRG-L@UMCVMB is administered by LISTSERV@UMCVMB. Subscribe
|
||
(or signoff) by email to LISTSERV@UMCVMB.BITNET .
|
||
|
||
If there is a LISTSERV closer to where you live, then you should
|
||
subscribe to the nearby system rather than to the remote. This
|
||
helps keep the total costs of the international network down.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
You live in Norway. The nearest LISTSERV is at FINHUTC. To
|
||
subscribe to AESRG-L@UMCVMB, send to LISTSERV@FINHUTC.BITNET .
|
||
|
||
Use the addresses in column two when sending messages to the other
|
||
members of the discussion lists, but do NOT send your subscription
|
||
requests to this address!! If you do, it will be forwarded to all
|
||
members of the mailing list. Chances are that nothing will happen,
|
||
and everybody will see how sloppy you are.
|
||
So, you subscribe by sending a command to a LISTSERV. The
|
||
method is similar to what we did when subscribing to Infonets in
|
||
Chapter 7. If your name is Jens Jensen, and you want to subscribe
|
||
to SOVNET-L, send this message through the Internet (assuming that
|
||
NDSUM1 is your nearest LISTSERV host):
|
||
|
||
To: LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET
|
||
Subject: (You can write anything here. Will be ignored.)
|
||
Text: SUB SOVNET-L Jens Jensen
|
||
|
||
When your subscription has been registered, you will receive a
|
||
confirmation. From this date, all messages sent to the list will be
|
||
forwarded to your mailbox. (Send "SIGNOFF SOVNET-L" to this address,
|
||
when you have had enough.)
|
||
Some lists will forward each message to you upon receipt. Others
|
||
will send a periodic digest (weekly, monthly, etc.).
|
||
To send a message to SOVNET-L, send to the BITNET address in
|
||
column two above. Send to
|
||
|
||
SOVNET-L@INDYCMS.BITNET
|
||
|
||
Review the following example. Most BITNET lists will accept these
|
||
commands.
|
||
|
||
Example: Subscription to the China list
|
||
---------------------------------------
|
||
CHINA-NN is listed like this in the List of Lists:
|
||
|
||
CHINA-NN CHINA-NN@ASUACAD China News Digest (Global News)
|
||
|
||
Scandinavians may subscribe to CHINA-NN by Internet mail to
|
||
LISTSERV@FINHUTC.BITNET . North American users may send their mail
|
||
to LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET .
|
||
If your name is Winston Hansen, write the following command in the
|
||
TEXT of the message
|
||
|
||
SUB CHINA-NN Winston Hansen
|
||
|
||
When you want to leave CHINA-NN, send a cancellation message like
|
||
this:
|
||
|
||
To: LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET
|
||
Subject: (nothing here)
|
||
SIGNOFF CHINA-NN
|
||
|
||
NOTE: Send the cancellation command to the address you used, when
|
||
subscribing! If you subscribed through LISTSERV@FINHUTC, sending
|
||
the SIGNOFF command to LISTSERV@NDSUVM1 will get you nowhere. Send
|
||
to LISTSERV@FINHUTC.
|
||
Never send the SIGNOFF command to the discussion list itself!
|
||
Always send to the LISTSERV.
|
||
|
||
Monitoring the action
|
||
---------------------
|
||
THINKNET is an online magazine forum dedicated to "thoughtfulness in
|
||
the cybertime environment." It brings reviews of significant and
|
||
thought-provoking exchanges within our new electronic nation.
|
||
This electronic publication is free. If you're interested in
|
||
philosophy, subscribe by sending a message through Internet to
|
||
thinknet@world.std.com . Write the following in the TEXT of the
|
||
message:
|
||
|
||
SEND THINKNET TO Your-Full-Name AT UserId@Your-Internet-Email-Address
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
If your email address is opresno@extern.uio.no and your name
|
||
Odd de Presno, use the following command:
|
||
|
||
SEND THINKNET TO Odd de Presno AT OPRESNO@EXTERN.UIO.NO
|
||
|
||
THINKNET is also available through the Philosophy conference on The
|
||
Well, and on GEnie in the Philosophy category under the Religion
|
||
and Ethics Bulletin Board. (Hard copy versions can be bought
|
||
through THINKNET, PO BOX 8383, Orange CA 92664-8383, U.S.A.).
|
||
If you're on The Well, read the topic "News from Around Well
|
||
Conferences" to learn about new developments.
|
||
These are some mailing lists that may help you locate sources
|
||
of interest:
|
||
|
||
NETSCOUT (NETSCOUT@VMTECMEX) The BITnet/Internet scouts.
|
||
Subscribe by email to LISTSERV@VMTECMEX.BITNET
|
||
with the following in the TEXT of your message
|
||
SUB NETSCOUT yourfirstname yourlastname
|
||
|
||
This is where you can discuss and exchange information
|
||
about servers, FTP sites, Filelists, lists, tools, and
|
||
any related aspects.
|
||
|
||
HELP-NET (HELP-NET@TEMPLEVM) BITNET/CREN/INTERNET Help Resource.
|
||
Send email to LISTSERV@TEMPLEVM.BITNET with the text
|
||
SUB HELP-NET yourfirstname yourlastname
|
||
|
||
The list's main purpose is to help solve user problems
|
||
with utilities and software related to the Internet
|
||
and BITNET networks. The library contains several good
|
||
help files for novice networkers. A great place for
|
||
new Internet users!
|
||
|
||
Other sources available through the Internet
|
||
--------------------------------------------
|
||
The Interest Groups List of Lists is available by electronic mail
|
||
from mail-server@nisc.sri.com . Send a message with the following
|
||
text in the message body:
|
||
|
||
Send netinfo/interest-groups
|
||
|
||
Note that as of April 1993, the file was over 1,100,000 bytes in
|
||
size. It will be returned to you in moderately sized pieces.
|
||
You can search the List of Lists by email. Say you're looking
|
||
for a mailing list related to Robotics. To find out, send a message
|
||
to LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU containing the following commands:
|
||
|
||
//ListSrch JOB Echo=No
|
||
Database Search DD=Rules
|
||
//Rules DD *
|
||
search robotics in lists
|
||
index
|
||
search robotics in intgroup
|
||
index
|
||
search robotics in new-list
|
||
index
|
||
|
||
Replace the search word 'robotics' with whatever else you may be
|
||
looking for.
|
||
The Usenet list of news groups and mailing lists is available on
|
||
hosts that run Usenet News or NetNews servers and/or clients in the
|
||
newsgroups news.announce.newusers and news.lists.
|
||
The members of news.newusers.questions, alt.internet.help,
|
||
alt.internet.access.wanted, and alt.internet.new-users readily
|
||
accept your help requests.
|
||
Alt.internet.services focuses on information about services
|
||
available on the Internet. It is for people with Internet accounts
|
||
who want to explore beyond their local computers, to take advantage
|
||
of the wealth of information and services on the net.
|
||
Services for discussion include:
|
||
* things you can telnet to (weather, library catalogs,
|
||
databases, and more),
|
||
* things you can FTP (like pictures, sounds, programs, data)
|
||
* clients/servers (like MUDs, IRC, Archie)
|
||
Every second week, a list of Internet services called the "Special
|
||
Internet Connections list" is posted to this newsgroup. It includes
|
||
everything from where to FTP pictures from space, how to find
|
||
agricultural information, public UNIX, online directories and
|
||
books, you name it.
|
||
Dartmouth maintains a merged list of the LISTSERV lists on
|
||
BITNET and the Interest Group lists on the Internet. Each mailing
|
||
list is represented by one line. To obtain this list, send a
|
||
message to LISTSERV@DARTCMS1.BITNET . Enter the following command
|
||
in the text of the message:
|
||
|
||
INDEX SIGLISTS
|
||
|
||
InterNIC Information Service maintains an announcement-only service
|
||
at LISTSERV@is.internic.net called net-happenings. It distributes
|
||
announcements about tools, conferences, calls for papers, news
|
||
items, new mailing lists, electronic newsletters like EDUPAGE, and
|
||
more. To subscribe, send a message to the LISTSERV containing this
|
||
command:
|
||
|
||
subscribe net-happenings Your Name
|
||
|
||
InterNIC's automated mail service is at MAILSERV@RS.INTERNIC.NET.
|
||
It allows access to documents and files via email. To use it, send
|
||
email to the Mailserv with the word "HELP" in the subject field of
|
||
your mail.
|
||
|
||
How to get more out of your magazine subscriptions
|
||
--------------------------------------------------
|
||
PC Magazine (U.S.A.) is one of those magazines that arrives here by
|
||
mail. We butcher them, whenever we find something of interest. The
|
||
"corpses" are dumped in a high pile on the floor.
|
||
To retrieve a story in this pile is difficult and time
|
||
consuming, unless the title is printed on the cover.
|
||
Luckily, there are shortcuts. Logon to PC MagNet on CompuServe.
|
||
Type GO PCMAG to get the following menu:
|
||
|
||
|
||
PC MagNet
|
||
|
||
1 Download a PC Magazine Utility
|
||
2 PC Magazine Utilities/Tips Forum
|
||
3 PC Magazine Editorial Forum
|
||
4 PC Magazine Programming Forum
|
||
5 PC Magazine After Hours Forum
|
||
6 PC Magazine Product Reviews Index
|
||
7 Free! - Take a Survey
|
||
8 Submissions to PC Magazine
|
||
9 Letters to the Editor
|
||
10 Subscribe to PC Magazine
|
||
|
||
Choice six lets you search for stories. Once you have a list with
|
||
page/issue references, turning the pages gets much easier.
|
||
PC Magazine is owned by the media giant Ziff-Davis. PC MagNet
|
||
is a part of ZiffNet on CompuServe. So is Computer Database Plus,
|
||
which lets you search through more than 250,000 articles from over
|
||
200 popular newspapers and magazines. The oldest articles are from
|
||
early 1987. The database is also available on CD-ROM, but the discs
|
||
cover only one year at a time.
|
||
CDP contains full-text from around 50 magazines, like Personal
|
||
Computing, Electronic News, MacWeek and Electronic Business.
|
||
Stories from the other magazines are available in abstracted form
|
||
only.
|
||
To search the database, CDP, you pay an extra US$24.00 per
|
||
hour. In addition, you pay US$1.00 per abstract and US$1.50 per
|
||
full-text article (1992). These fees are added to your normal
|
||
CompuServe access rates.
|
||
ZiffNet also offers Magazine Database Plus, a database with
|
||
stories from over 90 magazines covering science, business, sport,
|
||
people, personal finance, family, art and handicraft, cooking,
|
||
education, environment, travel, politics, consumer opinions, and
|
||
reviews of books and films.
|
||
The magazines include: Administrative Management, Aging,
|
||
Changing Times, The Atlantic, Canadian Business, Datamation,
|
||
Cosmopolitan, Dun's Business Month, The Economist, The Futurist,
|
||
High Technology Business, Journal of Small Business Management,
|
||
Management Today, The Nation, The New Republic, Online, Playboy,
|
||
Inc., Popular Science, Research & Development, Sales & Marketing
|
||
Management, Scientific American, Technology Review, UN Chronicle,
|
||
UNESCO Courier and U.S. News & World Report.
|
||
In the next chapter, we will present another ZiffNet magazine
|
||
database: the Business Database Plus.
|
||
Magazine Index (MI), from Information Access Company (U.S.A.),
|
||
is another source worth looking at. It covers over 500 consumer and
|
||
general-interest periodicals as diverse as Special Libraries and
|
||
Sky & Telescope, Motor Trend and Modern Maturity, Reader's Digest
|
||
and Rolling Stone. Many titles go as far back as 1959.
|
||
Although most of the database consists of brief citations, MI
|
||
also contains the complete text of selected stories from a long
|
||
list of periodicals. It is available through Dialog, CompuServe,
|
||
BRS, Data-Star, Dow Jones News/Retrieval, Nexis, and others.
|
||
Say you so often get references to a given magazine that you
|
||
want a paper subscription. Try the Electronic Newsstand, which is
|
||
available by gopher or telnet to gopher.netsys.com. If these
|
||
Internet commands are unavailable, try mail to staff@enews.com.
|
||
|
||
Finding that book
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Over 270 libraries around the world are accessible by the Internet
|
||
telnet command. Some of them can also be accessed by Internet mail.
|
||
This is the case with BIBSYS, a database operated by the Norwegian
|
||
universities' libraries.
|
||
I am into transcendental meditation. I'm therefore constantly
|
||
looking for books on narrow topics like "mantra". To search BIBSYS
|
||
for titles of interest, I sent mail to genserv@pollux.bibsys.no .
|
||
The search word was entered in the subject title of the message. By
|
||
return email, I got the following report:
|
||
|
||
Date: Fri, 21 Jul 93 13:54:18 NOR
|
||
From: GENSERV@POLLUX.BIBSYS.NO
|
||
Subject: Searching BIBSYS
|
||
|
||
Search request : MANTRA
|
||
Database-id : BIBSYS
|
||
Search result : 5 hits.
|
||
|
||
The following is one of the references. I have forwarded it to my
|
||
local library for processing:
|
||
|
||
Forfatter : Gonda, J.
|
||
Tittel : Mantra interpretation in the Satapatha-Brahmana
|
||
/ by J. Gonda.
|
||
Trykt : Leiden : E.J. Brill, 1988.
|
||
Sidetall : X, 285 s.
|
||
I serie : (Orientalia Rheno-traiectina ; 32)
|
||
ISBN : 90-04-08776-1
|
||
1 - UHF 90ka03324 - UHF/INDO Rh III b Gon
|
||
|
||
The Danish library database REX may be accessed through most
|
||
international packet switching networks. Its Network User Address
|
||
(NUA) is 23824125080000. When connected, enter RC8000 and press
|
||
return. Press ESC once. The system will respond with ATT. Enter KB
|
||
REX, and you're ready to search Dansk Bogfortegnelse since 1980,
|
||
Dansk Musikfortegnelse since 1980, and ISDS Denmark.
|
||
BARTON is the library system of Massachusetts Institute of
|
||
Technology. Its database contains everything received since 1974
|
||
except magazine articles, brochures, and technical reports from
|
||
sources outside M.I.T. Phone: +1-617-258-6700 (1200 bps). Press
|
||
ENTER a couple of times to access the system.
|
||
On CompuServe, there is a section for book collectors in the
|
||
Coin/Stamp/Collectibles Forum, and a Weekly Book Chat section in
|
||
the ScienceFiction & Fantasy Forum. In the Electronic Mall, you can
|
||
buy books directly from Ballantine Books, Penguin Books, Small
|
||
Computer Book Club, The McGraw-Hill Book Company, Time-Life Books
|
||
and Walden Computer Books.
|
||
On the Internet, Roswell Computer Books Ltd. (Canada) has an
|
||
online bookstore with a database of over 7,000 titles (1993).
|
||
Gopher to nstn.ns.ca, select "Other Gophers in Nova Scotia", and
|
||
then "Roswell Electronic Computer Bookstore". Failing access to
|
||
gopher, send your email requests to roswell@fox.nstn.ns.ca .
|
||
The Book Review Digest (GO BOOKREVIEW) is CompuServe's database
|
||
of bibliographical references and abstracts of reviews (since
|
||
1983). You can search by title, author, and keywords found in the
|
||
text of book reviews. CompuServe also offers book reviews through
|
||
Magazine Database Plus.
|
||
"Books in print" is a North American bibliographic reference
|
||
database. It is available on BRS and CompuServe.
|
||
South African Bibliographic and Information Network has a
|
||
gopher service at info2.sabinet.co.za.
|
||
FidoNet has COMICS (The Comic Book Echo), BITNET the list Rare
|
||
Book and Special Collections Catalogers (NOTRBCAT@INDYCMS). NewsNet
|
||
has the COMPUTER BOOK REVIEW newsletter and on The Well you'll find
|
||
the "Computer Books" conference. OCLC's WorldCat is a reference
|
||
database covering books and materials in libraries worldwide.
|
||
Bookworms may appreciate the BITNET discussion list DOROTHYL
|
||
(LISTSERV@KENTVM.KENT.EDU), and especially if they like Agatha
|
||
Christie, Josephine Tey and Dorothy L. Sayers.
|
||
On Usenet, you will find alt.books.reviews, k12.library,
|
||
alt.books.technical, rec.arts.books, and misc. books.technical, and
|
||
more.
|
||
On the Internet, there are a rapidly growing number of library
|
||
online public-access catalogs (OPACs) from all over the world. Some
|
||
provide users with access to additional resources, such as
|
||
periodical indexes of specialized databases. More than 270 library
|
||
catalogs are now online (1992).
|
||
An up-to-date directory of libraries that are interactively
|
||
accessible through Internet can be had by anonymous ftp from
|
||
ftp.unt.edu (then: cd library). File name: LIBRARIES.TXT. Check out
|
||
the end of Chapter 12 for how to get the file by email (ftpmail).
|
||
You will also find full electronic versions of books. This book
|
||
is one example. Many texts are courtesy of Project Gutenberg, an
|
||
organization whose goal is to develop a library of 10,000 public
|
||
domain electronic texts by the year 2000.
|
||
Since books are often quite large, they are somewhat bulky for
|
||
email transfer. If you have direct Internet access, use anonymous
|
||
ftp instead.
|
||
Many books are available through the /pub/almanac/etext
|
||
directory at oes.orst.edu. For more about how to use the Almanac
|
||
information server, send Almanac@oes.orst.edu the following email
|
||
command:
|
||
|
||
send guide
|
||
|
||
For a list of books, add the line
|
||
|
||
send gutenberg catalog
|
||
|
||
Among the offerings, you'll find The Complete Sherlock Holmes
|
||
Mysteries, The Unabridged Works of Shakespeare, Aesop's Fables,
|
||
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, The Holy Bible, The Love
|
||
Teachings of Kama Sutra, The Holy Koran, The Oedipus Trilogy
|
||
(Sophocles), Peter Pan, Roget's Thesaurus (1911), and The World
|
||
Fact Book (1990 - CIA).
|
||
If quite impossible to locate a given book, try the Rare Books
|
||
and Special Collections Forum at EXLIBRIS@RUTVM1.BITNET.
|
||
Non-Chinese speaking people will probably classify Chinese
|
||
poems as 'rare'. Many of them are impossible to read, unless your
|
||
computer can handle the special characters, and you know their
|
||
meaning.
|
||
Still interested? If yes, subscribe to CHPOEM-L@UBVM.BITNET .
|
||
Be prepared to use your Big5 and GuoBiao utilities.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 11: Getting an edge over your competitor
|
||
================================================
|
||
|
||
|
||
We must be willing to risk change to keep apace with rapid
|
||
change.
|
||
|
||
The key is moderation and balance, supported by sufficient
|
||
information to allow meaningful feedback.
|
||
|
||
It requires adaption by management and staff in developing
|
||
the necessary skills and vision.
|
||
|
||
This chapter starts with how to use the networks to manage
|
||
projects. Next, it treats how to monitor competitors, prospects,
|
||
suppliers, markets, technologies, and trends. It winds down with
|
||
marketing and sales by modem.
|
||
|
||
Project coordination
|
||
--------------------
|
||
So far we have mainly been looking at sources of information. Let
|
||
us start this chapter with some words about 'online conference
|
||
rooms' for project coordination.
|
||
Several services offer rental of private conference areas to
|
||
businesses. Corporations have discovered them to be an efficient
|
||
way of coordinating a group of people, who are far apart from each
|
||
other geographically. They are also useful when team members are
|
||
constantly on the move and hard to gather face to face.
|
||
Many international companies use such services regularly. The
|
||
applications are different. They range from tight coordination with
|
||
suppliers and subcontractors, to development of company strategies
|
||
and new organizational structures.
|
||
Renting an online conference room has advantages over doing it
|
||
in-house. The company does not have to buy software, hardware,
|
||
expensive equipment for communications, and hire people for to run
|
||
and maintain a conferencing system. The more international the
|
||
business, the better.
|
||
For ideas about how to set up and operate a coordination
|
||
conference. Study how volunteer organizations do it. One place to
|
||
check out is KIDPLAN, one of several coordination conferences used
|
||
by KIDLINK (see Chapter 2 and 5).
|
||
KIDPLAN is usually most active during April and May each year.
|
||
This is when their annual projects are being closed down, and new
|
||
projects are started. Read the dialog between coordinators to get
|
||
an idea of how the medium is being used.
|
||
Old conference messages are stored in notebook files. You can
|
||
therefore have the full coordination dialogs sent you by email.
|
||
Send all requests for notebook files to
|
||
|
||
LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU
|
||
|
||
Getting notebook files is a two-step process. In your first message
|
||
to the LISTSERV, ask for a list of available files. Do this by
|
||
using the following command in your email:
|
||
|
||
INDEX KIDPLAN
|
||
|
||
The LISTSERV will return a list of files. The following part is of
|
||
particular interest:
|
||
|
||
101/2/ KIDPLAN LOG9105B ALL OWN V 80 2397 91/05/14
|
||
23:40:22 Started on Wed, 8 May 91 00:11:09 CDT
|
||
102/2/ KIDPLAN LOG9105C ALL OWN V 80 3141 91/05/21
|
||
20:44:16 Started on Wed, 15 May 91 01:24:51 CDT
|
||
104/2/ KIDPLAN LOG9105D ALL OWN V 80 2685 91/05/28
|
||
22:34:31 Started on Wed, 22 May 91 17:01:21 +0200
|
||
|
||
Don't bother about the details. You just want file names, and
|
||
dates. The file LOG9105B contains all messages from 8 May 1991
|
||
until 15 May.
|
||
If you want all these three files, send another message to
|
||
LISTSERV with the following lines:
|
||
|
||
GET KIDPLAN LOG9105B
|
||
GET KIDPLAN LOG9105C
|
||
GET KIDPLAN LOG9105D
|
||
|
||
The files will be forwarded to your mailbox.
|
||
Note: Some mailbox services have restrictions on the size of
|
||
incoming mail. This may prevent you from receiving large notebook
|
||
files. If this happens, contact your local postmaster for help.
|
||
Some email systems are unable to forward your return-address
|
||
correctly to LISTSERV. If you suspect that this is the reason for
|
||
lack of success, try the following commands:
|
||
|
||
GIVE KIDPLAN LOG9105B TO Your-Correct-Return-Address
|
||
GIVE KIDPLAN LOG9105C TO Your-Correct-Return-Address
|
||
GIVE KIDPLAN LOG9105D TO Your-Correct-Return-Address
|
||
|
||
Making it work
|
||
--------------
|
||
Making online conferences and task force meetings work, can be a
|
||
challenge. Most of the dialog is based on the written word. The
|
||
flow of information can be substantial thus causing an information
|
||
overload for some participants.
|
||
To overcome this, many companies appoint moderator-organizers
|
||
for their online conferences. This person:
|
||
|
||
Adds value by setting agendas; summarizing points; getting
|
||
the discussion(s) back on track; moving on to the next
|
||
point; mediating debate; maintaining address and member
|
||
lists; acting as general sparkplug/motivator to keep things
|
||
flowing by making sure that contributions are acknowledged,
|
||
relevant points are noted, new members are welcomed, silent
|
||
"Read-Only Members" are encouraged to participate, and the
|
||
general atmosphere is kept appropriate to the goals of the
|
||
conference/task force meeting.
|
||
|
||
Great online conferences don't just happen. Hard work is required.
|
||
A few people must be responsible for getting the meetings fired up
|
||
and keep the discussion rolling.
|
||
The meeting's organization may depend on the number of
|
||
participants, where they come from, the exclusivity of the forum,
|
||
and the purpose of the "meeting."
|
||
In large meetings, with free access for outsiders, the best
|
||
strategy may be to appoint a Moderator-Editor. This person
|
||
|
||
Filters contributions, gathers new information, summarizes
|
||
scattered contributions, does background research.
|
||
|
||
Filtering may be needed in conferences that are open to customers
|
||
and media. The main purpose, however, is to help participants cope
|
||
with the absolute flow of information.
|
||
A conference can have an educational purpose. If so, you may
|
||
bring in someone who can add value by bringing experience and
|
||
expertise to the group.
|
||
You will also need someone to do all the dirty jobs everyone
|
||
expects to be done - but never notices until they are not done.
|
||
This person must keep the show running by serving as a benevolent
|
||
tyrant, sheriff, judge, mediator, general scapegoat, and by playing
|
||
a role in setting the general policy and atmosphere of the meeting.
|
||
Now, back to the 'normal' applications of the online resource.
|
||
|
||
Monitoring what others do
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
The best business opportunities are outside your company, in the
|
||
external world. We need to monitor customers and markets, find
|
||
technologies to help develop and build products, research new
|
||
business actions, find new subcontractors and suppliers, people to
|
||
hire, and persons to influence to boost sales.
|
||
In this marketing age, where sales calls cost hundreds of
|
||
dollars and business-to-business marketers use the telephone or
|
||
the mails to reach prospects, complete and accurate market lists
|
||
are most valuable commodities.
|
||
There are many other questions: What are our most important
|
||
customers and their key people doing? What new products are they
|
||
promoting? Who are their joint-venture partners? What else may
|
||
influence their willingness to buy from us?
|
||
What prices are our major suppliers offering other buyers?
|
||
Should we get other sources for supplies? What major contracts have
|
||
they received recently? Will these influence their ability to serve
|
||
our needs?
|
||
What new technologies are available now and how are they being
|
||
used by others?
|
||
Threats are the reverse side of opportunities. What are our
|
||
competitors doing? What products and services have they launched
|
||
recently? Are they successful? What are our competitors' weaknesses
|
||
and strengths? What relationships do they maintain with our most
|
||
important customers? How is their customer support functioning, and
|
||
what methods are they using in their quality assurance?
|
||
Each company has its own priorities when it comes to watching
|
||
the external environment. The information needs are different from
|
||
company to company, depending on what products and services that
|
||
are offered, the technological level of the company, the markets
|
||
that they address, and more.
|
||
Needs and priorities also differ by department and person, for
|
||
example depending on whether a user is the president, a marketing
|
||
manager, product manager, sales man, or has a position in finance
|
||
or production.
|
||
Remember your priorities when going online to search. You
|
||
cannot possibly capture and digest all information that is there.
|
||
Your basic problem remains to find the right information in the
|
||
right form at the right time.
|
||
|
||
Build your own, local 'database'
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
It does not take much effort to check one hundred different topics
|
||
from multiple online sources on a daily basis. The computer will do
|
||
it for you.
|
||
Also, you do not have to read all stories as carefully as you
|
||
would with printed material. Most experienced users just read what
|
||
is important now, and save selected parts of the retrieved texts on
|
||
their hard disks for later reference.
|
||
We handle printed material differently. Most of us make notes
|
||
in the margins, underline, use colors, cut out pages and put into
|
||
folders. These tricks are important, since it is so hard to find
|
||
information in a pile of papers.
|
||
Not so with electronic information. With the right tools, you
|
||
can locate information on your computer's hard disk in seconds.
|
||
In seven seconds, I just searched the equivalent of 2000 pages
|
||
of printed text for all occurrences of the combined search words
|
||
'SONY' and 'CD-ROM'!
|
||
My tool was the shareware program LOOKFOR (see Chapter 14). It
|
||
searched through 4.2 megabyte on my 80486-based notebook computer.
|
||
If you use an indexing program, the search may be completed even
|
||
faster.
|
||
I guess you can see it coming. My personal databases usually
|
||
give more direct value during my working day, than what I have on
|
||
paper, and have available online.
|
||
My hard disks contain megabytes of texts retrieved from various
|
||
online services, but only what I have decided to keep. This private
|
||
database therefore contains more relevant information per kilobyte
|
||
than the online databases I'm using. Searching the data often gives
|
||
enough good hits to keep me from going online for more.
|
||
|
||
| I repeat: You will often get better results when searching your |
|
||
| own subset of selected online databases, than by going online |
|
||
| to get information. It is usually easier and faster. |
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, your in-house database will never be fully up-
|
||
to-date. Too many things happen all the time.
|
||
Also, the search terms used for your daily intake of news will
|
||
never cover all future needs. Occasionally, you must go online to
|
||
get additional information for a project, a report, a plan.
|
||
Updating your database means going online often to find new
|
||
supplementary information.
|
||
|
||
| Regular monitoring gives the highest returns, and is required |
|
||
| if you want to have an edge over your competitors. |
|
||
|
||
For beginners, the best strategy will often be to start with the
|
||
general, and gradually dig deeper into industry specific details.
|
||
Let us now review some good hunting grounds for information, and
|
||
how to use them.
|
||
|
||
Clipping the news
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Several online services offer 'clipping services'. They select the
|
||
news that you want - 24 hours a day - from a continuous stream of
|
||
stories from newspapers, magazines, news agencies and newsletters.
|
||
Several services make news immediately available, when they
|
||
have been received by satellite. The delay previously used to
|
||
protect the interests of print media is disappearing quickly.
|
||
Online services usually deliver news sooner than in print media,
|
||
radio or TV.
|
||
You select stories by giving the online service a set of search
|
||
terms. The hits are then sent to your electronic mailbox, for you
|
||
to retrieve at will.
|
||
'Clipping' gives an enormous advantage. Few important details
|
||
escape your attention, even when you cannot go online daily. The
|
||
stories will stay in your mailbox until you have read them.
|
||
|
||
'Clipping' on CompuServe
|
||
------------------------
|
||
CompuServe's Executive News Service (ENS) monitor more than 8,000
|
||
stories daily. They use sources like Deutsche Press-Agentur, Kyodo
|
||
News Service, TASS, Xinhua News Agency, the Washington Post, OTC
|
||
News-Alert, Reuters Financial News Wire, Associated Press, UPI and
|
||
Reuters World Report, IDG PR Service, Inter Press Service (IPS),
|
||
Middle East News Network and European Community Report.
|
||
One of them, Reuters, has 1,200 journalists in 120 bureaus all
|
||
over the world. They write company news reports about revenue,
|
||
profit, dividend, purchases of other companies, changes in
|
||
management, and other important items for judging a company's
|
||
results. They write regular opinions about Industry, Governments,
|
||
Economics, Leading indicators, and Commerce.
|
||
Reuters also offers full-text stories from Financial Times and
|
||
other leading European newspapers. Its Textline is a database with
|
||
news from some 1,500 publications in over 40 countries. It includes
|
||
Reuters' own news services, and has translated abstracts of stories
|
||
from some 17 languages. The database reaches back 10 years and is
|
||
updated at around one million articles per year. (Textline is also
|
||
available on Nexis, Data-Star, and Dialog.)
|
||
Another one, the IDG PR Service, sends out high-tech related
|
||
news gathered by the staffs of IDG's magazines. InterPress Service
|
||
covers Third World countries. Middle East News Network integrates
|
||
the contents of 28 information sources covering this region of the
|
||
world.
|
||
The Executive News Service lets you define up to three
|
||
'clipping folders'. Supply up to seven 'key phrases' that define
|
||
your interests. These key phrases will be used when searching
|
||
stories as they are sent. Hits will be 'clipped' and held in a
|
||
folder for you to review at your convenience.
|
||
Each folder can hold 500 stories. When creating a clipping
|
||
folder, you set an expiration date and specify how many days a
|
||
clipped story is to be held (maximum 14 days).
|
||
To browse the contents of a folder, select it from the menu.
|
||
Stories can be listed by headlines or leads. Select those you want
|
||
to read, forward to others as email, or copy to another folder.
|
||
Delete those that you do not need.
|
||
Defining key phrases is simple. The important thing is not to
|
||
get too much nor too little. General phrases will give you many
|
||
unwanted stories while too narrow phrases will cause you to miss
|
||
pertinent stories. Let me illustrate with an example:
|
||
|
||
The phrase APPLE COMPUTERS will only clip stories that have the
|
||
words APPLE and COMPUTERS next to each other. This may be too
|
||
narrow. Specifying just APPLE or just COMPUTERS would be too
|
||
broad. Entering APPLE + COMPUTERS is a better phrase since the
|
||
words can appear anywhere in the story, and not necessarily
|
||
next to each other.
|
||
|
||
ENS carries an hourly surcharge of US$15/hour over base connect
|
||
rates.
|
||
|
||
Clipping on NewsNet
|
||
-------------------
|
||
NewsNet greets users with this opening screen:
|
||
|
||
-----------------
|
||
- N E W S N E T -
|
||
-----------------
|
||
W O R K I N G K N O W L E D G E
|
||
|
||
***New--Electromagnetic Field Litigation Reporter (EY86) tracks
|
||
developments in every important legal action involving
|
||
electromagnetic radiation from power lines, cellular phones,
|
||
VTDs, and radar and microwave equipment.
|
||
|
||
***The title of HH15 has been changed to Cancer Researcher
|
||
Weekly. This service was formerly entitled Cancer Weekly.
|
||
|
||
***Important work in the blood field throughout the world is
|
||
covered by Blood Week (HH44), including research, literature,
|
||
and upcoming events.
|
||
|
||
***TB Weekly (HH45) is an internationally-focused newsletter
|
||
that concentrates on tuberculosis-related news and research,
|
||
including business developments.
|
||
|
||
|
||
New Services on NewsNet:
|
||
|
||
TB Weekly (HH45)
|
||
Blood Weekly (HH44)
|
||
Electromagnetic Field Litigation Reporter (EY86)
|
||
Chapter 11 Update (FI82)
|
||
Tobacco Industry Litigation Reporter (HH48)
|
||
Trade and Development Opportunities (GT50)
|
||
|
||
For details on new services, enter READ PB99# or HELP followed by the
|
||
service code.
|
||
|
||
NewsNet's clipping service, NewsFlash, will automatically search
|
||
all new editions of newsletters selected for monitoring. The hits
|
||
will be sent to your mailbox, and be retained there for up to ten
|
||
weeks besides the current week.
|
||
Your selection of newsletters can be extended to include news
|
||
stories from United Press International (UPI), Reuters News Reports,
|
||
Associated Press, Business Wire, PR Newswire, and others.
|
||
For some time, I clipped newsletters in the telecommunications
|
||
group using the keywords 'Victoria' (an American communication
|
||
project) and 'KDD' (the Japanese telecom giant). When I called
|
||
NewsFlash to check, it typically reported:
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEWSFLASH NOTIFICATION
|
||
****************************************************************
|
||
4 Total Newsflash hits. Use STOP to stop and delete all.
|
||
New Hits = 4 Saved Items = 0
|
||
|
||
TE01 7/17/89 == VICTORIA == Headline #1
|
||
COOKE SELLS CABLE HOLDINGS TO 6-MEMBER GROUP FOR NEARLY $1.6 BILLION
|
||
Jack Cooke's cable systems will be sold to 6-member consortium
|
||
|
||
TE11 7/17/89 == VICTORIA == Headline #2
|
||
BOCs' PROGRESS TOWARD INTELLIGENT NETWORK ARCHITECTURE INTERTWINED
|
||
WITH DIFFICULT INTERNETWORKING NEGOTIATIONS, PENDING DECREE COURT
|
||
|
||
EC89 7/18/89 == KDD == Headline #3
|
||
KDD OPENS NY/LONDON OFFICES
|
||
TOKYO, JAPAN, 1989 JUL 14 (NB) -- Kokusai Denshin Denwa (KDD),
|
||
|
||
EC89 8/22/89 == KDD == Headline #4
|
||
FOREIGNERS CAN BUY INTO KDD
|
||
TOKYO, JAPAN, 1989 AUG 17 -- The Japanese government is planning
|
||
|
||
Enter Headline numbers or ALL to read, MORE, AGAIN, SAVE, STOP, or HELP
|
||
-->
|
||
|
||
NewsNet's databases grow by more than 400 stories per day. Your
|
||
search profiles may contain an almost unlimited number of subjects.
|
||
Delivery of hits is concurrent. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days
|
||
a week.
|
||
Sprintmail's clipping service (U.S.A.) scans stories from more
|
||
than 15 international newswires. FT Profile's E-mail Alert searches
|
||
daily on that particular day's issue of the Financial Times.
|
||
Dow Jones News/Retrieval has NewsScan (//CLIP). It can deliver
|
||
by fax or email to a mailbox on another online service. On GEnie,
|
||
use QuikNews Express, a personalized news clipping service that is
|
||
integrated with the Quik-Comm System email service.
|
||
Clarinet, a commercial news service available through Usenet,
|
||
also has a clipping program.
|
||
|
||
When clipping is impossible
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
Many services do not offer clipping. Here, your alternative is
|
||
various methods of regular selective reading.
|
||
Many conferencing systems let you select messages by keywords.
|
||
BIX has Keyword Indexer. It let you search public conferences after
|
||
a key word or phrase and report hits. Then it offers you to review
|
||
(or retrieve) messages of interest.
|
||
CompuServe's forums have efficient 'read selective' and 'quick
|
||
scan' commands. Another trick is to limit your reading to specific
|
||
message sections.
|
||
The high forum message volume is a special problem on this
|
||
service. Old messages are regularly deleted to make room for new
|
||
ones. (Often called "scroll rate.") Some popular forums do not keep
|
||
messages for more than a couple of days before letting them go. You
|
||
must visit often to get all new information.
|
||
Many bulletin boards can be told to store unread messages about
|
||
given topics in a compressed transportation file. This file can
|
||
then be retrieved at high speed. Special communication programs
|
||
(often called offline readers) and commands are available to
|
||
automate this completely.
|
||
Powerful scripts (see Chapter 12) can do automatic selection of
|
||
news stories based on the occurrence of keywords (e.g., a company
|
||
name) in headlines. I have developed such a system for selecting
|
||
news from the Online Today magazine on CompuServe.
|
||
|
||
Subscription services
|
||
---------------------
|
||
It is useful to dig, dig, and dig for occurrences of the same
|
||
search words, but digging is not enough. Unless you periodically
|
||
scan "the horizon," you risk missing new trends, viewpoints and
|
||
other important information.
|
||
It can be difficult to find good sources of information that
|
||
suits your needs. One trick is to watch the reports from your
|
||
clipping services. Over time, you may discover that some sources
|
||
bring more interesting stories than others. Take a closer look at
|
||
these. Consider browsing their full index of stories regularly.
|
||
If your company plans exportation to countries in Asia, check
|
||
out MARKET: ASIA PACIFIC on NewsNet. The newsletter is published
|
||
monthly by W-Two Publications, Ltd., 202 The Commons, Suite 401,
|
||
Ithaca, NY 14850, U.S.A. (phone: +1-607-277-0934). Annual print
|
||
subscription rate: US$279.
|
||
The index itself may be a barometer of what goes on. Here is an
|
||
example. Note the number of Words/Lines. Do these numbers tell a
|
||
story?
|
||
|
||
July 1, 1993
|
||
|
||
Head # Headline Words /Lines
|
||
------ ---------------------------------------------------- ------------
|
||
1) THE PHILIPPINES IS AT A TURG POINT 616/78
|
||
2) CHINA AND KOREA WILL LEAD REGIONAL ECONOMIC BOOM 315/41
|
||
3) ASIAN COMPENSATION IS STILL LOW, BUT RISING QUICKLY 303/38
|
||
4) CONSUMER GOODS WON'T BE ALL THE CHINESE BUY 221/29
|
||
5) WOMEN BEAR THE BRUNT OF CAMBODIA'S TROUBLES 284/34
|
||
6) TAIWAN MAKES A MOVE TOWARD THE CASHLESS SOCIETY 243/29
|
||
7) TIPS ON MANAGING CULTURAL HARMONY IN ASIA 264/37
|
||
8) TAIWANESE BECOME MORE DISCERNING, HARDER TO REACH 217/27
|
||
9) DIRECT MARKETING HEADED FOR GROWTH IN SINGAPORE 205/27
|
||
10) TOURISM IN MALAYSIA WILL GROW 610/76
|
||
11) CHONGQING: FUTURE POWERHOUSE 2708/342
|
||
|
||
It is a good idea to visit NewsNet to gather intelligence. Review
|
||
indexes of potentially interesting newsletters. Save them on your
|
||
hard disk for future references. You never know when they may be of
|
||
use.
|
||
The newsletters within computers and electronics bring
|
||
forecasts of market trends, evaluation of hardware and software,
|
||
prices, information about IBM and other leading companies. You will
|
||
find stories about technological developments of modems, robots,
|
||
lasers, video players, graphics, and communications software.
|
||
The Management section contains experts' evaluation of the
|
||
economical climate with forecasts, information about foreign
|
||
producers for importers, tips and experiences on personal
|
||
efficiency, management of smaller companies, and office automation.
|
||
Other sections are Advertising and Marketing, Aerospace and
|
||
Aviation, Automotive, Biotechnology, Building and Construction,
|
||
Chemical, Corporate Communications, Defense, Entertainment and
|
||
Leisure, Education, Environment, Energy, Finance and Accounting,
|
||
Food and Beverage, General Business, Insurance, Investment, Health
|
||
and Hospitals, Law, Management, Manufacturing, Medicine, Office,
|
||
Publishing and Broadcasting, Real Estate, Research and Development,
|
||
Social Sciences, Telecommunications, Travel and Tourism, Transport
|
||
and Shipping.
|
||
Several newsletters focus on specific geographical areas:
|
||
|
||
* MARKETING RESEARCH REVIEW (Analyzes and evaluates commercially
|
||
available marketing research and technology assessment reports.
|
||
Publisher: High-Tech Publishing Co., U.S.A.)
|
||
* GERMAN BUSINESS SCOPE and THE WEEK IN GERMANY
|
||
* NEWS FROM FRANCE
|
||
* COUNTRY RISK GUIDE: EUROPE
|
||
* EASTERN EUROPE FINANCE, and EASTERN EUROPEAN ENERGY REPORT
|
||
* EUROPEAN COMMUNITY: BUSINESS FORECAST
|
||
* INVESTEXT/EUROPEAN REGION
|
||
* PRS FORECASTS: EASTERN EUROPE, and WESTERN EUROPE
|
||
* AFRICA NEWS ON-LINE
|
||
* PRS-FORECASTS: MID-EAST & NORTH AFRICA
|
||
* PRS-FORECASTS: SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
|
||
* THE EXPORTER (Published by Trade Data Reports. Monthly
|
||
reports on the business of exporting. Functionally divided
|
||
into operations, markets, training resources, and world
|
||
trade information.)
|
||
* MID-EAST BUSINESS DIGEST
|
||
* LATIN AMERICA OPPORTUNITY REPORT
|
||
* COUNTRY RISK GUIDE: SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
|
||
* COUNTRY RISK GUIDE: ASIA & THE PACIFIC
|
||
* PRS FORECASTS: ASIA & THE PACIFIC
|
||
* PRS'S POLITICAL RISK LETTER
|
||
* SALES PROSPECTOR (Monthly prospect research reports for sales
|
||
representatives and other business people interested in
|
||
commercial, and institutional expansion and relocation
|
||
activity. Separate services grouped by geographic area in
|
||
the United States and Canada.)
