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1436 lines
71 KiB
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# #
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# BTN: Birmingham Telecommunications News #
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# #
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################################################################
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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COPYRIGHT 1993 ISSN 1055-4548
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----------------------------------------------------------------
|
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Volume 7, Issue 1 Issue #65 January 1994
|
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----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE OF CONTENTS
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
article title author
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Disclaimer/Statement of Policy.............................Staff
|
||
From The Editor.................................Scott Hollifield
|
||
Submission Guidelines...........................................
|
||
This City By Night..................................Lurch Henson
|
||
Conspiracy Klatch.........................Rebecca Krypton Ellery
|
||
Taming the Ugly Beast: Installing UnixWare 1.0........Gary Hasty
|
||
Unnamed Column.......................................Mark Maisel
|
||
BBS Behavior, Part I.................................Damion Furi
|
||
Notes From The Trenches............................Dean Costello
|
||
QmodemPro Windows Press Release.................Mustang Software
|
||
Local Music in January..............................Judy Ranelli
|
||
BTN ProFile: Steven Wheeler...........................The Bishop
|
||
Special Interest Groups (SIGs).........................Eric Hunt
|
||
Known BBS Numbers..........................................Staff
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
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|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
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################################################################
|
||
DISCLAIMER
|
||
AND STATEMENT OF POLICY
|
||
FOR BTN
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
We at BTN try our best to assure the accuracy of articles and
|
||
information in our publication. We assume no responsibility for damage
|
||
due to errors, omissions, etc. The liability, if any for BTN, its
|
||
*editors and writers, for damages relating to any errors or omissions,
|
||
etc., shall be limited to the cost of a one year subscription to BTN,
|
||
even if BTN, its editors or writers have been advised of the likelihood
|
||
of such damages occurring.
|
||
|
||
With the conclusion of that nasty business, we can get on with our
|
||
policy for publication and reproduction of BTN articles. We publish
|
||
monthly with a deadline of the fifteenth of the month prior to
|
||
publication. If you wish to submit an article, you may do so at any time
|
||
but bear in mind the deadline if you wish for your work to appear in a
|
||
particular issue. It is not our purpose to slander or otherwise harm a
|
||
person or reputation and we accept no responsibility for the content of
|
||
the articles prepared by our writers. Our writers own their work and it
|
||
is protected by copyright. We allow reprinting of articles from BTN
|
||
with only a few restrictions. The author may object to a reprint, in
|
||
which case he will specify in the content of his article. Otherwise,
|
||
please feel free to reproduce any article from BTN as long as the
|
||
source, BTN, is specified, and as long as the author's name and the
|
||
article's original title are retained. If you use one of our articles,
|
||
please forward a copy of your publication to:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mark Maisel
|
||
Publisher, BTN
|
||
606 Twin Branch Terrace
|
||
Birmingham, AL 35216
|
||
(205) 823-3956
|
||
|
||
|
||
We thank you for taking the time to read our offering and we hope that
|
||
you like it. We also reserve the right to have a good time while doing
|
||
all of this and not get too serious about it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
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################################################################
|
||
NEWSFLASH!
|
||
NEWSFLASH!
|
||
NEWSFLASH!
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
BBS LIST POSITION NOW VACANT!
|
||
TEEMING HORDES FLOOD BTN IN PANIC!
|
||
To be a part of the magic, see
|
||
From The Editor for details.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
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################################################################
|
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FROM THE
|
||
EDITOR Scott Hollifield
|
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################################################################
|
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|
||
|
||
January... a time of renewal. Of rebirth. Of... resolutions.
|
||
|
||
No, you won't find the typical "New Year's Resolutions" article
|
||
in BTN, whether it be those of our staff, of local sysops, or of anyone.
|
||
Why? Because it only occurred to me today that it would be a passable
|
||
idea for an article. Oh well.
|
||
|
||
Big deal, anyway. I hate to repeat myself, but this is the same
|
||
phenomenon I talked about in other columns, the need to codify our
|
||
nobels and ideals into one holiday or one time of the year, so we can
|
||
goof off the rest of the time.
|
||
|
||
In other words, if you're gonna resolve something, then do it every
|
||
day, or when it occurs to you to do so. Don't use the calendar as a
|
||
crutch. And, for those of us who don't care to resolve *anything*,
|
||
we're going to have a New Year's Eve party and sleep till noon.
|
||
|
||
I'd like to welcome a couple of new faces to BTN this month. I'm
|
||
always pleased to see our writerscape shift a little, however so
|
||
slightly, and the pleasing curves of our own version of continental
|
||
drift have brought us a couple of winners.