|
||
|
||
Many newsletters are focusing on technology intelligence:
|
||
|
||
Sensor Technology
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Provides updates on research being conducted in this rapidly
|
||
evolving technology. Besides analyzing advances in the field,
|
||
it offers ideas on how this technology can improve products and
|
||
services.
|
||
|
||
Advanced Manufacturing Technology
|
||
---------------------------------
|
||
Reports on desktop manufacturing, computer graphics, flexible
|
||
automation, computer-integrated manufacturing, and other
|
||
technological advances that help increase productivity.
|
||
|
||
High Tech Materials Alert
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
Reports on significant developments in high-performance
|
||
materials, including alloys, metallic whiskers, ceramic and
|
||
graphite fibers, and more. Concentrates on their fabrication,
|
||
industrial applications, and potential markets.
|
||
|
||
Futuretech
|
||
----------
|
||
Provides briefings on focused, strategic technologies that
|
||
have been judged capable of making an impact on broad
|
||
industrial fronts. Includes forecasts of marketable products
|
||
and services resulting from the uncovered technology and its
|
||
potential impact on industry segments.
|
||
|
||
Advanced Coating & Surface Technology, Electronic Materials
|
||
Technology News, Flame Retardancy News, High Tech Ceramics News,
|
||
Innovator's Digest, Technology Access Report, Inside R&D, Japan
|
||
Science Scan, New Technology Week, Optical Materials & Engineering
|
||
News, Performance Materials, Surface Modification Technology News,
|
||
Genetic Technology News, Battery & Ev Technology, and much more.
|
||
|
||
Newsletters on CompuServe
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
Many newsletters are being made available through forums' file
|
||
libraries on CompuServe. Consequently, they are a little harder
|
||
to locate. Some examples (1993):
|
||
|
||
Abacus Online - Quarterly newsletter on executive computing.
|
||
(In the Lotus Spreadsheet forum, Library 3.)
|
||
|
||
Anime Stuff - News and reviews of Japanese animation software.
|
||
(Comics/Animation Forum, Library 5.)
|
||
|
||
Communique - The quarterly newsletter of the International
|
||
Association of Business Communicators U.K. Chapter. (PR and
|
||
Marketing Forum, Library 8.)
|
||
|
||
Distance Education Newsletter - Analyzes the impact of elec-
|
||
tronic communication on academic research. (Telecommunications
|
||
Forum, Library 13.)
|
||
|
||
Hint: To find newsletters in the IBM PC oriented forums, enter GO
|
||
IBMFF to search. Select "Keyword" as search criteria, and enter
|
||
"newsletter". Add further keywords to narrow the search to your
|
||
areas of interest. CompuServe also has other file find services.
|
||
|
||
Databases with an international orientation
|
||
-------------------------------------------
|
||
Information Access provides reference databases to businesses. You
|
||
can search 10 databases with full-text stories, abstracts, and
|
||
indexes from international magazines.
|
||
PROMPT (Overview of Markets and Technology) is the largest of
|
||
them. It provides international coverage of companies, markets and
|
||
technologies in all industries.
|
||
The other databases cover areas like Aerospace and Defense,
|
||
Advertising and Marketing, New Product Announcements, Industry
|
||
Forecasts and Time Series.
|
||
The Information Access' databases are available through online
|
||
services like Dialog, Data Star, Financial Times Profile (England),
|
||
Nikkei in Japan and on the Thomson Financial Networks. They are
|
||
regularly published on CD-ROM.
|
||
ZiffNet offers the Business Database Plus through CompuServe.
|
||
Here, you can search in full-text stories from around 550 North
|
||
American and international publications for industry and commerce
|
||
(1993).
|
||
The articles are about sales and marketing ideas, product news,
|
||
industry trends and analysis, and provide company profiles in areas
|
||
such as agriculture, manufacturing, retailing, telecommunications,
|
||
and trade. This is a partial list of the database's magazines:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Agra Europe, Agribusiness Worldwide, Air Cargo World, Belgium:
|
||
Economic and Commercial Information, Beverage World, Beverage
|
||
World Periscope Edition, British Plastics & Rubber, British
|
||
Telecom World, Business Perspectives, CCI-Canmaking & Canning
|
||
International, CD-ROM Librarian, Chain Store Age - General
|
||
Merchandise Trends, Coal & Synfuels Technology, Communication
|
||
World, Communications Daily, Communications International,
|
||
Consultant, Cosmetic World News, Dairy Industries International,
|
||
Direct Marketing, The Economist, Erdol und Kohle, Erdgas,
|
||
Petrochemie: Hydrocarbon Technology, EuroBusiness, Euromoney,
|
||
Europe 2000, European Cosmetic Markets, European Rubber Journal,
|
||
Financial Market Trends, Financial World, Finnish Trade Review,
|
||
Food Engineering International, Forest Industries, Gas World,
|
||
Graphic Arts Monthly, The Printing Industry, High Technology
|
||
Business, IDC Japan Report, Inc., International Trade Forum,
|
||
Investment International, Israel Business, Japan Economic
|
||
Newswire, Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of
|
||
Marketing Research, Kyodo, Market Research Europe, Medical World
|
||
News, MEED Middle East Economic Digest, Middle East
|
||
Agribusiness, OECD Economic Outlook, The Oil and Gas Journal,
|
||
Oilweek, Petroleum Economist, Plastics World, Purchasing World,
|
||
Report on the Austrian Economy, Restaurant-Hotel Design
|
||
International, Royal Bank of Scotland Review, Seafood
|
||
International, Soviet Aerospace & Technology, Supermarket
|
||
Business Magazine, swissBusiness, Training: the Magazine of
|
||
Human Resources Development, World Economic Outlook, World Oil.
|
||
|
||
Dialog's ASIA-PACIFIC DATABASE covers business and economics in
|
||
Asia and the Pacific. It contains over 80,000 references from
|
||
newspapers, magazines and other sources in North America and
|
||
international.
|
||
The Asia-Pasific Dun's Market Identifiers on Dialog is a
|
||
directory listing of about 250,000 business establishments in 40
|
||
Asian and Pacific Rim countries.
|
||
The Middle East News Network publishes daily news, analysis and
|
||
comments from 19 countries in the Middle East produced by Arabic,
|
||
Hebrew, Turkish and Persian press. You can read these news through
|
||
Reuters (e.g., on NewsGrid/CompuServe), Down Jones News/Retrieval,
|
||
and Information Access.
|
||
The Jerusalem Institute for Western Defence provides a monthly
|
||
newsletter with research of the Arab press. It has unedited quotes
|
||
from around the Arab world. Write LISTSERV@jerusalem1.datasrv.co.il
|
||
to subscribe (Command: sub arab-press Firstname Lastname).
|
||
The International Reports financial newsletter may be read and
|
||
searched on NewsNet, Information Access, and Mead Data Central.
|
||
NewsNet also has Brazil Service, Mexico Service, Country Risk
|
||
Guides and Weekly International Market Alert.
|
||
Use CompuServe's Consumer Report to spot trends in the consumer
|
||
markets for appliances, automobiles, electronics/cameras, home.
|
||
EventLine (IQuest, CompuServe) monitors international conferences,
|
||
exhibitions, and congresses. The Boomer Report concentrates on the
|
||
habits of the "the baby-boom generation."
|
||
Affaersdata in Sweden offers the Swedish-language service
|
||
"Export-Nytt," which brings short news stories about export/import
|
||
from all over the world. Information providers are the Swedish
|
||
Export Council, the Norwegian Export Council, and the Suomen
|
||
Ulkomaankauppaliitto in Finland.
|
||
Orbit has an English language database of Japanese technology.
|
||
It contains abstracts of articles, patents and standards from more
|
||
than 500 Japanese magazines.
|
||
Dow Jones News/Retrieval brings full-text stories from the
|
||
Japan Economic Newswire. The Business Dateline contains news from
|
||
more than 150 regional business publications in the United States
|
||
and Canada.
|
||
The ABI/Inform business database (UMI/Data Courier) contains
|
||
abstracts and full-text articles from 800 business magazines and
|
||
trade journals. The sources include the Asia Pacific Journal of
|
||
Management, Business Korea, and the World Bank Research Observer.
|
||
Market research reports from Frost & Sullivan are available
|
||
through Data-Star. It produces over 250 market reports each year,
|
||
in 20 industrial sectors. These reports cover results of face-to-
|
||
face interviews with manufacturers, buyers and trade association
|
||
executives, supplemented by a search and summary of secondary
|
||
sources.
|
||
Glasnost in the former Soviet Union produced a long list of new
|
||
online information sources, including:
|
||
|
||
The Soviet Press Digest (stories from over 100 newspapers),
|
||
The BizEkon Reports (financial news from 150 business and
|
||
financial magazines),
|
||
SovLegisLine (law),
|
||
BizEdon Directory (detailed information about over 2,500
|
||
companies, who want to do business with foreign companies),
|
||
Who's Who in the Soviet Union and
|
||
The Soviet Public Association Directory.
|
||
|
||
Some of these may have changed their names now. Contact Mead Data
|
||
Central (Nexis/Lexis), Data-Star, FT Profile and Reuters for more
|
||
information.
|
||
DJNR also offers full text from the Paris-based International
|
||
Herald Tribune, publications like the Guardian and others from the
|
||
United Kingdom, and from sources in the former Soviet Union (like
|
||
Soviet Press Digest, BizEkon News, Moscow News, and others.)
|
||
E-EUROPE is an electronic communications network for doing
|
||
business in Eastern Europe countries, including CIS. Its purpose is
|
||
to help these countries in their transition to market economies. It
|
||
links business persons in Western Europe-Asia-North America with
|
||
those in Eastern Europe.
|
||
Subscription is free and for anyone. To subscribe to E-EUROPE,
|
||
send email LISTSERV@PUCC.PRINCETON.EDU (or a LISTSERV closer to
|
||
you) with the body the message containing this line
|
||
|
||
SUB E-EUROPE YourFirstName YourLastName
|
||
|
||
E-EUROPE also offers International Marketing Insights (IMI) for
|
||
several countries in this region, including Russia, Hungary, Czech,
|
||
Germany, Estonia, Poland, Bulgaria, and Lithuania.
|
||
The IMI reports important developments that have implications
|
||
for traders and investors. Typically brief and to-the-point, they
|
||
are prepared by American Embassies and Consulates.
|
||
The reports cover a wide range of subjects, such as new laws,
|
||
policies and procedures, new trade regulations, changing dynamics
|
||
in the marketplace, recent statements by influential parties and
|
||
emerging trade opportunities.
|
||
For a list of E-EUROPE IMI offerings, send the following
|
||
commands to LISTSERV@PUCC.PRINCETON.EDU:
|
||
|
||
GET E-EUROPE IMI
|
||
|
||
IMI update notices are not posted to E-EUROPE, but you can
|
||
subscribe to updates to these files.
|
||
The English-language newsletter "St. Petersburg Business News"
|
||
is published in Russia by the Committee for foreign economic
|
||
affairs of LECC. For information and subscription, send email
|
||
to aag@cfea.ecc.spb.su .
|
||
The Financial Izvestia weekly, the joint publication of London
|
||
Financial Times and Moscow-based Izvestia, is available by email.
|
||
The complete feed includes the full text of all articles published
|
||
in the Russian language newspaper, and financial and statistical
|
||
tables on the commodities and financial markets. Write Legpromsyrie
|
||
at root@sollo.soleg.msk.su for information.
|
||
Several Russian newspapers, including Commersant Daily, Nega,
|
||
and press services like Postfactum and Interfax, have digests or
|
||
complete editions available for Relcom network subscribers, usually
|
||
for a nominal fee.
|
||
|
||
Interested in the European Common Market?
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
Pergamon Financial Data Services, NewsNet, and others, offer Dun &
|
||
Bradstreet European Marketing Online. It contains company profiles
|
||
of around two million European companies.
|
||
Pergamon's ICC U.K. Company Databases contains data on over
|
||
140,000 British companies with up to ten years' financial history,
|
||
addresses, key people, mother firms/subsidiaries, stock quotes.
|
||
Its Comptex News Service brings daily business news from the
|
||
European arena.
|
||
The UK Company Library on CompuServe has financial information
|
||
about more than 1.2 million British companies from sources like
|
||
Extel Cards, ICC British Co. Directory and Kompass UK.
|
||
Data-Star offers Tenders Electronic Daily, a database of
|
||
European Community contract offers.
|
||
Investext offers a series of bulletins authored by Europe
|
||
Information Service (EIS): European Report (biweekly), Tech Report
|
||
(Monthly), Transport Europe (monthly), Europe Environment
|
||
(bimonthly), European Energy (bimonthly), European Social Policy
|
||
(monthly), and Multinational Service (monthly).
|
||
Investext is available through Data-Star, Lexis/Nexis, Dow
|
||
Jones News/Retrieval, Dialog, NewsNet, and others.
|
||
The German Company Library (on CompuServe) offers information
|
||
about some 48,000 German companies from databases like Credit
|
||
Reform and Hoppenstedt's Directory of German Companies. Its
|
||
European Company Library contains information about over two
|
||
million companies in the area.
|
||
Nexis (Mead Data Central International) brings news and
|
||
background information about companies and the different countries
|
||
in Europe. Their Worldwide Companies database contains company
|
||
profiles, balance sheets, income statements, and other financial
|
||
data on the largest companies in 40 countries.
|
||
Nexis also has Hoppenstedt German Trade Associations directory,
|
||
four more newsletters from the Europe Information Service: Europe
|
||
Energy, Europe Environment, Transport Europe and European Insight,
|
||
a weekly brief on European Community-related happenings, and
|
||
Notisur, a biweekly news and analysis report on South American and
|
||
Caribbean political affairs.
|
||
LEXIS (also Mead) has databases with information about English
|
||
and French law, and other law material from Australia, New Zealand,
|
||
Ireland, Scotland and North America.
|
||
Their Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory has information on over
|
||
700,000 lawyers and law firms worldwide. The directory can be used
|
||
for referrals, selection of associate counsel, and evaluation of
|
||
competitive counsel.
|
||
Check out KOMPASS EUROPE when planning exports to the EEC. Its
|
||
database contains details about companies in Sweden, Denmark,
|
||
Germany, United Kingdom, Holland, Belgium, France, Spain, Italy,
|
||
Sweden and Norway. (On Dialog)
|
||
ILINK has the EEC-I conference (Discussion about the European
|
||
Common Marked). Profile offers full-text searches (and a clipping
|
||
service) in stories from Financial Times. The database is being
|
||
updated daily at 00:01.
|
||
Those exporting to the EEC need to master German, French,
|
||
Italian, and Spanish besides having a common knowledge of English.
|
||
Conversation is the easy part. The problem is writing, and
|
||
especially when the task is to translate technical expressions to
|
||
the languages used within the Common Market.
|
||
For help, check out the Eurodicautom online dictionary through
|
||
ECHO (and others.) Start by selecting a source language (like
|
||
English), and up to seven languages for simultaneous translation.
|
||
The translation is word-for-word, but may be put in the correct
|
||
context if required.
|
||
ECHO also offers the European Commission's CORDIS database
|
||
(Community Research and Development Information Service) containing
|
||
information about research results within scientific and technical
|
||
fields. Keywords: Race, Esprit, Delta, Aim, Fast, Brite, Comett,
|
||
Climat, Eclair and Tedis.
|
||
CONCISE (COsine Network's Central Information Service for
|
||
Europe) is a pan-European information service to the COSINE
|
||
scientific and industrial research community. COSINE (Cooperation
|
||
for Open Systems Interconnection Networking in Europe) is part of
|
||
the European Common Market's Eureka project.
|
||
CONCISE brings information about the COSINE project, networks,
|
||
conferences, networking products, special interest groups, projects
|
||
databases, directories, email services and other networked services
|
||
in Europe. It is intended for researchers in all fields, from
|
||
astronomers through linguists and market researchers to zoologists.
|
||
CONCISE is accessible by email through the Internet, by FTP,
|
||
and interactively (telnet) over the European academic and research
|
||
networks, over public data networks and over telephone links. (See
|
||
ECHO in appendix 1 for more information.)
|
||
The mailing list EC@INDYCMS.BITNET is dedicated to discussion
|
||
of the European Community, and is open to all interested persons.
|
||
Subscribe by email to a LISTSERV close to where you live, or to
|
||
LISTSERV@INDYCMS.BITNET.
|
||
|
||
Scandinavia
|
||
-----------
|
||
Most countries have several local language news services. In
|
||
Norway, Statens Datasentral lets you search stories from the NTB
|
||
news agency. Aftenposten, a major newspaper, offers full-text
|
||
stories from their A-TEKST database, from Dagens Naeringsliv (DNX),
|
||
and the Kapital magazine.
|
||
Before meeting with people from Norsk Hydro, go online to get
|
||
recent news about these companies. It will only take a couple of
|
||
minutes. What you find may be important for the success of your
|
||
meeting.
|
||
If you know the names of your most important competitors, use
|
||
their names as keywords for information about recent contracts,
|
||
joint venture agreements, products (and their features), and other
|
||
important information.
|
||
KOMPASS ONLINE offers information about over 180,000 companies
|
||
and 34,000 products in Scandinavia, Finland, Germany, Switzerland,
|
||
and Great Britain. The information is presented in the local
|
||
language of the different countries.
|
||
KOMPASS is used by easy menus. You can search by
|
||
|
||
* company name
|
||
* product or service (optionally using an industry
|
||
classification code for companies or products)
|
||
* number of employees, type of business, postal number,
|
||
telephone area code, export area, year of incorporation,
|
||
bank affiliation.
|
||
|
||
The database is available through Affaersdata (Sweden). New users
|
||
pay a one time fee of around US$85. Searching costs around US$3.00
|
||
per minute.
|
||
The TYR database on the Finnish service VIEXPO (tel.: +358 67
|
||
235100) offers information about 2,500 companies in the Vaasa and
|
||
Oulu regions with addresses, phone numbers, contact persons, main
|
||
products, revenues, and SIC industry classification codes.
|
||
We can go on like this. The list of available services is long
|
||
in many countries.
|
||
|
||
How to monitor your competitors
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
Sales managers need to know what competitors are doing. Lacking
|
||
this knowledge, it is risky to maneuver in the market.
|
||
Start by making a strategy for online market intelligence. Here
|
||
are some practical hints:
|
||
|
||
(1) Select online services that offer clipping of stories and
|
||
information based on your search words or phrases. Examples:
|
||
NewsFlash on NewsNet, //TRACK on Dow Jones News/Retrieval, The
|
||
Executive News Service on CompuServe. Use these services for
|
||
automatic monitoring of stock quotes and business news.
|
||
|
||
(2) Read what investment analysts and advisors write about your
|
||
competitors. Most markets are well covered by databases and
|
||
other sources of information.
|
||
|
||
(3) Read what competitors write about themselves. Their press
|
||
releases are available from online databases in several
|
||
countries.
|
||
|
||
(4) Compare your competitors with your own company and industry.
|
||
Items: stock prices, profits, revenue, etc.
|
||
|
||
(5) Regularly monitor companies and their particular products.
|
||
|
||
(6) Watch trend reports about your industry. Search for patterns and
|
||
possible niches.
|
||
|
||
(7) Save what you find on your hard disk for future references.
|
||
|
||
Can you get everything through the online medium? Of course not!
|
||
Don't expect to find production data, production formulas, detailed
|
||
outlines of a company's pension plan, or the number of personal
|
||
computers in a company. Such information rarely finds its way to
|
||
public databases.
|
||
|
||
Intelligence by fax
|
||
-------------------
|
||
Financial Times' Profile has Fax Alert. Predefine your interests
|
||
using search words. Stories will be cut and sent to your personal
|
||
fax number whenever they appear. Price depends on the number of
|
||
characters transmitted.
|
||
Other online services offer similar services.
|
||
|
||
The Bulletin Board as a sales tool
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
Many companies - large and small - use bulletin board systems as a
|
||
marketing instrument. Here is an example:
|
||
The San Francisco-based Compact Disk Exchange (Tel.: +1-415-824-
|
||
7603) offers a database of used CD records. Members can call in to
|
||
buy at very low prices. They can sell old CDs through the board or
|
||
buy from other members. (1992)
|
||
|
||
Marketing and sales by modem
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
The Americans have a gift for this. You meet them in online forums
|
||
all over the world, in person or through agents, and especially in
|
||
computer oriented conferences and clubs.
|
||
Their main strategy is reference selling. Make key customers
|
||
happy, and make sure they tell others.
|
||
In Chapter 5, I told you what happened when a member wrote
|
||
about his upgrade to a 425 megabytes hard disk in CompuServe's
|
||
Toshiba forum. It made me place my order with his preferred seller.
|
||
One common sales strategy is to be constantly present in
|
||
relevant conferences, and spend a generous amount of time helping
|
||
others. This takes time. By proving competence and willingness to
|
||
help, you build a positive personal profile. This profile is the
|
||
key to business, information about competitors and other benefits.
|
||
To drop quickly into a conference to post an "advertisement,"
|
||
is a waste of time. The message may be read by some, but chances
|
||
are that you will be criticized (in public) for having 'polluted
|
||
their environment' with a commercial message.
|
||
Besides, the volume of information in the best conferences for
|
||
your marketing effort is probably too high to make traditional
|
||
advertisements worth the while.
|
||
|
||
Electronic mail
|
||
---------------
|
||
Here is a list of other useful applications of electronic mail:
|
||
|
||
* to distribute quickly lists of important prospects to your
|
||
sales force,
|
||
* to avoid lengthy telephone conversations,
|
||
* to receive order information faster and more efficiently than
|
||
by traditional mail or fax,
|
||
* to distribute quickly reports and memos to key people all
|
||
over the world,
|
||
* to send new prices and product announcements to customers,
|
||
* to exchange spread sheets and analyses between users of
|
||
personal computers.
|
||
|
||
If this isn't enough, ask for information from the International
|
||
Business Network at 70724.311@compuserve.com (or, at 70724,311 on
|
||
CompuServe).
|
||
|
||
Chapter 12: Practical tips
|
||
==========================
|
||
|
||
- Quick transfers with a minimum of errors
|
||
- Rescuing lost files
|
||
- Copyright and other legal matters
|
||
- Unwritten laws about personal conduct
|
||
- Privacy
|
||
- Fax services weigh less than your printer
|
||
- File transfers through the Internet
|
||
|
||
Speed and safety
|
||
----------------
|
||
Read about MNP, CCITT V.42, and V.42bis in appendix 2. These are
|
||
popular methods for automatic error correction and compression of
|
||
data. Compression gives faster transfers of data.
|
||
To use them, your modem must have these features built-in. They
|
||
must also be enabled in the modem of the service that you are
|
||
calling.
|
||
Compression is particularly helpful when sending or receiving
|
||
text, for example news stories and messages in conferences. They
|
||
ensure faster transfers.
|
||
They are not of much help when transferring precompressed texts
|
||
and programs. They may even make file transfers with protocols like
|
||
ZMODEM, Kermit, and XMODEM impossible. If this happens, temporarily
|
||
turn off the MNP and V.24/V42bis settings in your modem (more about
|
||
this in appendix 2).
|
||
Some online services let users retrieve conference messages
|
||
using a special get or grab function. This function often comes in
|
||
two versions:
|
||
* Grab to display: New messages and conference items are
|
||
received in an uninterrupted stream without stops between items.
|
||
Retrieval of text can happen at maximum speed.
|
||
* Grab to compressed file: New messages and conference items
|
||
are selected, automatically compressed and stored in a file. This
|
||
file is then transferred using ZMODEM or similar protocols.
|
||
Some services offer unattended online work with a variation of
|
||
the "get compressed file" method. Read about 'offline readers' in
|
||
chapter 16 for more about this.
|
||
The more advanced your software is, the more time it will take
|
||
to learn how to use it. The rewards are lower telephone costs,
|
||
faster transfers, and less time spent doing technical online work.
|
||
Recommended.
|
||
|
||
Different needs, different solutions
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
Frank Burns of the American online service MetaNet is spokesperson
|
||
for the strategy SCAN - FOCUS - ACT.
|
||
On your first visits to a new online service, you SCAN. The
|
||
goal is to get an overview of what is being offered and find out
|
||
how to use it most efficiently. Notes are made of interesting
|
||
bulletins, databases, conferences, messages, news services, public
|
||
domain and shareware programs, games, and more.
|
||
Capture all of it to disk. Don't study it until disconnected
|
||
from the service. Evaluate the material to prepare for your next
|
||
moves: FOCUS and ACT.
|
||
As you learn about offerings, users and applications, your use
|
||
of the service changes. What was interesting on your first visits,
|
||
lose out to new discoveries. Some applications may stay as 'regular
|
||
online functions', like when you decide to read a given news report
|
||
on Monday mornings.
|
||
Here are some other hints:
|
||
|
||
* Find out what you do NOT have to know and have enough self-
|
||
confidence immediately to discard irrelevant material. Walk quickly
|
||
through the information. Select what you need now, store other
|
||
interesting items on your hard disk, clip references, and drop the
|
||
remainder of your capture file.
|
||
|
||
* Learn when and how to use people, computers, libraries and
|
||
other resources. Prepare well before going online. Note that the
|
||
online resource may not necessarily be the quickest way to the
|
||
goal. If you want the name of Michael Jackson's latest album, you
|
||
may get a faster answer by calling a local music shop. . . .
|
||
|
||
* Make an outline of how to search the service before going
|
||
online. If required, start by going online to collect help menus
|
||
and lists of search commands (unless you already have the printed
|
||
user information manual). Study the instructions carefully, plan
|
||
your visit, and then call back.
|
||
Often, it may be useful to do trial searches in online data,
|
||
which you have previously captured to your hard disk. Do this to
|
||
check if your use of search words is sensible.
|
||
Who knows, you may even have what you are searching for right
|
||
there. Besides, it is imperative that you use the correct search
|
||
terms to find what you're looking for.
|
||
Write your search strategy on a piece of paper. If you know how
|
||
to write macros for your communications program, consider writing
|
||
some for your planned search commands. - Few people can type 240
|
||
characters per second. Using macros may save you time, frustration
|
||
and money.
|
||
|
||
* It may be wise to do your search in two steps. On your first
|
||
visit: Get a LIST of selected headlines or references, and then log
|
||
off the service.
|
||
Study your finds, and plan the next step. Then call back to get
|
||
full-text of the most promising stories.
|
||
This strategy is often better than just 'hanging online' while
|
||
thinking. When you feel the pressure of the taximeter, it is easy
|
||
to make costly mistakes.
|
||
|
||
* Novices should always go the easiest way. Don't be shy. Ask
|
||
SOS Assistance services for help, if available. Invest in special
|
||
communication programs with built in automatic online searching
|
||
features. They are designed to make your work easier.
|
||
|
||
* Limit your search and avoid general and broad search terms.
|
||
It is often wise to start with a search word that is so 'narrow'
|
||
that it is unlikely to find articles outside your area of interest.
|
||
Your goal is not to find many stories. You want the right ones.
|
||
|
||
When everything fails
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Data communications is simple - when you master it. Occasionally,
|
||
however, you WILL lose data. You may even experience the worst of
|
||
all: losing unread private email on your hard disk.
|
||
A while ago, this happened to a friend. She logged on to her
|
||
mailbox service using the communications program Procomm.
|
||
After capturing all her mail, she tried to send a message. For
|
||
some reason, the computer just froze. It was impossible to close
|
||
the capture file. She had to switch the power OFF/ON to continue.
|
||
All retrieved mail was obviously lost.
|
||
The other day, I had a similar experience. After having written
|
||
a long and difficult letter, something went wrong. The outfile was
|
||
inexplicably closed. The resulting file size was 0 bytes.
|
||
Both problems were solved by the MS-DOS program CHKDSK run with
|
||
the /F option. If you ever get this problem, and have an MS-DOS
|
||
computer, try it. It may save your day.
|
||
|
||
Copyright notices and legal stuff
|
||
---------------------------------
|
||
Most commercial online services protect their offerings with
|
||
copyright notices. This is especially so for database information
|
||
and news.
|
||
Some vendors make you accept in writing not to store captured
|
||
data on a local media (like diskettes or hard disks). Others (like
|
||
Prodigy in the U.S.) force clients to use communication software
|
||
that makes it impossible to store incoming data to disk.
|
||
The reason is simple. Information providers want to protect
|
||
their income.
|
||
In most countries, you can quote from what others have written.
|
||
You can cut pieces out of a whole and use in your own writing. What
|
||
you cannot do, however, is copy news raw to resell to others. If
|
||
an online service discovers you doing that, expect a law suit.
|
||
Read copyright notices to learn about the limitations on your
|
||
usage of data that you receive.
|
||
|
||
Unwritten laws about personal conduct
|
||
-------------------------------------
|
||
Some services let their users be anonymous. This is the case on
|
||
many chat services. If you want to pose as Donald Duck or Jack the
|
||
Ripper, just do that.
|
||
Many free BBS systems let you register for full access to the
|
||
service during your first visit. It is possible to use any name.
|
||
Don't do that. Use your true name, unless asked to do otherwise.
|
||
It's impolite and unrespectful of the other members to participate
|
||
in online discussions using a false identity.
|
||
Being helpful is an important aspect of the online world. The
|
||
people you meet 'there' use of their time to help you and others.
|
||
Often free. The atmosphere is one of gratitude, and a positive
|
||
attitude toward all members.
|
||
If you use rude words in public, expect your mailbox to fill
|
||
with angry messages from others. Those who respond carefully to
|
||
personal attacks, will never regret it. Don't say things online
|
||
that you would not have said in person.
|
||
REMEMBER: Words written in a moment of anger or frustration
|
||
can be stored on at least one hard disk. Your 'sins' may stay
|
||
there for a long time - to resurface when you least want it to.
|
||
Here are some guidelines (often called 'online netiquette'):
|
||
|
||
* If mail to a person doesn't make it through, avoid posting
|
||
the message to a conference. Keep private messages private.
|
||
|
||
* It is considered extremely bad taste to post private mail
|
||
from someone else on public conferences, unless they give
|
||
you explicit permission to redistribute it.
|
||
|
||
* Many users end their messages with some lines about how
|
||
to get in touch with them (their email address, phone
|
||
number, address, etc.). Limit your personal "signature"
|
||
to maximum four lines.
|
||
|
||
* Do not send test messages to a public conference, unless
|
||
they are set up to serve this purpose.
|
||
|
||
* If someone requests that readers reply by private email,
|
||
do that. Do not send to the conference, where the request
|
||
appeared.
|
||
|
||
* When replying to a message in a public conference, many
|
||
users 'quote' the original message prefixed by '>' or
|
||
another special character, as in
|
||
|
||
You wrote:
|
||
>I strongly believe it was wrong to attack
|
||
>Fidel Castro in this way!
|
||
|
||
When you quote another person, edit out whatever isn't
|
||
directly applicable to your reply. By including the entire
|
||
message, you'll only annoy those reading it.
|
||
|
||
* Note that if you USE ALL CAPITAL LETTERS, people will
|
||
think you're shouting.
|
||
|
||
Finally, smile with me about the following story: According to Time
|
||
magazine (7/19/93, p. 58), three women who corresponded with Mr. X
|
||
over the network discovered his duplicity and went public on the
|
||
network. The incident sparked a lively debate over electronic
|
||
etiquette (and ruined Mr. Casanova's chances for further romance).
|
||
|
||
Fax services weigh less than your computer's printer
|
||
----------------------------------------------------
|
||
Many online services let you send electronic mail as fax messages.
|
||
This is an interesting feature when in that far away place without
|
||
a printer. Send the draft contract or other texts to your hotel's
|
||
fax machine or to your client's office to get a printout on paper.
|
||
|
||
Privacy
|
||
-------
|
||
The level of online privacy differs by network, service, and
|
||
application. Whatever these services may claim, always expect that
|
||
someone, somewhere, is able to watch, even record.
|
||
All mailbox services have at least one person authorized to
|
||
access your personal mail box in case of an emergency. Most of the
|
||
time they not have a right to read it without your permission, but
|
||
they can.
|
||
In some countries, mailbox services may let outsiders (like the
|
||
police) routinely read your private email to check for 'illegal'
|
||
contents. In this respect, email is not safer than ordinary mail.
|
||
The good news is that most 'inspectors' and 'sysops' are good,
|
||
honest people. On the other hand, it is useful to know your
|
||
situation.
|
||
It is not safe to send sensitive information (like credit card
|
||
details) by private electronic mail. True, the probability that an
|
||
outsider should get hold of and take advantage of such information
|
||
is small, but it definitely is not 100 percent safe.
|
||
|
||
Encrypt your email to protect sensitive information.
|
||
|
||
Always assume that someone is recording all that is being said in
|
||
online conferences, chats, and other interactive social gatherings.
|
||
In chats, anyone using a personal computer as a terminal can log
|
||
the conversation, or use screen dump just to capture 'interesting
|
||
parts'.
|
||
Many PC users can scroll back the screen. They can wait and
|
||
decide whether to save the conversation in a file until after the
|
||
conversation has taken place. With these capabilities widely
|
||
available, users of chats and talk should always assume that their
|
||
conversations are being recorded.
|
||
Do not say indiscreet things in small, informal discussions. It
|
||
may be recorded and reposted under embarrassing circumstances.
|
||
The program PGP has become the defacto international Internet
|
||
standard for public key encryption.
|
||
For more on privacy, check out ETHICS-L@MARIST.BITNET. The
|
||
files RFC 1113 through 1115 are about 'Privacy enhancements for
|
||
Internet electronic mail' (see appendix 1 for how to get them).
|
||
Usenet has alt.privacy (Privacy issues in cyberspace), and
|
||
comp.society.privacy (Effects of technology on privacy).
|
||
|
||
File transfers through the Internet
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
The Internet is a term used of a network interconnecting hundreds
|
||
of thousands of computer centers around the world. These centers
|
||
use different types of hardware and software, and different methods
|
||
of file transfer.
|
||
What method to use for file transfers depends on the source
|
||
host and the type of mailbox computer that you are using. The
|
||
transfer usually takes place in two steps:
|
||
|
||
1. Transferring files from a remote data center to your local
|
||
mailbox host.
|
||
|
||
2. Transfer from your local mailbox host to your personal
|
||
computer.
|
||
|
||
Transfer to your local mailbox host
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
We will explain the most commonly used method for those who only
|
||
have access to file transfer by email. This method can be used by
|
||
everybody.
|
||
Transferring plain text files is easy. Files with imbedded
|
||
word processor control codes will often have to be treated as
|
||
binary files. More about this later.
|
||
To transfer a text to another user, just send it as an ordinary
|
||
electronic message.
|
||
Getting text files from a library on a remote computer is a
|
||
special case. Often, they can be had by sending a retrieval command
|
||
(like GET) by email to the remote center. After a while, the file
|
||
will be sent to your mailbox by email. You can read it like you
|
||
read other mail.
|
||
Example: The file BINSTART can be retrieved from the KIDART
|
||
directory on a computer center in North Dakota, U.S.A. It explains
|
||
how to retrieve binary art files from the KIDLINK project's file
|
||
libraries.
|
||
To get the file, send a message to the center's mail forwarding
|
||
'agent' at LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU. Use the following command
|
||
syntax in your text:
|
||
|
||
GET <directory name> <file name>
|
||
|
||
To get the BINSTART file, write the following command in the TEXT
|
||
of your message:
|
||
|
||
GET KIDART BINSTART
|
||
|
||
Note that the command has to be put in the body of the mail and not
|
||
in the subject field. The file will arrive in your mailbox after a
|
||
while.
|
||
Also, note that lists of available files are usually available
|
||
by using an "INDEX <directory name>" command. To get a list of
|
||
files in the KIDART directory, add the command "INDEX KIDART" in
|
||
your message above.
|
||
Non-LISTSERV libraries may use other retrieval commands. Often,
|
||
you can get information of what commands to use by sending the word
|
||
HELP to a mailing service (in the Subject area or in the body of
|
||
the text).
|
||
|
||
Transferring binary files
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
Users with a direct connection to the Internet usually have access
|
||
to the FTP command (File Transfer Protocol). If they do, they often
|
||
prefer FTP for transfers of binary files like computer programs,
|
||
pictures, sound, and compressed text files.
|
||
The bad news is that the FTP command is not available to all
|
||
users of Internet mail. These will have to use "FTP by mail," or
|
||
other tricks to transfer such files. More about this in a moment.
|
||
The FTP command gives access to a special file transfer service.
|
||
It works in the following way:
|
||
|
||
1. Logon to your local email host and enter 'FTP remote-
|
||
center-code'. Example: 'ftp 134.129.111.1'.
|
||
This command will connect you to the center in North Dakota
|
||
mentioned above. Here, you will be prompted for user name and
|
||
password. Enter 'anonymous' as user name, and use your real name or
|
||
email address as password.
|
||
This way of logging on to retrieve files is called "transfers
|
||
by anonymous ftp." You can use this method on many hosts on the
|
||
Internet.
|
||
|
||
2. When connected to the remote center, you can request transfer
|
||
of the desired file to your mailbox. Before doing that, you may
|
||
have to navigate to a given file catalog (cd directory), and tell
|
||
the host that the transfer is to be binary (bin). Finally, initiate
|
||
the transfer by entering a "GET file name" command.
|
||
|
||
3. The file will be transferred to your local mailbox computer
|
||
at high speed. When the transfer is done, you logoff from the
|
||
remote center to "get back" to your mailbox computer's prompt line.
|
||
Now, you can transfer the file to your personal computer using
|
||
communications protocols like Kermit, XMODEM, ZMODEM or whatever
|
||
else is available.
|
||
|
||
Binary files transferred as text codes
|
||
--------------------------------------
|
||
If you do not have access to FTP, you must use ordinary email for
|
||
your binary transfers.
|
||
Usually, email through the Internet can only contain legal
|
||
character codes (ASCII characters between number 32 - 126). Most
|
||
systems cannot transfer graphics or program files directly, since
|
||
these files normally contain binary codes (which are outside this
|
||
ASCII character range).
|
||
The solution is to convert binary files to text codes using a
|
||
utility program called UUENCODE. The encoded file can be sent by
|
||
ordinary email, as in this example:
|
||
|
||
|
||
From TRICKLE@VM1.NoDak.EDU Fri Aug 16 16:32:37 1991
|
||
Date: Fri, 16 Aug 1991 09:31:34 CDT
|
||
To: opresno@EXTERN.UIO.NO
|
||
Subject: Part 1/1 SIMTEL20.INF PD:<MSDOS.STARTER>
|
||
|
||
The file PD:<MSDOS.STARTER>SIMTEL20.INF has been uuencoded before
|
||
being sent. After combining the 1 parts with the mail headers
|
||
removed, you must run the file through a decode program.
|
||
------------ Part 1 of 1 ------------
|
||
begin 600 SIMTEL20.INF
|
||
M6T9I;&4Z(%-)351%3#(P+DE.1B`@("`@("`@("`@("`@("`@("!,87-T(')E
|
||
M=FES960Z($IU;F4@,C@L(#$Y.3%=#0H-"B`@(%M.;W1E.B!$=64@=&\@9&ES
|
||
M:6P-"AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:
|
||
M&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:
|
||
6&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&AH:&@(Z
|
||
`
|
||
end
|
||
-------- End of part 1 of 1 ---------
|
||
|
||
When you receive a message with uuencoded text, download it to your
|
||
personal computer's hard disk. Use an editor to cut out the codes
|
||
and paste them to an empty work file. Using the example above, the
|
||
first line in your work file should contain:
|
||
|
||
begin 600 SIMTEL20.INF
|
||
|
||
and the last line should contain
|
||
end
|
||
|
||
Now, use a utility program called UUDECODE to convert the file back
|
||
to its binary form (or whatever).
|
||
More information about uuencoding and uudecoding is given in
|
||
the BINSTART file mentioned above (for MS-DOS computers). It has
|
||
a detailed explanation, BASIC source code for making the program
|
||
UUDECODE.COM, and a DEBUG script for those preferring that.
|
||
Versions of UUDECODE are also available for other types of
|
||
computers.
|
||
|
||
Transfer of pictures
|
||
--------------------
|
||
Denis Pchelkin in Protvino (Russia) is 11 years old, has two cats
|
||
and one dog, and has contributed beautiful computer graphics art to
|
||
the KIDLINK project (1992).
|
||
The file ART019 in the KIDART catalog of the North Dakota
|
||
center contains one of his creations. It is a UUENCODEd picture
|
||
in GIF graphics format.
|
||
You can retrieve Denis' creation by sending a GET command to
|
||
LISTSERV@VM1.NODAK.EDU . Put the following command in the TEXT of
|
||
your message:
|
||
|
||
GET KIDART ART019
|
||
|
||
The LISTSERVer will return a message filled with strange uu-codes.
|
||
We assume that you have already retrieved the BINSTART file, and
|
||
that you have a version of the conversion program. Your next step
|
||
is uudecoding:
|
||
Read the message into an editor or a viewing program. Cut and
|
||
paste the codes to a work file. Keep the original as backup. Use
|
||
the UUDECODE.COM program to convert ART019 into a GIF formatted
|
||
file.
|
||
Now, view the picture with your favorite graphics program. (Or
|
||
use shareware GIF-viewers like PICEM, VUIMG, and VPIC for MS-DOS
|
||
computers. These programs are available from CompuServe's IBM
|
||
forums and other services.)
|
||
Sending binary files in uuencoded form has weaknesses. One is
|
||
the lack of automatic error correction when sending/receiving e-
|
||
mail. Noise on the line can easily distort the picture.
|
||
File size is another problem. UUENCODEing typically increases
|
||
file sizes by almost one third. Some mailbox systems restrict the
|
||
length of individual messages that you can receive, and the file
|
||
may just be too big.
|
||
If the uuencoded file gets too big, some services can (or will
|
||
by default) split it up in parts and then sent separately.
|
||
Tons of uuencoded public domain and shareware programs are
|
||
available for retrieval by ordinary email.
|
||
|
||
FTP by email
|
||
-------------
|
||
While some services accept commands like GET KIDART ART019 by
|
||
email, this is not so with the many so-called FTP libraries. Many
|
||
of them can only be accessed by FTP.
|
||
Services exist that will do FTP transfers by email for those
|
||
not having access to the FTP command. The most popular is at DEC
|
||
Corporate Research in the U.S.
|
||
For more information, write a message to one of the following
|
||
addresses:
|
||
|
||
ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com
|
||
ftpmail@cs.uow.edu.au
|
||
|
||
In the TEXT of your message, put the word "HELP".
|
||
FTPMAIL lets you uuencode binary files for transfers. It can
|
||
split large files up into several messages, thus helping you around
|
||
local restrictions on the size of each incoming mail message.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 13: Cheaper and better communication
|
||
============================================
|
||
|
||
Packet data services and data transportation
|
||
services like Tymnet Outdial, Infonet, Internet,
|
||
and PC Pursuit may help keep costs down.
|
||
About reducing the cost of using mailing lists.
|
||
|
||
Many users access online services by calling them directly. A lot
|
||
pay extra for long distance calls to other cities and countries,
|
||
even when this means inferior transmission quality (like when noise
|
||
characters degrade the data).
|
||
Others investigate other routings for their data. One option is
|
||
the packet data networks. Most countries have Public Data Networks
|
||
(PDNs) operated by local telecommunications authorities. These
|
||
services are often cheaper than direct calls for some applications,
|
||
but more expensive for others.
|
||
Before using a packet data network, you'll need to establish a
|
||
"Network User Identification" (NUI) with the PDN carrier. You must
|
||
also know the Network User Address (NUA) of the hosts that you want
|
||
to access.
|
||
In Scandinavia, the local PDNs are called Datapak. They can be
|
||
accessed by direct local calls or through leased lines. To personal
|
||
users, direct calls are least expensive. A leased line may be cost
|
||
efficient when the daily volume is high, like in a company.
|
||
When you communicate with online services through a PDN, the
|
||
latter will split your data and bundle it in standard envelopes or
|
||
'packets'.
|
||
Each packet is marked with a code and sent out into the data
|
||
stream. Based on this code, the packet is routed from computer
|
||
center to computer center until it reaches its final destination.
|
||
There, the information will be reassembled into its original form
|
||
before being handed over to a user or online service.
|
||
It is almost like traveling by train. The price per packet or
|
||
traveler is lower than what it costs to rent the whole train for
|
||
your trip.
|
||
National telecommunications monopolies were the first to offer
|
||
packet data services. Their rates were moderately lower than for
|
||
long distance calls, but it was hard to find the relationship
|
||
between real costs and prices. This is still the situation in
|
||
many countries.
|
||
Throughout the world, efforts to privatize nationwide phone
|
||
networks continue. In many countries, this has given us some
|
||
interesting competitors offering attractive rates for similar
|
||
services.
|
||
Their rates differ considerably from country to country, as
|
||
does the quality of transmissions. The advantage of using packet
|
||
data also varies considerably, by application and by country. The
|
||
best routing for retrieval of online news may be impossibly
|
||
expensive for chats or complex online jobs.
|
||
We can offer no hard rules of thumb, except this:
|
||
|
||
Compare rates regularly!
|
||
|
||
What is cheapest?
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Some networks charge by the hour, while others charge by volume
|
||
(number of characters transferred per minute).
|
||
When volume is low, your best bet is to use network services
|
||
with a low price per minute and high prices for volume.
|
||
When volume is high, you may be better off using those charging
|
||
by the minute.
|
||
To estimate costs reliably, you'll need statistics. Since your
|
||
usage probably differs from what others do, start accumulating
|
||
experience data now. Like this:
|
||
|
||
On services only charging for connect time
|
||
------------------------------------------
|
||
Capture trip information to a log file. Register the following
|
||
information:
|
||
* number of minutes connected
|
||
* modem speed
|
||
* number of characters transmitted.
|
||
Some communication programs can do this automatically for you.
|
||
|
||
On services charging for time and volume
|
||
----------------------------------------
|
||
Log the following information:
|
||
* number of minutes connected
|
||
* modem speed
|
||
* number of segments or packets (measurements of volume)
|
||
|
||
You need this to estimate the average volume of data transferred by
|
||
minute. Here are some general experiences and hints:
|
||
Long streams of data without stops are cheaper through services
|
||
that only charge by the minute. Retrieving software is a typical
|
||
high volume application.
|
||
Trips that include navigation from conference to conference,
|
||
with a little bit of up- and downloading here and there, make the
|
||
average transfer speed fall dramatically. It's like driving through
|
||
a big city at 150 kilometers per hour. Red lights will reduce the
|
||
average speed considerably.
|
||
The actual transferred volume of text per minute will differ
|
||
from place to place (geographically), and often also from call to
|
||
call. It depends on factors like:
|
||
|
||
* How fast you can enter commands and how much time you spend
|
||
staring at the display before pressing keys,
|
||
* How long it takes for an online service to react to your
|
||
commands. For example, the response time on CompuServe at
|
||
04:00 GMT on a Friday morning (it is evening in the U.S.) is
|
||
much worse than at 10:30 GMT on a Sunday morning. Then, most
|
||
users are asleep.
|
||
* The load on your packet data network while you use the
|
||
service (or the amount of noise and retransmission, when
|
||
calling direct),
|
||
* The type of modem you are using (speed, level of MNP),
|
||
* The number of commands you (or your scripts) have to enter
|
||
during your online visit. An increase in the number of
|
||
commands, reduces the average transfer speed.
|
||
* The amount of transfer overhead for color and screen handling
|
||
(like, VT-100 codes) that is transferred with your text.
|
||
* Your use of menus and help texts while online, or whether
|
||
you come as "expert" with a minimum of prompts.
|
||
|
||
It's impossible to calculate the practical effects of these items.
|
||
You will just have to bear them in mind when estimating typical
|
||
jobs, measuring speeds, calculating costs, and comparing networks.
|
||
Finding the optimal network for our needs, will take time, but
|
||
is well worth the effort. I think the figures may surprise you.
|
||
The network services in this chapter will often give you better
|
||
quality transfers than a direct call. On the other hand, calling
|
||
direct may give more characters transferred per minute. The average
|
||
speed tends to drop dramatically when using a packet data service.
|
||
|
||
Using national packet data services
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
Most commercial online services can be reached through national
|
||
PDNs, but you may have problems finding the correct NUA (Network
|
||
User Address) to get there. Few PDNs have a directory of available
|
||
"electronic telephone numbers" for you to consult.
|
||
The Norwegian PDN, Datapak, used to be my only alternative for
|
||
access to foreign online services, and I thought that the cost was
|
||
acceptable. Not so anymore.
|
||
My applications require that data be pumped back and forth at
|
||
maximum speed. On network services charging by a combination of
|
||
volume and time, 80 percent of my costs are typically for volume,
|
||
while 20 percent is for connect time.
|
||
When I log out after a successful visit to CompuServe through
|
||
Datapak, the two services give me similar reports:
|
||
|
||
Thank you for using CompuServe!
|
||
|
||
Off at 10:11 EST 24-Nov-87
|
||
Connect time = 0:15
|
||
|
||
CLR PAD (00) 00:00:14:55 537 75
|
||
|
||
The last line comes from Datapak. It tells that I have received 537
|
||
segments and sent 75.
|
||
The "Segment" is Datapak's volume measure. A segment contains
|
||
up to sixty-four characters and/or carriage returns. The price is
|
||
calculated accordingly.
|
||
At today's prices, Datapak is still my cheapest alternative
|
||
calling CompuServe for chats.
|
||
I use Datapak when connecting to TWICS in Tokyo, as the only
|
||
alternative today is direct calls at a prohibitive cost. Once i-Com
|
||
(see below) starts offering outdial to Japan, I expect this service
|
||
to be substantially cheaper.
|
||
The slower your modem speed, the more attractive is Datapak
|
||
compared with direct calls.
|
||
To get access to a national PDN, you must have a user
|
||
identification and a password. (Getting temporary access to PDN
|
||
services while traveling abroad is often hard and expensive.)
|
||
|
||
| Note: If you have access to a national PDN, but need |
|
||
| information about PDNs in other countries, try Hostess, the |
|
||
| Global Network Service's information service from British |
|
||
| Telecom in England. The NUA is 02342 1920101013 (02342 is |
|
||
| the Data Network Identifier Code section of the address.) |
|
||
| Username or password is not required to use this service. |
|
||
|
||
Outdial through PC Pursuit
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
Sprintnet (formerly GTE Telenet) lets American users call bulletin
|
||
boards in North America at lower rates through their PC Pursuit
|
||
service.
|
||
They pay a modest subscription to call a local number for
|
||
access to PC Pursuit. Once connected, they can enter an electronic
|
||
phone-number to connect to a so-called 'outdial modem' in another
|
||
city.
|
||
Once connected to the outdial modem, they can give it dialing
|
||
commands and have it call any local number. This way, they can use
|
||
PC Pursuit to call an online service in the area, or the private
|
||
modem of a friend.
|
||
We call PC Pursuit an Outdial service. Such services normally
|
||
offer lower rates for access to remote bulletin boards than what
|
||
it costs to call by long distance. Besides, they reduce the chances
|
||
for noise on the line.
|
||
|
||
Outdial through i-Com
|
||
---------------------
|
||
i-Com offers outdial to North American online services by reselling
|
||
capacity from Tymnet's network (owned by British Telecommunications
|
||
PLC).
|
||
In the United States, Galaxy Telecomm Corp. offers a similar
|
||
service under the name Starlink. Outdial to numbers in Japan and
|
||
Europe is planned.
|
||
i-Com markets its services to users in Europe and Japan, and
|
||
have local access in Brussels, Paris, Lyon, Milano, the Hague,
|
||
Eindhoven, Zurich, Geneva, London, Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol,
|
||
Cambridge, Edinburgh, Leeds, Frankfurt, Cologne, Munich, Madrid,
|
||
Stockholm, Copenhagen, and more.
|
||
The basic fee for access to the service is US$25.00 per hour
|
||
(1992). You don't pay volume charges. The monthly subscription fee
|
||
is US$8.00. You can pay using VISA or MasterCard/Eurocard.
|
||
In Norway, I have used i-Com to connect to The Well in San
|
||
Francisco, MetaNet in Virginia, EXEC-PC in Wisconsin, and SciLink
|
||
in Toronto, Canada. At the time, i-Com was cheaper than direct
|
||
calls and Datapak for access to these services.
|
||
While an ID on your local PDN is only valid in your area or
|
||
country, your i-Com ID can be used all over the world including
|
||
several cities in North America. Once your plane has landed in
|
||
Milano, you can dial the local i-Com node to connect to your
|
||
favorite service.
|
||
i-Com also has a bulletin board (US$13.00/hour). These are some
|
||
of its services:
|
||
|
||
* Search a database to find BBS numbers in a given area of
|
||
interest, or to locate outdial numbers in a given city or
|
||
area code.
|
||
* Conferences about how to use North American bulletin boards.
|
||
* Retrieval of shareware and public domain software.
|
||
* Online shopping of American goods at American prices.
|
||
|
||
Cheaper access to CompuServe
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
Wherever CompuServe has local access points, you'll be better off
|
||
using these. You do not have to sign any special agreements. Your
|
||
CompuServe ID is all you need. Payment for using these services
|
||
will appear on your CompuServe bill.
|
||
CompuServe has special deals with a list of network services,
|
||
like InfoNet Europe (formerly Computer Sciences Corp.), Istel,
|
||
FALNET, FENICS, CompuPass, LATA Networks, Tymnet/Sprintnet. Enter
|
||
the command GO LOG on CompuServe to get access information, and GO
|
||
RATES for rates.
|
||
I have been using CompuPass from Japan, CompuServe's own
|
||
network in the United States, Istel, InfoNet, and PDN services in
|
||
Europe.
|
||
When at home, I usually use CompuServe's 9600 bps node in
|
||
Stockholm, Sweden. It is even cheaper than calling Oslo for a 2400
|
||
bps node for most of my jobs. There is no surcharge when accessing
|
||
at non-prime time, and US$7.70 per hour during prime time (weekdays
|
||
08:00 to 19:00 local time). In addition, I pay long distance rates
|
||
to call the node. CompuServe has no extra charges for volume.
|
||
|
||
| Whenever CompuServe opens a new node in your vicinity, or |
|
||
| upgrades the modem speed on one of their nodes, look at the |
|
||
| effects on your total costs. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Use software for automatic access and navigation (like TAPCIS,|
|
||
| OzCIS, or ATO). They give higher volume per minute and make |
|
||
| your accesses even more cost efficient. |
|
||
|
||
Before leaving for a business trip, visit CompuServe to find local
|
||
access numbers in your destination cities. The list of countries
|
||
includes Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France,
|
||
Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Holland, South Africa,
|
||
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and England.
|
||
You can also access CompuServe through i-Com and other outdial
|
||
services.
|
||
CompuServe has exchange of electronic mail with Internet. You
|
||
can also access the service by telnet to hermes.merit.edu (binary
|
||
transfers are impossible, though).
|
||
|
||
IXI - a European alternative to PDN
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
IXI is an X.25 data network for European academic, industrial and
|
||
governmental research centers. It is sponsored by the EEC under the
|
||
ESRIN project, and is operated by the Dutch PTT.
|
||
IXI interconnects national research networks, many national
|
||
public data networks and several specialized international
|
||
networks. It works like a national PDN service, but uses its own
|
||
Network User Addresses. Echo, STN, DIMDI, Data-Star and other
|
||
database vendors can be accessed through IXI.
|
||
The service is not available to most users having email access
|
||
through the Internet.
|
||
|
||
Using DASnet to cross network boundaries
|
||
----------------------------------------
|
||
DA Systems forwards electronic mail and files (also binary files)
|
||
across mailbox system boundaries for customers. They can send your
|
||
mail to several large in-house systems, information networks, and
|
||
over 60 commercial mailbox systems in 30 countries.
|
||
These are some systems on their list: ABA/net, Alternex
|
||
(Brazil), ATT Mail, BIX, BITNET, CESAC (Italy), CIGnet, ComNet
|
||
(Switzerland), CONNECT, Dialcom, Deutsche Mailbox, Dialcom, Envoy
|
||
100, EIES, EasyLink, Euromail (Germany), FredsNaetet (Sweden),
|
||
Galaxy, GeoNet (hosts in Germany, England, U.S.A.), GreenNet, INET,
|
||
INFOTAP (Luxembourg), Mailbox Benelux, MCI Mail, MercanMail (Asia),
|
||
MBK Mediabox (Germany), MetaNet, Nicarao (Nicaragua), NWI, OTC
|
||
PeaceNet/EcoNet, Pegasus (Australia), PINET, Portal, PsychNet, San
|
||
Francisco/Moscow Teleport, Telexphone (France), TeleRede
|
||
(Portugal), Telehaus Nordhorn (Germany), Telemail, TEXTEL (the
|
||
Caribbean), TWICS (Japan), UNISON, UUCP, Web (Canada), The WELL,
|
||
Internet.
|
||
This list may suggest lack of connectivity between networks
|
||
that do indeed have connections. For example, Internet email may
|
||
easily be sent to ATT Mail, Alternex, BIX, BITNET, FredsNaetet,
|
||
GeoNet, GreenNet, and many others on this list. Connectivity changes
|
||
constantly. Check to see if you really need it, as this service is
|
||
far from free.
|
||
DASnet also lets you send email as telex, fax and by ordinary
|
||
mail. They charge you by the number of characters transferred, and
|
||
the destination address. (Contact Anna B. Lange, DA Systems, Inc.,
|
||
U.S.A. Tel.: +1-408-559-7434, or write her at AnnaB@11.DAS.NET).
|
||
|
||
FidoNet - grassroots playground
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
FidoNet is an amateur network consisting of tens of thousands of
|
||
bulletin boards all over the world. The network is "loosely
|
||
coupled," meaning that most of the participating boards are not
|
||
always connected. They call each others at regular intervals to
|
||
exchange mail, often in the middle of the night when the rates are
|
||
low.
|
||
Most FidoNet boards have conferences, and allow you to send
|
||
mail to users of other systems. NetMail is a term often used for
|
||
private FidoNet email. EchoMail is used about its international
|
||
conferences. The selection of echomail conferences on a given
|
||
FidoNet board can be as unique as the rest of the system.
|
||
|
||
RelayNet
|
||
--------
|
||
is another global network of bulletin boards. It offers exchange
|
||
of email between systems. Messages and conference items entered on
|
||
one system will automatically be copied to other participating
|
||
boards. Your costs for "talking" with others in other parts of the
|
||
world are very small.
|
||
|
||
Other grassroots networks
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
It doesn't take much to set up a bulletin board service, and it is
|
||
as easy to connect BBS systems to each other in a dial-up network
|
||
for regular exchanges of email, files and conferences.
|
||
All over the world, grassroots networks keep popping up with
|
||
names like ILINK, AmNet, Suedd MB-Verbund, Starmail, MagicNet, A-
|
||
NET, MausNet, Zerberus-Netz, SMBX-NET, BASA-NETZ, you name it.
|
||
Many boards offer access to more than one grassroots network,
|
||
as well as to the Internet. Thus, the ability to send global email
|
||
is extended to new users every day.
|
||
|
||
Other services
|
||
--------------
|
||
The PDN Connect-USA competes with Starlink in North America.
|
||
(Connect-USA Communications, Inc., 2625 Pennsylvania NE Suite 225,
|
||
Albuquerque, New Mexico. 505-881-6988 (voice), 505-881-2756 (FAX),
|
||
505-881-6964 (BBS). )
|
||
Global Access is a similar service reselling time on the
|
||
Sprintnet network in North America.
|
||
|
||
Reducing the cost of using mailing lists
|
||
----------------------------------------
|
||
The problem of subscribing to mailing lists is that all discussion
|
||
items come to you in individual messages. Each message comes with
|
||
its own mailer header, and this information is generally completely
|
||
useless. (Read "Returned mail" in Chapter 7 for details.)
|
||
Newer versions of the BITNET LISTSERV software provide commands
|
||
that solve this problem:
|
||
|
||
SET <list name> DIGEST
|
||
----------------------
|
||
This command is sent to a LISTSERV to make all daily messages
|
||
come to you in one, single message. Example: Say you've joined
|
||
KIDCAFE@vm1.nodak.edu, which usually has a large number of
|
||
messages each day. Send the following command to the LISTSERV:
|
||
|
||
SET KIDCAFE DIGEST
|
||
|
||
It will typically reduce the number of lines received from this
|
||
mailing list by around 50 percent.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SET <list name> INDEX
|
||
---------------------
|
||
This command is sent to a LISTSERV to get a daily list of
|
||
messages, like in this example from KIDCAFE:
|
||
|
||
Index Date Size Poster and subject
|
||
----- ---- ---- ------------------
|
||
22839 06/22 26 From: David Chalmers
|
||
<David.Chalmers@p3.f155.n633.z3.fidonet.org>
|
||
Subject: Conor Dublin Ireland
|
||
|
||
Based on this list, you can use the LISTSERV's search commands
|
||
to retrieve individual messages of interest. These commands are
|
||
similar to those used for searching in chapter 7.
|
||
|
||
For more about searching mailing lists' message bases, send a
|
||
message to LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu with the following command in
|
||
the text of your mail:
|
||
|
||
GET KIDLINK TIPS
|
||
|
||
Some LISTSERVs offers simplified search commands and macros
|
||
to make retrieval of individual messages simpler.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 14: Keep what you find
|
||
==============================
|
||
|
||
|
||
Little is gained by being skillful at
|
||
locating and accumulating information,
|
||
and then becoming drowned
|
||
in an avalanche of data
|
||
that one cannot manage - or use.
|
||
|
||
This chapter starts with how to build a personal data base on your
|
||
own hard disk. We continue by investigating strategies for finding
|
||
interesting information on your disk, before winding down with some
|
||
words about what separates good information from bad.
|
||
|
||
Search and throw away
|
||
---------------------
|
||
To novices, everything is difficult. During the first online trips,
|
||
they may feel as if moving to the other side of the globe to start
|
||
over: They need new newspapers, magazines, information sources, and
|
||
services.
|
||
Trial and error are required to find online gold mines. As you
|
||
get more experience, focus tends to shift from getting information
|
||
to digesting.
|
||
Getting the data gets 'into your fingers', and doesn't bother
|
||
much anymore. The number of retrieved lines increases. The only bad
|
||
news is that your reading speed remains at the same old level.
|
||
In our time, people tend to talk more than they listen, and you
|
||
usually find more information than knowledge. Therefore, say NO to
|
||
irrelevant information. It is seldom worth keeping.
|
||
There is generally no good reason to learn things that you
|
||
really don't need to know. Practice "selective ignorance."
|
||
Regularly evaluate your online sources critically, and discard
|
||
those costing you more than they are worth. Concentrate on those
|
||
giving the best returns.
|
||
Adjust the frequency with which you visit selected services to
|
||
match their usefulness. What used to be daily visits, may have to
|
||
be downgraded to once per week or month. Consider replacing daily
|
||
news monitoring by clipping services.
|
||
Plan 'overview' and 'details' with different frequencies.
|
||
'Overview' refers to online trips to get an impression of what
|
||
generally goes on. An example:
|
||
|
||
My script system is set for automatic visits to the CompuServe
|
||
Toshiba forum. Whenever I visit, it 'digs out' unread messages
|
||
based on key words on the item's subject line.
|
||
During 1991, it searched for these strings: '5100', T2000', and
|
||
'425'. Once, This gave the following message to read:
|
||
|
||
#: 29550 S6/Hi-Power Notebooks
|
||
05-Oct-91 17:27:30
|
||
Sb: #T2000SX Recharger
|
||
Fm: Steve Kitahata 75166,1741
|
||
To: All
|
||
|
||
I tried to order the battery recharger for my T2000SX from Jade
|
||
Computer last weekend. The sales rep said it would take about
|
||
a week, so I called today to check up on it. He told me that I
|
||
could only buy the recharger with the car adapter as a bundled
|
||
set for $260. They had both advertised in their flyer as
|
||
separate items, which they should be. Has anyone heard of
|
||
this?
|
||
|
||
Does anyone know of any sources that have the battery recharger
|
||
available? Any help would be appreciated. Thanx.
|
||
|
||
-- Steve
|
||
|
||
My script found the search word "T2000" in the subject line's text
|
||
(Sb: #T2000SX Recharger), and subsequently selected the message.
|
||
Once per month, the same system "scans the horizon" to give me
|
||
an idea of what is going on. This is done by requesting a list of
|
||
subjects being discussed. Here is part of one such list:
|
||
|
||
29555: DOS 5 Upgrade
|
||
6 replies
|
||
|
||
29540: TDOS Upgrade questions
|
||
3 replies
|
||
|
||
29585: Toshiba DOS 5.0 ships!
|
||
1 reply
|
||
|
||
29586: DOS 5.0 Upgrade Solution
|
||
|
||
29580: ToshibaDOS=bad business
|
||
8 replies
|
||
|
||
29581: DOS 5 / Stacker
|
||
1 reply
|
||
|
||
Reading the list, allows me to see if new and interesting topics
|
||
are up for discussion. If I use Stacker and want contact with other
|
||
users, I can request message number 29581 and the subsequent reply
|
||
(1 reply). That should give me some email addresses.
|
||
|
||
| Several advanced communication programs and offline readers |
|
||
| have built-in quick scan features. For example, TAPCIS does |
|
||
| this just fine in CompuServe forums. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| When retrieving conference messages from bulletin boards using |
|
||
| 1stReader at high speed, like 9600 bps or above, then the cost |
|
||
| of downloading all new items may be insignificant. Therefore, |
|
||
| you might just as well do it. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Later, when reading the captured mail, 1stReader lets you |
|
||
| select messages to read from a list of subjects. You can save |
|
||
| what you want to keep, and delete the rest. |
|
||
|
||
By regular scanning subject headers you reduce the risk of missing
|
||
important trends, for example because authors were using other
|
||
terms on the subject line than expected.
|
||
Scanning also lets us discover if the discussion is heading off
|
||
in other, interesting directions.
|
||
After a while, you'll have a set of sources, persons, and tools
|
||
that will provide you with what you need. This is your personal
|
||
infrastructure of electronic information. Now, you must maintain
|
||
and cultivate it.
|
||
|
||
Store incoming information
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
Chances are that you will retrieve more information than you can
|
||
read. Sometimes it takes weeks for me to get up to date with my
|
||
own readings.
|
||
If you visit several online services, consider storing the data
|
||
in files with different names. Use part of the file name to show the
|
||
source of this information.
|
||
If visiting a service regularly, consider using the date as
|
||
part of the file names. This will make it easier to select, read
|
||
and search them in a useful sequence.
|
||
|
||
| Example: Say you're regularly visiting TWICS in Tokyo. What you |
|
||
| download on November 10, you may store in a file named |
|
||
| |
|
||
| TW1110.TMP |
|
||
| |
|
||
| My scripts do this automatically. On some services, they also |
|
||
| split retrieved data into URGENT and MAY BE READ LATER files. |
|
||
| Private mail from TWICS is stored in NB1110.TMP. By storing |
|
||
| private mail separately, it is easier to see if somebody wants |
|
||
| a quick reply. |
|
||
|
||
All file names in this example have the extension .TMP (temporary).
|
||
This signifies that these files are unread.
|
||
When I read them, and select parts for permanent storage on my
|
||
hard disk, I use different names. Often, I use the year, or a
|
||
month/year code in the file name extension. For example, the file
|
||
DIALOG.93 contains information from DIALOG collected during 1993.
|
||
|
||
Postprocessing the data
|
||
------------------------
|
||
The data capture is completed, and the retrieved data is stored on
|
||
the hard disk in more or several files. Your next task is to
|
||
|
||
* Read the received texts,
|
||
* Cut and paste selected parts to archive or work files,
|
||
* Prepare responses to your electronic mail. This may include
|
||
quoting part of the incoming messages in your replies.
|
||
* Finally, delete all temporary files.
|
||
|
||
Many advanced programs have these features built in. If not, you
|
||
may use your favorite word processor, or something else. There are
|
||
many alternatives.
|
||
LIST is my favorite MS-DOS shareware file viewer program. It
|
||
can be downloaded from most bulletin boards. Using LIST, it is
|
||
difficult to destroy your precious retrieved data while reading,
|
||
cutting and pasting.
|
||
|
||
| MORE ABOUT LIST: |
|
||
| Assume that all input data is stored in the disk catalog C:\IN |
|
||
| and that you're using the file name convention suggested above. |
|
||
| Type LIST and press Enter. A list of file names will appear on |
|
||
| your screen. Press S to sort the list, and then D to have them |
|
||
| sorted by creation date. The newest files are at the bottom of |
|
||
| the list. |
|
||
| Move the cursor (using the Arrow keys) to the input file |
|
||
| that you want to read and press Enter. Scroll up and down in the|
|
||
| file by pressing the PgUp/PgDn or the arrow keys. |
|
||
| Let's assume that you are reading TW1110.TMP right now. |
|
||
| On your screen is a piece of information that you want to |
|
||
| keep for future reference. Mark the text with ALT-M commands |
|
||
| (keep the ALT key pressed down, while pressing M), and then |
|
||
| ALT-D. LIST will ask you for a file name. You enter TWICS.93, |
|
||
| and the text is appended to what is already there. |
|
||
| This method allows you quickly to mark and append parts |
|
||
| of your input file to various archive files. Press ESC to |
|
||
| return to the file list when through, then press D. LIST asks |
|
||
| if you really want to delete the file. Press Y, and TW1110.TMP |
|
||
| is gone. |
|
||
| LIST lets you find information stored in your archives |
|
||
| (string search). What you find can be marked and copied to a |
|
||
| work file. It can also be set to invoke an editor or a word |
|
||
| processor for the selected file. |
|
||
|
||
Reuse of data on your hard disk
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
Over time your personal archives will grow in size. You begin to
|
||
experience the benefits of having all this information on your
|
||
hard disk.
|
||
Yesterday's news is today's history, and may be used in many
|
||
interesting ways.
|
||
One business executive regularly monitors key technologies,
|
||
customers, competitors, and suppliers. He does it by tapping
|
||
sources like KOMPASS, Associated Press, and Reuters. Interesting
|
||
bits of information are regularly stored on his disk.
|
||
Tomorrow, there is an important meeting with a major customer.
|
||
First, a quick search through the personal customer database to be
|
||
reminded of important events since the last meeting. An unfamiliar
|
||
person is also going to be present. Maybe there is some background
|
||
information, for example about a recent promotion.
|
||
Then, a quick check on major competitors. Maybe they are up to
|
||
something that he needs to know about.
|
||
With efficient tools for searching your hard disk, finding
|
||
information takes only a few seconds. If you are still left with
|
||
open questions, go online to complement.
|
||
On MS-DOS computers, you can search the files with WordPerfect,
|
||
LIST, the DOS utility FIND, and a long list of other programs. I
|
||
prefer programs that let me search for more than one word at the
|
||
time, like in HYDRO AND PETROCHEMICAL AND CONTRACT, or EXXON OR
|
||
MOBIL.
|
||
|
||
| MY FAVORITE: My favorite search utility is LOOKFOR. It can |
|
||
| be downloaded from many bulletin boards. The MS-DOS program |
|
||
| is small, fast, and is superior for searches in DOS text files.|
|
||
| Store your finds in work files, or print them out on paper. |
|
||
| LOOKFOR is not an indexing program. It is ready to search |
|
||
| anywhere, anytime. |
|
||
|
||
Discipline and organization is required to get the most out of your
|
||
file archives. You must decide what to do with each piece of
|
||
information: Should it be printed out and be read in front of the
|
||
fireplace this evening, or should it be circulated? Should it be
|
||
stored on your hard disk, or be refined before storage?
|
||
Use standard file names that are easy to remember. If you
|
||
don't, risk having to view files to find out what they contain.
|
||
It may take longer to find a piece of information in a casual
|
||
file on a large disk, than look up a piece of information on paper
|
||
in your inbox. Therefore, finish handling your capture file while
|
||
you read it on your screen:
|
||
Send the pieces to their final destination. Make immediate
|
||
transfers to your TO-DO files. Give the original file a name that
|
||
makes it easier to move later. Have a procedure that prevents
|
||
duplication of effort.
|
||
|
||
Desinformation, deception and errors
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
Always use several sources of information. Some people write to
|
||
lead you astray. The online world exposed some interesting
|
||
incidents that came out of the former Soviet Union before the
|
||
attempted coup in 1991.
|
||
Desinformation hurts everybody and comes from all sides. Even
|
||
professional news agencies, like Associated Press, Reuters and
|
||
Agence France-Presse, regularly stumble.
|
||
Most news is written by journalists reporting what they have
|
||
seen, read or heard. Their interpretation of the situation may be
|
||
wrong. Supplement online news with what knowledgeable people say
|
||
(by email or in conferences), when knowing the facts is important.
|
||
Another point: Errors will occasionally be discovered and
|
||
reported by the news sources, but always after the fact. Always
|
||
store these reports in your archives, and make it a rule to search
|
||
to the end when looking for something. Otherwise, you may never
|
||
discover these corrections.
|
||
|
||
Chapter 15: You pay little for a lot!
|
||
=====================================
|
||
|
||
|
||
Calculating costs
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Those living in Norway may read up to twenty-six pages of news from
|
||
Associated Press in the United States and Financial Times (England)
|
||
for US$ 0.64, or less.
|
||
The trick is to dial long distance to a 9600 bps node in Sweden
|
||
when the telephone company and CompuServe's non-prime time rates
|
||
are in effect.
|
||
At 9600 bps, you may transfer text at up to 960 characters per
|
||
second. One page of text (size A-4) holds around 2200 characters.
|
||
A typical news story is one to two pages of text.
|
||
|
||
| Users watching the 'taximeter' can use online services at a |
|
||
| very low cost. For many, global communication is almost free.|
|
||
|
||
Reading exactly the same news through another network or service,
|
||
may cost you 300 percent more. Through yet another online service,
|
||
the cost may double again.
|
||
A full issue of the NewsBytes newsletter is around 150,000
|
||
characters, or 68 pages of text. Retrieving it from a local BBS
|
||
typically costs me around 29 cents. Retrieving the full text from
|
||
CompuServe would cost me over 500 percent more.
|
||
Using NewsNet for the job, at 2400 bps through Datapak, would
|
||
increase my current cost by more than US$30.00.
|
||
The time of day may be important. Some services have different
|
||
rates for access during the day, the evening, and the weekend.
|
||
Use your calculator often.
|
||
|
||
When you pay by the minute
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
When using bulletin boards, phone charges are often the only cost
|
||
items. Some boards require a subscription fee for full access to
|
||
the system. Still, it is easy to calculate the costs of your calls.
|
||
Divide the subscription fee by an estimated number of calls, and
|
||
add to the cost of using the phone.
|
||
The same applies to users of CompuServe. Their total cost is
|
||
simply the sum of all connect charges, any network charges (to
|
||
CompuServe and others), part of the basic subscription fee, and
|
||
local phone rates (for direct dialing to the service, or to reach
|
||
the network's node).
|
||
Where a service uses a monthly subscription rate, add part of
|
||
this to the time charges. Distribute the rate using an estimated
|
||
number of online hours per month.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
You pay US$30/hour to access a service during prime time. Your
|
||
modem speed is 240 cps.
|
||
|
||
Theoretically, if the data flows without pauses at system
|
||
prompts, you can transfer 392 pages of text in one hour.
|
||
Even when you deduct some characters due to stops in the
|
||
transfer, the resulting transferred volume remains respectable.
|
||
|
||
To transfer one page of text takes around nine seconds (2200
|
||
characters divided by the speed, which is 2400 bps, or about
|
||
240 characters per second). The cost is nine cents.
|
||
|
||
A given binary file (a program) is 23552 bytes large. Using the
|
||
XMODEM protocol, you can transfer it in about four minutes and
|
||
thirteen seconds. The cost is US$2.10. To find the cost when
|
||
paying by the minute is simple. Just calculate the cost per
|
||
minute or second, and multiply by the estimated connect time.
|
||
|
||
On many services, it will take a minute or two before you can
|
||
start to receive text or files. Disconnecting also takes a few
|
||
seconds. Add this to the connect time when calculating costs.
|
||
|
||
Pauses and delays in the transfer can be caused by you or others,
|
||
and may have a dramatic impact. It is particularly important to
|
||
take this into account when comparing alternatives using different
|
||
networks.
|
||
|
||
Example: Transfers to TWICS via Datapak at 9600 bps rarely
|
||
gave me higher effective speeds than 100 cps. The reason was
|
||
that the connection between the Japanese telcom network and
|
||
TWICS went through a 1200 bps gateway.
|
||
|
||
A high speed connection to your data transporter's network does
|
||
not guarantee a high speed connection to the remote computer.
|
||
|
||
I used to go through Datapak at 9600 bps to a computer center
|
||
in Oslo. There, I was connected through a local area network to
|
||
the host computer. The effective speed was rarely higher than
|
||
4800 bps. Calling direct gave twice the speed.
|
||
|
||
Try to measure the effective transfer speed before selecting a
|
||
routing for your data. Transfer the same amount of text through
|
||
various networks.
|
||
If future transfers are likely to take place at a given time of
|
||
day, test at that time. If your planned application is retrieval of
|
||
programs, retrieve programs. If you want to read news, then read
|
||
news from the services that you want to compare.
|
||
When a network service charging for volume (like Datapak) will
|
||
also be part of a comparison, measuring volume is particularly
|
||
important. Do not assume that you know the answer in advance.
|
||
|
||
| NOTE: Always calculate the cost based on a fixed volume, like |
|
||
| for the transfer of 1000 characters. This is particularly |
|
||
| important when you need to use different transfer speeds to |
|
||
| access competing services. |
|
||
|
||
Network load varies considerably throughout the day depending on
|
||
the number of simultaneous users, and their applications. This also
|
||
applies to online services. The load is normally lowest, when the
|
||
bulk of the users are asleep, and during weekends. When the load is
|
||
low, you get more done per minute.
|
||
|
||
Planning and self-discipline pays off
|
||
-------------------------------------
|
||
The actual cost of using a given set of services depends a lot on
|
||
your self-discipline, the tools you use, and on how well prepared
|
||
you are:
|
||
|
||
* If accessing manually, use "quick" commands rather than menus
|
||
to move at maximum speed to desired sources of information.
|
||
|
||
* Do not set your services to be used with colors, sound, or
|
||
special methods for displaying graphics, unless you have no
|
||
choice, or are willing to pay the extra cost. They increase
|
||
the volume of transferred text, and lower effective speed.
|
||
|
||
* Get the information and disconnect. It is expensive - and
|
||
usually unnecessary - to read captured text while online.
|
||
Log off to read. Call back for more to read, disconnect, and
|
||
then call back again.
|
||
|
||
* Learn how to write your mail offline, and send the letters
|
||
"in a batch" to your mailbox. Your messages will often have
|
||
fewer typing errors, be better thought out, and the cost
|
||
will be considerably lower.
|
||
|
||
* Consider automating your communication (see Chapter 16).
|
||
I use Bergen By Byte this way. A while ago, it gave me the
|
||
following progress report: "Time on: 17 hrs 43 min, today 0
|
||
hrs 0 min, total 827 times." In average, I spend around 1.3
|
||
minutes per call. Yesterday, I was connected for 2:48
|
||
minutes. The result was 106 kilobytes' worth of conference
|
||
mail.
|
||
|
||
Modem speed and cost
|
||
--------------------
|
||
2400 bps is a sensible modem speed for some applications, and used
|
||
to be a good starting point for new onliners. The benefits of using
|
||
a faster modem may be marginal under the following conditions:
|
||
|
||
* When navigating the online service considerably reduces the
|
||
effective speed, and you access the service manually.
|
||
* When you pay considerably more for access at higher speed.
|
||
(CompuServe charges extra for 9600 bps access, but not much.)
|
||
* When your networks do not offer higher speeds.
|
||
* When the relative price of a faster modem in your country
|
||
is prohibitive.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, a modem doing 9600 bps or more, does give you
|
||
considerably faster communication. If doing things faster is more
|
||
important than keeping costs down, then it is a wise investment.
|
||
This is the case for me. Besides, often it is definitely cheaper.
|
||
Your applications have a considerable impact on your costs. If
|
||
you mainly use your modem for retrieval of programs and large data
|
||
files from bulletin boards - and don't have to pay extra for volume
|
||
- then higher modem speeds will immediately give reduced costs.
|
||
A slower speed modem may also stop you from getting what you
|
||
want. For example, there are several shareware programs on my board
|
||
that users of 2400 bps modems are unable to download within their
|
||
allotted 30 minutes per day.
|
||
|
||
When you pay for volume
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
Some network services, like Datapak in Norway, have high rates for
|
||
volume, and very low rates for connect time. When using such
|
||
services, automatic communication becomes less useful. Rather than
|
||
connecting, getting a piece of information, disconnecting, and
|
||
then going back for more, you may find it cost efficient to review
|
||
menus and results while online.
|
||
When paying for volume, the online service's menus become
|
||
luxury items. Using quick commands for navigating is cheaper.
|
||
Your comparisons will never be accurate when comparing with
|
||
services charging for connect time. It is particularly difficult
|
||
when the measure of volume is 'packets' rather than 'number of
|
||
characters transferred'.
|
||
Datapak and many other PDN services reports your sessions like
|
||
this:
|
||
|
||
CLR PAD (00) 00:00:14:55 537 75
|
||
|
||
These numbers say that you have been connected to a service for 14
|
||
minutes and 55 seconds, that 537 data 'packets' have been received,
|
||
and that 75 have been sent. Use these figures to calculate the cost
|
||
of the call.
|
||
|
||
| One data 'packet' or segment contains up to 64 characters. |
|
||
| Think of it as a measure of the number of lines. Each line can |
|
||
| have a maximum of 64 characters. If you send the character A |
|
||
| and a carriage return, then this also counts as a segment. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Consequently, it is hard to use the Datapak record to estimate |
|
||
| the real number of characters transferred. All we know is that |
|
||
| 537 + 75 segments were transferred, and that 612 segments may |
|
||
| contain up to 39,168 characters. |
|
||
|
||
When calculating the cost of a direct call, just the number of
|
||
minutes counts. Use the time reported by the online service, and
|
||
not your stop watch. CompuServe gives this type of report:
|
||
|
||
Thank you for using CompuServe!
|
||
|
||
Off at 10:11 EST 24-Nov-92
|
||
Connect time = 0:15
|
||
|
||
If the size of your log file was 15 KB after the first test, and 11
|
||
KB after the second, then just adjust the latter to compare (Actual
|
||
Cost/11*15). It is easy to compare services that only charge by
|
||
the minute.
|
||
|
||
More practical hints
|
||
--------------------
|
||
It is more expensive to call a service daily "to check the news,"
|
||
than to call it once per week to retrieve the same stories.
|
||
Navigating by menus is more expensive than going directly to a
|
||
source, or going there by stacking commands (i.e., combining quick
|
||
commands into one).
|
||
Many services let you read selective items in conferences by
|
||
entering a search string. On my BBS, the following command
|
||
|
||
r extended 100+ c
|
||
|
||
lets you read all messages containing the search string 'extended'
|
||
in the text starting with message number 100.
|
||
If you forget the "c" parameter, the flow will stop after each
|
||
message. This will reduce the average effective speed. Always use
|
||
"nonstop" commands when reading stories, conference items, and
|
||
other texts.
|
||
Now, read the next chapter.
|
||
Chapter 16: Automatic communication
|
||
===================================
|
||
|
||
Automatic data communication as a development strategy.
|
||
|
||
To get a lead on your competitors.
|
||
To avoid duplication of effort.
|
||
To reduce costs.
|
||
To reduce boring and repetitive work.
|
||
To avoid having to remember technical details.
|
||
|
||
Automatic communication is both for professionals and amateurs.
|
||
First, because it keeps the costs down. Second, because it lets
|
||
you do the job faster and safer.
|
||
|
||
We all have different needs
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
Automation will never be the same for everybody. Our needs are too
|
||
different.
|
||
Some get excited when a program can dial a bulletin board,
|
||
retrieve a program, and then disconnect without them having to
|
||
touch the keyboard.
|
||
Some want an "answering machine" that can respond to and
|
||
forward email when he or she is away from the office.
|
||
Others want a communications system that can tap selected news
|
||
sources, search databases, and do postprocessing on the retrieved
|
||
material.
|
||
For most professionals, doing things manually takes too much
|
||
time. Time is better spent reading, digesting, and using, rather
|
||
than on stupid technical retrieval work. Computers can do that.
|
||
To others again, automation is a question of being able to use
|
||
the online resource at all. If it takes 60 seconds to get a piece of
|
||
information, it may be possible to get before running for the next
|
||
meeting.
|
||
If it takes 15 minutes, however, there may not be enough time.
|
||
If you also need to read a help text to find out how to do it, you
|
||
may not even consider it. The mind is full of other things right
|
||
now.