|
||
|
||
First of all, our old friend Gary Hasty, from The Comfy Chair! in
|
||
Dalton, Georgia, makes his first-ever appearance in BTN. His welcome
|
||
technical moxie has a good bit of that old BTN flavor to it, and while
|
||
we don't know if he'll be a regular contributor, we'll be showing him
|
||
the chains and beckoning invitingly.
|
||
|
||
Second of all, BTN is proud to present someone who is relatively new
|
||
to our medium but is an old friend of paranoia, suspicion and hidden
|
||
motives, so we think she'll fit right in. Rebecca Krypton Ellery is a
|
||
local conspiracy theorist who, you'll find, is quite offbeat, even by
|
||
the standards of conspiracy theorists. I chatted with Rebecca on The
|
||
Matrix recently for the first time, and eagerly persuaded her to write
|
||
for BTN. In case it's not apparent, "Rebecca Krypton Ellery" is not her
|
||
real name. Rebecca claims that her identity on The Matrix is also
|
||
false, although she dutifully pays the subscription bills. With any
|
||
luck, Rebecca will be joining us on a regular or semi-regular basis,
|
||
for a friendly peek into her own universe.
|
||
|
||
Most of the usual gang are here as well, including the beginning of
|
||
a new three-part series by Damion Furi.
|
||
|
||
Now, to some business:
|
||
|
||
It's official--please welcome fairly-reliable contributor Bernie
|
||
Starchaser as BTN's new Assistant Editor. Bernie will be, and has
|
||
been, helping me put together each month's issue of BTN, and so he
|
||
gets a nice little title for his efforts, just so long as he is willing
|
||
to take half the blame for the mistakes as well.
|
||
|
||
James Minton has regretfully picked up his hat from the hatrack and
|
||
said, "Sayonara, amigos"; due to lack of time, James will no longer be
|
||
able to man the helm of our Known BBS Numbers list. So, without trying
|
||
to sound like a malicious carnival barker... Would anybody else like to
|
||
step up and take a shot? Volunteers for the Keeper of the List may now
|
||
apply. It's an awesome responsibility, rife with hidden rewards and
|
||
pleasures, only some of them sexual in nature. If you're interested in
|
||
this high-profile, thrill-packed position, leave me (SCOTT HOLLIFIELD)
|
||
mail on The Matrix, Crunchy Frog, or Channel 8250. No salesman will
|
||
come to your door.
|
||
|
||
We're also taking submissions of the non-BBS-list variety, as
|
||
usual; for details on how to submit material to BTN, see the upcoming
|
||
submission guidelines.
|
||
|
||
That's it, buckaroos; I'm gone to finish off the last bit of egg nog
|
||
before the expiration date hits. Have a happy arbitrarily-mandated
|
||
calendar kick-off.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
FREEBIE!!!
|
||
GET IT WHILE IT'S HOT! Systems That Offer Free BTN
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
The following boards allow BTN to be downloaded freely, that is
|
||
with no charge to any existing upload/download ratios.
|
||
|
||
ADAnet One Alter-Ego Bone Yard
|
||
Bus System The Castle Channel 8250
|
||
C.A.B. The Comfy Chair! Crunchy Frog
|
||
DC Info Exchange Final Frontier The Guardian
|
||
Hardware Hotline Homewood's Hell Hole Joker's Castle
|
||
Leaping's Lounge Lemon Grove Lion's Den
|
||
Martyrdom Again?! The MATRIX Milliways BBS
|
||
The Outer Limits Owl's Nest Playground
|
||
Safe Harbor Southern Stallion Starbase 12
|
||
Thy Master's Dungeon Weekends BBS
|
||
|
||
|
||
(This list includes some systems which are not local to Birmingham and
|
||
therefore not included on our BBS Numbers list.)
|
||
|
||
If you are a sysop and you allow BTN to be downloaded freely, please let
|
||
me know via The Matrix or Crunchy Frog so that I can post your board as
|
||
a free BTN distributor. Thanks.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
I. ARTICLE LENGTH
|
||
|
||
Right now, there's no strict enforcement of a length restriction,
|
||
but if your submission is somewhat short, I may request that you make it
|
||
longer. Anyone can sit down and type out a screen's worth of stuff. I
|
||
have yet to encounter an article that was too *long*, so don't worry
|
||
about that.
|
||
|
||
|
||
II. SUBJECT MATTER
|
||
|
||
Again, there's no hard-and-fast rules about subject matter. I'm
|
||
interested in seeing material on a wide variety of topics. That
|
||
includes BBSs, politics, music, books, or better yet, something that
|
||
doesn't neatly fall into any one category. Next to that, my favorite
|
||
articles are the ones that have something to do with BBSing, since that
|
||
is supposedly what we're sort of about. Technical reviews are also
|
||
good. I tend to kind of frown on fiction, but I'm willing to take a
|
||
look at anything you've got. If it's interesting enough, your chances
|
||
are good.