|
||
|
||
| When using a system for automatic communication, you do not |
|
||
| have to learn and remember online commands. The system will |
|
||
| do it for you. |
|
||
|
||
The minimum solution
|
||
--------------------
|
||
Automatic data communication in its simplest form entails the
|
||
following:
|
||
|
||
* One keypress to get the communications program to dial a
|
||
number, and send user name/password when the online service
|
||
requests this information.
|
||
|
||
* Macro commands (like in a word processor) for navigating
|
||
through an online service, searching, and to send complex
|
||
commands by pressing one key.
|
||
|
||
Most communication programs have a macro language or a script
|
||
language. You will probably never regret time spent on learning
|
||
how to use these features. At a minimum, you should be able to have
|
||
your system log on to a service automatically.
|
||
Autologon spares you the task of remembering your user name and
|
||
password. Besides, most people are only able to use the keyboard at
|
||
a low speed. They easily get frustrated by having to correct typing
|
||
errors.
|
||
|
||
Auto-logon with Procomm
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
Procomm is one of the most popular communications program in use
|
||
today (see appendix 2). A Procomm script file is a text file, which
|
||
can contain a list of commands for dialing and navigating on an
|
||
online service.
|
||
When writing a Procomm script for auto-logon, your first step
|
||
is to list the commands that you believe required. Enter them in a
|
||
text file (as DOS or ASCII text).
|
||
In such scripts, you can test for the occurrence of a small
|
||
piece of information that the online service is supposed to send at
|
||
a given time (like the question "Password?").
|
||
When this information is found, Procomm can be set to send the
|
||
proper response or command (here, your secret password).
|
||
Scripts can be tied to your favorite online services through
|
||
Procomm's dialing directory. Press a key to start the appropriate
|
||
script file for access to a service.
|
||
The following is a simple PROCOMM script file. It can be used
|
||
to access my bulletin board in Norway. It assumes that your name is
|
||
Jens Mikkelsen, and that the secret password is FOXCROOK4. You'll
|
||
have to change this before testing.
|
||
|
||
;
|
||
;Script file for auto-logon to SHS with PROCOMM and PROCOMM PLUS
|
||
;
|
||
WAITFOR "our FIRST Name? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "Jens^M"
|
||
WAITFOR "our LAST Name? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "Mikkelsen^M"
|
||
WAITFOR "ots will echo)? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "foxcrook4^M"
|
||
WAITFOR "^JMore (Y),N,NS? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "n^M"
|
||
WAITFOR "^JMore (Y),N,NS? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "n^M"
|
||
WAITFOR "R] to Continue? "
|
||
PAUSE 1
|
||
TRANSMIT "^M"
|
||
|
||
It is not difficult. You probably understand a lot already. Here is
|
||
the explanation:
|
||
|
||
* the ";" character at the beginning of a line identifies it as
|
||
a comment line. Procomm is to ignore it. We use such lines
|
||
for notes.
|
||
|
||
* WAITFOR "our FIRST Name? "
|
||
has Procomm wait for the text string "our FIRST NAME?" from
|
||
my BBS. It is a part of the question "What is your first
|
||
name?".
|
||
|
||
* PAUSE 1
|
||
halts the execution of the script file for one second.
|
||
|
||
* TRANSMIT "Jens^M"
|
||
sends the name "Jens" followed by a Return (the code ^M in
|
||
Procomm).
|
||
|
||
* WAITFOR "our LAST Name? "
|
||
makes Procomm wait for the question "What is your LAST Name?"
|
||
|
||
The script continues like this. In WAITFOR commands, we use part of
|
||
the text that is displayed on our screen once the scrolling stops.
|
||
Make sure that the search term is unique. It must not appear
|
||
elsewhere in the text coming from the host computer. If it does,
|
||
your name and password may be sent too early.
|
||
You can call the script HORROR.CMD, and attach it to the entry
|
||
for my board in your Procomm phone directory. When you call it the
|
||
next time, Procomm will execute the commands in the file and "turn
|
||
the keyboard over to you" when done.
|
||
|
||
Macros in Procomm
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Above, we used a script to log on automatically to a service. When
|
||
Procomm gives us access to the keyboard again, we must continue
|
||
manually.
|
||
What we want to do online varies. Sometimes, we want to read
|
||
new messages in conferences. In other cases, the purpose is to
|
||
check new programs in the file library. If we find programs of
|
||
interest, we may want to download them.
|
||
Shorthand macros can help you do this faster and safer. For
|
||
example, one macro can take you quickly to a conference for new
|
||
messages. You can make Procomm start this macro whenever you press
|
||
ALT-0 (keep the ALT key down, then press 0).
|
||
You can have the macro key ALT-1 send other commands when in
|
||
the file archives.
|
||
When I started using MS-DOS computers for data communications,
|
||
PC-TALK became my favorite program. It has many of the same macro
|
||
capabilities that Procomm has.
|
||
With PC-TALK, I did autologon to NewsNet. Macro number one sent
|
||
commands that gave me the contents of various newsletters. Macro #2
|
||
picked up the contents in another group. Macro #3 picked up stories
|
||
from my mailbox, and macro #4 logged me off the service. My mission
|
||
was completed by pressing four or five keys.
|
||
|
||
Automating the full task
|
||
------------------------
|
||
It's a long way from automated logon scripts and the use of macros
|
||
to automating the whole task. The major difference is that with
|
||
full automation, you do not have to look at the screen while the
|
||
script is working. You can do other things. Sometimes, you may not
|
||
even be present when the job is being done.
|
||
On a typical morning, I go directly from bed to my office to
|
||
switch my communications computer on.
|
||
While I visit the bathroom, my communications program calls
|
||
three online services, retrieve and send information.
|
||
When the script has disconnected from the first service, which
|
||
is my bulletin board, it analyzes the received data. I want an
|
||
alphabetic list of visitors since my last visit, a sorted list of
|
||
downloaded programs, and names of those calling in at 9600 bps or
|
||
higher.
|
||
Sometimes, the unexpected happen. There may be noise on the
|
||
line, or a sudden disconnect. Usually, my script can solve this
|
||
without manual intervention. It is therefore allowed to work
|
||
unattended most of the time.
|
||
When I get to my office after breakfast, it is all done. My
|
||
communications program is set for reading and responding to today's
|
||
email. I can sit down, and immediately get to work.
|
||
After having written all my replies, I say "send" to my system.
|
||
For me, it's time for another cup of coffee. I am not needed by the
|
||
keyboard while my mail is being sent.
|
||
This is what an automatic communications system can do. My
|
||
scripts also help plan and prepare online visits, and ease my work
|
||
by postprocessing results.
|
||
|
||
| When your communication is fully automated, you need not |
|
||
| read incoming data while it scrolls over your screen, and |
|
||
| then again after logging off the service. You do it only |
|
||
| once. |
|
||
|
||
How to get it? Here are some alternatives:
|
||
|
||
Alternative 1: Write your own system
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
You can write procedures for powerful script-driven programs like
|
||
ProYam (from Omen Technology) and Crosstalk MK IV.
|
||
I started writing scripts for ProYam over seven years ago. The
|
||
system is constantly expanded to include new services, refined to
|
||
include more functions, and enhanced to become more robust.
|
||
The scripts make my system work like an autopilot. It calls
|
||
online services, navigates, retrieves and sends data.
|
||
Postprocessing includes automatic reformatting of retrieved
|
||
data, transfers to various internal databases, statistics, usage
|
||
logs, and calculation of transfer costs.
|
||
Such scripts can do quite complex operations online. For
|
||
example, it can
|
||
|
||
- Buy and sell stock when today's quotes are over/under
|
||
given limits,
|
||
- Select news stories and other types of information based
|
||
on information found in menus or titles.
|
||
|
||
Script writing is not for everybody. It is complicated, and takes a
|
||
lot of time. Therefore, it is only for the specially interested.
|
||
On the other hand, those going for it seldom regret. Tailor-
|
||
made communication scripts give a wonderful flexibility. The
|
||
software does not cost much, but again, it takes a lot of time!
|
||
|
||
| Do not use large and complex script files before you know the |
|
||
| online service well. The scripts let you do things quicker and |
|
||
| safer, but there is always a possibility for unexpected |
|
||
| problems. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Test your scripts for a long time to make them robust by |
|
||
| "training" them to handle the unexpected. Leave them to work |
|
||
| unattended when you are reasonably certain that they can do |
|
||
| the job. - It may take months to get to that point. |
|
||
| |
|
||
| Build a timeout feature into your scripts, so that they don't |
|
||
| just hang there waiting for you after an encounter with fate. |
|
||
|
||
Alternative 2: Use scripts made by others
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
Some script authors generously let others use their creations.
|
||
Earle Robinson of CompuServe's IBM Europe Forum, share his ProYam
|
||
scripts for automatic usage of CompuServe with others. They are
|
||
available from the IBM Communication Forum library.
|
||
Enter GO XTALK on CompuServe to find advanced script files for
|
||
Crosstalk Mk.4.
|
||
ZCOMM and ProYam scripts for visiting my board automatically
|
||
can be freely downloaded there. They split access up into these
|
||
three phases:
|
||
|
||
Phase 1: Menu driven offline preparation.
|
||
Phase 2: Automatic logon, navigation through the system, and
|
||
automatic disconnection.
|
||
Phase 3: Automatic offline postprocessing.
|
||
|
||
You will find scripts for other programs on many online services.
|
||
|
||
Alternative 3: Special software
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
Several online services sell communication programs with built-in
|
||
functions that provides you with automation. They can have offline
|
||
functions for reading and responding to mail. The degree of
|
||
automation varies.
|
||
There are also many programs written by third parties. Most
|
||
programs assume that you use 'expert' as your default operating
|
||
mode on the online service.
|
||
TapCIS, Autosig (ATO), OzCIS, CISOP, CompuServe Navigator (for
|
||
Macintosh), AutoPilot (for Amiga), ARCTIC (for Acorn Archimedes),
|
||
and QuickCIS (for Atari) are popular choices on CompuServe. TapCIS
|
||
is my personal favorite. (CIM does not offer much automation!)
|
||
Aladdin is for GEnie. It automates your use of RoundTables
|
||
(conferences), file areas, and mail. Dialog users turn to Dialog-
|
||
Link.
|
||
Nexis News Plus (for Nexis, US$50) has pull-down menus and
|
||
detailed selection of commands. This MS-DOS program helps users set
|
||
up detailed search commands before logging on to the Mead Data
|
||
Central. Your search results will be downloaded automatically.
|
||
Personal Bibliographics Software, Inc. (Ann Arbor, Mich, U.S.A.
|
||
Tel.: +1-313-996-1580) sells Pro-Search to Dialog and BRS users
|
||
(for Macintosh and MS-DOS).
|
||
Pro-Search will lead you through menus to find information on
|
||
both services. It translates your plain English search commands
|
||
into the cryptic search language used by the services. It logs on
|
||
automatically, connects to these services, finds your information,
|
||
and shows you the hits.
|
||
|
||
Alternative 4: Offline readers
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
The alternatives above have one important weakness. Noise on the
|
||
line can prevent the "robot" from doing the job. All it takes is
|
||
for noise to give a prompt another content than is expected by your
|
||
program or script (as in "En@er a number:" instead of "Enter a
|
||
number:").
|
||
You can avoid noise problems by using get commands (see Chapter
|
||
15), and by making the online service use its minimum prompts
|
||
('expert mode') . Still, this does not give full protection.
|
||
The best is to let the online service do the navigation. Think
|
||
of it as logging on to run a batch file on the remote computer.
|
||
Combine this with automatic transfers of your commands, transmitted
|
||
in of one stream of data with automatic error correction (in the
|
||
software and in the modem), and you have a very robust system.
|
||
The program logs on to the service. Then the service takes
|
||
over. It registers your user identity, checks your user profile for
|
||
personal interests, retrieves and packs all messages, news and
|
||
files into one compressed file, and sends it to you at high speed.
|
||
Your outgoing messages, search commands, commands to join or
|
||
leave conferences, and more, are transferred to the remote computer
|
||
in a similar packet (compressed file).
|
||
When received by the remote computer, it unpacks the transfer
|
||
file and distributes messages and commands to various services
|
||
following your instructions.
|
||
Your "physical" contact with the service is when your modem is
|
||
disconnected. The help menus that you read belong to your program,
|
||
and not the online service. You read and respond to mail in a
|
||
reading module (ref. the term "offline reader").
|
||
Some offline readers give the caller access to more tools than
|
||
is available on the online service itself. They may have spelling
|
||
checkers, multimedia support, let you use your favorite editor or
|
||
word processor, and offer various storage, search, and printing
|
||
options.
|
||
Using offline readers is probably the easiest, cheapest, and
|
||
safest way of using online services. These "readers" are popular
|
||
among bulletin board users, and some commercial services are also
|
||
starting to accommodate them.
|
||
There are many offline reader programs. The most advanced take
|
||
over completely upon logon, and manage transfers of commands and
|
||
compressed information files to and from the host. (Example:
|
||
Binkley Term on FidoNet)
|
||
Global Link is an offline reader for EcoNet. Bergen By Byte
|
||
offers the BBS/CS Mail Grabber/Reader, a script system used with
|
||
the communications program Telix and the service's "auto-get"
|
||
function.
|
||
The most popular systems on the PCBoard based Thunderball Cave
|
||
BBS are Offline Express, Megareader, Session Manager, Rose Reader
|
||
and EZReader. These are used with scripts written for various
|
||
communication programs. Some of them have built in communications
|
||
(and script) modules.
|
||
EZReader from Thumper Technologies (P.O. Box 471346, Tulsa, OK
|
||
74147-1346, U.S.A.) lets users retrieve mail from several online
|
||
systems using transfer formats such as QWK, PCBoard capture files,
|
||
ProDoor ZIPM files, XRS, MCI Mail, and others. Cost: US$49 (1992).
|
||
1stReader from Sparkware (Post Office Box 386, Hendersonville,
|
||
Tennessee 37077, U.S.A.) is my personal favorite for accessing
|
||
Qmail based online systems.
|
||
|
||
| Note: Some offline readers contain all the features required |
|
||
| for fully automated communications. Some bulletin boards allow |
|
||
| up- and downloading to start right after CONNECT. |
|
||
| Off-Line Xpress, an offline mail reader for QWK (Qwikmail) |
|
||
| packets, does not contain a communications module. It just does |
|
||
| pre- and postprocessing of mail packets. |
|
||
| You can use the Off-Line Xpress as one element in a larger |
|
||
| automated system. For example, a system for access to PCBoard |
|
||
| bulletin boards may consist of Off-Line Xpress software, PKZIP |
|
||
| and PKUNZIP (popular shareware programs to compress/decompress |
|
||
| mail packets), the QMODEM communications program, and a script |
|
||
| to navigate to/from the QWK packet send and receive area on the |
|
||
| BBS. |
|
||
| 1stReader (version 1.11) contains a powerful script based |
|
||
| communications module. It lets you compose replies, set search |
|
||
| commands, subscriptions to services, add and drop conferences, |
|
||
| and enter download commands offline. |
|
||
|
||
Automatic automation
|
||
--------------------
|
||
We have explained how to write scripts with Procomm. However, there
|
||
are simpler and quicker ways. Many communication programs can make
|
||
scripts automatically using a learning function. It goes like this:
|
||
Start the learning function before calling the online service.
|
||
Then log on, navigate to the desired services, do what you want to
|
||
automate, and disconnect.
|
||
The learning feature analyzes the received data and builds a
|
||
script file for automatic communication.
|
||
If you call again with the new script, it will "drive the same
|
||
route one more time."
|
||
ZCOMM and ProYam have a learning feature. This is how I made a
|
||
script for accessing Semaforum BBS using ZCOMM:
|
||
|
||
ZCOMM asked for a phone number. I entered +47-370-11710. It
|
||
asked for speed, and I entered 2400 bps. Next, I had to choose
|
||
one of the following:
|
||
|
||
(1) System uses IBM PC (ANSI) line drawing
|
||
(2) 7 bits even parity
|
||
(3) 8 bits no parity
|
||
|
||
My choice was 1.
|
||
ZCOMM dialed the number. When the connection was established,
|
||
I entered my name and password, navigated to the message
|
||
section, read new messages, browsed new files in the library,
|
||
and entered G for Goodbye. This was the "tour" that I wanted to
|
||
automate.
|
||
When disconnected, I pressed the F1 key. This prompted the
|
||
learning process based on a record of the online tour. The log
|
||
described everything that had happened in detail, including my
|
||
pauses to think. Now I was prompted by the following question:
|
||
|
||
'newscr.t' exists. Append/replace/quit?
|
||
|
||
I selected append. Then:
|
||
|
||
Do you want this script file as a new entry in your
|
||
telephone directory (y/n)?
|
||
|
||
I entered "y," and named it "semaforum." After a few seconds,
|
||
my new script was ready:
|
||
|
||
Your new script is in the file 'newscr.t' !!
|
||
You can append the file to your current script file
|
||
(for example PHODIR.T) or have the commands executed by
|
||
entering:
|
||
call semaforum.newscr.t
|
||
|
||
It was time to test the new wonder. I entered
|
||
|
||
call semaforum.newscr.t
|
||
|
||
at the ZCOMM command line, hit the Enter key, and off it went.
|
||
ZCOMM called the BBS and repeated everything - at far higher
|
||
speed than I had done it manually. It went on-hook as planned
|
||
when done.
|
||
|
||
Limitations
|
||
-----------
|
||
Auto-learn programs can create a script file that let you "drive
|
||
the same route." For some applications this is enough. For others,
|
||
it's just part of the way. You have to refine the script manually
|
||
to get what you want.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
If you call my bulletin board with an auto-learned script made
|
||
yesterday, chances are that everything works well. If you call
|
||
twice on the same day, however, you're in for a surprise. The
|
||
board greets you differently on your second visit. You will not
|
||
get the menu of available bulletins. It will take you directly
|
||
to the system's main menu. Your script must take this into
|
||
account.
|
||
|
||
On most online services, many things can happen at each "junction
|
||
of your road." At one point in one of my scripts, up to twenty
|
||
things may happen. Each event needs its own "routing."
|
||
Twenty possible events are an extreme, but three to four
|
||
possibilities at each system prompt is not unusual. All of them
|
||
need to be handled by your script, if you want it to visit online
|
||
services unattended while asleep.
|
||
It is quicker and simpler to use other people's scripts and
|
||
programs, although this might force you to use a different program
|
||
for each service.
|
||
Personally, I prefer offline readers on services where such are
|
||
able to do the job. On other services, I usually depend on my own
|
||
tailor-made scripts.
|
||
Chapter 17: Gazing into the future
|
||
==================================
|
||
|
||
Thoughts about things to come.
|
||
|
||
Newspaper of the future
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
Some years ago, Nicholas Negroponte of Massachusetts Institute of
|
||
Technology, said that today's newspapers are old-fashioned and soon
|
||
to be replaced by electronic "ultra personal" newspapers.
|
||
"If the purpose is to sell news," he said, then it must be
|
||
completely wrong to sell newspapers. Personally, I think that it is
|
||
a dreadful way of receiving the news."
|
||
MIT's Media Laboratory had developed a new type of electronic
|
||
newspaper. Daily, it delivered personalized news to each researcher.
|
||
The newspaper was "written" by a computer that searched through the
|
||
news services' cables and other news sources according to each
|
||
person's interest profile.
|
||
The system could present the stories on paper or on screen. It
|
||
could convert them to speech, so that the "reader" could listen to
|
||
the news in the car or the shower.
|
||
In a tailor-made electronic newspaper, personal news makes big
|
||
headlines. If you are off for San Francisco tomorrow, the weather
|
||
forecasts for this city is front page news. Email from your son
|
||
will also get a prominent place.
|
||
"What counts in my newspaper is what I consider newsworthy,"
|
||
said Negroponte.
|
||
He claimed that the personal newspaper is a way of getting a
|
||
grip on the information explosion. "We cannot do it the old way
|
||
anymore. We need other agents that can do prereading for us. In
|
||
this case, the computer happens to be our agent."
|
||
|
||
The technology is already here. Anyone can design similar papers
|
||
using powerful communication programs with extensive script
|
||
features. I have tried.
|
||
My test edition of The Saltrod Daily News did not convert news
|
||
to sound. It did not look like a newspaper page on my screen. Not
|
||
because it was impossible. I simply did not feel these 'extras'
|
||
worth the effort.
|
||
My personal interest profile was taken care of by my scripts.
|
||
If I wanted news, the "news processor" went to work and "printed"
|
||
a new edition. On Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, I got an
|
||
"extended edition."
|
||
This is a section from my first edition:
|
||
|
||
"Front page," Thursday, November 21.
|
||
Under the headline News From Tokyo, the following items:
|
||
|
||
TOSHIBA TO MARKET INEXPENSIVE PORTABLE WORD PROCESSOR
|
||
TOHOKU UNIVERSITY CONSTRUCTING SEMICONDUCTOR RESEARCH LAB
|
||
MEITEC, U.S. FIRM TO JOINTLY MARKET COMPUTER PRINTER INFO
|
||
TOSHIBA TO SUPPLY OFFICE EQUIPMENT TO OLIVETTI
|
||
NISSAN DEVELOPS PAINT INSPECTION ROBOT
|
||
MADE-TO-ORDER POCKET COMPUTER FROM CASIO
|
||
|
||
These articles were captured from Kyoto News Service through
|
||
Down Jones/News Retrieval.
|
||
|
||
The column with news from the United States had stories from
|
||
NEWSBYTES newsletters:
|
||
|
||
* DAY ONE COMDEX.
|
||
* IBM'S PRE ANNOUNCEMENT OF "CLAMSHELL"
|
||
* AT&T TO JUMP IN SOONER WITH LAPTOP COMPUTER
|
||
* COMMODORE THIRD CONSECUTIVE QUARTERLY LOSS
|
||
* 2 ZENITH UNVEILS TOUCH-SCREEN
|
||
* HP's EARNINGS DROP
|
||
|
||
Hot News From England came from several sources, including
|
||
Financial Times, and Reuters (in CompuServe's UK News).
|
||
Headlines read:
|
||
|
||
* THE CHRISTMAS SELLING WAR
|
||
* BIG MACS GOING CHEAP TO UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
|
||
|
||
"Page 2" was dedicated to technology intelligence. "Page 3"
|
||
had stories about telecommunications, mainly collected from
|
||
NewsNet's newsletters. "Page 4" had stories about personal
|
||
computer applications.
|
||
|
||
As the cost of communicating and using online services continues to
|
||
decrease, many people will be able to do the same. This is where we
|
||
are heading.
|
||
Some people say it is too difficult to read news on a computer
|
||
screen. Maybe so, but pay attention to what is happening in
|
||
notebook computers. This paragraph was written on a small PC by the
|
||
fireplace in my living room. The computer is hardly any larger or
|
||
heavier than a book.
|
||
(Sources for monitoring notebook trends: NEWSBYTES' IBM and
|
||
Apple reports, CompuServe's Online Today, and IBM Hardware Forum.)
|
||
|
||
Electronic news by radio
|
||
------------------------
|
||
If costs were of no concern, then your applications of the online
|
||
world would probably change considerably. Pay attention, as we are
|
||
moving fast in that direction.
|
||
Radio is one of the supporting technologies. It is used to
|
||
deliver Usenet newsgroup to bulletin boards (example: PageSat Inc.
|
||
of Palo Alto, U.S.A.) Also, consider this:
|
||
Businesses need a constant flow of news to remain competitive.
|
||
Desktop Data Inc. (tel. +1-617-890-0042) markets a real-time news
|
||
service called NewsEDGE in the United States and Europe. They call
|
||
it "live news processing." Annual subscriptions start at US$20,000
|
||
for ten users (1993).
|
||
NewsEDGE continuously collects news from more than 100 news
|
||
wires, including sources like PR Newswire, Knight Ridder/Tribune
|
||
Business News, Dow Jones News Service, Dow Jones Professional
|
||
Investor Report and Reuters Financial News.
|
||
The stories are "packaged" and immediately feed to customers'
|
||
personal computers and workstations by FM, satellite, or X.25
|
||
broadcast:
|
||
|
||
* All news stories are integrated in a live news stream all day
|
||
long,
|
||
|
||
* The NewsEdge software manages the simultaneous receipt of
|
||
news from multiple services, and alerts users to stories that
|
||
match their individual interest profiles. It also maintains a
|
||
full-text database of the most recent 250,000 stories on the
|
||
user's server for quick searching.
|
||
|
||
Packet radio
|
||
------------
|
||
A global amateur radio network allows users to modem around the
|
||
world, and even in outer space. Its users never get a telephone
|
||
bill.
|
||
There are over 700 packet radio based bulletin boards (PBBS).
|
||
They are interconnected by short wave radio, VHF, UHF, and
|
||
satellite links. Technology aside, they look and feel just like
|
||
standard bulletin boards.
|
||
Once you have the equipment, can afford the electricity to
|
||
power it up, and the time it takes to get a radio amateur license,
|
||
communication itself is free.
|
||
Packet radio equipment sells in the United States for less
|
||
than US$ 750. This will give you a radio (VHR tranceiver), antenna,
|
||
cable for connecting the antenna to the radio, and a controller
|
||
(TNC - Terminal Node Controller).
|
||
Most PBBS systems are connected to a network of packet radio
|
||
based boards. Many amateurs use 1200 bps, but speeds of up to
|
||
56,000 bps are being used on higher frequencies (the 420-450 MHz
|
||
band in the United States).
|
||
Hams are working on real-time digitized voice communications,
|
||
still-frame (and even moving) graphics, and live multiplayer games.
|
||
In some countries, there are also gateways available to terrestrial
|
||
public and commercial networks, such as CompuServe, and Usenet.
|
||
Packet radio is demonstrated as a feasible technology for
|
||
wireless extension of the Internet.
|
||
Radio and satellites are being used to help countries in the
|
||
Third World. Volunteers in Technical Assistance (VITA), a private,
|
||
nonprofit organization, is one of those concerned with technology
|
||
transfers in humanitarian assistance to these countries.
|
||
VITA's portable packet radio system was used for global email
|
||
after a volcanic eruption in the Philippines in 1991. Today, the
|
||
emphasis is on Africa.
|
||
VITA's "space mailbox" passes over each single point of the
|
||
earth twice every 25 hours at an altitude of 800 kilometers. When
|
||
the satellite is over a ground station, the station sends files and
|
||
messages for storage in the satellite's computer memory and
|
||
receives incoming mail. The cost of ground station operation is
|
||
based on solar energy batteries, and therefore relatively cheap.
|
||
To learn more about VITA's projects, subscribe to their mailing
|
||
list by email to LISTSERV@AUVM.BITNET. Use the command SUB DEVEL-L
|
||
<First-name Last-name>.
|
||
For more general information about packet radio, check out
|
||
HamNet on CompuServe, and especially its library 9. Retrieve the
|
||
file 'packet_radio' (Packet radio in earth and space environments
|
||
for relief and development) from GNET's archive (see chapter 7).
|
||
ILINK has an HAMRADIO conference. There is a packet radio
|
||
mailing list at PACKET-RADIO@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL (write PACKET-
|
||
RADIO-REQUEST@@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL to subscribe).
|
||
Usenet has rec.radio.amateur.packet (Discussion about packet
|
||
radio setups), and various other rec.radio conferences. There is
|
||
HAM_TECH on FidoNet, and Ham Radio under Science on EXEC-PC.
|
||
The American Radio Relay League (AARL) operates an Internet
|
||
information service called the ARRL Information Server. To learn
|
||
how to use it, send email to info@arrl.org with the word HELP in
|
||
the body of the text.
|
||
|
||
Cable TV
|
||
--------
|
||
Expect Cable TV networks to grow in importance as electronic high-
|
||
ways, to offer gateways into the Internet and others, and to get
|
||
interconnected not unlike the Internet itself.
|
||
Example: Continental Cablevision Inc. (U.S.A.) lets customers
|
||
plug PCs and a special modem directly into its cable lines to link
|
||
up with the Internet. The cable link bypasses local phone hookups
|
||
and provide the capability to download whole books and other
|
||
information at speeds up to 10 million bits per second.
|
||
|
||
Electronic mail on the move
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
For some time, we have been witnessing a battle between giants. On
|
||
one side, the national telephone companies have been pushing X.400
|
||
backed by CCITT, and software companies like Lotus, Novell, and
|
||
Microsoft.
|
||
On the other side, CompuServe, Dialcom, MCI Mail, GEISCO,
|
||
Sprint, and others have been fighting their wars.
|
||
Nobody really thought much about the Internet, until suddenly,
|
||
it was there for everybody. The incident has changed the global
|
||
email scene fundamentally.
|
||
One thing seems reasonably certain: that the Internet will
|
||
grow. In late 1992, the president of the Internet Society (Reston,
|
||
Va., U.S.A.) made the following prediction:
|
||
|
||
".. by the year 2000 the Internet will consist of some 100
|
||
million hosts, 3 million networks, and 1 billion users (close
|
||
to the current population of the People's Republic of China).
|
||
Much of this growth will certainly come from commercial
|
||
traffic."
|
||
|
||
We, the users, are the winners. Most online services now understand
|
||
that global exchange of email is a requirement, and that they must
|
||
connect to the Internet.
|
||
Meanwhile, wild things are taking place in the grassroots
|
||
arena:
|
||
|
||
* Thousands of new bulletin boards are being connected to
|
||
grassroots networks like FidoNet (which in turn is connected
|
||
to the Internet for exchange of mail).
|
||
|
||
* Thousands of bulletin boards are being hooked directly into
|
||
the Internet (and Usenet) offering such access to users at
|
||
stunning rates.
|
||
|
||
* The BBSes are bringing email up to a new level by letting
|
||
us use offline readers, and other types of powerful mail
|
||
handling software.
|
||
|
||
Email will never be the same.
|
||
|
||
Cheaper and better communications
|
||
---------------------------------
|
||
During Christmas 1987, a guru said that once the 9600 bps V.32
|
||
modems fell below the US$1,200 level, they would create a new
|
||
standard. Today, such modems can be bought at prices lower than
|
||
US$200. In many countries, 14,400 bits/s modems are already the
|
||
preferred choice.
|
||
|
||
Wild dreams get real
|
||
--------------------
|
||
In the future, we will be able to do several things simultaneously
|
||
on the same telephone line. This is what the promised land of ISDN
|
||
(Integrated Service Digital Networks) is supposed to give us.
|
||
Some users already have this capability. They write and talk
|
||
on the same line using pictures, music, video, fax, voice and data.
|
||
ISDN is supposed to let us use services that are not generally
|
||
available today. Here are some key words:
|
||
|
||
* Chats, with the option of having pictures of the people
|
||
we are talking to up on our local screen (for example in
|
||
a window, each time he or she is saying something).
|
||
Eventually, we may get the pictures in 3-D.
|
||
|
||
* Database searches in text and pictures, with displays of
|
||
both.
|
||
|
||
* Electronic transfers of video/movies over a telephone line
|
||
(fractal image compression technology may give us another
|
||
online revolution). Imagine dances filmed by ethnologists
|
||
at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., or an
|
||
educational film about the laps in northern Norway from
|
||
an information provider called the Norwegian Broadcasting
|
||
Corp.
|
||
|
||
The "Internet Talk Radio" is already delivering programs by
|
||
anonymous ftp (e.g., through ftp.nau.edu in the directory
|
||
/talk-radio).
|
||
|
||
* Online amusement parks with group plays, creative offerings
|
||
(drawing, painting, building of 3-D electronic sculptures),
|
||
shopping (with "live" people presenting merchandise and
|
||
good pictures of the offerings, test drives, etc.), casino
|
||
(with real prizes), theater with live performance, online
|
||
"dressing rooms" (submit a 2-D picture of yourself, and
|
||
play with your looks), online car driving schools (drive a
|
||
car through Tokyo or New York, or go on safari).
|
||
|
||
The Sierra Network has been playing around with these ideas
|
||
for quite some time.
|
||
|
||
* Your favorite books, old as new, available for on-screen
|
||
reading or searching in full text. Remember, many libraries
|
||
have no room to store all the new books that they receive.
|
||
Also, wear and tear tend to destroy books after some time.
|
||
|
||
Many books are already available online, including this one.
|
||
|
||
* Instant access to hundreds of thousands of 'data cottages'.
|
||
These are computers in private homes of people around the
|
||
world set up for remote access. With the technical advances
|
||
in the art of transferring pictures, some of these may grow
|
||
to become tiny online "television stations."
|
||
|
||
These wild ideas are already here, but it will take time before
|
||
they are generally available. New networks need to be in place. New
|
||
and more powerful communications equipment has to be provided.
|
||
Farther down the road, we can see the contours of speech-based
|
||
electronic conferences with automatic translation to and from the
|
||
participants' languages. Entries will be stored as text in a form
|
||
that allows for advanced online searching. We may have a choice
|
||
between the following:
|
||
|
||
* To use voice when entering messages, rather than entering
|
||
them through the keyboard. The ability to mix speech, text,
|
||
sound and pictures (single frames or live pictures).
|
||
|
||
* Messages are delivered to you by voice, as text or as a
|
||
combination of these (like in a lecture with visual aids).
|
||
|
||
* Text and voice can be converted to a basic text, which then
|
||
may be converted to other languages, and forwarded to its
|
||
destination as text or voice.
|
||
|
||
One world
|
||
---------
|
||
Within the Internet, the idea of "the network as one, large
|
||
computer" has already given birth to many special services, like
|
||
gopher and WAIS. Potentially, we will be able to find and retrieve
|
||
information from anywhere on the global grid of connected systems.
|
||
Bulletin boards have commenced to offer grassroots features
|
||
modeled after telnet and ftp. These alternatives may even end up
|
||
being better and more productive than the interactive commands
|
||
offered "inside" the Internet.
|
||
The global integration of online services will continue at full
|
||
speed, and in different ways.
|
||
|
||
Rates
|
||
-----
|
||
There is a trend away from charging by the minute or hour. Many
|
||
services convert to subscription prices, a fixed price by the
|
||
month, quarter or year.
|
||
Other services, among them some major database services, move
|
||
toward a scheme where users only pay for what they get (no cure, no
|
||
pay). MCI Mail was one of the first. There, you only pay when you
|
||
send or read mail. On CompuServe's IQuest, you pay a fixed price
|
||
for a fixed set of search results.
|
||
|
||
Cheaper transfers of data
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
Privatization of the national telephone monopolies has given us
|
||
more alternatives. This will continue. Possible scenarios:
|
||
|
||
* Major companies selling extra capacity from their own
|
||
internal networks,
|
||
|
||
* Telecommunications companies exporting their services at
|
||
extra low prices,
|
||
|
||
* Other pricing schemes (like a fixed amount per month with
|
||
unlimited usage),
|
||
|
||
* New technology (direct transmitting satellites, FM, etc.)
|
||
|
||
So far, data transporters have been receiving a disproportionate
|
||
share of the total costs. For example, the rate for accessing
|
||
CompuServe from Norway through InfoNet is US$11.00, while using the
|
||
service itself costs US$12.80 at 2400 bps.
|
||
Increased global competition in data transportation is quickly
|
||
changing this picture, supported by general access to the Internet.
|
||
Prices will most likely continue their dramatic way toward zero.
|
||
|
||
Powerful new search tools
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
As the sheer quantity of information expands, the development of
|
||
adequate finding tools is gaining momentum. Our major problem is
|
||
how to use what we have access to.
|
||
This is especially true on the Internet. Expect future personal
|
||
information agents, called "knowbots," which will scan databases
|
||
all over the online world for specific information at a user's
|
||
bidding. This will make personal knowledge of where you need to go
|
||
redundant.
|
||
Artificial intelligence will increase the value of searches, as
|
||
they can be based on your personal searching history since your
|
||
first day as a user.
|
||
Your personal information agents will make automatic decisions
|
||
about what is important and what is not in a query. When you get
|
||
information back, it will not just be in the normal chronological
|
||
order. It will be ranked by what seems to be closest to the query.
|
||
|
||
Sources for future studies
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
It seems appropriate to end this chapter with some online services
|
||
focusing on the future:
|
||
Newsbytes has a section called Trends. The topic is computers
|
||
and communications. ECHO has the free database Trend, the online
|
||
edition of the Trend Monitor magazine. It contains short stories
|
||
about the development within electronics and computers (log on to
|
||
ECHO using the password TREND).
|
||
Usenet has the newsgroup clari.news.trends (Surveys and
|
||
trends). Why not complement what you find here by monitoring trends
|
||
in associated areas (like music), to follow the development from
|
||
different perspectives? The music forum RockNet on CompuServe has a
|
||
section called Trends.
|
||
CompuServe's Education Forum has the section Future Talk. What
|
||
educators think about the future of online services (and education)
|
||
is always interesting. The Well, based just outside Silicon Valley
|
||
in the United States, has The Future conference.
|
||
UUCP has info-futures. Its purpose is "to provide a speculative
|
||
forum for analyzing current and likely events in technology as they
|
||
will affect our near future in computing and related areas."
|
||
(Contact: info-futures-request@cs.bu.edu for subscription.)
|
||
Usenet has comp.society.futures about "Events in technology
|
||
affecting future computing."
|
||
It is tempting to add a list of conferences dedicated to
|
||
science fiction, but I'll leave that pleasure to you.
|
||
|
||
Have a nice trip!
|
||
|
||
|
||
Appendix 1: List of selected online services
|
||
============================================
|
||
|
||
To make a list of online services is difficult. Services come and
|
||
go. Addresses and access numbers are constantly changed. Only one
|
||
thing is certain. Some of the details below will be outdated, when
|
||
you read this.
|
||
|
||
Affaersdata i Stockholm AB
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
P.O. Box 3188, S-103 63 Stockholm, Sweden. Tel.: + 46 8 736 59 19.
|
||
|
||
America Online
|
||
--------------
|
||
has the CNN Newsroom (Turner Educational Services), The Washington
|
||
Post, the National Geographic magazine, PC World and Macworld. AOL
|
||
has tailor-made graphical user interfaces for Apple, Macintosh, and
|
||
PC compatible computers, and about 300.000 users (in June 1993).
|
||
Sending and receiving Internet mail is possible.
|
||
Contact: America Online, 8619 Westwood Center Dr., Vienna, VA
|
||
22182-2285, USA. Phone: +1-703-448-8700.
|
||
|
||
APC
|
||
---
|
||
The Association for Progressive Communications (APC) is a worldwide
|
||
partnership of member networks for peace and environmental users with
|
||
host computers in several countries:
|
||
|
||
Alternex (Brazil). Email: support@ax.apc.org
|
||
Chasque (Uruguay). Email: apoyo@chasque.apc.org
|
||
ComLink e.V (Germany). Email: support@oln.comlink.apc.org
|
||
Ecuanex (Ecuador). Email: intercom@ecuanex.apc.org
|
||
GlasNet (Russia). Email: support@glas.apc.org
|
||
GreenNet (England). Email: support@gn.apc.org
|
||
Institute for Global Communications (U.S.A.), includes
|
||
EcoNet, PeaceNet, ConflictNet, LaborNet.
|
||
Email: support@igc.apc.org
|
||
Nicarao - CRIES (Nicaragua). Email: ayuda@nicarao.apc.org
|
||
NordNet (Sweden). Email: support@pns.apc.org
|
||
Pegasus (Australia). Email: support@peg.apc.org
|
||
Web (Canada). Email: support@web.apc.org
|
||
|
||
While all these services are fee based, they bring a wealth of
|
||
information on environmental preservation, peace (incl. Greenpeace
|
||
Press Releases), human rights, grant-making foundations, Third World
|
||
Resources, United Nations Information Service, Pesticide Information
|
||
Service, and more.
|
||
For information about APC, write to apcadmin@igc.apc.org , or APC
|
||
International Secretariat, Rua Vincente de Souza, 29, 22251-070 Rio
|
||
de Janeiro, BRASIL. Fax: +55-21-286-0541.
|
||
For information about the PeaceNet World News Service, which
|
||
delivers news digests directly to your email box, send a request to
|
||
pwn@igc.apc.org.
|
||
|
||
Bergen By Byte
|
||
--------------
|
||
Norwegian online service with conferences and many files. Modem
|
||
tel.: +47 05 323781. PDN (Datapak) address: 0 2422 450134. Telnet:
|
||
oscar.bbb.no (192.124.156.38).
|
||
English-language interface available. Annual subscription
|
||
rates. You can register online. Limited free usage.
|
||
|
||
BIBSYS
|
||
------
|
||
Book database operated by the Norwegian universities' libraries.
|
||
Send Internet mail to genserv@pollux.bibsys.no with your search
|
||
word in the subject title of the message.
|
||
|
||
Big Sky Telegraph
|
||
-----------------
|
||
is an online community for educators, business people etc. living
|
||
in rural areas in North America. Address: 710 South Atlantic,
|
||
Dillon, Montana 59725, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
BITNET
|
||
------
|
||
"Because It's Time NETwork" started in 1981 as a small network for
|
||
IBM computers in New York, U.S.A. Today, BITNET encompasses 3,284
|
||
host computers by academic and research institutions all over the
|
||
world. It has around 243,016 users (source: Matrix News 1993)
|
||
All connected hosts form a worldwide network using the NJE
|
||
(Network Job Entry) protocols and with a single list of nodes.
|
||
There is no single worldwide BITNET administration. Several
|
||
national or regional bodies administer the network.
|
||
The European part of BITNET is called EARN (European Academic
|
||
Research Network), while the Canadian is called NetNorth. In Japan
|
||
the name is AsiaNet. BITNET also has connections to South America.
|
||
Other parts of the network have names like CAREN, ANSP, SCARNET,
|
||
CEARN, GULFNET, HARNET, ECUANET, and RUNCOL.
|
||
Normally, a BITNET email address looks like this:
|
||
|
||
NOTRBCAT@INDYCMS
|
||
|
||
The part to the left of the @-character is the users' mailbox code.
|
||
The part to the right is the code of the mailbox computer. It is
|
||
common for Internet users to refer to BITNET addresses like this:
|
||
NOTRBCAT@INDYCMS.BITNET .
|
||
To send email from the Internet to BITNET, it has to be sent
|
||
through special gateway computers. On many systems, this is taken
|
||
care of automatically. You type NOTRBCAT@INDYCMS.BITNET, and your
|
||
mailbox system does the rest.
|
||
On some systems, the user must give routing information in the
|
||
BITNET address. For example, North American mail to BITNET can be
|
||
sent through the gateway center CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU . To make mail to
|
||
NOTRBCAT go through this gateway, its mail address must be changed
|
||
as follows:
|
||
|
||
NOTRBCAT%INDYCMS.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
|
||
|
||
Explanation: The @ in the initial address is replaced with % . Then
|
||
add the gateway routing: ".BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU".
|
||
If you must use a gateway in your address, always select one
|
||
close to where you live. Ask your local postmaster for the correct
|
||
addressing in your case.
|
||
BITNET has many conferences. We call them discussion lists or
|
||
mailing lists. The lists are usually administered by a computer
|
||
program called LISTSERV. The dialog is based on redistribution of
|
||
ordinary email by mailing lists. Consequently, it is simple for
|
||
users of other networks to participate in BITNET conferences.
|
||
A list of discussion lists (at present around 1,600 one-line
|
||
descriptions) is available by email from LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET.
|
||
Write the following command in the TEXT of your message:
|
||
|
||
LIST GLOBAL
|
||
|
||
NEW-LIST@NDSUVM1.BITNET and NETMONTH (from BITLIB@YALEVM.BITNET)
|
||
distribute regular notices about new discussion lists. Subscribe to
|
||
NEW-LIST by email to LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET. Use the following
|
||
command:
|
||
|
||
SUB NEW-LIST Your-first-name Your-last-name
|
||
|
||
This is how we usually subscribe to discussion lists. Send your
|
||
subscription commands to a LISTSERV close to where you live.
|
||
The command "SENDME BITNET OVERVIEW" tells LISTSERV to send
|
||
more information about the services.
|
||
|
||
BIX
|
||
---
|
||
is operated as a joint venture between General Videotex Corp. and
|
||
the North American computer magazine BYTE (McGraw-Hill). To some
|
||
extent, it mirrors what you can read on paper. BIX offers global
|
||
Internet email, telnet and ftp, multiple conferences. In 1992, the
|
||
service had about 50,000 members.
|
||
The NUA address is 0310600157878. On Internet, telnet
|
||
x25.bix.com . At the Username: prompt, enter BIX as a user name. At
|
||
the second Username: prompt, enter NEW if you don't already have an
|
||
account on the service.
|
||
You can sign up for the service, and play during your first
|
||
visit to the service. Read BYTE for more information, or write to
|
||
General Videotex Corporation, 1030 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge,
|
||
MA 02138, USA. Phone: +1-617-354-4137.
|
||
|
||
BRS
|
||
---
|
||
Bibliographic Retrieval Services is owned by InfoPro Technologies
|
||
(see below). BRS/After Dark is a service for PC users. It can be
|
||
accessed during evenings and weekends at attractive rates.
|
||
InfoPro offers connection through their own network in Europe,
|
||
and through the Internet. BRS contains about 120 databases within
|
||
research, business, news, and science. The service's strengths are
|
||
medicine and health.
|
||
Membership in BRS costs US$80 per year, plus hourly database
|
||
usage charges. It is also available through CompuServe (at a
|
||
different price).
|
||
Contact in Europe: BRS Information Technologies, Achilles
|
||
House, Western Avenue, London W3 OUA, England. Tel. +44 81 993
|
||
9962. In North America: InfoPro Technologies. Tel.: +1-703-442-0900.
|
||
Telnet: brs.com (US$6/hr).
|
||
|
||
Canada Remote Systems
|
||
---------------------
|
||
is North America's largest bulletin board system (1992). It has a
|
||
software library of more than 500,000 programs and files, and over
|
||
3,500 public forums and discussion areas.
|
||
Canada Remote provides several news and information services,
|
||
including the United Press International and Reuters news wires,
|
||
North American stock exchange results, the twice-weekly edition of
|
||
Newsbytes, and other publications.
|
||
Tel.: +1-416-629-7000 (in the U.S.) and +1-313-963-1905 (Canada).
|
||
Canada Remote Systems, 1331 Crestlawn Drive, Unit D, Mississauga,
|
||
Ontario, Canada L4W 2P9.
|
||
|
||
CGNET
|
||
-----
|
||
is a network interconnecting a group of international research
|
||
organizations. Besides email, CGNET provides news clipping
|
||
services, airline reservation information, and database search.
|
||
(See Dialcom)
|
||
Contact: CGNET Services International, 1024 Hamilton Court,
|
||
Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. Telephone: +1-415-325-3061.
|
||
Fax: 1-415-325-2313 Telex: 4900005788 (CGN UI) .
|
||
|
||
CIX (England)
|
||
-------------
|
||
British online-service available by telnet, through PDN services
|
||
and by direct dial. Telnet cix.compulink.co.uk.
|
||
Compulink Information eXchange Ltd. claims to be Europe's
|
||
largest conferencing system. Sign-up fee (1993): GBP 25.00. Monthly
|
||
minimum: GBP 6.25. Off-peak connect rate GBP 2.40. Peak rate is
|
||
3.60 per hour.
|
||
The service has full Internet access, and email exchange with
|
||
CompuServe and Dialcom. CIX has many conferences, ISDN access,
|
||
Usenet News, telnet and ftp.
|
||
Contact: The Compulink Information Exchange Ltd., The Sanctuary
|
||
Oakhill Grove, Surbiton, Surrey KT6 6DU, England. Tel.: +44-81-390-
|
||
8446. Fax: +44-81-390-6561. NUA: 2342 1330 0310. Data: +44-81-390-
|
||
1255/+44-81-390-1244. Email: cixadmin@cix.compulink.co.uk .
|
||
|
||
CIX (USA)
|
||
---------
|
||
The Commercial Internet eXchange is a North American association of
|
||
commercial Internet providers in which they agree to carry each
|
||
others' packets of mail, and more.
|
||
|
||
Clarinet
|
||
--------
|
||
A commercial network publishing service providing information and
|
||
news in over 100 newsgroups by subject matter on Usenet. Read
|
||
Chapter 9 for more information. Single-user (individual) prices
|
||
available.
|
||
Clarinet Communications Corp., 124 King St. North, Waterloo,
|
||
Ontario N2J 2X8, Canada. Email: info@clarinet.com .
|
||
|
||
Commercial Mail Relay Service (CMR)
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
This service is not available anymore. They used to be available
|
||
on this address:
|
||
Intermail-Request@Intermail.ISI.EDU
|
||
|
||
CompuServe
|
||
----------
|
||
has about 1.3 million users (August 93) all over the world, over
|
||
1,500 databases, 200 forums, 500 newspapers, online shopping from
|
||
more than 100 shops and entertainment. It's like a large electronic
|
||
supermarket.
|
||
You can access the service though local access numbers in over
|
||
100 countries, through Packet Switching Services, and outdial
|
||
services. The international NUA address is 0313299999997.
|
||
A list of available forums can be retrieved from the IBM
|
||
Communication Forum. Participation in forums is normally free (no
|
||
extra charge).
|
||
The IQuest database service gives access to more than 800
|
||
publications, databases, and indexes within business, public
|
||
affairs, research, news, etc. Bibliographic and full-text searches.
|
||
Some IQuest databases are physically residing on other online
|
||
services, like NewsNet, Dialog, BRS, and Vu/Text (U.S.A.), Data-
|
||
Star (Switzerland), DataSolve (England. It has TASS in the World
|
||
Reporter database), and Questel (France). Sometimes, it is cheaper
|
||
to use these services on CompuServe, than by a call to these
|
||
services directly.
|
||
The connect charge for CompuServe's Alternative Pricing Plan is
|
||
US$12.80/hour at 1200 and 2400 bps. 9600 bps costs US$22.80/hour.
|
||
Monthly subscription US$2.50. Using the Executive News Service
|
||
(clipping service) costs an extra US$15/hour.
|
||
An optional flat-rate pricing plan (the Standard Pricing plan)
|
||
is available for US$8.95 per month. It gives unlimited access to
|
||
over 30 basic services, including CompuServe mail, The Electronic
|
||
Mall, news, weather and sports, member support services, reference
|
||
and travel services.
|
||
Hourly rates for Standard Pricing Plan members using extended
|
||
services go from US$6/hour for 300 bits/s to US$16/hour for 9600
|
||
bits/s access. (Feb. 93)
|
||
In addition, there are network charges. These differ a lot by
|
||
country. For example, access through European CompuServe nodes has
|
||
no communication surcharges during non-prime time (19:00-8:00 local
|
||
time).
|
||
CompuServe can be accessed by telnet to hermes.merit.edu, or
|
||
35.1.48.150. Host: CompuServe.
|
||
CompuServe Information Services Inc., POB 20212, 5000 Arlington
|
||
Centre Blvd., Columbus, Ohio 43220, U.S.A.
|
||
In Europe, call voice: +49-89-66550-111, fax: +49-89-66 550-255
|
||
or write to CompuServe, Jahnstrasse 2, D-8025 Unterhaching b.,
|
||
Munich, Germany. To contact CompuServe Africa, call (012) 841-2530
|
||
in South Africa, or (+27)(12) 841-2530 for everywhere else.
|
||
|
||
Cosine
|
||
------
|
||
COSINE (Cooperation for Open Systems Interconnection Networking in
|
||
Europe) is a European Common Market "Eureka" project. It works to
|
||
establish a communications network infrastructure for scientific
|
||
and industrial research institutes all over Europe.
|
||
IXI is the international packet data network on which the
|
||
COSINE project is based. It is available Europe-wide providing
|
||
links of up to 64 Kbit/s, carries non commercial traffic for the
|
||
research communities, and provides links to several public data
|
||
networks.
|
||
The CONCISE online information service is a focal point for
|
||
information of interest to European researchers. It has lists of
|
||
sources of information.
|
||
Internet users can access CONCISE through Telnet. Connect
|
||
either to concise.ixi.ch (130.59.2.16) or concise.funet.fi
|
||
(128.214.6.181). Login: concise, password: concise.
|
||
For help, send email to helpdesk@concise.level-7.co.uk with the
|
||
following command in the body of the text:
|
||
|
||
start
|
||
help cug-email
|
||
|
||
This will give you the `CONCISE User Guide - Email Access'.
|
||
|
||
DASnet
|
||
------
|
||
forwards mail between systems that do not have any email exchange
|
||
agreements. See description in Chapter 13. Contact: DA Systems,
|
||
Inc., 1503 E. Campbell Ave., Campbell, CA 95008, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
DataArkiv
|
||
---------
|
||
Major Scandinavian online service based in Sweden. Contact:
|
||
DataArkiv, Box 1502, 171 29 Solna, Sweden. Fax: +46 8 828 296.
|
||
Tel.: +46 8 705 13 11.
|
||
|
||
Data-Star
|
||
---------
|
||
Formerly owned by Radio-Suisse in Switzerland, Data-Star is now
|
||
owned by Knight-Ridder (U.S.A.). It offers over 200 databases
|
||
within business, science and medicine.
|
||
SciSearch is a database with references to over nine million
|
||
stories from 4500 newspapers and magazines.
|
||
Other databases: Current Patents Fast Alert, Flightline (with
|
||
stories about air transport), The Turing Institute Database on
|
||
artificial intelligence, Information Access (international market
|
||
data), parts of SovData, Who Owns Whom, etc..
|
||
Access through Internet: telnet to rserve.rs.ch [192.82.124.4]
|
||
and login as rserve , and follow standard login procedure.
|
||
Contact in North America: D-S Marketing, Inc., Suite 110, 485
|
||
Devon Park Drive, Wayne, PA 19087, Tel.: +1-215-687-6777.
|
||
Contact in Scandinavia: Data-Star marketing AB, Maessans gt. 18,
|
||
Box 5278, S-402 25 Gothenburg, Sweden. Tel.: +46 31 83 59 75.
|
||
|
||
Delphi
|
||
------
|
||
has full access to Internet. Write to: General Videotex Corp., 1030
|
||
Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
|
||
|
||
Dialcom
|
||
-------
|
||
is owned by British Telecom and is a network of data centers in
|
||
many countries. Dialcom is selling its services through many agents
|
||
(like EsiStreet for the music industry, and CGNet for agricultural
|
||
research).
|
||
Some selected services: The Official Airline Guide, news
|
||
(Financial Times Profile, Newsbytes, AP, UPI, and Reuters), mail
|
||
(Dialcom400), fax services and several conference type offerings
|
||
(like Campus 2000 for the education market).
|
||
Today, most Dialcom users are unable to exchange mail with the
|
||
Internet (DASnet is a commercial alternative), but mail can be sent
|
||
to users of SprintMail, IBM Mail, AT&Ts Easylink, MCI Mail,
|
||
Compania Telefonica Nacional de Espana, and other X.400 systems.
|
||
Contact: Dialcom, 6120 Executive Blvd., Rockville, MD 20852,
|
||
U.S.A. The British service Telecom-Gold is a subsidiary of Dialcom
|
||
UK. In North America, contact BT North America at tel.: +1-408-922-
|
||
7543. In Europe, contact British Telecom.
|
||
CGNET can be reached through the Internet. Send a message to
|
||
postmaster@cgnet.com for more information.
|
||
|
||
Dialog Information Services
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
is owned by Knight Ridder and has more than 400 databases online.
|
||
They offer a long list of newspapers including the San Francisco
|
||
Chronicle in full-text, Newsbytes, Information Access, the Japan
|
||
Technology database, most major global news wires, Trademarkscan,
|
||
USA Today, Teikoku Databank from Japan.
|
||
Knowledge Index offers evening and weekend reduced-rate access
|
||
to more than 100 popular full-text and bibliographic databases and
|
||
50,000 journals (1993).
|
||
Dialog has gateways to other services, like CompuServe and iNet,
|
||
making the databases available to a larger market. Many databases
|
||
are also available on CD-ROM.
|
||
In Europe, contact DIALOG Europe, P O Box 188, Oxford OX1 5AX,
|
||
England. You can telnet to DIALOG.COM (192.132.3.254, US$ 3/hour in
|
||
1992).
|
||
|
||
Down Jones News/Retrieval
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
focuses on news for finance and business. DJN/R is the sole online
|
||
distributor of The Wall Street Journal (with articles from the
|
||
international editions), Barron's, Dow Jones and Telerate's
|
||
newswires in full-text.
|
||
Further, it has PR Newswire, many other newspapers in full-
|
||
text, clipping service, online charting for investors, and gateways
|
||
to other services like Info Globe (Globe and Mail in Canada).
|
||
Address: P.O. Box 300, Princeton, N.J. 08543-9963. DJN/R is
|
||
also accessible through a gateway from MCI Mail.
|
||
You can telnet to djnr.dowjones.com . At the WHAT SERVICE
|
||
PLEASE prompt, enter DJNR and press Enter. An ENTER PASSWORD prompt
|
||
will appear. Here, enter your normal DJNS account password.
|
||
|
||
ECHO
|
||
----
|
||
European Commission Host Organization is accessible via CONCISE.
|
||
Telnet either to concise.ixi.ch (130.59.2.16) or concise.funet.fi
|
||
(128.214.6.181). Login: concise, password: concise. The NUA address
|
||
is 0270448112. You can also telnet to echo.lu . Login as echotest
|
||
or echo.
|
||
ECHO's I'M GUIDE is a free database providing information about
|
||
online services within the European Common Market. It includes CD-
|
||
ROMs, databases and databanks, database producers, gateways, host
|
||
organizations, PTT contact points, and information brokers in
|
||
Europe.
|
||
ECHO's other databases are classified under the headings
|
||
Research and development, Language industry, Industry and economy.
|
||
For information contact: ECHO Customer Service, BP 2373, L-1023
|
||
Luxembourg. Tel.: +352 34 98 1200. Fax: +352 34 98 1234.
|
||
|
||
Exec-PC Network BBS
|
||
-------------------
|
||
is based in Milwaukee (Wisconsin, U.S.A.). In August 1991, it had
|
||
238 incoming phone lines, 9 gigabytes of disk capacity, more than
|
||
100 new programs/day, 300,000 programs available for downloading
|
||
(including the complete selection from PC-SIG California) and more
|
||
than 130,000 active messages in its conferences. More than 3,300
|
||
persons called EXEC-PC each day.
|
||
The service focuses on owners of IBM compatible computers
|
||
(MS/PC-DOS, Windows, OS/2, Windows, Unix), Apple Macintosh, Amiga
|
||
and Atari ST through over 200 conferences.
|
||
You can access EXEC-PC through i-Com's outdial service, Global
|
||
Access, PC-Pursuit, Connect-USA, and by direct dialing. Annual
|
||
subscription costs US$60.00. You can sign on while online.
|
||
Unregistered users get thirty minutes per day free.
|
||
|
||
FidoNet
|
||
-------
|
||
was founded in 1984 for automatic transfers of files from one place
|
||
to the other at night, when the telephone rates are low. FidoNet is
|
||
one of the most widespread networks in the world. It consists
|
||
mainly of personal computers (IBM/Amiga/Macintosh...).
|
||
FidoNet systems exchange documents by using a modem and calling
|
||
another FidoNet system. Communication can be either direct to the
|
||
destination system (calling long distance) or by routing a message
|
||
to a local system.
|
||
Each computer connected to FidoNet is called a node. There are
|
||
nodes in around 70 countries. In June 1993, the net had 24,800
|
||
nodes throughout the world (source: FidoNet nodelist). The number
|
||
of nodes is growing at about 40 percent per year.
|
||
Most nodes are operated by volunteers, and access is free.
|
||
FidoNet is believed to have over 1.56 million users (1992).
|
||
Conferences (called ECHOs or Echomail) are exchanged between
|
||
interested nodes, and may thus have thousands of readers. A typical
|
||
FidoNet Echomail conference gets 50 to 100 messages each day. Any
|
||
connected BBS may carry 50, 100, or more echomail conferences.
|
||
Net Mail is the term for storing and delivering mail. FidoNet
|
||
users can send and receive mail through the Internet.
|
||
The list of member bulletin boards is called the Nodelist. It
|
||
can be retrieved from most boards. Each node has one line on this
|
||
list, like in this example:
|
||
|
||
,10,Home_of_PCQ,Warszawa,Jan_Stozek,48-22-410374,9600,V32,MNP,XA
|
||
|
||
The commas are field separators. The first field (empty in this
|
||
example) starts a zone, region, local net, Host, or denotes a
|
||
private space (with the keyword Pvt).
|
||
The second field (10) is the node number, and the third field
|
||
(Home_of_PCQ) is the name for the node.
|
||
The fourth field (Warszawa) is a geographical notation, and the
|
||
fifth field (Jan_Stozek) is the name of the owner. The sixth field
|
||
is a telephone contact number, and the other fields contain various
|
||
technical information used in making connections.
|
||
FidoNet has six major geographical zones: (1) North America,
|
||
(2) Europe, etc., (3) Oceania, (4) America Latina, (5) Africa,
|
||
(6) Asia.
|
||
For information, contact the International FidoNet Association
|
||
(IFNA), P.O. Box 41143, St. Louis, MO 63141, U.S.A. You can also
|
||
write to postmaster@fidonet.fidonet.org .
|
||
The FIDO subdirectory in the MSDOS directory on SIMTEL20 (on
|
||
the Internet) contains extensive information, including explanation
|
||
of FidoNet, guide for its nodes, gateways between FidoNet and
|
||
Internet, and various programs and utilities. (See TRICKLE in
|
||
Chapter 4 for more about how to get these files.)
|
||
|
||
Fog City Online Information Service
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
is the world's largest bulletin board with AIDS information. Based
|
||
in San Francisco (U.S.A.) it offers free and anonymous access for
|
||
everybody.
|
||
Call +1-415-863-9697. Enter "AIDS" by the question "First
|
||
name?" and "INFO" by the question "Last Name?".
|
||
|
||
FT Profile
|
||
----------
|
||
has full-text articles from Financial Times in London, from several
|
||
European databases (like the Hoppenstedt database with more than
|
||
46,000 German companies), and the Japanese database Nikkei.
|
||
Profile is available through Telecom-Gold, and can also be
|
||
accessed through other online services. Clipping service. CD-ROM.
|
||
Contact FT Information Services at tel.: +44-71-873-3000.
|
||
|
||
GEnie
|
||
-----
|
||
General Electric Network for Information Exchange is GE's Consumer
|
||
Information Service. GEnie gives access to many databases and other
|
||
information services. It has around 350,000 users (1992).
|
||
The basic rate is US$4.95/month plus connect charges. The
|
||
surcharge is US$18/hour between 08:00 and 18:00, and US$6.00/hour
|
||
for some services, like email, downloading of software, "chat,"
|
||
conferences, and multi-user games. Access to Internet email is
|
||
available as a surcharged add-on service. (Addressing format:
|
||
userid@GEnie.GEis.com)
|
||
For information call +1-301-340-4492. GE Information Services,
|
||
401 N. Washington St., Rockville, MD 20850, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GE Information Service Co. (GEIS)
|
||
---------------------------------
|
||
Online service operated by General Electric. Available in over 32
|
||
countries. GEIS' QUIK-COMM service integrates multinational
|
||
business communications for public and private mail systems. Its
|
||
services include Telex Access; and QUIK-COMM to FAX, which allows
|
||
users to send messages from their workstations to fax machines
|
||
throughout the world. Contact: tel. +1-301-340-4485
|
||
|
||
GENIOS
|
||
------
|
||
German online service (tel.: +49 69 920 19 101). Offers information
|
||
from Novosti (Moscow), data about companies in the former DDR, the
|
||
Hoppenstedt business directories, and more.
|
||
|
||
GlasNet
|
||
-------
|
||
is an international computer network that provides lowcost
|
||
telecommunications to nonprofit, nongovernment organizations
|
||
throughout the countries of the former Soviet Union. Email, fax,
|
||
telex, public conferences.
|
||
For nonprofit, nongovernmental organizations, basic GlasNet
|
||
service fees are 350 rubles/month after a one-time registration fee
|
||
of 1000 rubles. This does not include faxes or telexes. (1992)
|
||
Write to: GlasNet, Ulitsa Yaroslavskaya 8, Korpus 3 Room 111,
|
||
129164 Moscow, Russia. Phone: (095) 217-6182 (voice). Email:
|
||
fick@glas.apc.org .
|
||
|
||
Global Access
|
||
-------------
|
||
is a North American outdial service (see Chapter 13) owned by G-A
|
||
Technologies, Inc. It has an information BBS at +1-704-334-9030.
|
||
|
||
IASNET
|
||
------
|
||
The Institute for Automated Systems Network was the first public
|
||
switched network in the xUSSR. Its main goal is to provide a wide
|
||
range of network services to the scientific community in the xUSSR,
|
||
including access to online databases, a catalog of foreign
|
||
databases, and conferencing (ADONIS).
|
||
|
||
IBM Information Network
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
The IBM Information Network, based in Tampa, Florida, is IBM's
|
||
commercial value-added data network offering the ability to send
|
||
email and data worldwide. It is one of the largest networks in the
|
||
world, with operator-owned nodes in over 36 countries.
|
||
To send mail from the Internet to a user of Advantis IBMmail
|
||
(also called IMX or Mail Exchange), address to their userid at
|
||
ibmmail.com. You need to know their userid (IEA in IBMmail
|
||
terminology) in advance.
|
||
An IBMmail user can find how to address to Internet by sending
|
||
mail to INFORM at IBMmail with /GET INET in the body of the text.
|
||
|
||
i-Com
|
||
-----
|
||
offers outdial services to North America (ref. Chapter 13).
|
||
Contact: i-Com, 4 Rue de Geneve B33, 1140 Brussels, Belgium. Tel.:
|
||
+32 2215 7130. Fax: +32 2215 8999. Modem: +32 2215 8785.
|
||
|
||
ILINK (Interlink)
|
||
-----------------
|
||
is a network for exchange of conferences between bulletin boards in
|
||
U.S.A., Canada, Scotland, England, Norway, France, Australia, New
|
||
Zealand, Sweden, and other countries.
|
||
|
||
Infonet
|
||
-------
|
||
is a privately owned vendor of packet data services with local
|
||
operations in over 50 countries, and access from more than 135
|
||
countries. Contact: Infonet Services Corp., 2100 East Grand Ave.,
|
||
El Segundo, CA 90245, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
INTERNET
|
||
--------
|
||
started as ARPANET, but is now a large group of more than 6,000
|
||
interconnected networks all over the world supporting mail, news,
|
||
remote login, file transfer, and many other services. All
|
||
participating hosts are using the protocol TCP/IP.
|
||
There are around 1.3 million host computers with IP addresses
|
||
(March 1992. Ref. RFC1296 and RFC 1181). The number of users is
|
||
estimated to more than ten million people. Some one million people
|
||
are said to exchange email messages daily.
|
||
In addition, private enterprise networks have an estimated
|
||
1,000,000 hosts using TCP/IP (Source: Matrix News August 1993.)
|
||
These offer mail exchange with the Internet, but not services such
|
||
as Telnet or FTP to most parts of the Internet, and are estimated
|
||
to have some 7.5 million users.
|
||
Some claim that these figures are low. They believe it is
|
||
possible to reach around 50 million mailboxes by email through the
|
||
Internet.
|
||
Several commercial companies offer full Internet services.
|
||
Among these are Alternet (operated by UUNET) and PCI (operated by
|
||
Performance Systems, Inc.). The UK Internet Consortium offers
|
||
similar services in Great Britain.
|
||
INTERNET gives users access to the ftp and telnet commands. Ftp
|
||
gives them interactive access to remote computers for transferring
|
||
files. Telnet gives access to a remote service for interactive
|
||
dialog.
|
||
The Interest Groups List of Lists is a directory of conferences
|
||
available by ftp from ftp.nisc.sri.com (192.33.33.53). Log in to
|
||
this host as user "anonymous." Do a 'cd' (change directory) to the
|
||
"netinfo" directory, then enter the command "GET interest-groups."
|
||
The list is more than 500 KB characters long.
|
||
You can also get it by email from mail-server@nisc.sri.com .
|
||
Write the following command in the TEXT of the message:
|
||
|
||
Send netinfo/interest-groups
|
||
|
||
You can telnet several bulletin boards through Internet. Here is a
|
||
sample:
|
||
|
||
Name Login as Description
|
||
---- ---------- -----------
|
||
CONRAD.APPSTATE.EDU info World news collected by
|
||
monitoring short wave
|
||
broadcasts from BBS and
|
||
other global sources.
|
||
ISCA.ICAEN.UIOWA.EDU ISCABBS A large amount of public
|
||
domain programs
|
||
ATL.CALSTATE.EDU LEWISNTS Electronic newspapers and
|
||
the Art World.
|
||
TOLSUN.OULU.FI BOX Finnish service. English
|
||
available as an option.
|
||
|
||
"Internet Services Frequently Asked Questions and Answers" can be
|
||
retrieved by email from mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu . Write
|
||
|
||
send usenet/news.answers/internet-services/faq
|
||
|
||
in the body of your message.
|
||
|
||
Internet
|
||
--------
|
||
is a term used on something many call "WorldNet" or "The Matrix."
|
||
It includes the networks in INTERNET, and a long list of networks
|
||
that can send electronic mail to each other (though they may not
|
||
be based on the TCP/IP protocol).
|
||
The Internet includes INTERNET, BITNET, DECnet, Usenet, UUCP,
|
||
PeaceNet, IGC, EARN, Uninett, FidoNet, CompuServe, Alternex
|
||
(Brazil), ATT Mail, FredsNaetet (Sweden), AppleLink, GeoNet (hosts
|
||
in Germany, England, U.S.A.), GreenNet, MCI Mail, MetaNet, Nicarao
|
||
(Nicaragua), OTC PeaceNet/EcoNet, Pegasus (Australia), BIX, Portal,
|
||
PsychNet, Telemail, TWICS (Japan), Web (Canada), The WELL, CARINET,
|
||
DASnet, Janet (England)
|
||
"Answers to Commonly Asked New Internet User' Questions" is
|
||
available by email from SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL . Send email with the
|
||
following command in the message's SUBJECT heading:
|
||
|
||
RFC 1206
|
||
|
||
One important feature of the Internet is that no one is in charge.
|
||
The Internet is essentially a voluntary association.
|
||
Another thing is that there are rarely any additional charges
|
||
for sending and receiving electronic mail (even when sending to
|
||
other networks), retrieving files, or reading Usenet Newsgroups..
|
||
|
||
Intermail
|
||
---------
|
||
See Commercial Mail Relay Service.
|
||
|
||
Istel
|
||
-----
|
||
A privately owned vendor of packet data services, who has operator-
|
||
owned nodes in Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan,
|
||
Holland, Spain, Sweden, England. Contact: AT&T Istel. Tel.: 0527-
|
||
64295 (in England).
|
||
|
||
Kompass Online and Kompass Europe
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
These databases are available through many services, including
|
||
Affaersdata in Sweden and Dialog. Contact: (voice) +47 22 64 05 75.
|
||
|
||
InfoPro Technologies
|
||
--------------------
|
||
Previously Maxwell Online. InfoPro's services include BRS Online
|
||
and Orbit Online. BRS owns BRS Online, BRS Colleague, BRS After
|
||
Dark, and BRS Morning Search, which focus on medical information.
|
||
Orbit focuses on patent and patent-related searches.
|
||
Orbit carries an annual membership fee of US$50 (1992), and
|
||
hourly fees that differ according to database.
|
||
Contact: InfoPro Technologies, 8000 Westpark Drive, McLean,
|
||
VA 22102, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-703-442-0900.
|
||
|
||
Maxwell Online
|
||
--------------
|
||
See InfoPro Technologies.
|
||
|
||
MCI Mail
|
||
--------
|
||
MCI Mail, Box 1001, 1900 M St. NW, Washington, DC 20036, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
Mead Data Central
|
||
-----------------
|
||
operates the Nexis and Lexis services. Contact: Mead Data Central
|
||
International, International House, 1, St. Katharine's Way, London
|
||
E1 9UN, England.
|
||
TELNET lexis.meaddata.com or 192.73.216.20 or 192.73.216.21 .
|
||
Terminal type = vt100a. Note: If characters do not echo back, set
|
||
your terminal to "local" echo.
|
||
|
||
MetaNet
|
||
-------
|
||
Contact: Metasystems Design Group, 2000 North 15th Street, Suite
|
||
103, Arlington, VA 22201, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-703-243-6622.
|
||
|
||
MIX
|
||
---
|
||
A Scandinavian bulletin board network exchanging conferences. For
|
||
information, call Mike's BBS in Norway at the following numbers:
|
||
+47-22-416588, +47-22-410403 and +47-22-337320.
|
||
|
||
Minitel
|
||
-------
|
||
French videotex service, which is being marketed all over the
|
||
world. It is based on a special graphics display format (Teletel),
|
||
has over 13,000 services, and appears like a large French online
|
||
hypermarche with more than seven million users (1992).
|
||
Access to the French Minitel network is available via the
|
||
Infonet international packet data network on a host-paid and
|
||
chargeable account basis.
|
||
|
||
Mnematics
|
||
---------
|
||
Mnematics, 722 Main Street Sparkill, NY 10976-0019, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-
|
||
914-359-4546.
|
||
|
||
NEC PC-VAN
|
||
----------
|
||
Japan's largest online service measured both in number of users and
|
||
geographical presence. Your communications system must be able to
|
||
display Japanese characters to use the service.
|
||
|
||
Netnews
|
||
-------
|
||
See Usenet.
|
||
|
||
NewsNet
|
||
-------
|
||
The world's leading vendor of full-text business and professional
|
||
newsletters online. Offers access to over 700 newsletters and news
|
||
services within 30 industry classification groups (1993). Includes
|
||
the major international news wires.
|
||
You can read individual newsletter issues, and search back
|
||
issues or individual newsletters or publications within an industry
|
||
classification. NewsNet's clipping service is called NewsFlash.
|
||
Enter PRICES at the main command prompt for an alphabetic listing
|
||
of all available services.
|
||
Contact: NewsNet, 945 Haverford Rd., Bryn Mawr, PA 19010, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
NIFTY-Serve
|
||
-----------
|
||
is Japan's number 2 online service. It had 250,000 subscribers in
|
||
January 1992. Access is possible via a gateway from CompuServe.
|
||
Your communications system must be able to display Japanese
|
||
characters to use the service.
|
||
Nifty-Serve is jointly operated by Fujitsu and Nissho Iwai
|
||
Trading in a licensing agreement with CompuServe.
|
||
|
||
NWI
|
||
---
|
||
Networking and World Information, Inc. One time subscription fee:
|
||
US$20 (US$5 is given to charity. US$15 is returned to the user as
|
||
free time). Non-prime time access costs US$10.70/hour at 300 to
|
||
2400 bps. Otherwise, the rate is US$23.50. The service is available
|
||
through PDN and outdial services. (1992)
|
||
Contact: NWI, 333 East River Drive, Commerce Center One, East
|
||
Hartford, CT 06108, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-203-289-6585.
|
||
CompuServe users can access NWI's PARTICIPATE conferences
|
||
through a gateway.
|
||
|
||
OCLC
|
||
----
|
||
is a nonprofit computer library service and research organization
|
||
whose computer network and products link more than 15,000 libraries
|
||
in 47 countries and territories. It serves all types of libraries,
|
||
including public, academic, special, corporate, law, and medical
|
||
libraries. Contact: OCLC, 6565 Fratz Rd., Dublin, OH, U.S.A. Tel.:
|
||
+1-614-764-6000.
|
||
|
||
Orbit
|
||
-----
|
||
is owned by InfoPro Technologies (formerly Maxwell Online and
|
||
Pergamon Orbit Infoline Inc.). It offers more than 100 science,
|
||
technical and patent research, and company information databases.
|
||
Contact in North America: InfoPro Technologies, 8000 West Park
|
||
Drive, McClean, VA 22102, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-703-442-0900.
|
||
In Europe: ORBIT Search Service, Achilles House, Western Avenue,
|
||
London W3 0UA, England. Tel.: +44 1 992 3456, Fax. +44 1 993 7335.
|
||
Telnet orbit.com (US$6/hr in 1992).
|
||
|
||
Pergamon Financial Data Services
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
See Orbit.
|
||
|
||
Polarnet
|
||
--------
|
||
is a Scandinavian distributed conferencing system available through
|
||
many boards, including Mike's BBS (see above).
|
||
|
||
Prestel
|
||
-------
|
||
is owned by British Telecom. It is a videotex service based on a
|
||
special graphics display format. The service is also available
|
||
as "TTY Teletype." NUA address: 02341 10020020.
|
||
|
||
Prodigy
|
||
-------
|
||
is a North American videotex service owned by IBM and Sears. You
|
||
must have a special communications program to use the service,
|
||
which claimed 2.5 million subscribers in early 1992. (Analysts
|
||
estimated only 850,000 paying users).
|
||
Rates: US$12.50 per family per month for up to six family
|
||
members and up to 30 email messages. Annual subscription: US$
|
||
119.95. The packet sent new users contains a communication
|
||
program and a Hayes-compatible 2400 bps modem. Price: US$ 180.
|
||
(early 1992)
|
||
Contact: Prodigy Services Co., 445 Hamilton Ave., White Plains,
|
||
NY 10601, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-914-962-0310. Email (through Internet):
|
||
postmaster@inetgate.prodigy.com .
|
||
|
||
RelayNet
|
||
--------
|
||
Also called PcRelay-Net. An international network for exchange of
|
||
email and conferences between more than 8,500 bulletin boards. The
|
||
Relaynet International Message Exchange (RIME) consists of some
|
||
1,000 systems (1992).
|
||
|
||
Relcom
|
||
------
|
||
means 'Russian Electronic Communications.' This company provides
|
||
email, other network services, a gateway to Internet, and access to
|
||
Usenet.
|
||
In early 1992, RELCOM had regional nodes in 25 cities of the
|
||
xUSSR connecting over 1,000 organizations or 30,000 users. RELCOM
|
||
has a gateway to IASNET.
|
||
|
||
Saltrod Horror Show
|
||
-------------------
|
||
Odd de Presno's BBS system. Tel.: +47 370 31378.
|
||
|
||
The Sierra Network
|
||
------------------
|
||
is one of the best things out there for online games. The service
|
||
claimed more than 20,000 subscribers in 1993. Contact: The Sierra
|
||
Network, P.O. Box 485, Coarsegold, CA 93614, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
SIGnet
|
||
------
|
||
Global BBS network with over 2500 nodes around the world (1993).
|
||
|
||
SIMTEL20 Software Archives
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
is a system maintained by the US Army Information System Command.
|
||
It contains public domain software, shareware, documentation and
|
||
mail archives under the following top-level headings: HZ100, INFO-
|
||
IBMPC, MSDOS, PC-BLUE, ADA, ARCHIVES, CPM, CPMUG, PCNET, SIGM,
|
||
STARS, UNIX-C, VHDL, ZSYS, MACINTOSH, MISC, and TOPS20.
|
||
All files are accessible by Anonymous FTP. For information,
|
||
send a message to the address LISTSERV@RPIECS.BITNET with the
|
||
command 'HELP' in the first line of your text.
|
||
|
||
SprintMail
|
||
----------
|
||
is a large, commercial vendor of email services. It has local nodes
|
||
serving customers in 108 countries through its SprintNet network
|
||
(1991).
|
||
Internet mail to the SprintMail user identity 'T.Germain' can
|
||
be sent to T.Germain@sprint.sprint.com .
|
||
For information, contact SprintMail, 12490 Sunrise Valley Dr.,
|
||
Reston, VA 22096, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
SuperNET
|
||
--------
|
||
is an international network for exchange of conferences and mail
|
||
between SuperBBS bulletin board systems. Contact: SuperNet World
|
||
Host through FidoNet at 2:203/310 (+46-300-41377) Lennart Odeberg.
|
||
|
||
TCN
|
||
---
|
||
is a Dialcom network. Internet email to TCN is only possible if
|
||
either the sender or recipient has registered with DASnet. The
|
||
email address would be: TCNxxx@das.net (where xxx is the TCN
|
||
number).
|
||
|
||
Thunderball Cave
|
||
----------------
|
||
Norwegian bulletin board connected to RelayNet. Call +47-22-
|
||
299441 or +47-22-299442. Offers Usenet News and Internet mail.
|
||
|
||
Tocolo BBS
|
||
----------
|
||
Bulletin board for people with disabilities in Japan, or with
|
||
"shintaishougaisha," which is the Japanese term. Call: +81-3-205-
|
||
9315. 1200 bps, 8,N,1. Your communications system must be able to
|
||
display Japanese characters to use the service.
|
||
|
||
TRI-P
|
||
-----
|
||
International outdial service. Contact: INTEC America, Inc., 1270
|
||
Avenue of the Americas, Suite 2315, New York, NY 10020, U.S.A. In
|
||
Japan, contact Intec at 2-6-10 Sarugaku-cho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101.
|
||
Fax: +81-3-3292-2929.
|
||
|
||
TWICS BeeLINE
|
||
-------------
|
||
English-language Japanese online service with PARTIcipate, Caucus
|
||
and Usenet netnews. Half the users are Japanese. Others connect
|
||
from U.S.A., England, Canada, Germany, France, South Africa, and
|
||
Scandinavia.
|
||
The NUA address is: 4406 20000524. Direct call to +81 3 3351
|
||
7905 (14,4KB/s), or +81-3-3351-8244 (9600 bps). At CONNECT, press
|
||
ENTER a few times. Wait about a second between keystrokes to get to
|
||
the registration prompt.
|
||
New users can sign on as GUEST for information. You can also
|
||
write postmaster@twics.co.jp, or send mail to TWICS/IEC, 1-21
|
||
Yotsuya, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 160, JAPAN.
|
||
Foreign users have free access (1992).
|
||
|
||
UMI/Data Courier
|
||
----------------
|
||
620 South Street, Louisville, KY 40202, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
Uninett
|
||
-------
|
||
delivers networking services to Norwegian research and educational
|
||
services.
|
||
|
||
Unison
|
||
------
|
||
North American conferencing service using PARTIcipate software. NUA
|
||
address: 031105130023000. Password: US$35.00. Monthly subscription:
|
||
US$6.25. Non-prime time access: US$12.00/hour. Prime time access:
|
||
US$19.00/hour. Enter SIGNUP when online the first time and follow
|
||
the prompts. (1991)
|
||
|
||
UUCP
|
||
----
|
||
UUCP (UNIX to UNIX Copy) is a protocol, a set of files and a set
|
||
of commands to copy files from one UNIX computer to another.
|
||
This copying procedure is the core of the UUCP network, a loose
|
||
association of systems all communicating with the UUCP protocol.
|
||
UNIX computers can participate in the UUCP network (using
|
||
leased line or dial-up) through any other UNIX host. The network
|
||
now also has many MS-DOS and other hosts, and consisted of 16,300
|
||
hosts in January 1993 (source: UUCP map) serving more than 489,000
|
||
users.
|
||
The UUCP network is based on two systems connecting to each
|
||
other at specific intervals, and executing any work scheduled for
|
||
either of them. For example, the system Oregano calls the system
|
||
Basil once every two hours. If there's mail waiting for Oregano,
|
||
Basil will send it at that time. Likewise, Oregano will at that
|
||
time send any mail waiting for Basil.
|
||
There are databases with connectivity information (UUCP maps),
|
||
and programs (pathalias) that will help you decide the correct
|
||
routing of messages. However, many UUCP hosts are not registered in
|
||
the UUCP map.
|
||
EUNET is a UUCP based network in Europe. JUNET is an equivalent
|
||
network in Japan. There are many gateway machines that exchange
|
||
mail between UUCP and the Internet. Among these, UUNET.UU.NET is
|
||
among the most frequently used.
|
||
|
||
Usenet
|
||
------
|
||
Usenet, Netnews, or just "News" are common terms for a large
|
||
many-to-many conferencing (only) system distributed through UUCP,
|
||
Internet, FidoNet, and BITNET.
|
||
This grassroots driven "network" has grown out of the global
|
||
university and research domains. It is a service rather than a real
|
||
network. It is not an organization, and has no central authority.
|
||
Usenet's newsgroups are carried by over 69,000 host computers
|
||
in five continents, and has over 1,991,000 users (source: Brian
|
||
Reid, 1993). Many of these hosts have access to the Internet. The
|
||
European portion of Usenet is called EUNET (European Unix NET).
|
||
The local administrator of each individual node in the network
|
||
decides what newsgroups to receive and make available to its users.
|
||
Few systems offer access to all of them.
|
||
NetNews is organized in groups of 'conferences'. Each of these
|
||
classifications is organized into groups and subgroups according to
|
||
topic. As of June 1, 1993, there were 4500 newsgroups and 2500
|
||
regional newsgroups. Several sites are carrying over 2600 topics.
|
||
The groups distributed worldwide are divided into seven broad
|
||
classifications:
|
||
|
||
"comp" Topics of interest to both computer professionals and
|
||
hobbyists, including topics in computer science, software
|
||
source, and information on hardware and software systems.
|
||
|
||
"sci" Discussions marked by special and usually practical
|
||
knowledge, relating to research in or application of the
|
||
established sciences.
|
||
|
||
"misc" Groups addressing themes not easily classified under any
|
||
of the other headings or which incorporate themes from
|
||
multiple categories.
|
||
|
||
"soc" Groups primarily addressing social issues and
|
||
socializing.
|
||
|
||
"talk" Groups largely debate-oriented and tending to feature
|
||
long discussions without resolution and without
|
||
appreciable amounts of generally useful information.
|
||
|
||
"news" Groups concerned with the news network and software
|
||
themselves.
|
||
|
||
"rec" Groups oriented towards hobbies and recreational
|
||
activities.
|
||
|
||
Also available are many "alternative" hierarchies, like:
|
||
|
||
"alt" True anarchy; anything and everything can and does
|
||
appear. Subjects include sex, and privacy.
|
||
|
||
"biz" Business-related groups
|
||
|
||
"clari" Newsgroups gatewayed from commercial news services and
|
||
other 'official' sources. (Requires payment of a fee and
|
||
execution of a licence. More information by email to
|
||
info@clarinet.com).
|
||
|
||
Most Netnews hosts offer both global and local conferences. Many
|
||
newsgroups can be read through bulletin boards, commercial online
|
||
services, or through gateways from connected hosts (like from some
|
||
BITNET hosts).
|
||
A full list of available groups and conferences are normally
|
||
available from hosts offering Netnews, and on NETNEWS servers.
|
||
All users should subscribe to news.announce.important .
|
||
|
||
Vu/Text
|
||
-------
|
||
325 Chestnut St., Suite 1300, Philadelphia, PA 19106, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
The Well
|
||
--------
|
||
The Whole Earth Lectronic Link is a commercial online service based
|
||
in Sausalito (U.S.A.). It has its own conferencing culture and is
|
||
an interesting starting point for those wanting to "study" what
|
||
makes the area around Silicon Valley so dynamic.
|
||
The Well has several hundred conferences, public and private,
|
||
about 7,000 members, and is available in a variety of ways. The
|
||
service has full Internet access, and can be reached by telnet
|
||
to well.sf.ca.us (or 192.132.30.2).
|
||
Modem tel.: +1-415-332-6106 at 1200 bps or +1-415-332-7398
|
||
at 2400 bps. You can subscribe online. Rates: US$ 20/month plus
|
||
US$ 2/hour (invoiced by the minute online - 1992).
|
||
|
||
ZiffNet
|
||
-------
|
||
markets its services through CompuServe (ZiffNet and ZiffNet/Mac),
|
||
Prodigy, and its own online service in the U.S.A. Their offerings
|
||
include the Ziff Buyer's Market, the ZiffNet/Mac Buyer's Guide,
|
||
Computer Database Plus, Magazine Database Plus, NewsBytes, and the
|
||
Cobb Group Online.
|
||
Contact: Ziff Communications Company, 25 First Street, Cambridge,
|
||
MA 02141, U.S.A. Tel.: +1-617-252-5000.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 2:
|
||
|
||
Short takes about how to get started
|
||
====================================
|
||
|
||
* a computer
|
||
* modem and a communications program
|
||
|
||
You must have a computer
|
||
------------------------
|
||
It is not important what kind of computer you have, though you may
|
||
find out that it is an advantage to have a popular one. The most
|
||
common type of microcomputer today is called MS-DOS computers (or
|
||
IBM PC compatibles or IBM clones).
|
||
Your computer should have enough memory for communication. This
|
||
is seldom a problem. An MS-DOS computer with 256 KB RAM is enough
|
||
when using popular programs like PROCOMM.
|
||
Your computer does not have to be very powerful and super fast,
|
||
unless you want ultra fast transfers, use a slow communications
|
||
program, or a complex system of script files. If this is the case,
|
||
you'll know to appreciate speed and power.
|
||
You do not need a hard disk. Many do without. Not having one,
|
||
however, means more work, and less room for storage of all the
|
||
nice things that you may want to retrieve by modem.
|
||
Personally, I want as much hard disk space as I can possibly
|
||
get. When you have read the book, I guess you'll understand why.
|
||
Others may want to delay the purchase of a hard disk until they
|
||
can spare the money. If you can afford it, however, do it! It is a
|
||
decision that you'll never regret.
|
||
|
||
You must have a modem
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Some computers are always connected to a network. If this is your
|
||
situation, then you probably have what you need already. The rest
|
||
of us need a modem.
|
||
A modem is a small piece of equipment that is translating the
|
||
internal, electrical signals of the computer to sound codes. These
|
||
codes can be sent over an ordinary telephone line. You may think
|
||
of it as a type of Morse alphabet.
|
||
The recipient of data also needs a modem. In his case, the sound
|
||
codes will have to be translated back into their original form as
|
||
digital codes. When this is done, he can view text and pictures on
|
||
the screen, and use the received data in other applications.
|
||
You can buy modems on an expansion card for installation in
|
||
your computer, or in a separate box. Often, a modem has already
|
||
been built into the computer, when you buy it.
|
||
Whether to buy an internal or an external modem is a question
|
||
of needs:
|
||
A portable computer with an internal modem is easier to bring
|
||
on travels than an external modem with a modem cable and a power
|
||
adapter.
|
||
An external modem can serve several computers. Some of them are
|
||
so compact that they fit besides your toothbrush in the toilet bag.
|
||
An internal modem blocks one of your serial ports.
|
||
|
||
External modems
|
||
---------------
|
||
The options are many. The modems differ on speed, features, prices
|
||
- and whether they are approved for usage in your country.
|
||
Some of them are connected to the phone line by cable. Others
|
||
are connected to the handset (to the talk and listen part) by two
|
||
rubber cups. We call such modems acoustic modems (or acoustic
|
||
couplers).
|
||
Acoustic modems are useful where connecting other modems to the
|
||
telephone is difficult. The bad news is that you'll get more noise
|
||
on the line. Acoustic modems can therefore not be recommended for
|
||
use in other cases.
|
||
|
||
Asynchronous or synchronous modems?
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
Formerly, data communication was done by sending job commands to a
|
||
mainframe computer, and having the result returned in one batch.
|
||
The modems were called synchronous. Such modems (and computers) are
|
||
still in use in some large corporations.
|
||
Most of today's online services are based on an interactive
|
||
dialog between the user and the remote computer. The user enters a
|
||
command, for example a letter or a number in a menu, and the result
|
||
is returned almost immediately. The modems used for such work are
|
||
called asynchronous (See "Explanation of some words and terms" in
|
||
appendix 4).
|
||
Unless you know that you must have a synchronous modem, buy an
|
||
asynchronous one.
|
||
|
||
Choice of speed
|
||
---------------
|
||
Speed is measured in many ways. One method is to use baud. Another
|
||
is to use characters per second (cps) or bits per second (bps).
|
||
Bps is a measure of how many data bits that can be transferred
|
||
over a data channel in one second. (Each byte is split up into bits
|
||
before transfer during serial communication.)
|
||
The relationship between baud and bits per second is complex,
|
||
and often misused. Bits per second is unambiguous. In this book,
|
||
we will use it as bps.
|
||
We can estimate the number of characters per second by dividing
|
||
the number of bps by ten. For example. 1200 bps is roughly 120 cps.
|
||
In 1987, 300, 1200 and 2400 bps asynchronous modems were the
|
||
standard in many countries. Around 1990, the growth in 9600 bps
|
||
modems and modem with faster speeds gained momentum.
|
||
Modem user manuals often give transfer speed by referring to
|
||
some international classification codes. Here are some CCITT codes
|
||
with explanation:
|
||
|
||
V.21 0-300 bps Still used by a small group. Cannot
|
||
full duplex communicate with the American Bell
|
||
103 standard.
|
||
|
||
V.22 1200 bps Partly compatible with the American
|
||
full duplex Bell 212a standard. Sometimes it
|
||
works, sometimes it fails.
|
||
|
||
V.22bis 2400 bps Used all over the world. Very
|
||
full duplex common.
|
||
|
||
V.23 600 & 1200 Rare protocol. Used mainly in Europe.
|
||
bps w/75 Half duplex.
|
||
bps return ch.
|
||
|
||
V.26ter 2400 bps Used mainly in France
|
||
full duplex
|
||
|
||
V.27ter 2400/4800 bps Used in Group III fax
|
||
half duplex
|
||
|
||
V.29 4800, 7200 and Used in gr. III fax and in some (Ame-
|
||
9600 bps rican) modems. Do not buy V.29 if you
|
||
half duplex want a 9600 bps modem.
|
||
|
||
V.32 4800/9600 bps Current standard for 9600 bps modems
|
||
full duplex
|
||
|
||
V.32bis 4800/7200/9600, Full duplex with faster interrogation.
|
||
12000/14400 bps
|
||
|
||
V.34 14400 bps A proposed high speed protocol that
|
||
never made it.
|
||
|
||
V.42 Error correction protocol (an appendix
|
||
yields compatibility w/MNP gr. 2,3 and
|
||
4 (see MNP below). For V.22, V.22bis,
|
||
V.26ter and V.32.
|
||
|
||
V.42bis Data compression for V.42 modems.
|
||
Meant to replace MNP and LAP. Text can
|
||
be transferred three times faster than
|
||
with MNP, i.e., in up to 38400 bps
|
||
using a 9600 bps modem. Very common.
|
||
|
||
V.Fast Upcoming standard. If approved by
|
||
also called CCITT, it will support speeds to
|
||
V.32terbo 28,800 bps for uncompressed data
|
||
transmission rates over regular dial-
|
||
up, voice-grade lines. Using V.42bis
|
||
data compression, up to 86,400 bps
|
||
may be achievable.
|
||
|
||
When you consider buying a modem with higher speed, remember that
|
||
going from 1200 bps to 2400 is a 50 percent increase, while going
|
||
from 1200 to 9600 bps gives 800 percent!
|
||
On the other hand, if you currently have 9600 bits/s, going to
|
||
14.400 will only give you 50 percent.
|
||
|
||
MNP error correction and compression
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
The Microcom Networking Protocol (MNP) is a U.S. industry standard
|
||
for modem-to-modem communication with automatic error correction
|
||
and compression.
|
||
Automatic error correction is useful when there is noise on the
|
||
telephone line. MNP splits the stream of data up into blocks before
|
||
transmission. They are checked by the other modem upon receipt. If
|
||
the contents are correct, an acknowledge message is sent back to
|
||
the sending modem. If there has been an error in the transmission,
|
||
the sending modem is asked to retransmit.
|
||
When using compression, files are being preprocessed before
|
||
transmission to decrease their size. The result is that the modem
|
||
has to send fewer bytes, and the effect is higher speed.
|
||
MNP Level 3 and up send data between two modems synchronously
|
||
rather than asynchronously. Since sending a start and stop bit with
|
||
each transferred byte is no longer required, the effect is higher
|
||
speed.
|
||
MNP-4 or higher have automatic adjustment of block length when
|
||
there is noise on the line. If the line is good, longer blocks are
|
||
sent. The block size is decreased if the line is bad causing many
|
||
retransmissions.
|
||
MNP-5 has data compression. This gives a further increase in
|
||
transfer speed by from 10 to 80 percent depending on the type of
|
||
data sent. MNP-7 is capable of a three-to-one compression ratio.
|
||
Both users must have their modems set for MNP to use it.
|
||
|
||
The speed of the computer's COMM port
|
||
-------------------------------------
|
||
Installing a super fast modem does not guarantee an increase in the
|
||
effective transfer speed. The serial port of your computer may be a
|
||
limiting factor.
|
||
Owners of older MS-DOS computers often have UARTs (serial port
|
||
processors) in the Intel 8250 or National 16450 series. With these
|
||
in the computer, it is difficult to achieve speeds above 9600 bps
|
||
without losing data.
|
||
Take this into account when investing in a modem.
|
||
|
||
MNP and efficiency
|
||
------------------
|
||
I call my bulletin board daily. My personal computer is set to
|
||
communicate with a V.32 modem at 19,000 bps. The modem sends data
|
||
to the telephone line at 9600 bps, which is this modem's maximum
|
||
line speed.
|
||
Data is received by the remote computer's V.32 modem at 9600
|
||
bps, and forwarded to bulletin board at 19200 bps.
|
||
Why these differences in speed?
|
||
MNP level 5 compresses data in the modem before transfer, and
|
||
gives error-free transfer to and from the bulletin board at higher
|
||
speed than by using 9600 bps all the way through.
|
||
The compression effectiveness differs by the type of data. When
|
||
sending text, the effective transfer speed may double. Speed will
|
||
increase further if the text contains long sequences of similar
|
||
characters.
|
||
Text is typically compressed by up to 63 percent. This means
|
||
that a 2400 bps modem using MNP-5 may obtain an effective speed of
|
||
around the double when transferring such data.
|
||
|
||
File transfers using MNP
|
||
------------------------
|
||
Files are often compressed and stored in libraries before transfer.
|
||
Online services do this because compressed files take less space on
|
||
their hard disks. Also, it is easier for users to keep track of
|
||
files sent in a library file.
|
||
You rarely get speed advantages when transferring precompressed
|
||
files using MNP or V.42bis. With some modems, you must turn MNP and
|
||
V.42bis compression off before retrieval of compressed files.
|
||
|
||
Dumb or intelligent modem?
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
Some modems are operated with switches or buttons on a panel. They
|
||
do not react to commands from your computer. We call them dumb.
|
||
You must dial numbers manually, and press a key on the modem,
|
||
when you hear the tone from a remote modem. Only when the modem is
|
||
connected to the remote modem, can you ask your communications
|
||
program to take over.
|
||
We call those modems 'intelligent' that can react to commands
|
||
from your computer. Most of them react to commands according to the
|
||
Hayes standard.
|
||
Buy intelligent, Hayes-compatible modems - even when other
|
||
standards may seem better. Most of today's communication programs
|
||
are designed to be used by such modems.
|
||
|
||
Note: Buy modems that use the Hayes extended command set.
|
||
|
||
When a popular communications program, like Procomm and Crosstalk,
|
||
tells the modem to "dial a number" or "go on hook," then the Hayes-
|
||
compatible modem will do just that.
|
||
When you press ALT-H in Procomm, the modem will disconnect from
|
||
the remote modem.
|
||
If you press ALT-D followed by the number "2," Procomm will
|
||
locate the number to an online service in your telephone directory,
|
||
and dial that number.
|
||
When the connection with the remote modem has been established,
|
||
your modem will report back to you with a message like CONNECT
|
||
2400. This tells that a connection has been set up at 2400 bps.
|
||
If I select "k" from a menu provided by my communications
|
||
program's command scripts, then my system will retrieve today's
|
||
business news from Tokyo and put them up on my screen.
|
||
In the process, my system tells the modem to do several things,
|
||
including "call a number," "speed 2400 bps," "redial if busy," "go
|
||
on-hook when done." The only thing that I have to do, is press "k".
|
||
The communications program and the modem will do the rest.
|
||
Automatic communication is impossible without an intelligent
|
||
modem.
|
||
|
||
The Hayes standard
|
||
------------------
|
||
The U.S. company Hayes Microcomputer Products, Inc. pioneered
|
||
command-driven modems. Their Smartmodem became a success, and
|
||
"Hayes compatibility" a standard for intelligent modems.
|
||
Today, it is as unimportant to buy a Hayes modem to get access
|
||
to Hayes commands, as to buy an IBM PC to run PC software.
|
||
Automatic dialing (autodial) was one of Smartmodem's important
|
||
features. The modem could call a number and prepare for data
|
||
communication, once a connection had been set up. If the line was
|
||
busy, it could wait a while and then redial. The operator could
|
||
work with other things while waiting for the equipment to be ready
|
||
for communication.
|
||
The modem had automatic answer (autoanswer), i.e., when someone
|
||
called in, the modem could take the phone off hook and set up a
|
||
connection with a remote modem. The modem enabled a connected PC to
|
||
act as an electronic answering machine.
|
||
Hayes-compatible modems can report call progress to the local
|
||
screen using short numeric codes or words like CONNECT, CONNECT
|
||
1200, CONNECT 2400, NO CARRIER, NO DIALTONE, BUSY, NO ANSWER, RING
|
||
etc.
|
||
There can be small differences between such modems. The message
|
||
DIALTONE on one modem may be DIAL TONE on another. Most of the main
|
||
progress messages, however, are the same across brands.
|
||
The old Smartmodem had switches used to configure the modem.
|
||
Most modern Hayes-compatible modems come without switches and have
|
||
more commands than their ancestor.
|
||
Today's Hayes-compatible modems have a core of common commands,
|
||
the "real" Hayes-commands, and several unstandardized additional
|
||
commands. Here is an example:
|
||
|
||
A standard on the move
|
||
----------------------
|
||
On the Quattro SB2422 modem, 2400 bps speed without automatic speed
|
||
detection is set by the command "AT&I1." The equivalent command on
|
||
Semafor's UniMod 4161 is "AT+C0".
|
||
Automatic detection of speed is a feature that lets the modem
|
||
discover the speed of the remote modem to set its own speed at the
|
||
same level. (Other modems may use different commands to set this.)
|
||
When I want Procomm to call a bulletin board, it first sends a
|
||
sequence of Hayes commands to the Semafor modem. The purpose is to
|
||
"configure" the modem before calling. It sends the following:
|
||
|
||
AT S0=0 +C0 S7=40 S9=4 &D2
|
||
|
||
The cryptic codes have the following meaning:
|
||
|
||
AT "Attention modem. Commands following.."
|
||
S0=0 No automatic answer
|
||
+C0 No automatic speed detection (fixed speed)
|
||
S7=40 Wait 40 seconds for an answer tone from the
|
||
remote modem.
|
||
S9=4 Wait 4/10 seconds for detection of carrier
|
||
&D2 Go on-hook if the DTR signal is being changed.
|
||
|
||
If this command is sent to the Quattro modem, it will reply with
|
||
"ERROR". The code "+C0" must be replaced with an "&I1". The rest
|
||
of the commands are the same. (Note: when a modem responds with
|
||
"ERROR," it has usually rejected all commands sent to it!)
|
||
This setup is held in the modem's memory when Procomm sends its
|
||
dialing command: ATDT4737031378. AT stands for ATtention, as above.
|
||
DT stands for Dial Tone. Here, it is used to dial the number
|
||
4737031378 using tone signaling (rather than pulse dialing).
|
||
|
||
The modem cable
|
||
---------------
|
||
If you have an external modem, you must connect your computer to
|
||
the modem with a cable. Some modems are sold without a cable.
|
||
This cable may be called a serial cable, a modem cable, a
|
||
RS232C cable, or something else. Make sure that you buy the
|
||
correct cable for your system.
|
||
Make sure that the connectors at each end of the cable are
|
||
correct. If a male connector (with pins) is required in one end and
|
||
a female (with holes) in the other, do not buy a cable with two
|
||
male connectors.
|
||
Some connectors have 9 pins/holes, while others have 25 or 8-
|
||
pin round plugs (Apple computers). Use a shielded cable to ensure
|
||
minimal interference with radio and television reception.
|
||
At this point, some discover that there is no place on the PC
|
||
to attach the cable. Look for a serial port at the rear of your
|
||
machine, labeled MODEM, COMMUNICATIONS, SERIAL, or with a phone
|
||
symbol.
|
||
If you find no suitable connector, you may have to install an
|
||
asynchronous communication port in the box.
|
||
|
||
Connecting your equipment to earth
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
Secure your computer and modem against thunderstorms and other
|
||
electrical problems. Securing the electric outlet in the wall is
|
||
not enough. Problems can also enter through the telephone line.
|
||
Thunderstorms have sent electrical pulses through the telephone
|
||
line destroying four modems, three PC-fax cards, one mother board,
|
||
and at least one asynchronous communication port.
|
||
To prevent this from happening to you, disconnect electrical
|
||
and telephone cables from your equipment during thunderstorms.
|
||
|
||
The communications program
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
A powerful communications program is half the job. In my case it's
|
||
the whole job. Most of my work is done automatically.
|
||
The communications program will help you with the mechanical
|
||
transportation of data in both directions. It lets you store
|
||
incoming information for later use and reduces the risks of errors.
|
||
Here are some items to consider when shopping communications
|
||
program:
|
||
* Seriously consider buying automatic programs ('robots') for
|
||
access to individual online services, even if that means having to
|
||
use several programs for different applications. (Read chapter 16
|
||
for more details.)
|
||
* Menus and help texts are important for novices, and in
|
||
environments with "less motivated personnel." Advanced users may
|
||
find it boring.
|
||
* Ability to transfer data without errors. The program should
|
||
have transfer protocols like XMODEM, Kermit, XMODEM/CRC, YMODEM and
|
||
ZMODEM. The XMODEM protocol is the most commonly used. You need
|
||
these protocols if you want to transfer compiled computer programs
|
||
(e.g., .COM and .EXE files). They are also used when transferring
|
||
compressed files, graphics and music files.
|
||
* Does it let you tailor it to your taste/needs? Some programs
|
||
let you attach batches of commands to function keys and keypress
|
||
combinations. For example, by having your computer call your
|
||
favorite online service by pressing the F1 key.
|
||
* Does it let you "scroll back" information having disappeared
|
||
out of your screen? This may be useful when you want to respond
|
||
while online to an electronic mail message. The sender's address
|
||
and name, which you need to respond, have scrolled off the screen.
|
||
If you cannot review the "lost" information, you may have to
|
||
disconnect and call back later to send your mail.
|
||
|
||
Connecting to the online service
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
The first couple of times, most people think that it is very
|
||
difficult. Soon it becomes a simple routine.
|
||
On some computers, you just press a key, and that's it. On
|
||
others, you have to call and press, and watch, while things are
|
||
happening. Cheap is often a synonym for more work.
|
||
If you have a dumb modem connected to your personal computer,
|
||
these are the typical steps that you must take:
|
||
|
||
(1) Start your communications program and set it up, e.g., with
|
||
2400 bps, 8 bits word length, 1 stop bit, no parity. (This
|
||
is the most common setup.) Then set the program to "online."
|
||
(2) Call the number (e.g., +47 370 31378)
|
||
(3) When you hear the tone from the remote modem in the phone,
|
||
press DATA to get the modems to connect to each other
|
||
(i.e., to start to "handshake").
|
||
(4) A front panel indicator may tell you when the connection
|
||
has been set up. You can start transferring data.
|
||
|
||
With an MS-DOS computer, an automatic modem and a powerful program
|
||
preset for the job, the steps may be as follows:
|
||
|
||
(1) Start the program and display the telephone directory.
|
||
Select a service from the list by pressing a number.
|
||
(2) The modem will call automatically to the service. When
|
||
CONNECT has been established, your user identification and
|
||
password are sent at the prompts for such information. When
|
||
this is done, you are free to take control.
|
||
|
||
With an MS-DOS computer, TAPCIS, and an intelligent modem, you
|
||
start by selecting forums and services to access on CompuServe.
|
||
Enter 'o' to upload and download programs, or 'n' to have it fetch
|
||
new message headers and messages.
|
||
TAPCIS will dial the number, do the job, and tell you when it's
|
||
done. Meanwhile, you can go out to look at the moon, or sing a
|
||
song.
|
||
|
||
Getting started with Procomm
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
Procomm is cheap and probably the most commonly used communications
|
||
program for MS-DOS computers. It's been like this for many years,
|
||
though there are many better and cheaper alternatives.
|
||
An older version of the program (version 2.4.2) is still being
|
||
distributed through bulletin boards all over the world. You may
|
||
give copies of this version to anyone. The requirement is that you
|
||
pay a contribution of US$25 to the vendor if you like it and start
|
||
to use it.
|
||
Procomm is simple for novices, can automate the work for
|
||
advanced users and be run on almost any MS-DOS computer. Here is
|
||
some of the features:
|
||
Press ALT-F10 for a pull-down window text listing features and
|
||
commands. Press ALT+D to call a number, update the telephone
|
||
directory, or select a script file for autologon to a service.
|
||
Procomm can emulate (pretend to be) different terminal types,
|
||
like IBM 3101 and DEC VT-100/VT-52. Most services covered in this
|
||
book may be well served with the setting ANSI.BBS.
|
||
It let you use both dumb and intelligent Hayes-compatible
|
||
modems. If you have the latter, select numbers from the telephone
|
||
directory for autologon. If the number is busy, Procomm can call
|
||
back until you can get through.
|
||
You can define macros to automate your work. You can have one
|
||
keystroke send your user identification, another for your password,
|
||
and a third key to send a sequence of commands. Macros make your
|
||
communication faster and safer.
|
||
You can write script files to automate the online work further.
|
||
You can transfer text files and binary files using automatic error
|
||
detection/correction protocols, like XMODEM, YMODEM, Telink and
|
||
Kermit, at speeds from 300 to 19200 bps. Adding external protocols
|
||
like ZMODEM is relatively simple.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 3:
|
||
|
||
Online with the world
|
||
=====================
|
||
|
||
- Practical data communication
|
||
- Your first trip online
|
||
- Typical pitfalls and simple solutions
|
||
- Receiving (downloading) letters, text and programs
|
||
- Sending (uploading) letters, text and programs
|
||
|
||
Practical data communication
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
The first thing novices want to know is how to set up the modem
|
||
and computer for communication. This may take more time than
|
||
expected and often seems complex for the uninitiated. You can save
|
||
yourself much sweat and frustration by asking others for help.
|
||
To set up your equipment for communication is a one time job.
|
||
Once done, you can almost forget what you did and why.
|
||
There are so many different modems, computers and programs out
|
||
there. We just cannot give practical advice on the use of all of
|
||
them in one short appendix. Instead, we will use one example. Your
|
||
job is to "translate" the text into a terminology that fits your
|
||
tools.
|
||
Once your system is set up for communication, your first job
|
||
will be to find what keys to press to get the job done. How you use
|
||
your communications program may vary considerably from our example.
|
||
In general, however, it will be the same for most people doing
|
||
manual communication. Once online, the environment is the same for
|
||
all users.
|
||
If you plan to use automatic communications as explained in
|
||
chapter 16, this chapter may not be that important. Your program
|
||
will do the job for you. Still, take a few minutes and browse
|
||
through the text. It may enable you to handle unexpected problems
|
||
better.
|
||
Our example assumes that you have an MS-DOS computer. Not
|
||
because this is the best microcomputer in the world, but because
|
||
there are more of them than anything else. We assume that you
|
||
have an external, intelligent Hayes-compatible modem and the
|
||
communications program Procomm (version 2.4.2).
|
||
In this example, your modem is tested by calling my bulletin
|
||
board at +47 370 31378. Not because this is the best board in the
|
||
world, but because I have full control over how it looks and feels
|
||
for those using it.
|
||
|
||
Assembling the equipment
|
||
------------------------
|
||
You have the modem, the cable (to connect your modem with the
|
||
computer), a phone cable (to connect your modem with the phone or
|
||
the wall jack), and a communications program.
|
||
Check that the modem's power switch is off. Place the modem by
|
||
the computer, and plug the power supply cord (or the power adapter
|
||
cord) into the AC wall socket. Switch on the modem.
|
||
|
||
Do NOT use 115-volt equipment in 250-volt sockets!
|
||
|
||
Connect modem and computer using the modem cable. There may be
|
||
several optional sockets on the computer. These are usually marked
|
||
RS-232, COMMS, MODEM, or just nothing. The connector may be of a
|
||
flat 25-pins, 9 pins, or a round 8-pins type. Use communication
|
||
port number 1, 2, or whatever else is available for this purpose.
|
||
If you have several options, and the socket for communication
|
||
port number 1 seems free, use this. If not, try one of the others.
|
||
Next, connect the modem to the telephone line. If in luck, the
|
||
modem came with a phone cable that works with your setup. If so, it
|
||
is simple:
|
||
1. Disconnect the phone cable from the telephone. Insert the
|
||
modular plug into the right jack on the modem. This jack is often
|
||
marked with the word LINE, with a drawing of a modular wall jack,
|
||
or another understandable icon.
|
||
2. You may be able to connect the phone to the modem using the
|
||
phone cord that came with the modem. This may allow you to use the
|
||
phone for voice, when the line is not busy with communication. (You
|
||
may have to make changes in this cord to make it work with the
|
||
connected phone.)
|
||
This concludes the technical assembly of your equipment. Next
|
||
step is to install the communications program. When this is done,
|
||
we will check it out.
|
||
|
||
Installing the program
|
||
----------------------
|
||
Let us assume that you have received Procomm on a diskette, and
|
||
that it is set up with its default configuration. PROCOMM.EXE is
|
||
the program. The other files have no importance here.
|
||
Enter Procomm and press ENTER. Our first task is to prepare it
|
||
for communication:
|
||
If you are using a monochrome display, use the command
|
||
|
||
PROCOMM /B
|
||
|
||
The program will greet you by a welcome text. At the bottom of the
|
||
screen, the message "CREATING SYSTEM FILES" may appear (if these
|
||
have not been created yet), followed by a message from the creators
|
||
of the program.
|
||
Press ENTER when you have read the text. The screen will be
|
||
blanked, and a text line will appear at the bottom.
|
||
Now is the time to test if the technical installation has been
|
||
successful.
|
||
|
||
The dial tone
|
||
-------------
|
||
Lift the receiver from the phone and check if you can hear the dial
|
||
tone. If you can, turn the pages to "Does the computer have contact
|
||
with the modem?"
|
||
If you hear nothing, there are several possible causes:
|
||
* The phone is not working. This is easily checked. Disconnect
|
||
it from the modem, and connect it to the wall (using the original
|
||
cable!). If you get a dial tone now, then the phone is in order.
|
||
* The cable between the modem and the wall jack may be broken,
|
||
or wrongly configured. To check this, we must first check the
|
||
connection between the modem and the computer.
|
||
Once we know that the connection between the modem and the
|
||
computer is in order, we can use the modem to check our phone
|
||
cable.
|
||
* The cable between the modem and the phone may be in disorder.
|
||
For example, the modular phone connector may have a cabling that
|
||
differs from what is assumed in your country. If there is no dial
|
||
tone, then the cable between the modem and the telephone must be
|
||
repaired, or replaced.
|
||
|
||
Does your computer have contact with the modem?
|
||
-----------------------------------------------
|
||
When you first use Procomm, it is preset for communication at 300
|
||
bps, use of port 1 and ANSI-BBS. (The control line at the bottom of
|
||
your screen should read: ALT-F10 HELP, ANSI-BBS, HDX, 300 N81, LOG
|
||
CLOSED, PRT OFF, CR and CR.)
|
||
* If your modem is unable to communicate at 300 bps, you must
|
||
change the setup. Press ALT-P (keep the ALT key down while pressing
|
||
P) to get the menu LINE SETTINGS. Choice 9 gives 2400 bps with 8
|
||
bits word length, no parity and one stop bit. This is a common
|
||
setting. Select 24 "Save changes" to make the setting permanent.
|
||
* If you know that your modem is not connected to the
|
||
computer's port number 1, then change this from the same menu.
|
||
Choice 21 gives COM2, and choice 22 gives COM3.
|
||
If you don't know what communication port the modem has been
|
||
connected to, you have to find out by testing. Do this by entering
|
||
(i.e., sending to the modem) the characters AT. Now, the modem is
|
||
supposed to respond with an OK (or with the number "0," if the
|
||
modem is set to reply with numeric codes).
|
||
If you get an "OK" or a "0" on your display, continue reading
|
||
from "Does the modem have contact with the phone line?"
|
||
If you can see "AT" on your screen while you enter it, you have
|
||
contact with the modem. This is true even if it does not send any
|
||
confirmation. The modem may have been instructed not to confirm. If
|
||
you see the AT characters, read from "Does the modem have contact
|
||
with the phone line?"
|
||
If there is no contact between the modem and the computer, the
|
||
screen will remain blank at all times. Your problem may be the
|
||
cable, your choice of modem port, or the modem setup.
|
||
First, check if the modem is switched on (the power switch),
|
||
and that the plugs are firmly in the jacks.
|
||
Then let's check the modem. It may have been set not to respond
|
||
to your commands. Let's try to change that. Enter the following
|
||
command, and press ENTER:
|
||
|
||
ATQ0E1V1
|
||
|
||
This should make your modem: give result codes on your screen (Q0),
|
||
show the characters that you enter (E1), and use OK instead of the
|
||
numerical result code 0 (V1).
|
||
If you still get no OK, the reason may still be in the modem. I
|
||
have seen modems get "indigestion problems" when too many commands
|
||
are given to them.
|
||
Try give a command to return it to its factory setting. This
|
||
command is not the same on all Hayes-compatible modems. On most of
|
||
them, you can use one of the following: AT&F, ATF or ATZ (on some
|
||
modems ATZ is used to reset to the stored configuration). Locate
|
||
the correct command to use in the modem's user manual. Then, try
|
||
ATQ0E1V1 again.
|
||
If you are still without success, check your choice of modem
|
||
port. If there are several communication connectors at the back of
|
||
your computer, test these. If this doesn't help, connect the modem
|
||
cable to the most probable jack.
|
||
Now, test the communication port for a response from the modem
|
||
using another communications program setting. Press ALT-P, select
|
||
another port (choice 20 - 23), press ESC and try "AT" again (or
|
||
ATQ0E1V1). If there is still no reaction, test the computer's other
|
||
communications connectors.
|
||
|
||
If you have a mouse connected to your computers, make sure
|
||
that it is not using the same port as your communications
|
||
program.
|
||
|
||
Problems with the communications port are often caused by other
|
||
equipment. Remove all extra equipment (like a PC-fax card or a
|
||
mouse), and all associated software (often represented by a
|
||
line starting with "DRIVER=" in CONFIG.SYS, or a resident
|
||
program driving a mouse). Remove all resident programs from
|
||
memory before testing.
|
||
|
||
If you are still at the same unfortunate stage, chances are that
|
||
the problem is either in the cable or the modem. If you know others
|
||
who are into data communication, visit them for help. Bring your
|
||
cable and your modem to have them tested in an environment where
|
||
things work. It is easier to isolate a problem by testing your
|
||
units in sequence on your helper's system.
|
||
First, the cable. Connect it between his computer and his
|
||
modem. Test the connection to his modem with your cable as the only
|
||
foreign element. If the test is successful, your cable is OK.
|
||
Next, the modem. If the test is successful, your modem is in
|
||
order. The most probable cause of your problems is your computer's
|
||
communications port.
|
||
|
||
In communications, many parts have to work together. You may
|
||
have problems with more than one of them at the same time. The
|
||
rule is to test step by step to eliminate possible problems.
|
||
|
||
If you get no reply from your modem, when it is connected to your
|
||
friend's computer, chances are that it needs to be repaired. Call
|
||
the seller for help.
|
||
A last refuge is to buy an extra communications card for your
|
||
computer . . .
|
||
|
||
Does your modem have contact with the phone line?
|
||
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
You have contact between your computer and modem. The modem answers
|
||
"OK" as assumed. We now have to test if there is contact with the
|
||
phone line. That is easy.
|
||
Enter the following command and press ENTER:
|
||
|
||
ATQ0E1V1
|
||
|
||
When the modem answers OK, enter the dialing command:
|
||
|
||
ATDT37031378
|
||
|
||
The modem will try to call 37031378, the number to my BBS. (You may
|
||
have to prefix the number with an international code, and the
|
||
country code for Norway. If international calls require the prefix
|
||
009, enter ATDT009-47-37031378).
|
||
Your modem will wait for CONNECT a preset number of seconds
|
||
(rarely longer than 60 seconds).
|
||
If your modem does not detect the dial tone (within the preset
|
||
waiting time), it will give you the following error message
|
||
|
||
NO DIALTONE
|
||
|
||
All other messages (except ERROR) declare that the modem did detect
|
||
the dial tone. If it did, continue reading from "Configuring your
|
||
program."
|
||
|
||
NO DIALTONE
|
||
-----------
|
||
The most probable causes of NO DIALTONE are that your phone cable
|
||
is not connected, that it has been damaged, or that it is the wrong
|
||
cable for the job.
|
||
The latter cause is common in many countries. For example, a
|
||
cable made for a telephone network in the United States, may not
|
||
work in Norway. A cable made for connection to a switchboard, may
|
||
not work when connected to a domestic phone line.
|
||
A standard, domestic American phone cable contains four lines.
|
||
Two of these (line number 1 and 4) carry sounds. The others are not
|
||
being used. A standard Norwegian domestic cable is set up in the
|
||
same way, but here line number 1 and 3 carry sound.
|
||
Changing the configuration of such cables is often simple. Just
|
||
cut the cable in two, and put the lines together correctly. This is
|
||
typically required when your modem assumes that you use it in North
|
||
America, while you are in a country with different cabling.
|
||
|
||
Configuring your program
|
||
------------------------
|
||
The modem answers. The dial tone is being detected. Procomm is
|
||
installed on your hard disk. Now, check if the program has been
|
||
correctly configured.
|
||
Press ALT-S to get the Setup Menu. Select 1, Modem setup, from
|
||
this menu.
|
||
Choice 1, Modem init string, is a general setup command. This
|
||
command will be sent to the modem each time you start Procomm. You
|
||
are free to make is as long and powerful as you want. Our purpose
|
||
now, however, is to check if it works.
|
||
|
||
Most modems do not react if one element in your setup command
|
||
is wrong. They respond with ERROR (or the numeric code), and
|
||
disregard the rest.
|
||
|
||
Procomm's standard Modem init string has the following commands:
|
||
|
||
ATE0 S7=60 S11=55 V1 X1 S0=0!
|
||
|
||
These work well with most modems, provided the speed is legal.
|
||
Go back to the blank screen (using ESC). Test the init command
|
||
by entering it manually. (Do not enter the "!" character. This is
|
||
Procomm's code for ENTER.)
|
||
If the modem reacts with ERROR, check with the modem manual to
|
||
find out what is wrong. (Check if the values S7=60 and S11=55 are
|
||
not too high.)
|
||
If you have to change the init command, go back to the Modem
|
||
init string menu choice. Enter the correct commands. Remember to
|
||
add the "!" at the end.
|
||
Press ESC to get to the main configuration menu and select 2,
|
||
TERMINAL SETUP. Check if Terminal emulation is ANSI-BBS. Change
|
||
choice 2, Duplex, to FULL. The other factory settings are NONE, CR,
|
||
CR, DEST, BS, OFF, ON, 350, OFF.
|
||
Return to the SETUP MENU (press ESC). Press "s" to save the
|
||
setup to disk. Your setting has now been stored, and Procomm is
|
||
ready to be used.
|
||
|
||
Dialing
|
||
-------
|
||
Now, test your setup by calling your favorite online service. We
|
||
will show how to log on to my bulletin board.
|
||
You can call manually by entering ATDT followed by the phone
|
||
number. The most practical method, however, is to use the built-in
|
||
phone directory.
|
||
Press ALT-D to get to the phone directory. Press "R" to revise
|
||
the list, and enter Saltrod Horror Show somewhere on the list. I
|
||
have it as number 2. Answer the questions like this:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Name: Saltrod Horror Show
|
||
Number: 009-47-370-31378
|
||
Baud: 9600
|
||
Parity: N
|
||
Databits: 8
|
||
Stop Bits: 1
|
||
Echo On? N
|
||
Command file: (press ENTER, meaning that you don't want to
|
||
use a script file at this point)
|
||
|
||
Baud can be anything from 300 bps to 9600 bps. It's up to you, and
|
||
depends on your modem's capabilities.
|
||
When done, enter "2" and press ENTER. The modem will dial the
|
||
number (that you have as item 2 on the list), and try to connect.
|
||
If the number is busy, you will get a warning. You can now
|
||
leave Procomm (ALT+X), or set it for redialing (ALT+R). When set
|
||
for redialing, Procomm will call back until a connection has been
|
||
made. When CONNECT is received from your modem, Procomm announces
|
||
the fact with a beep in the computer's loudspeaker.
|
||
Text will start scrolling over your screen. First, a short
|
||
welcome text pops up. Your interactive dialog with the bulletin
|
||
board can start.
|
||
The first question is "What is your First Name?" Enter your
|
||
first name. Then, "What is your Last Name?" Enter your last name.
|
||
Your dialog with the remote computer will continue like this.
|
||
The board will ask you questions, and you will enter your answers.
|
||
|
||
What may go wrong?
|
||
------------------
|
||
A setting that works beautifully when calling one bulletin board,
|
||
may be a disaster when calling another service. Here are some
|
||
typical problems:
|
||
|
||
When dialing through a switchboard (PBX).
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
Remember to add 9 or 0 for a city line, when dialing out from a
|
||
PBX. If you forget, you'll get nowhere.
|
||
Use the following command (assuming that you must enter 0 to
|
||
get a city line, and use tone signaling):
|
||
|
||
ATDT0W4737031378
|
||
|
||
If you must use 9 for a city line and pulse dialing, use the
|
||
following command
|
||
|
||
ATDP9W4737031378
|
||
|
||
Register your standard dialing command in Procomm's MODEM SETUP.
|
||
Enter ALT+S and then select 1, Modem Setup. Choice 2, Dialing
|
||
command. The default entry is ATDT. Replace this with ATDT0W,
|
||
ATDP9W or whatever makes dialing work for you.
|
||
|
||
No answer from the remote computer
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
Your computer has to "talk the same language" as the remote host.
|
||
If the parameters of your communications program have been set
|
||
incorrectly, it may be impossible to set up a connection with the
|
||
service.
|
||
Sometimes, you get CONNECT, but your screen only gives you
|
||
strange, unintelligible 'noise' characters. The reason may be
|
||
CONNECT at an incompatible speed, a service's use of special codes
|
||
for displaying text (including special language characters), or
|
||
that the service requires use of a special communications program
|
||
or method (as when a service starts by interrogating for the use of
|
||
an offline reader).
|
||
Many online services require that you use certain settings.
|
||
Most services, however, may be reached when using the following:
|
||
|
||
Speed: 2400 bps
|
||
8 bits word length, no parity, one stop bit
|
||
|
||
Some services (notably some Unix hosts) demand 7 bits, even parity,
|
||
one stop bit.
|
||
|
||
Sorry, no luck!
|
||
---------------
|
||
Try again, just in case. The remote computer may have had a
|
||
temporary problem, when you called. The PTT may have given you a
|
||
particularly noisy telephone line on this attempt.
|
||
If this doesn't help, recheck each point in the communications
|
||
process. It is so easy to do something wrong.
|
||
If nothing helps, read the service's user information manuals.
|
||
Only rarely will you be able to blame the communications program
|
||
(unless you have made it yourself), or the equipment. Most errors
|
||
are caused by finger trouble and misunderstandings.
|
||
|
||
Testing the Saltrod Horror Show
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
First time visitors often experience problems, and in particular if
|
||
this is their first time online using a Hayes-compatible modem.
|
||
Here are some typical problems with suggested solutions:
|
||
|
||
* Disable Guard Tones from the modem when dialing. If it has
|
||
this feature, you can often turn it off. Put the required command
|
||
in your Modem init string.
|
||
* Don't press ENTER to "wake" my system. The software will
|
||
automatically detect your speed and adjust accordingly. The same
|
||
applies for many services. On some, you're just asking for problems
|
||
by not waiting patiently (often the case when the remote software
|
||
starts by checking if you use an offline reader).
|
||
* My BBS accepts from 300 to 9600 bps asynchronous, full duplex
|
||
communication. You may not succeed with 1200 bps half duplex, Bell
|
||
300 bps or 1200 bps.
|
||
* Start with your communications program set for 8 bits word
|
||
length, no parity and one stop bit. Try 7 bits, even parity if
|
||
there is too much noise on the line (you cannot retrieve programs
|
||
using this setting, though).
|
||
* When your modem is set at a low transfer speed, it may not
|
||
wait long enough for carrier from my modem. Most modems let you
|
||
set this waiting time longer by giving a value to a S-register.
|
||
(Read in your modem's manual about how to do this).
|
||
|
||
Partial success
|
||
---------------
|
||
Some bulletin boards offer colors and music. If your equipment is
|
||
set up correctly, you can receive the welcome text in full color
|
||
graphics accompanied by a melody in your computer's speaker.
|
||
If it is not, chances are that you will get many strange codes
|
||
on your screen, and an ugly feeling that something is wrong.
|
||
There are two ways out of this problem:
|
||
1. Ask the bulletin board to send text only (select U for
|
||
Utilities, and then G for Graphics to change setting),
|
||
2. Set your computer for colors and graphics. This feature is
|
||
only available for callers with an MS-DOS computers. You may need
|
||
to add the line DEVICE=ANSI.SYS in your CONFIG.SYS.
|
||
Finally, you must have a communications program that allows you
|
||
to display colors on your screen. Procomm set with ANSI-BBS does
|
||
that.
|
||
|
||
Downloading programs
|
||
--------------------
|
||
We call the transfer of programs and files from a remote computer
|
||
for downloading. It means "transfer of data to your computer AND
|
||
storage of the data (down) on YOUR local disk."
|
||
You are downloading, when you call my board to retrieve a
|
||
program.
|
||
When you, overwhelmed by gratitude, send one of your favorite
|
||
programs TO my bulletin board, then we call it uploading.
|
||
Data can be many things. It may be news from Washington Post, a
|
||
digital picture, an executable program, a pile of invoices, a piece
|
||
of music, a voice file, an animated sequence of pictures and music,
|
||
or compressed library files.
|
||
Downloading "plain text" (also called "plain ASCII" or "DOS
|
||
text" on MS-DOS machines) is relatively easy. Such text usually
|
||
only contains characters between number 32 (space character) and
|
||
126 (the ~ character) in the ASCII table.
|
||
Characters with lower numbers have special functions (like the
|
||
control characters ESCape and CTRL+C). These may not even be
|
||
displayed on your screen. Characters with higher numbers are used
|
||
for graphics, special national characters, and other applications.
|
||
Special transfer methods are often required, when your data
|
||
contains text with characters outside ASCII number 32 through 126.
|
||
Read under "Protocol transfers" below for more information about
|
||
how to do this.
|
||
|
||
Downloading text
|
||
----------------
|
||
Most communication programs require that you begin by opening a
|
||
file. They ask you to enter a file name. From this point and
|
||
onwards all incoming text will be stored in this file until you say
|
||
stop.
|
||
Communication programs do this in different ways. Some let
|
||
incoming data flow through a temporary storage area using the
|
||
principle first in, first out. When you open a file, it starts
|
||
storing data from the beginning of the temporary storage area,
|
||
though this text may have scrolled off your screen some time ago.
|
||
Most communication programs start storing data from NOW.
|
||
Procomm works this way. You start downloading of text by pressing
|
||
the PgDn key. A window will appear on your screen giving you a
|
||
choice between various methods. Select ASCII.
|
||
In another window, you are asked to enter a file name. When
|
||
done, storage of incoming data starts. You stop the process by
|
||
pressing the ESC key.
|
||
Procomm has another method called "file logging." You start
|
||
this by pressing ALT-F1. Procomm requests the file name, and the
|
||
storage process starts. (Read under "Strip" about the difference
|
||
between these methods.)
|
||
|
||
If you forget to tell Procomm to store incoming data, then
|
||
you will most probably lose this data for ever.
|
||
|
||
Do not waste time and money by forgetting to store what you
|
||
receive!
|
||
|
||
The term "append"
|
||
-----------------
|
||
When downloading text - or anything - it is important to know
|
||
whether you are appending information to an existing file, or
|
||
overwriting it (i.e., destroying the old text).
|
||
Most communication programs complain with an audible signal,
|
||
when you try to overwrite an existing file. They will ask you if
|
||
you really want to delete it, or append the current data.
|
||
|
||
The term "strip"
|
||
----------------
|
||
The purpose of 'strip' is to remove something from incoming data or
|
||
to change it on the fly.
|
||
When you use ASCII downloading with Procomm, ALL incoming data
|
||
are being stored. This includes so-called ESCape sequences. If you
|
||
use File Logging, all control characters (except the line feed and
|
||
new page characters) are being removed (filtered).
|
||
If you download text from a computer that uses other ASCII
|
||
characters for linefeed and return, save time by having the
|
||
communications program convert them on the fly to their correct
|
||
form for your computer.
|
||
You define strip procedures through Procomm's SetUp menu (ALT-
|
||
S). You can also request automatic conversion of characters to
|
||
graphics values, or local language variants.
|
||
|
||
National characters
|
||
-------------------
|
||
Special national characters cause problems in many countries. One
|
||
reason is that they are represented by different internal codes on
|
||
various hardware platforms, and that some networks are unable to
|
||
transmit 8-bits data.
|
||
Some systems represent these special characters by a 7-bit
|
||
code, others by an 8-bit code. Some depend on the computer having
|
||
an internal national language ROM, or that it uses a special
|
||
(resident) conversion program.
|
||
What gives good results on an MS-DOS computer, may give rubbish
|
||
on a Macintosh, Amiga, Atari, or a PC using MS Windows.
|
||
Many communication programs have features that can help you
|
||
solve at least some these problems. They let you make translation
|
||
tables for automatic conversion of special incoming and outgoing
|
||
characters.
|
||
If you call a Scandinavian online service using 7 bits even
|
||
parity, many transfer the national special characters using the
|
||
ASCII code equivalents of number 91, 92, 93, 123, 124, and 125.
|
||
Similar, more or less formal standards are in place in other
|
||
countries.
|
||
|
||
Protocol transfers
|
||
------------------
|
||
If your purpose is to transfer digitized pictures, a computer
|
||
program, a batch of invoices, a piece of music or an animated
|
||
sequence of pictures, it's important that each character (bit)
|
||
arrives correctly. We achieve this by using protocol transfers.
|
||
These files often contain control or binary characters. You
|
||
cannot transfer binary files without the use of special methods.
|
||
It is easy to understand why we need protocol transfers when
|
||
retrieving plain text as tables of numbers, statistics, and
|
||
financial reports. Transfer errors may have fatal consequences.
|
||
Protocol transfers are also required when transferring word
|
||
processor text files having imbedded control codes (like text made
|
||
with WordPerfect), and compressed files.
|
||
Here is an example:
|
||
|
||
Downloading public domain software
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
First, you need the names and features of the programs that can be
|
||
downloaded from a service. On most bulletin boards, you must enter
|
||
a command to navigate to the File Library. Here, they normally
|
||
greet you with a menu listing available commands.
|
||
|
||
Try H (for Help!) or ? when you are stuck.
|
||
|
||
Public domain and shareware programs are stored in subdirectories
|
||
on my bulletin board. The directories have numerical names. Utility
|
||
programs for MS-DOS computers are stored in directory 10. Games are
|
||
stored in directory 17.
|
||
Enter L for a list of available directories (other bulletin
|
||
boards may use different commands). Enter "L 17" to list the files
|
||
in directory 17. This will give file names, lengths in characters
|
||
(to help you estimate download time), creation dates, and a short
|
||
description of each file.
|
||
You can search for files of interest. When looking for programs
|
||
that can help you get more out of a printer, you may search using
|
||
keywords like "printer."
|
||
Some programs are made available in text form. This is the case
|
||
with older BASIC programs. (The file name extensions .BAS, .ASC or
|
||
.TXT suggest that the files contain plain text.) You can download
|
||
these files using ASCII.
|
||
Most programs are stored in their executable form, or as one
|
||
executable file among several in a compressed transfer file (a
|
||
library of files). On my board, most of these files have the file
|
||
name extension .EXE or .COM.
|
||
What transfer protocol to use, depends on what is available in
|
||
your communications program.
|
||
|
||
The protocol transfer method explained
|
||
--------------------------------------
|
||
The protocol transfer algorithms use methods to check the transfer
|
||
with automatic error correction. In principle, they work like this:
|
||
The sending program calculates a check sum based on the
|
||
contents of the file. The receiving program does the same
|
||
calculation and compares the result with the senders' check sum. If
|
||
the figures match, the transfer was successful. If not, all or part
|
||
of the file will be retransmitted.
|
||
These are some popular protocols:
|
||
|
||
XMODEM
|
||
------
|
||
has automatic error detection and correction. Most modern programs
|
||
have this feature. XMODEM exists in programs for MS-DOS computers,
|
||
CP/M computers, Apple, TRS-80 Model 100, etc. It is the most
|
||
commonly used transfer protocol.
|
||
XMODEM assumes 8-bit settings in your communications program.
|
||
The file to be sent is split up into 128 bit sized blocks (or
|
||
"packets") before transfer. The sender calculates the check sum and
|
||
adds a check sum bit at the end of each packet. (Packing, sending
|
||
and checking is done automatically by the software.)
|
||
The receiving program calculates its own check sum and compares
|
||
with the sender's. If an error is detected, XMODEM will request
|
||
retransmission of the last block.
|
||
XMODEM is reasonably good when there is little noise on the
|
||
telephone line is low. When the line is bad, however, there is
|
||
always a chance that the transfer will stop. You cannot use XMODEM
|
||
on computer networks that use ASCII flow control or ESCape codes.
|
||
The transfer commands must be given to both computers. You can
|
||
only transfer one file per command.
|
||
XMODEM's "packet size" (block length) is short. This has an
|
||
impact on transfer speed, and especially when downloading from
|
||
timesharing systems, packet switched networks, via satellites, and
|
||
when using buffered (error correcting) modems.
|
||
The control method (8-bit check sum) and unprotected
|
||
transactions give a low level of safety against errors in the
|
||
transmission. The transferred file may contain 127 bytes with noise
|
||
characters (at the end). The creation date of the file is lost in
|
||
the transfer.
|
||
These weaknesses have given us better methods. Here are some of
|
||
them:
|
||
|
||
XMODEM/CRC
|
||
----------
|
||
CRC is an abbreviation for Cyclical Redundancy Check. The method
|
||
guarantees 99.9969 percent free transfer. It still has the other
|
||
weaknesses of ordinary XMODEM transfers.
|
||
|
||
YMODEM Batch
|
||
------------
|
||
is faster than XMODEM and gives a high level of safety in the
|
||
transfers. When used with some programs, YMODEM can transfer the
|
||
files' creation time/date. You can transfer updated documents. This
|
||
will replace documents with an older creation date. Only one party
|
||
must enter the file name. YMODEM takes care of the rest.
|
||
|
||
Kermit
|
||
------
|
||
is used on many computer platforms, and especially where they use a
|
||
terminal emulation mode (like VT-100) which makes the use of XMODEM
|
||
impossible. Kermit is one of the few asynchronous error correction
|
||
protocols that functions well when exchanging files having half
|
||
duplex IBM front-end machines.
|
||
Kermit can transfer more than one file at the time.
|
||
|
||
Super-Kermit
|
||
------------
|
||
is also called Kermit with Sliding Windows. It can transfer many
|
||
packets before stopping to check the transfer. The protocol is
|
||
much faster than XMODEM.
|
||
|
||
ZMODEM
|
||
------
|
||
is currently the fastest transfer protocol for many applications.
|
||
All transactions are protected with a 16-bit or 32-bit CRC. ZMODEM
|
||
is immune against most error conditions that prevent traditional
|
||
protocols to achieve correct transfer.
|
||
ZMODEM transfers the creation date of the file and its exact
|
||
contents. The file name is read once, and all transfer commands may
|
||
be given by the sending program.
|
||
|
||
Decompression of files
|
||
----------------------
|
||
If a file has name extensions like ZIP, LZH, ARC, PAK, LQR, LBR,
|
||
ZOO, ARJ, or QQQ, you are facing a compressed file. We use such
|
||
files to achieve faster transfers.
|
||
Files having the extension .EXE or .COM may be compressed files
|
||
that have been converted into a self-extract format. To retrieve
|
||
the files from a self-extract compressed file, just enter the
|
||
file's name.
|
||
To decompress files that have not been made self-extract,
|
||
you need a utility program. These programs have many names and are
|
||
available through most bulletin boards.
|
||
|
||
Transfer problems
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Most transfer problems are caused by the communication programs
|
||
and their (lack of) features.
|
||
Some Procomm users have problems with the Kermit protocol. Tip:
|
||
use 8 bit world length and no parity in your program setup. 7 bits
|
||
and even parity does not always work (on version 2.4.2).
|
||
|
||
Uploading
|
||
---------
|
||
The transfer of data "the other way," i.e., from your disk to a
|
||
remote computer, requires that you start by making some decisions.
|
||
Is the file to be sent as plain ASCII? Should I compress it in a
|
||
distribution file to reduce transfer time, and make it easier to
|
||
handle for the recipient?
|
||
If you are transferring a text file containing special national
|
||
characters, then these may have to be converted to another format.
|
||
If your text contains blank lines (like blank lines between
|
||
paragraphs), you may have to insert a space character at the start
|
||
of all such lines. Some systems interpret a blank line as a signal
|
||
telling that transmission is done. The invisible space character
|
||
prevents this.
|
||
Some hosts have limitations on line length. They may require
|
||
that lines be shorter than 80 characters. If you send lines that
|
||
are too long, the result may be fatal.
|
||
|
||
Sending electronic mail
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
If you send your mail too fast, some online services tend to get
|
||
digestion problems. You must be very accurate with the format of
|
||
your message. It has to agree with the host machine's rules about
|
||
line length, and maximum number of lines per message.
|
||
Let's assume that you want to send the following message to an
|
||
electronic mailbox:
|
||
|
||
To: Datatid
|
||
cc: Anne-Tove Vestfossen
|
||
Sj: Merry Christmas!
|
||
Text: Thanks for the box with herring. The taste was
|
||
formidable. etc .. etc... etc...
|
||
Greetings, Odd
|
||
|
||
If this is all you have to say, doing it manually may be as fast as
|
||
doing it automatically. However, if the line containing "etc .. etc
|
||
.." is two full pages of text, you may feel differently. Then, the
|
||
best may be to upload a prewritten letter.
|
||
Many Procomm users prefer to split the job in two. They enter
|
||
the first four lines manually, and upload the body of the text
|
||
(when the remote computer is ready to receive).
|
||
Press PgUp to get a menu of various uploading protocols. Select
|
||
ASCII for transfer of plain text. Procomm will ask for the name of
|
||
the file, which contains your letter. Enter the name, and the file
|
||
will be sent.
|
||
|
||
Slow down with "pacing"
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
Sometimes, the PgUp method is just what you need. On other days,
|
||
strange things may stop you in the middle of your transfer. One
|
||
typical reason is that Procomm is sending it too fast for the
|
||
recipient.
|
||
"Pacing" is a method used to slow the speed of the transfer to
|
||
a level that the recipient can handle.
|
||
Procomm lets you set a tiny pause after each line sent. Another
|
||
technique is to ask the program to wait for a given character (a
|
||
"Go-character"), before allowing it to send the next line. For
|
||
example: the character ":" is often used in the prompts for the
|
||
next line on bulletin boards.
|
||
|
||
Protocol transfers may be easier
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
You may find it easier to use a transfer protocol. With Procomm,
|
||
press the PgUp key, and the program will ask for a protocol. Select
|
||
Kermit or something else. The program will ask for a file name, you
|
||
enter it, and off it goes. You will have no problems with blank
|
||
lines, or lines that are too long.
|
||
At times, even this will fail. The most common reasons are:
|
||
* The recipient requires that Procomm be set for 8-bits word
|
||
length, no parity, 1 stop bit, when using this protocol, but you
|
||
have it set differently.
|
||
* You think that the recipient's version of YMODEM is the same
|
||
that you have. Wrong! Total failure.
|
||
Do the following to upload the file TEST.TXT to my bulletin
|
||
board using XMODEM:
|
||
|
||
1. Navigate to the file area. Tell SHS what you want by using
|
||
the following command:
|
||
u;test.txt;x
|
||
2. Press PgUp, select XMODEM, enter a file name (TEST.TXT), and
|
||
the transfer will start. (If you're too slow, SHS may be
|
||
tired of waiting for your commands . . .)
|
||
3. When the transfer is completed, my board will ask for a
|
||
short description of the file. Enter it, and you're done.
|
||
|
||
Enter G (for Goodbye), and disconnect.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 4:
|
||
|
||
Explanation of some frequently used terms
|
||
=========================================
|
||
|
||
|
||
We have included some terms that are commonly used in the online
|
||
world. For more information, get a copy of "FYI: Internet User's
|
||
Glossary." To get this file, send email to SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL with
|
||
the following command in the Subject of your mail: RFC 1392 .
|
||
|
||
Address
|
||
-------
|
||
The string of characters that you must give an electronic mail
|
||
program to direct a message to a particular person.
|
||
The term "Internet address" often refers to an assigned number,
|
||
which identifies a host on this network.
|
||
|
||
Anonymous FTP
|
||
-------------
|
||
The procedure of connecting to a remote computer, as an anonymous
|
||
or guest user, to transfer files back to your computer. See FTP for
|
||
more information.
|
||
|
||
ANON-FTP
|
||
--------
|
||
See Anonymous FTP.
|
||
|
||
ANSI
|
||
----
|
||
(1) ANSI is an organization that sets standards.
|
||
(2) 'ANSI graphics' (ref. the term ANSI-BBS) is a set of cursor
|
||
control codes that originated on the VT100 terminal. Many online
|
||
services use these codes to help improve the sending of characters
|
||
to communication programs. It uses the escape character, followed
|
||
by other characters, to move the cursor on the screen, change
|
||
color, and more.
|
||
|
||
Archie
|
||
------
|
||
An electronic directory service for locating information throughout
|
||
the Internet. You can use Archie to locate files on anonymous ftp
|
||
archive sites, other online directories and resource listings. It
|
||
is useful for finding free software.
|
||
Archie offers access to the "whatis" description database.
|
||
This database contains descriptions that include the name and a
|
||
brief synopsis of the large number of public domain software,
|
||
datasets and informational documents located on the Internet.
|
||
This book emphasizes email access to Archie. You can also reach
|
||
archie servers by telnet to one of the following addresses:
|
||
|
||
archie.au 139.130.4.6 (Australian server)
|
||
archie.mcgill.ca 132.206.44.21 (Canada)
|
||
archie.funet.fi 128.214.6.100 (Finland/Europe s.)
|
||
archie.th-darmstadt 130.83.128.111 (Germany)
|
||
archie.cs.huji.ac.il 132.65.6.15 (Israel server)
|
||
archie.kuis.kyoto-u.ac.jp 130.54.20.1 (Japan)
|
||
archie.sogang.ac.kr 163.239.1.11 (Korea)
|
||
archie.nz 130.195.9.4 (New Zealand)
|
||
archie.ncu.edu.tw 140.115.19.24 (Taiwan)
|
||
archie.doc.ic.ac.uk 146.169.11.3 (UK/England server)
|
||
archie.rutgers.edu 128.6.18.15 (U.S.A.)
|
||
|
||
Archie server
|
||
-------------
|
||
An email-based file transfer facility offered by some systems
|
||
connected to the Internet.
|
||
|
||
ASCII
|
||
-----
|
||
The American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A standard
|
||
seven-bit code created to achieve compatibility between various
|
||
types of data processing equipment. ASCII, pronounced "ask-key,"
|
||
is the common code for microcomputer equipment.
|
||
The Standard ASCII Character Set consists of 128 decimal
|
||
numbers ranging from zero through 127 assigned to letters, numbers,
|
||
punctuation marks, and the most common special characters.
|
||
The Extended ASCII Character Set also consists of 128 decimal
|
||
numbers and ranges from 128 through 255 representing additional
|
||
special, mathematical, graphic, and foreign characters.
|
||
|
||
ASCII download
|
||
--------------
|
||
Retrieval of plain ASCII text (without special codes). Normally, it
|
||
takes place without automatic error correction, but it is typically
|
||
managed by XON/XOFF flow control.
|
||
|
||
Asynchronous transfer
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Serial communication between two computers. When signals are sent
|
||
to a computer at irregular intervals, they are described as
|
||
asynchronous. Data is sent at irregular intervals by preceding each
|
||
character with a start bit and following it with a stop bit.
|
||
Asynchronous transmission allows a character to be sent at
|
||
random after the preceding character has been sent, without regard
|
||
to any timing device. Consequently, in case of line noise, the
|
||
modem can find out right away where the next byte should start.
|
||
|
||
Autodial
|
||
--------
|
||
When a modem dials a telephone number automatically. Autodial may
|
||
be started by the user entering the number manually, or the number
|
||
may be sent automatically by the communications program (for
|
||
example after having been selected from a phone register).
|
||
|
||
Baud
|
||
----
|
||
A unit of measurement that shows the number of discrete signal
|
||
elements, such as bits, that can be sent per second.
|
||
Bits per second (bps) is the number of binary digits sent in
|
||
one second. There is a difference between bps and baud rate, and
|
||
the two are often confused. For example, a device such as a modem
|
||
said to send at 2400 baud is not correct. It actually sends 2400
|
||
bits per second.
|
||
Both baud rate and bps refer to the rate at which the bits
|
||
within a single frame are sent. The gaps between the frames can be
|
||
of variable length. Accordingly, neither baud rate nor bps refer
|
||
accurately to the rate at which information is actually being
|
||
transferred.
|
||
|
||
BBS
|
||
---
|
||
Bulletin Board or Bulletin Board System. See Bulletin Board.
|
||
|
||
Bell
|
||
----
|
||
Standard frequencies used in older modems made in the United
|
||
States. The standard for 300 bps is called Bell 103. The standard
|
||
for 1200 bps full duplex is called Bell 212A. Modems using these
|
||
standards are normally unable to communicate with CCITT standard
|
||
modems at these speeds.
|
||
|
||
Big5
|
||
----
|
||
Coding scheme developed in Taiwan for using Chinese on computers.
|
||
There are different varieties of Big5 codes, the most common being
|
||
ET Big5 (the code used by the Taiwanese program ETen, pronounced
|
||
Yi3tian1) and HKU Big5 (the code used for programs developed at
|
||
Hong Kong University).
|
||
ET Big5 files must be read with the ETen operating system.
|
||
|
||
Binary
|
||
------
|
||
The base 2 number system in which only the digits 1 and 0 are used
|
||
is called the binary system. The binary system lets us express any
|
||
number, if we have enough bits, as a combination of 1's and 0's.
|
||
Also used to express conditions like on/off, true/false, yes/no.
|
||
|
||
Bits
|
||
----
|
||
Bit is an abbreviation for Binary digIT. Computer words and data
|
||
are made-up of bits, the smallest unit of information.
|
||
A bit can be either zero or one, represented in a circuit by an
|
||
off or on state, respectively. The bits are set on or off to store
|
||
data, or to form a code that in turn sends instructions to the
|
||
computer's central processing unit.
|
||
|
||
Bits per second (bps)
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Bits per second (bps) is the number of binary digits sent in one
|
||
second. It refers to the rate at which the bits within a single
|
||
frame are sent ('frame' is another term for 'packet'). The gaps
|
||
between frames can be of variable length. Accordingly, bps does
|
||
not refer to the rate at which information is actually being
|
||
transferred.
|
||
We usually estimate the amount of characters transferred per
|
||
second (cps) by dividing the number of bps by 10. Example: 2400 bps
|
||
transfers around 240 characters per second.
|
||
|
||
Boolean
|
||
-------
|
||
Search algorithm built on the algebraic theories of the English
|
||
mathematician George Booles. Boolean algorithms are used in online
|
||
databases to help narrow down the number of hits using the words
|
||
AND, OR, and NOT.
|
||
|
||
Bounce
|
||
------
|
||
The return of a piece of mail because of an error in its delivery.
|
||
|
||
Bps
|
||
---
|
||
Abbreviation for bits per second. See above.
|
||
|
||
Browse
|
||
------
|
||
To view and possibly edit a file of data on screen similar to
|
||
handling text in a word processing document.
|
||
|
||
Bulletin board
|
||
--------------
|
||
A computer, often a microcomputer, set up to receive calls and
|
||
work as an online service. The BBSes let users communicate with
|
||
each other through message bases, and exchange files. They and may
|
||
also offer other services (like news, data base searches, and
|
||
online shopping).
|
||
|
||
Carrier
|
||
-------
|
||
The tone that the modem sends over a phone line before any data is
|
||
sent on it. This tone has a fixed frequency and a fixed amplitude.
|
||
It is then modified to indicate data.
|
||
|
||
Character
|
||
---------
|
||
Here used about a letter, a number or another typographical symbol
|
||
or code.
|
||
|
||
CCITT
|
||
-----
|
||
The Consultative Committee for International Telephony and
|
||
Telegraphy. An international consultative committee, organized by
|
||
the United Nations. Membership includes Telephone, governmental
|
||
Post, and Telegraph Authorities, scientific and trade associations,
|
||
and private companies. CCITT is part of the International
|
||
Telecommunications Union, a United Nations treaty organization
|
||
based in Geneva, Switzerland.
|
||
CCITT sets international communications recommendations. These
|
||
are often adopted as standards. It also develops interface, modem,
|
||
and data network recommendations. The X.25 protocol for access to
|
||
packet-switched networks was originally a recommendation of CCITT.
|
||
A wide range of CCITT documents is available through The
|
||
Teledoc database of The International Telecommunication Union
|
||
(ITU):
|
||
|
||
* CCITT and CCIR administrative documents
|
||
* lists of contributions (substantive input/proposals)
|
||
to CCITT and CCIR study groups
|
||
* lists of CCITT reports and Recommendations
|
||
(i.e., standards)
|
||
* summaries of CCITT new or revised Recommendations
|
||
* CCITT and CCIR meeting schedules and other
|
||
information concerning Study Groups structures
|
||
and activities.
|
||
|
||
For information, write to shaw@itu.arcom.ch or bautista@itu.arcom.ch
|
||
The database is at teledoc@itu.arcom.ch .
|
||
|
||
COM port
|
||
--------
|
||
A COM port (or communication port) is a communications channel or
|
||
pathway over which data is transferred between remote computing
|
||
devices.
|
||
MS-DOS computers may have as many as four COM ports, COM1, COM2,
|
||
COM3, and COM4. These are serial ports most often used with a
|
||
modem to set up a communications channel over telephone lines. They
|
||
can also be used to send data to a serial printer, or to connect a
|
||
serial mouse.
|
||
|
||
Conference
|
||
----------
|
||
Also called SIG (Special Interest Group), Forum, RoundTable, Echo.
|
||
A conference is an area on a bulletin board or online service set
|
||
up as a mini board. Most conferences have separate message bases
|
||
and often also file libraries and bulletins. Conferences are
|
||
focused on topics, like politics, games, multimedia and product
|
||
support.
|
||
|
||
Connect time
|
||
------------
|
||
A term used for the hours, minutes, and seconds that a user is
|
||
connected to an online service. On several commercial services,
|
||
users have to pay for connect time.
|
||
|
||
CPS
|
||
---
|
||
Characters per second. See Bits per second.
|
||
|
||
Data
|
||
----
|
||
Information of any kind, including binary, decimal or hexadecimal
|
||
numbers, integer numbers, text strings, etc.
|
||
|
||
Database
|
||
--------
|
||
A database is a highly structured file (or set of files) that tries
|
||
to provide all the information assigned to a particular subject and
|
||
to allow programs to access only items they need.
|
||
Online services offer databases that users can search to find
|
||
full-text or bibliographic references to desired topics.
|
||
|
||
DCE/DTE
|
||
-------
|
||
Data Communications Equipment/Data Terminal Equipment. Equipment
|
||
connected to an RS232 connector must be either a DCE (like a modem
|
||
or a printer) or a DTE (computer or terminal). The term defines the
|
||
types of equipment that will "talk" and "listen."
|
||
|
||
Default
|
||
-------
|
||
When a value, parameter, attribute, or option is assigned by a
|
||
communications program, modem, or online system unless something
|
||
else is specified, it is called the default.
|
||
For example, communication programs often have prespecified
|
||
values for baud rate, bit size and parity that are used unless
|
||
alternative values are given. These prespecified values are called
|
||
the defaults.
|
||
Some services give users a choice between two or more options.
|
||
If a selection is not made by the user, then a selection is
|
||
automatically assigned, by default.
|
||
|
||
Discussion list
|
||
---------------
|
||
See Mailing list.
|
||
|
||
Domain Name System (DNS)
|
||
------------------------
|
||
Email addressing system used in networks such as Internet and
|
||
BITNET. The Internet DNS consists of a hierarchical sequence of
|
||
names, from the most specific to the most general (left to right),
|
||
separated by dots, for example nic.ddn.mil.
|
||
|
||
Doors
|
||
-----
|
||
A service offered by many bulletin boards to allow the user to
|
||
leave the (remote) main software system to use one or several
|
||
independent programs, like games and databases.
|
||
|
||
Downloading
|
||
-----------
|
||
The transfer of data from an online service and "down" to your
|
||
computers' disk.
|
||
|
||
DTR
|
||
---
|
||
Data Terminal Ready is a circuit which, when ON, tells the modem
|
||
that your computer is ready to communicate. Most modems are unable
|
||
to tell your computer that a connection has been set up with a
|
||
remote computer before this circuit has been switched off. If your
|
||
computer turns this signal OFF, while it is in a dialog with a
|
||
remote computer, the modem will normally disconnect.
|
||
|
||
Duplex
|
||
------
|
||
Describes how you see text entered by the keyboard. When the
|
||
setting is HALF DUPLEX, all characters entered on your computer for
|
||
transfer to an online service (or your modem) will be displayed. In
|
||
addition, you will normally receive an echo from the online service
|
||
(or modem). The result will often 'bbee lliikkee tthhiiss'.
|
||
When using the setting FULL DUPLEX, typed characters will not
|
||
be shown. What you see, are characters echoed back to you from the
|
||
online service and/or your modem.
|
||
|
||
ECHO
|
||
----
|
||
(1) When data is being sent, the receiving device often resends the
|
||
information back so the sending device can be sure it was received
|
||
correctly.
|
||
(2) Term used on FidoNet for this network's system of exchanging
|
||
conferences (parallel conferencing).
|
||
|
||
Email
|
||
-----
|
||
Abbreviation for Electronic Mail.
|
||
|
||
FAQ
|
||
---
|
||
"Frequently Asked Questions" about services on the Internet. A list
|
||
of FAQ documents is posted every four to six weeks to the Usenet
|
||
newsgroup news.announce.newusers.
|
||
|
||
File server
|
||
-----------
|
||
A file server is a device that "serves" files to everyone on a
|
||
network. It allows everyone on the network to get files in a single
|
||
place, on one computer. Typically, it is a combination computer,
|
||
data management software, and large capacity hard disk drive.
|
||
|
||
File transfer
|
||
-------------
|
||
The copying of a file from one computer to another over a computer
|
||
network.
|
||
|
||
Finger
|
||
------
|
||
A program on computers directly connected to the Internet that
|
||
returns information about a registered user on a system. Finger is
|
||
useful before initiating chats, known on the Internet as "talk."
|
||
|
||
Flame
|
||
-----
|
||
A "flame" is a conference message sent by someone who generally
|
||
disagrees so violently that they are willing to sink to personal
|
||
attacks. Flames can be extremely annoying, and can get the writer
|
||
banished from several conference networks.
|
||
|
||
Fractal
|
||
--------
|
||
A mathematical algorithm from which an image can be created. A
|
||
fractal formula generates a fractal picture composed of an image
|
||
based on a basic pattern. An outgrowth of chaos mathematics, it is
|
||
being used for compressing and decompressing high quality images.
|
||
Generally, a fractally compressed image has an extremely small file
|
||
size.
|
||
|
||
FTP (File Transfer Protocol)
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
A program on the Internet for sending and receiving files to and
|
||
from a remote computer to your local host. FTP lets you connect to
|
||
many remote computers, as an anonymous or guest user, to transfer
|
||
files back to your computer.
|
||
FTP only lets you list file directories on foreign systems, and
|
||
get or retrieve files. You cannot browse menus, send email, or
|
||
search databases.
|
||
Usually, type ftp at your system prompt, login on the remote
|
||
system, and ask for the file you want to receive. It transfers to
|
||
your local host machine. (For more on this, read under "Internet"
|
||
in appendix 1.)
|
||
Unless your computer is directly connected to the Internet, the
|
||
retrieved software will have to be transferred from your local host
|
||
machine to your PC.
|
||
Where ftp is not available, you may use FTPMAIL (see chapter
|
||
12).
|
||
|
||
Full duplex
|
||
-----------
|
||
The term full-duplex means the transmission of data in two
|
||
directions simultaneously as from a terminal to a computer or from
|
||
the computer to the terminal. Full-duplex is simultaneous two-way
|
||
communication.
|
||
|
||
Full-text database
|
||
------------------
|
||
A database containing the full text of an article, a chapter in a
|
||
book, or a book. The contents are not limited to abstracted
|
||
information (indexes, bibliographic information).
|
||
|
||
FYI
|
||
---
|
||
"For Your Information." On the Internet, a subseries of RFCs that
|
||
are not technical standards or descriptions of protocols.
|
||
|
||
Gateway
|
||
-------
|
||
Here, we use the term gateway about an interconnection between two
|
||
(or more) online services, set up to allow a user of one service to
|
||
use the other service's offerings through the first service's user
|
||
interface.
|
||
The term also has other meanings:
|
||
A gateway provides an interconnection between two networks with
|
||
different communications protocols. Gateways operate at the 4th
|
||
through 7th layer of the OSI model. For example, a PAD (a packet
|
||
assembler/disassembler) is a device used to interface non-X.25
|
||
devices to an X.25 network. The PAD serves as a gateway. Protocol
|
||
converters are gateways between networks.
|
||
The gateway, provided by an adapter card in a workstation,
|
||
enables the network to perform as if it were a mainframe terminal
|
||
connected directly to the mainframe.
|
||
|
||
Gopher
|
||
------
|
||
A world wide information service with many implementations. It
|
||
works from a top-level subject-oriented menu system that accesses
|
||
other information services across the Internet. Gopher combines a
|
||
finding and fetching capability in one tool.
|
||
Gopher gets information from certain locations on the Internet
|
||
to which it is connected, and brings the information to your
|
||
computer. It can also get information via other Gophers at other
|
||
locations connected to yet other hosts. The Telneting or file
|
||
transfer protocols are transparent to the user.
|
||
"Common Questions and Answers about the Internet Gopher" are
|
||
posted to the following Usenet newsgroups comp.infosystems.gopher,
|
||
comp.answers, and news.answers every two weeks.
|
||
The most recent version of this FAQ is also available by
|
||
anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu in the /pub/usenet/news.answers
|
||
directory. The file is called gopher.faq.
|
||
To get it by email, write mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
|
||
command "send usenet/news.answers/finding-sources" in the body of
|
||
the text.
|
||
|
||
GuoBiao
|
||
-------
|
||
Coding scheme for using Chinese on computers developed in mainland
|
||
China. For more information, send email to LISTSERV@UGA.BITNET with
|
||
one of the following commands in the text of your mail:
|
||
GET PC HELP (for PC users)
|
||
GET MAC HELP (Macintosh users)
|
||
GET CXTERM HELP (X Windows users)
|
||
|
||
Half duplex
|
||
-----------
|
||
The term half-duplex means the transmission of data in either
|
||
direction but only one direction at a time.
|
||
|
||
Ham
|
||
---
|
||
Amateur radio.
|
||
|
||
Handle
|
||
------
|
||
An alias used on a bulletin board or online service instead of your
|
||
real name. Often used in chats.
|
||
|
||
Header
|
||
------
|
||
(1) In an email message, the part that precedes the body of a
|
||
message and contains, among other things, the message originator,
|
||
date and time.
|
||
(2) On a packet switched network, the portion of a package,
|
||
preceding the actual data, containing source and destination
|
||
addresses, and error checking and other fields.
|
||
|
||
Host
|
||
----
|
||
A term for host computer, remote computer or online service. Here,
|
||
we use it about a timesharing computer, a BBS system, or a central
|
||
computer that controls a network and delivers online services.
|
||
|
||
Hytelnet
|
||
--------
|
||
(1) An Internet service offering access to many other services,
|
||
including university and library catalogues around the world.
|
||
Prefers VT-100 emulation. (telnet herald.usask.ca. Login: hytelnet)
|
||
The Hytelnet anonymous ftp archive is at ftp.usask.ca. Get the
|
||
README file in the /pub/hytelnet directory.
|
||
|
||
(2) A memory resident utility (MS-DOS) that provides instant
|
||
information on Internet-accessible library catalogues, Free-Nets,
|
||
Campus Wide Information Servers, Gophers, WAIS, and much more.
|
||
The program is available by ftp from access.usask.ca in the
|
||
/pub/hytelnet/pc/ directory. File name is hytelnxx.zip where xx is
|
||
the number of the latest version.
|
||
HYTEL-L@KENTVM.BITNET is a mailing list for announcements of new
|
||
versions.
|
||
|
||
Information utility
|
||
-------------------
|
||
A term often used about online services (not unlike the term power
|
||
utility).
|
||
|
||
Internet
|
||
--------
|
||
See appendix 1.
|
||
|
||
Internet number
|
||
---------------
|
||
See IP Address
|
||
|
||
IP (Internet Protocol)
|
||
----------------------
|
||
The Internet standard protocol that provides a common layer over
|
||
dissimilar networks, used to move packets between host computers
|
||
and through gateways if necessary.
|
||
For more information, send a message to service@nic.ddn.mil with
|
||
the following text in the subject title: RFC 791 .
|
||
|
||
IP Address
|
||
----------
|
||
Every machine on the Internet has a unique address, called its
|
||
Internet number or IP address. Usually, this address is represented
|
||
by four numbers joined by periods ('.'), like 129.133.10.10.
|
||
The first two or three pieces represent the network that the
|
||
system is on, called its subnet. For example, all of the computers
|
||
for Wesleyan University in the U.S.A. are in the subnet 129.133,
|
||
while the number in the previous paragraph represents a full
|
||
address to one of the university's computers.
|
||
|
||
IRC
|
||
---
|
||
Internet Relay Chat is a worldwide "party line" protocol that
|
||
allows one to converse with others in real time.
|
||
|
||
ISDN
|
||
----
|
||
An emerging technology being offered by many telephone carriers of
|
||
the world. ISDN combines voice and digital network services in a
|
||
single medium, making it possible to offer customers digital data
|
||
services as well as voice connections through a single "wire." The
|
||
standards that define ISDN are specified by CCITT.
|
||
|
||
ISO
|
||
---
|
||
The International Organization for Standardization. A voluntary,
|
||
nontreaty organization responsible for creating international
|
||
standards in many areas, including computers and communications.
|
||
Its members are the national standards organizations of the 89
|
||
member countries, including ANSI for the U.S.
|
||
ISO is coordinator of the main Internet networking standards
|
||
that are in use today.
|
||
ISO@NIC.DDN.MIL is a mailing list focusing on the ISO protocol
|
||
stack.
|
||
|
||
JIS
|
||
---
|
||
A Japanese industry standard code for presenting the Japanese
|
||
character set Kanji on computers. JIS defines special ranges of
|
||
user-defined characters. Only the most popular ones are included.
|
||
The newer Shift JIS standard sets aside certain character codes
|
||
to signal the start of a two-character sequence. Together, these
|
||
define a single Kanji metacharacter.
|
||
There are many oddities to be found in handling Kanji over the
|
||
network. Sending JIS-encoded messages through the Internet is done
|
||
using a 7-bit code (standardized on JUNET). Unfortunately, it
|
||
incorporates the ESC character, which some systems will filter out.
|
||
(This problem can be overcome by using UUENCODing.)
|
||
Some services, like APICNET in Tokyo, converts outgoing Kanji
|
||
messages automatically to 7-bit format.
|
||
|
||
JVArcServ
|
||
---------
|
||
Archive server for FidoNet modelled after Archie for the Internet.
|
||
It maintains file lists from FidoNet systems throughout its area
|
||
and will do searches on these file lists based on netmail requests
|
||
made to it by remote systems.
|
||
JVArcServ lets you search through file listings for the program
|
||
you are looking for. It will send you an email message back telling
|
||
you the BBS name, phone number, and file section of all the systems
|
||
in the network that match the given criteria.
|
||
|
||
KB
|
||
--
|
||
Kilobyte. A unit of data storage size which represents 1024
|
||
characters of information.
|
||
|
||
Kbits
|
||
-----
|
||
1,000 bits.
|
||
|
||
Kermit
|
||
------
|
||
Protocol designed for transferring files between microcomputers and
|
||
mainframe computers developed by Catchings at Columbia University.
|
||
There are both public domain, and copyrighted Kermit programs.
|
||
Some of these programs are complete programs in themselves offering
|
||
the communication functions needed for the particular machine on
|
||
which they are running.
|
||
The complete Kermit protocol manual and the source code for
|
||
various versions are available from:
|
||
|
||
Kermit Distribution, (212) 854-3703
|
||
Columbia University Center for Computing Activities
|
||
612 West 115 Street, New York, NY 10025
|
||
|
||
Knowbot
|
||
-------
|
||
Experimental directory services using intelligent computer programs
|
||
that automate the search and gathering of data from distributed
|
||
databases. The concept behind the Knowbot is that it is supposed to
|
||
be a Knowledge Robot -- something that goes hunting for information
|
||
on the Internet.
|
||
To reach a Knowbot: telnet CNRI.Reston.va.us port 70
|
||
|
||
LAN
|
||
---
|
||
Local Area Network. A data network intended to serve an area of
|
||
only a few square kilometers or less.
|
||
|
||
LAP-M
|
||
-----
|
||
Link Access Procedure for Modems is a CCITT standard for modem
|
||
modulation and error control. It is the primary basis for the CCITT
|
||
V.42 protocol.
|
||
|
||
Library
|
||
-------
|
||
is used on online services about a collection of related databases
|
||
(that you may search in) or files (that may be retrieved).
|
||
|
||
List
|
||
----
|
||
File-viewing program for MS-DOS computers (see chapter 14).
|
||
Registration: US$37 to Buerg Software, 139 White Oak Circle,
|
||
Petaluma, CA 94952, U.S.A. (1993).
|
||
|
||
LISTSERV
|
||
--------
|
||
An automated mailing list distribution system enabling online
|
||
discussions of technical and nontechnical issues conducted by
|
||
electronic mail throughout the Internet. The LISTSERV program was
|
||
originally designed for the BITNET/EARN networks.
|
||
Similar lists, often using the Unix readnews or rn facility,
|
||
are available on the Internet.
|
||
|
||
LOOKFOR
|
||
-------
|
||
Fast and flexible shareware program for boolean searches in text
|
||
files. Registration: US$15 plus postage to David L. Trafton, 6309
|
||
Stoneham Rd., Bethesda, Md. 20817, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
Lurking
|
||
-------
|
||
No active participation by a subscriber to a mailing list, a
|
||
conference, or Usenet newsgroup. A person who is lurking is just
|
||
listening to the discussion.
|
||
|
||
MAILBASE
|
||
--------
|
||
A program functioning like a LISTSERV. For more information about
|
||
the Mailbase at Newcastle University (England), send email to
|
||
MAILBASE@MAILBASE.AC.UK containing the following commands:
|
||
|
||
send mailbase overview (for a general guide to Mailbase)
|
||
send mailbase userhelp (for a User Guide)
|
||
lists (for a list of available forums)
|
||
|
||
This mailbase managed 403 mailing lists in July 1993.
|
||
|
||
Mail Gateway
|
||
------------
|
||
A machine that connects to two or more electronic mail systems
|
||
(including dissimilar mail systems) and transfers messages among
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
Mailing list
|
||
------------
|
||
A possibly moderated discussion group on the Internet, distributed
|
||
via email from a central computer maintaining the list of people
|
||
involved in the discussion. Anyone can send a message to a single
|
||
mailing list address. The message is "reflected" to everyone on the
|
||
list of addresses. The members of that list can respond, and the
|
||
responses are reflected, forming a discussion group.
|
||
(See LISTSERVers)
|
||
|
||
Mail path
|
||
---------
|
||
A series of machine names used to direct electronic mail from one
|
||
user to the other.
|
||
|
||
Mail server
|
||
-----------
|
||
A software program that distributes files or information in
|
||
response to requests sent by email.
|
||
|
||
MHS
|
||
---
|
||
(1) Message handling Service. Electronic mail software from Action
|
||
Technologies licensed by Novell for its Netware operating systems.
|
||
Provides message routing and store and forward capabilities. MHS
|
||
has gateways into PROFS, and X.400 message systems. It has been
|
||
augmented with a directory naming service and binary attachments.
|
||
|
||
(2) Message Handling System. The standard defined by CCITT as X.400
|
||
and by ISO as Message-Oriented Text Interchange Standard (MOTIS).
|
||
MHS is the X.400 family of services and protocols that provides the
|
||
functions for global email transfer among local mail systems.
|
||
|
||
MNP
|
||
---
|
||
Microcom Networking Protocol. A proprietary standard of error
|
||
control and data compression.
|
||
|
||
Modem
|
||
-----
|
||
An acronym for MOdulator-DEModulator. It is a device that converts
|
||
digital data from a computer or terminal into analog data that can
|
||
be sent over telephone lines. On the receiving end, it converts
|
||
the analog data back to digital data.
|
||
Most modern modems can handle the dialing and answering of a
|
||
telephone call and generate the speed of the data transmission,
|
||
measured in bits per second, or baud rates. The telephone industry
|
||
sometimes refers to a modem as a dataset.
|
||
|
||
Moderator
|
||
---------
|
||
A person, or a small group of people, who manage moderated mailing
|
||
lists and newsgroups. Moderators are responsible for deciding which
|
||
email submissions are passed on to list.
|
||
|
||
MUD
|
||
---
|
||
Multi-User Dungeon. A multi-user, text based, virtual reality game.
|
||
|
||
NAPLPS
|
||
------
|
||
North American Presentation-Level Protocol Syntax. A text and
|
||
graphics data transmission format for sending large amounts of
|
||
information between computers.
|
||
It was designed for the encoding of alphanumeric, alpha-mosaic,
|
||
alpha-geometric and alpha-photographic constructs. The standard is
|
||
resolution independent and device independent, and can easily
|
||
accommodate international character sets, bit-mapped images in
|
||
color, animation and sound.
|
||
NAPLPS was originally developed for videotext and teletext
|
||
systems through the Canadian Standards Association (CSA-T500-1983.
|
||
It was later enhanced by AT&T, and in 1983 became an ANSI standard
|
||
(ANSI-X3.110-1983).
|
||
Some videotext systems, including Prodigy (U.S.A.), are based
|
||
on NAPLPS. On CompuServe, NAPLPS has been replaced with a newer
|
||
protocol called GIF, Graphics Interchange Format.
|
||
|
||
Netfind
|
||
-------
|
||
Internet directory services that allow users to get information
|
||
about individuals. Search by name and organization/location.
|
||
For more information, send email to LISTSERV@brownvm.brown.edu
|
||
with the following text in the body of your mail "GET NETFIND
|
||
HELP".
|
||
|
||
Netiquette
|
||
----------
|
||
A pun on "etiquette" referring to proper behavior on a network.
|
||
|
||
Netnews
|
||
-------
|
||
See: Usenet.
|
||
|
||
Network
|
||
-------
|
||
A data communications system which interconnects computer systems
|
||
at various sites.
|
||
|
||
NIC
|
||
---
|
||
Network Information Center. An organization that provides users
|
||
with information about services provided by the Internet network.
|
||
|
||
NREN
|
||
----
|
||
The National Research and Education Network. A proposed computer
|
||
network to be built in the U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
NUA
|
||
---
|
||
Network User Address. The network address in a packet data network.
|
||
The electronic number that is sent to the network to connect to an
|
||
online service. Also, called X.121 address.
|
||
|
||
NUI
|
||
---
|
||
Network User Identification. The user name/password that you use to
|
||
get access to (and use) a commercial packet switched network.
|
||
|
||
Offline
|
||
-------
|
||
has the opposite meaning of "Online" (see below). It signifies
|
||
that your computer is not in direct communication with a remote
|
||
online service.
|
||
|
||
Offline Reader
|
||
--------------
|
||
A computer program making the handling of mail and files from
|
||
online services easier (and cheaper). Some also provides automatic
|
||
mail and file transfers.
|
||
Typically, you first connect to an online service (often a BBS)
|
||
to capture new mail in a compressed file (typically through a
|
||
"QMail door program.") Many offline mail reader programs are idle
|
||
while this goes on, while others can do communications as well.
|
||
When disconnected from the service, the offline reader works as
|
||
a combination message data base and message editor. It gives you
|
||
the feeling of still being connected to the online service, while
|
||
actually being completely disconnected.
|
||
When you have read and replied to all messages offline, the
|
||
offline reader creates a compressed "packet" containing any replies
|
||
entered. Some also let you prepare packets containing commands to
|
||
join or leave conferences, subscribe to or signoff from special
|
||
services, and download files.
|
||
Then, you dial back to the BBS to upload (send) the packet,
|
||
either using the offline reader's communications module, or another
|
||
communications program.
|
||
Readers are available for MS-DOS, MS-Windows, Macintosh, Amiga,
|
||
Atari ST, Unix, and CP/M computers. The programs may be downloaded
|
||
from many BBSes, and commercial services.
|
||
|
||
Online
|
||
------
|
||
In this book, it signifies the act of being in direct communication
|
||
with a remote computer's central processing unit.
|
||
An online database is a file of information that can be directly
|
||
accessed by the user.
|
||
|
||
OSI
|
||
---
|
||
Open System Interconnection. A set of protocols designed to be an
|
||
international standard method for connecting unlike computers and
|
||
networks.
|
||
|
||
OZCIS
|
||
-----
|
||
DOS-based program that automates access to CompuServe using an
|
||
elaborate array of menus. Free for personal use. Contact: Ozarks
|
||
West Software, 14150 Gleneagle Drive, Colorado Springs, CO 80921,
|
||
U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
Packet
|
||
------
|
||
(1) A group of bits sent by a modem that comprise a byte of
|
||
information.
|
||
(2) A group of bytes sent by a file transfer protocol.
|
||
|
||
Packet data networks
|
||
--------------------
|
||
Also called Packet Switching Networks (PDN). Value added networks
|
||
offering long distance computer communications. They let users
|
||
access a remote computer, by dialing a local node, or access point.
|
||
The packet data networks use high speed digital links, which
|
||
can be land lines or satellite communications, to transmit data
|
||
from one computer to another using packets of data. They use
|
||
synchronous communications, usually with the X.25 protocol. The
|
||
routes are continually optimized, and successive packets of the
|
||
same message need not necessarily follow the same path.
|
||
|
||
Packet switching
|
||
----------------
|
||
Sending data in packets through a network to some remote location.
|
||
The data to be sent is subdivided into individual packets of data,
|
||
each having a unique identification and carrying its destination
|
||
address. This allows each packet to go by a different route. The
|
||
packet ID lets the data be reassembled in proper sequence.
|
||
|
||
PC
|
||
--
|
||
Personal computer.
|
||
|
||
PDN
|
||
---
|
||
See Packet data networks.
|
||
|
||
Postmaster
|
||
----------
|
||
On the Internet, the person responsible for handling electronic
|
||
mail problems, answering queries about users, and other related
|
||
work at a site.
|
||
|
||
Prompt
|
||
------
|
||
Several times during interactive dialogs with online services, the
|
||
flow of data stops while the host computer waits for commands from
|
||
the user. At this point, the service often presents the user with a
|
||
reminder, a cue, a prompt. These are some typical prompts:
|
||
|
||
?
|
||
!
|
||
WHAT NOW?
|
||
(Read) next letter -
|
||
ulrik 1>
|
||
System News - 5000>
|
||
Enter #, <H>elp, or <CR> to continue?
|
||
Action ==> (Inbox)
|
||
Command:
|
||
Enter command or <RETURN>
|
||
-->
|
||
|
||
Protocol
|
||
--------
|
||
A formal description of message formats and the rules two computers
|
||
must follow to exchange messages. Protocols can describe low-level
|
||
details of machine-to-machine interface (e.g., the order in which
|
||
bits and bytes are sent across the wire), or high-level exchanges
|
||
between allocation programs (e.g., the way in which two programs
|
||
transfer a file across the Internet).
|
||
|
||
ProYam
|
||
------
|
||
Powerful script-driven communications program. US$139 + $5 for
|
||
postage from Omen Technology Inc., 17505-V NW Sauvie Island Rd,
|
||
Portland, Oregon 97231, U.S.A. (VISA and Eurocard - 1992)
|
||
|
||
PSS
|
||
---
|
||
British Telecom's Packet Switch Stream, an X.25 packet data
|
||
network.
|
||
|
||
PTT
|
||
---
|
||
Postal Telegraph and Telephone. A telephone service provider, often
|
||
a monopoly, in a particular country.
|
||
|
||
QWK
|
||
---
|
||
Qwikmail. A common offline message file format for bulletin boards
|
||
offering mail through a QMail Door. The .QWK door and file format
|
||
has been used to develop entire BBS networks (example: ILINK.)
|
||
See "offline reader."
|
||
|
||
RFC
|
||
---
|
||
The Internet's Request for Comments document series. Working notes
|
||
of the Internet research and development community.
|
||
|
||
Script files
|
||
------------
|
||
A set of commands that enable a communications program to execute a
|
||
given set of tasks automatically (macro commands).
|
||
|
||
Server
|
||
------
|
||
A provider of resources (e.g., file servers and name servers).
|
||
|
||
SIG
|
||
---
|
||
Special Interest Group.
|
||
|
||
Snail mail
|
||
----------
|
||
A pejorative term referring to the national postal service in
|
||
different countries.
|
||
|
||
String search
|
||
-------------
|
||
A method for searching a database. Works like the search function
|
||
in a common word processor program.
|
||
On online services, your commands will often search the full
|
||
document (including the title, subtitles, keywords, and the full
|
||
text). Sometimes, string searches just return a line or a few lines
|
||
around the hit. In other cases, they return the full screen or the
|
||
full document.
|
||
|
||
Sysop
|
||
-----
|
||
Common name used on bulletin boards for System Operator. This is
|
||
the person in charge of maintenance and helping users.
|
||
|
||
System
|
||
------
|
||
Generic name for a computer with connected equipment or for an
|
||
online service or bulletin board.
|
||
|
||
Talk
|
||
----
|
||
A command on the Internet, which may remind of IRC, but is a single
|
||
link between two parties only.
|
||
|
||
TAPCIS
|
||
------
|
||
A program for automatic access to CompuServe. It lets callers read
|
||
and respond to personal email and forum message threads offline,
|
||
and download files. Contact: Support Group, Inc., Lake Technology
|
||
Park, McHenry, MD 21541, U.S.A. Also: TAPCIS Forum. Internet mail:
|
||
74020.10@compuserve.com. On CompuServe: 74020,10. Registration: US$
|
||
79.00.
|
||
|
||
TCP/IP
|
||
------
|
||
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. Set of
|
||
communications protocols that internetwork dissimilar systems
|
||
connected to the Internet. TCP/IP supports services such as remote
|
||
login (telnet), file transfer (FTP), and mail (SMTP).
|
||
|
||
Telnet
|
||
------
|
||
A program on the Internet that allows logins to another computer to
|
||
run software there. Telnet allows a user at one site to interact
|
||
with a remote system at another site as if the user's terminal was
|
||
connected directly to the remote computer.
|
||
With telnet, you can browse menus, read text files, use gopher
|
||
services, and search online databases. Sometimes, you can join
|
||
live, interactive games and chat with other callers. Usually, you
|
||
cannot download files or list file directories.
|
||
Telnet is not available to users who have email only access to
|
||
the Internet.
|
||
To telnet a remote computer, you must know its name. This can
|
||
either be in words, like "vm1.nodak.edu", or a numeric address,
|
||
like "134.129.111.1". Some services require that you connect to a
|
||
specific "port" on the remote system. Enter the port number, if
|
||
there is one, after the Internet address.
|
||
For a list of SPECIAL INTERNET CONNECTIONS, send email to
|
||
bbslist@aug3.augsburg.edu. You can also get it by ftp or gopher to
|
||
csd4.csd.uwm.edu, and through alt.internet.services on Usenet.
|
||
|
||
Terminal emulator
|
||
-----------------
|
||
A program that allows a computer to emulate a terminal. The
|
||
workstation appears as a given type of terminal to the remote host.
|
||
|
||
TRICKLE
|
||
-------
|
||
Servers on the Internet offering the SIMTEL20 shareware and public
|
||
domain files by email (uuencoded). These servers include:
|
||
|
||
TRICKLE@TREARN.BITNET (Turkey)
|
||
TRICKLE@BBRNSF11.BITNET (Belgium)
|
||
TRICKLE@TAUNIVM.BITNET (Israel)
|
||
TRICKLE@IMIPOLI.BITNET (Italy)
|
||
TRICKLE@DB0FUB11.BITNET (Germany)
|
||
TRICKLE@AWIWUW11.BITNET (Austria)
|
||
TRICKLE@UNALCOL.BITNET (Colombia)
|
||
|
||
For more information and a list of TRICKLE servers, send a message
|
||
to one of these addresses with the command "/HELP" in the body of
|
||
your text.
|
||
|
||
TTY
|
||
---
|
||
Abbreviation for TELETYPE, a special type of writing terminal
|
||
(electrical/mechanical). Also, known as 'dumb terminal'.
|
||
|
||
TTY mode
|
||
--------
|
||
This is when a communications program emulates a TTY machine, which
|
||
only involves printing characters and recognizing the linefeed,
|
||
carriage return and backspace characters.
|
||
|
||
Unix
|
||
----
|
||
An operating system that supports multi-user and multitasking
|
||
operations.
|
||
|
||
Uploading
|
||
---------
|
||
The act of transferring data from your computer's disk (up) to an
|
||
online service and storage there.
|
||
|
||
Usenet
|
||
------
|
||
A global bulletin board, of sorts, in which millions of people
|
||
exchange public information on every conceivable topic. For more
|
||
information, see appendix 1.
|
||
|
||
UUCP
|
||
----
|
||
See appendix 1.
|
||
|
||
Veronica
|
||
--------
|
||
A service on the Internet. Maintains an index of gopher items, and
|
||
provides keyword searches of those titles. The result of a search
|
||
is a set of gopher-type data items, which is returned to the user
|
||
as a gopher menu. The user can access any of these data items by
|
||
selecting from the returned menu.
|
||
|
||
WAIS (Wide Area Information Servers)
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
A kind of indexed online search tool to locate items based on what
|
||
they contain - usually keyword text searches. It is a powerful tool
|
||
for concurrent searches of large databases and/or newsgroups on the
|
||
Internet.
|
||
Example: Telnet QUAKE.THINK.COM (or Telnet 192.31.181.1). Login
|
||
as "wais".
|
||
|
||
WAN
|
||
---
|
||
Wide Area Network.
|
||
|
||
The 'whatis' database
|
||
---------------------
|
||
Archie (see above) also permits access to the whatis description
|
||
database. It contains the names and brief synopses of over 3,500
|
||
public domain software packages, datasets and informational
|
||
documents located on the Internet.
|
||
|
||
Whois
|
||
-----
|
||
An Internet program that lets users query a database of people and
|
||
other Internet entities, such as domains, networks, and hosts, kept
|
||
at the NIC (see above).
|
||
For example, Whois lets you scan through a registry of
|
||
researchers in the network field to find an Internet address, if
|
||
you have only the last name or part of it. It will give you the
|
||
person's company name, address, phone number, and email address. It
|
||
had around 70,000 listings in December 1992.
|
||
To access the WHOIS, telnet to rs.internic.net. When greeted by
|
||
the host, type "WHOIS" and press RETURN. It also has a gopher
|
||
service (type "gopher" go access, instead of "wais").
|
||
|
||
WWW (World Wide Web)
|
||
--------------------
|
||
is much like Gopher in that it provides top level access down to
|
||
other services on the Internet. WWW uses a hypertext interface with
|
||
cross links between things. You can use highlighted words to jump
|
||
off onto another track.
|
||
|
||
WYSIWYG
|
||
-------
|
||
What You See is What You Get.
|
||
|
||
X.25
|
||
----
|
||
A CCITT standard communications protocol used internationally in
|
||
packet data networks. It provides error-checked communication
|
||
between packet data networks and their users or other networks.
|
||
Rather than sending a stream of bits like a modem, an X.25
|
||
router sends packets of data. There are different packet sizes and
|
||
types. Each packet contains data to be transmitted, information
|
||
about the packet's origin, destination, size, and its place in the
|
||
order of the packets sent. There are clear packets that perform
|
||
the equivalent of hanging-up the phone. There are reset, restart,
|
||
and diagnostic packets. On the receiving end, the packet
|
||
assembler/ disassembler (PAD) in the router translates the packets
|
||
back into a readable format.
|
||
|
||
X.400
|
||
-----
|
||
The CCITT and ISO standard for electronic mail.
|
||
|
||
X.500
|
||
-----
|
||
The CCITT and ISO standard for electronic directory services.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Appendix 5:
|
||
|
||
Books, articles, newsletters, etc. for further reading
|
||
======================================================
|
||
|
||
Internet
|
||
--------
|
||
"The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems
|
||
Worldwide," John S. Quarterman, Digital Press, Bedford, MA, 719
|
||
pages, 1990. (Internet address: mids@tic.com. Gopher service at
|
||
gopher.tic.com.)
|
||
|
||
"Matrix News," a newsletter about cross-network issues. Networks
|
||
frequently mentioned include USENET, UUCP, FidoNet, BITNET, the
|
||
Internet, and conferencing systems like the WELL and CompuServe.
|
||
Matrix News is about all computer networks worldwide that exchange
|
||
electronic mail.
|
||
Online subscription: US$25 for twelve monthly issues, or US$15
|
||
for students. Paper subscriptions: US$30 for twelve monthly
|
||
issues, or US$20 for students; for overseas postage, add US$10
|
||
(1992).
|
||
Contact: Matrix News, Building 2 Suite 300, 1120 South Capitol
|
||
of Texas Highway, Austin, TX 78746, U.S.A. Email: mids@tic.com .
|
||
|
||
"!%@:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing and Networks," by
|
||
Donnalyn Frey and Rick Adams (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 632
|
||
Petaluma Avenue, Sebastopol, CA 95472, U.S.A.). 408 pages, US26.95.
|
||
Write to nuts@ora.com for ordering information.
|
||
|
||
"The User's Directory of Computer Networks" by Tracy L. LaQuey
|
||
(Ed.), University of Texas, Digital Press, 12 Crosby Drive,
|
||
Bedford, MA 01730, U.S.A. 630 pages, 1990.
|
||
|
||
"Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide, Second
|
||
Edition" by Brendan P. Kehoe, Prentice-Hall Series in Innovative
|
||
Technology, 1993. 112 pages, ISBN 0-13-010778-6, US$22.00.
|
||
|
||
"The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog," by Ed Krol. 1992.
|
||
Published by O'Reilly and Associates, Inc., 103 Morris Street,
|
||
Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472, U.S.A.. 400 pages, US$24.95. ISBN 1-
|
||
56592-025-2. Email questions to nuts@ora.com or uunet!ora!nuts .
|
||
|
||
"A Guide to Electronic Mail Networks and Addressing," by Donnalyn
|
||
Frey and Rick Adams. 1989. O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 103 Morris
|
||
Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472, U.S.A. Email address:
|
||
nuts@ora.com .
|
||
|
||
"Managing UUCP and the Internet." Published by O'Reilly and
|
||
Associates, Inc., 103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472,
|
||
U.S.A. Email address: nuts@ora.com .
|
||
|
||
"The Internet Companion: A Beginner's Guide to Global Networking"
|
||
by Tracy LaQuey, with Jeanne C. Ryer. Addison-Wesley, 1992, $10.95,
|
||
p. 196, ISBN 0-201-62224-6. Order direct from Addison-Wesley
|
||
Publishing Co., Inc., 1 Jacob Way, Reading, MA 01867, U.S.A.
|
||
|
||
"Internet: Getting Started," April Marine, ed., SRI International,
|
||
Menlo Park, CA, May 1992. ISBN: none, US$39.
|
||
|
||
"The New User's Guide to the Internet" by Daniel P. Dern, McGraw-
|
||
Hill, New York, USA. 1993. ISBN 0-07-016510-6 (hc). ISBN 0-07-
|
||
16511-4 (pbk).
|
||
|
||
"An Internet Primer for Information Professionals: A Basic Guide to
|
||
Networking Technology," by Elizabeth S. Lane, and Craig A.
|
||
Summerhil, p. 200, Meckler Corp., Westport, CT, USA. US$37.50. ISBN
|
||
0-88736-831-X.
|
||
|
||
"Crossing the Internet Threshold," by Roy Tennant, John Ober, and
|
||
Anne G. Lipow, p. 134, Library Solutions Press, 1100 Industrial
|
||
Rd., Suite 9, San Carlos, CA 94070, U.S.A. 1993. ISBN: 1-882208-01-
|
||
3 . US$45.00 plus shipping and handling.
|
||
|
||
"The Internet Passport: NorthWestNet's Guide to Our World Online"
|
||
by Kochmer, Jonathan and NorthWestNet. 4th ed. 515p. Bellevue, WA,
|
||
USA: NorthWestNet, 1993. ISBN: 0-9635281-0-6. Price: US$39.95.
|
||
(US$19.95 nonprofit and educational). Fax: +1-206-562-4822.
|
||
|
||
"Internet: Mailing Lists 1993 Edition." Franklin F. Kuo, SRI
|
||
Internet Information Services. Published by PTR Prentice Hall, New
|
||
Jersey, USA. ISBN: 0-13-327941-3. Paperback, 356 pages.
|
||
|
||
"Internet Connections: A Librarian's Guide to Dial-Up Access and
|
||
Use" by Mary E. Engle, Marilyn Lutz, William W. Jones, Jr., and
|
||
Genevieve Engel. Library and Information Technology Association's
|
||
Monographs Series, #3, 1993. 166 pages. ISBN 0-8389-7677-0.
|
||
|
||
"Internet World magazine", Meckler Corporation, 11 Ferry Lane West,
|
||
Westport, CT 06880, U.S.A. (meckler@jvnc.net)
|
||
|
||
"The Internet Business Journal," 1-60 Springfield Road, Ottawa,
|
||
CANADA, K1M 1C7. Fax: +1-613-564-6641. Publisher: Michael
|
||
Strangelove <72302.3062@compuserve.com>.
|
||
|
||
"Netpower: Resource Guide to Online Computer Networks," by Eric
|
||
Persson, Fox Chapel Publishing, Box 7948, Lancaster, PA 17604-7948,
|
||
U.S.A. US$ 39.95. 1993. 800+ pages. Email: NetPower1@aol.com .
|
||
|
||
"Information Highways." Magazine. Annual subscription: $98.00CDN.
|
||
Information Highways, 162 Joicey Blvd., Toronto, Ontario, M5M 2V2,
|
||
Canada. Fax: +1-416-488-7078.
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board systems and networks
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
BoardWatch Magazine, 7586 Weat Jewell Ave., Suite 200, Lakewood,
|
||
CO 80232, U.S.A. Email: jrickard@boardwatch.com .
|
||
|
||
CompuServe
|
||
----------
|
||
"CompuServe from A to Z," by Charles Bowen, Bantam Computer Books,
|
||
1991. US$24.95. Paperback, 520 pages.
|
||
|
||
GEnie
|
||
-----
|
||
"Glossbrenner's Master Guide to GEnie," Alfred Glossbrenner,
|
||
Osborne/McGraw-Hill, 1991, US$39.95, paperback, 616 pages.
|
||
|
||
Various
|
||
-------
|
||
"EcoLinking: Everyone's Guide to Online Environmental Information,"
|
||
by Don Rittner. Peachpit Press, 1992, US$18.95, paperback, 352
|
||
pages, appendices, index.
|
||
|
||
"Online Information Hunting," by Nahum Goldman, TAB Books, Inc.,
|
||
1992, US$19.95, paperback, 236 pages.
|
||
|
||
"SysLaw: The Legal Guide for Online Service Providers" by Lance
|
||
Rose, Esq., and Jonathan Wallace, Esq. Sold by PC Information
|
||
Group, 1126 East Broadway, Winona, MN 55987, U.S.A. US$34.95 plus
|
||
$3.00 shipping.
|
||
|
||
"The Information Broker's Handbook," by Sue Rugge and Alfred
|
||
Glossbrenner, Windcrest/McGraw-Hill.
|
||
|
||
"Dvorak's Guide to PC Telecommunications," John Dvorak and Nick Anis
|
||
(1992, 1128 pages, US$39.95). Second edition.
|
||
|
||
Articles
|
||
--------
|
||
The following articles are available by email from LISTSERV@UHUPVM1
|
||
(BITNET) or LISTSERV@UHUPVM1.UH.EDU (Internet). In the TEXT of your
|
||
message, write the GET command shown after the article's citation
|
||
below:
|
||
|
||
Bailey, Charles W., Jr. "Electronic Publishing on Networks: A
|
||
Selective Bibliography of Recent Works." The Public-Access
|
||
Computer Systems Review 3, no. 2 (1992): 13-20. GET BAILEY PRV3N2
|
||
F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Harnad, Stevan. "Post-Gutenberg Galaxy: The Fourth Revolution in
|
||
the Means of Production of Knowledge." The Public-Access Computer
|
||
Systems Review 2, no. 1 (1991): 39-53. GET HARNAD PRV2N1 F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Halbert, Martin. "Public-Access Computer Systems and the
|
||
Internet." The Public-Access Computer Systems Review 1, no. 2
|
||
(1990): 71-80. GET HALBERT PRV1N2 F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Arms, Caroline R. Review of Library Resources on the Internet:
|
||
Strategies for Selection and Use, by Laine Farley, ed. In The
|
||
Public-Access Computer Systems Review 3, no. 2 (1992): 29-34. GET
|
||
ARMS PRV3N2 F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Barron, Billy. Review of Zen and the Art of the Internet: A
|
||
Beginner's Guide to the Internet, by Brendan P. Kehoe. In The
|
||
Public-Access Computer Systems Review 3, no. 1 (1992): 57-59. GET
|
||
BARRON PRV3N1 F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Cook, Dave. Review of The User's Directory of Computer Networks,
|
||
by Tracy L. LaQuey, ed. In The Public-Access Computer Systems
|
||
Review 2, no. 1 (1991): 177-181. GET COOK PRV2N1 F=MAIL.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 6:
|
||
|
||
International Standard Top-level Country codes
|
||
==============================================
|
||
|
||
Top-level country codes derived from the International Standards
|
||
Organization's international standard ISO 3166, except United Kingdom
|
||
that should be called Great Britain (GB) instead of UK.
|
||
|
||
Domain Country Comments
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
AD Andorra
|
||
AE United Arab Emirates
|
||
AF Afghanistan
|
||
AG Antigua and Barbuda
|
||
AI Anguilla
|
||
AL Albania
|
||
AM Armenia Ex-USSR
|
||
AN Netherland Antilles
|
||
AO Angola
|
||
AQ Antarctica
|
||
AR Argentina
|
||
AS American Samoa
|
||
AT Austria
|
||
AU Australia
|
||
AW Aruba
|
||
AZ Azerbaidjan Ex-USSR
|
||
BA Bosnia-Herzegovina Ex-Yugoslavia
|
||
BB Barbados
|
||
BD Bangladesh
|
||
BE Belgium
|
||
BF Burkina Faso
|
||
BG Bulgaria
|
||
BH Bahrain
|
||
BI Burundi
|
||
BJ Benin
|
||
BM Bermuda
|
||
BN Brunei Darussalam
|
||
BO Bolivia
|
||
BR Brazil
|
||
BS Bahamas
|
||
BT Buthan
|
||
BV Bouvet Island
|
||
BW Botswana
|
||
BY Bielorussia Ex-USSR
|
||
BZ Belize
|
||
CA Canada
|
||
CC Cocos (Keeling) Isl.
|
||
CF Central African Rep.
|
||
CG Congo
|
||
CH Switzerland
|
||
CI Ivory Coast
|
||
CK Cook Islands
|
||
CL Chile
|
||
CM Cameroon
|
||
CN China
|
||
CO Colombia
|
||
CR Costa Rica
|
||
CS Czechoslovakia
|
||
CU Cuba
|
||
CV Cape Verde
|
||
CX Christmas Island
|
||
CY Cyprus
|
||
DE Germany
|
||
DJ Djibouti
|
||
DK Denmark
|
||
DM Dominica
|
||
DO Dominican Republic
|
||
DZ Algeria
|
||
EC Ecuador
|
||
EE Estonia Ex-USSR also via .su domain
|
||
EG Egypt
|
||
EH Western Sahara
|
||
ES Spain
|
||
ET Ethiopia
|
||
FI Finland
|
||
FJ Fiji
|
||
FK Falkland Isl.(Malvinas)
|
||
FM Micronesia
|
||
FO Faroe Islands
|
||
FR France
|
||
FX France (European Ter.) ???
|
||
GA Gabon
|
||
GB Great Britain (UK) X.400 address gateway
|
||
GD Grenada
|
||
GE Georgia Ex-USSR
|
||
GH Ghana
|
||
GI Gibraltar
|
||
GL Greenland
|
||
GP Guadeloupe (Fr.)
|
||
GQ Equatorial Guinea
|
||
GF Guyana (Fr.)
|
||
GM Gambia
|
||
GN Guinea
|
||
GR Greece
|
||
GT Guatemala
|
||
GU Guam (US)
|
||
GW Guinea Bissau
|
||
GY Guyana
|
||
HK Hong Kong
|
||
HM Heard & McDonald Isl.
|
||
HN Honduras
|
||
HR Croatia Ex-Yugoslavia via .yu
|
||
HT Haiti
|
||
HU Hungary
|
||
ID Indonesia
|
||
IE Ireland
|
||
IL Israel
|
||
IN India
|
||
IO British Indian O. Terr.
|
||
IQ Iraq
|
||
IR Iran
|
||
IS Iceland
|
||
IT Italy
|
||
JM Jamaica
|
||
JO Jordan
|
||
JP Japan
|
||
KE Kenya
|
||
KG Kirgistan Ex-USSR
|
||
KH Cambodia
|
||
KI Kiribati
|
||
KM Comoros
|
||
KN St.Kitts Nevis Anguilla
|
||
KP Korea (North)
|
||
KR Korea (South)
|
||
KW Kuwait
|
||
KY Cayman Islands
|
||
KZ Kazachstan Ex-USSR
|
||
LA Laos
|
||
LB Lebanon
|
||
LC Saint Lucia
|
||
LI Liechtenstein
|
||
LK Sri Lanka
|
||
LR Liberia
|
||
LS Lesotho
|
||
LT Lithuania Ex-USSR
|
||
LU Luxembourg
|
||
LV Latvia Ex-USSR
|
||
LY Libya
|
||
MA Morocco
|
||
MC Monaco
|
||
MD Moldavia Ex-USSR
|
||
MG Madagascar
|
||
MH Marshall Islands
|
||
ML Mali
|
||
MM Myanmar
|
||
MN Mongolia
|
||
MO Macau
|
||
MP Northern Mariana Isl.
|
||
MQ Martinique (Fr.)
|
||
MR Mauritania
|
||
MS Montserrat
|
||
MT Malta
|
||
MU Mauritius
|
||
MV Maldives
|
||
MW Malawi
|
||
MX Mexico
|
||
MY Malaysia
|
||
MZ Mozambique
|
||
NA Namibia
|
||
NC New Caledonia (Fr.)
|
||
NE Niger
|
||
NF Norfolk Island
|
||
NG Nigeria
|
||
NI Nicaragua
|
||
NL Netherlands
|
||
NO Norway
|
||
NP Nepal
|
||
NR Nauru
|
||
NT Neutral Zone
|
||
NU Niue
|
||
NZ New Zealand
|
||
OM Oman
|
||
PA Panama
|
||
PE Peru
|
||
PF Polynesia (Fr.)
|
||
PG Papua New Guinea
|
||
PH Philippines
|
||
PK Pakistan
|
||
PL Poland
|
||
PM St. Pierre & Miquelon
|
||
PN Pitcairn
|
||
PT Portugal
|
||
PR Puerto Rico (US)
|
||
PW Palau
|
||
PY Paraguay
|
||
QA Qatar
|
||
RE Reunion (Fr.) In .fr domain
|
||
RO Romania
|
||
RU Russian Federation Ex-USSR
|
||
RW Rwanda
|
||
SA Saudi Arabia
|
||
SB Solomon Islands
|
||
SC Seychelles
|
||
SD Sudan
|
||
SE Sweden
|
||
SG Singapore
|
||
SH St. Helena
|
||
SI Slovenia Ex-Yugoslavia also via .yu
|
||
SJ Svalbard & Jan Mayen Is
|
||
SL Sierra Leone
|
||
SM San Marino
|
||
SN Senegal
|
||
SO Somalia
|
||
SR Suriname
|
||
ST St. Tome and Principe
|
||
SU Soviet Union Still used.
|
||
SV El Salvador
|
||
SY Syria
|
||
SZ Swaziland
|
||
TC Turks & Caicos Islands
|
||
TD Chad
|
||
TF French Southern Terr.
|
||
TG Togo
|
||
TH Thailand
|
||
TJ Tadjikistan Ex-USSR
|
||
TK Tokelau
|
||
TM Turkmenistan Ex-USSR
|
||
TN Tunisia
|
||
TO Tonga
|
||
TP East Timor
|
||
TR Turkey
|
||
TT Trinidad & Tobago
|
||
TV Tuvalu
|
||
TW Taiwan
|
||
TZ Tanzania
|
||
UA Ukraine Ex-USSR via .su domain
|
||
UG Uganda
|
||
UK United Kingdom ISO 3166 code is GB
|
||
UM US Minor outlying Isl.
|
||
US United States
|
||
UY Uruguay
|
||
UZ Uzbekistan Ex-USSR
|
||
VA Vatican City State
|
||
VC St.Vincent & Grenadines
|
||
VE Venezuela
|
||
VG Virgin Islands (British)
|
||
VI Virgin Islands (US)
|
||
VN Vietnam
|
||
VU Vanuatu
|
||
WF Wallis & Futuna Islands
|
||
WS Samoa
|
||
YE Yemen
|
||
YU Yugoslavia
|
||
ZA South Africa
|
||
ZM Zambia
|
||
ZR Zaire
|
||
ZW Zimbabwe
|
||
|
||
Some other top level codes being used:
|
||
--------------------------------------
|
||
ARPA Old style Arpanet
|
||
COM Commercial
|
||
EDU Educational
|
||
GOV Government
|
||
INT International field used by Nato
|
||
MIL US Military
|
||
NATO Nato field being replaced by .int
|
||
NET Network
|
||
ORG Non-Profit Organization
|
||
|
||
The codes (domains) in this section are special in that some of
|
||
them are used in more than one country.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Appendix 7:
|
||
|
||
About the author
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Odd de Presno (born 1944) lives in Arendal, a small town in Norway,
|
||
with his computers and modems. He has written twelve books. Half
|
||
these focus on various aspects of the Online World. The rest is
|
||
about practical applications of MS-DOS based personal computers.
|
||
Published in Norway and England. His book "The Online World" is
|
||
distributed globally as shareware.
|
||
Over 700 of his articles have been published in management and
|
||
technical magazines in Scandinavia, England, Japan, and the U.S.
|
||
Writer. International public speaker. Consultant. Operates an
|
||
English-language bulletin board system in Norway (since 1985).
|
||
Area of special expertise: applications of global sources of
|
||
online information, computer conferencing, global electronic mail,
|
||
automation of information retrieval, MS-DOS computer applications.
|
||
Founder and Project Director of KIDLINK, an international non-
|
||
profit organization promoting a global dialog among the youth of
|
||
the world. Since its start in 1990, KIDLINK has involved over ten
|
||
thousand kids in the 10 - 15 years range in over 50 countries.
|
||
Educational background includes a Diploma Degree in Business
|
||
Administration from Bedriftsoekonomisk Institutt (Norway).
|
||
He founded the software company Data Logic A/S (Norway) in 1967
|
||
and was president for five years. Sales manager Control Data Corp.
|
||
seven years (in charge of CYBERNET/Norway, an international online
|
||
service). Marketing manager IKO Software Service A/S, two years.
|
||
Currently running his own business.
|
||
Member of the Computer Press Association (U.S.A.) since 1983,
|
||
and NFF (Norway). Listed in Marquis' "Who's Who in the World" from
|
||
1991.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Appendix 8:
|
||
|
||
HOW TO REGISTER YOUR COPY OF THE ONLINE WORLD
|
||
=============================================
|
||
|
||
The online world is extremely dynamic. Services and offerings come and go.
|
||
Your registration will support further research, and production of updates.
|
||
|
||
You can register your current copy, or sign up for six updates of the book
|
||
during one year. Details are given below.
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
|
||
Please send to:
|
||
|
||
Odd de Presno
|
||
4815 Saltrod
|
||
Norway (Europe)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Please add me as a supporter of the Online World book:
|
||
|
||
Name ______________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Company ______________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Address ______________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
City ________________________________State _______ Zip ____________
|
||
|
||
Country ________________________________
|
||
|
||
Email address ______________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Please mark off your selections with (x) below:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Basic Registration for individuals
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
( ) NOK 105.00 For payment by credit card.
|
||
(around US$ 15.00)
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 20.00 For all other methods of payment.
|
||
(or, in Norwegian currency: NOK 140.00.)
|
||
|
||
Option (for Basic Registration)
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
( ) US$ 2.00 Add to have a copy of the most recent version of the
|
||
book sent you on diskette. Only with registration!
|
||
(In Norway, NOK 10.00)
|
||
|
||
( ) 5.25" MS-DOS disk ( ) 3.5" disk 720KB MS-DOS
|
||
|
||
|
||
Registration with Six Updates for individuals
|
||
---------------------------------------------
|
||
Six updates of the manuscript will be sent you during the next 12 months.
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 60.00 For all methods of payment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Registration for businesses
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
All Corporate site licence options include six updates during the
|
||
next 12 months.
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 500 Distribution for up to 100 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 3.000 Distribution for up to 1000 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 6.000 Distribution for up to 2500 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 10.000 Distribution for up to 5000 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 15.000 Distribution for up to 10000 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
( ) US$ 25.000 Distribution for over 10000 people on a single network
|
||
|
||
|
||
Discounts for schools and public libraries
|
||
------------------------------------------
|
||
Special rates are available for schools and public libraries. For details,
|
||
send a message to LISTSERV@vm1.nodak.edu (BITNET users can send it to
|
||
LISTSERV@NDSUVM1). In the text of the message, use the command:
|
||
|
||
GET TOW SCHOOLS
|
||
GET TOW LIBRARY
|
||
|
||
( ) Please identify what type of discount you are taking advantage of:
|
||
|
||
Ref: ______________
|
||
|
||
Description: ____________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
____________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Amount ____________________ Date _______________
|
||
|
||
( ) Check or money order payable to Odd de Presno in U.S. funds enclosed
|
||
( ) SWIFT transfer to 6311.05.27189 (Kredittkassen 4800 Arendal, Norway)
|
||
( ) VISA ( ) MasterCard ( ) American Express
|
||
|
||
|
||
Credit card number __________________________________ Exp date _______
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
If you already have an evaluation copy of the book, where did you get it?
|
||
|
||
________________________________________________ Version number: ____
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Comments or suggestions for improvement of The Online World __________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Date ___________________
|
||
|
||
Signature _________________________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
ZDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD?
|
||
3 T H A N K Y O U F O R S U P P O R T I N G S H A R E W A R E 3
|
||
@DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDY
|
||
|
||
|
||
|