|
||
Politics is fine, but try not to rant--and make whatever you have to
|
||
say original. I can go out and find ten Rush Limbaughs if I want.
|
||
Also refrain from "This Is What Happened To Me Today" slice-of-life
|
||
articles unless it's leading somewhere good.
|
||
Reviews should be both informative and opinionated. Don't be too
|
||
objective, but still tell us about what you're reviewing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
III. FILE FORMAT
|
||
|
||
Plain and simple ASCII is preferred, but we can convert WordPerfect
|
||
files if need be.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IV. STYLE GUIDELINES
|
||
|
||
1. Use a right margin of 72 columns.
|
||
2. Indent paragraphs at the fifth column.
|
||
3. Put two spaces after each sentence.
|
||
4. Skip a line after each paragraph.
|
||
5. Refrain from using BBS-specific devices like "<grin>" and ":-)".
|
||
6. Be sure to give your article a title.
|
||
7. Try to use correct grammar, spelling and capitalization! My staff
|
||
proofread as best as we can, but a well-typed article makes our job
|
||
easier.
|
||
8. The dash is correctly typed as two hyphens, like "--". Use it to
|
||
set apart phrases and clauses--as with this sentence.
|
||
9. To emphasize a word, place a pair of asterisks around it, like
|
||
*this*. This takes the place of italics (except for titles; see
|
||
12).
|
||
10. If you have to emphasize a group of words, use capitals, AS IN THIS
|
||
EXAMPLE. I generally don't like the way that looks, so use it
|
||
sparingly, if at all.
|
||
11. If you're unsure whether to spell out a number or not, leave it in
|
||
numeral form.
|
||
12. Titles of books, films, plays, albums and works of art are
|
||
surrounded by underlines, like: U2's _The Joshua Tree_. This takes
|
||
the place of italics in this regard; I call it "title-cizing".
|
||
On the other hand, television shows, songs, poems, article titles
|
||
and short stories are surrounded by quotation marks.
|
||
|
||
|
||
V. HOW DO I SUBMIT AN ARTICLE?
|
||
|
||
The easiest way is to upload it as a private file on one of two
|
||
systems: The Matrix and the Crunchy Frog. (Their phone numbers are
|
||
listed at the end of this feature.) To upload a file privately, begin
|
||
your file description with a slash ("/"). Then leave me (SCOTT
|
||
HOLLIFIELD) a private message telling me what the file name is, so that
|
||
I can have the sysop make it available for me.
|
||
Another way is to leave me the article as a private message, or a
|
||
series of private messages.
|
||
If you become a regular contributor to BTN, you can get access to
|
||
the private BTNWA conference, which is for BTN writers. There we
|
||
discuss articles, policy, ideas, etc. The BTNWA conference also
|
||
contains a private file directory which I can access more easily than a
|
||
private file outside BTNWA.
|
||
|
||
That's it!
|
||
|
||
Get to work!
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
THIS CITY BY NIGHT
|
||
Lurch Henson
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
My job, while more aggravating than most, gives me a unique
|
||
perspective on this city. Tonight, for instance, I am at the Botanical
|
||
Gardens, a lovely place anytime, but especially so at night. Tonight
|
||
is cool. A light rain is falling, and there is no one to bother me
|
||
out here. I can roam the Gardens at will, the only obligation being
|
||
that I let no one else do the same. I just spent an hour down in the
|
||
Japanese section, waiting to make my checks there, inspecting the
|
||
grounds to make sure no one has slipped over the fence or squeezed
|
||
through the gate, and I sat and listened to the rain. Quiet. Peaceful.
|
||
Enjoyable. Better if I had a Lady in here with me, but then, you can't
|
||
have everything.
|
||
|
||
Another place is Vulcan Park. Again, it's quiet, peaceful, and
|
||
there is no one to bother you. You can go up into the observation ring
|
||
and look out over the city, seeing it like few others are... shining
|
||
brightly in the night, like no one below has a care in the world.
|
||
Beautiful, tranquil, quiet.
|
||
|
||
Then, my friends, there is another place. This is the place I was
|
||
in charge of protecting a few nights ago. This is a city park, with
|
||
nothing to steal, and little to destroy. This park is surrounded on
|
||
three sides by the projects, and it is *not* quiet. I spent twelve
|
||
hours on post out there, and from nightfall until about 3 a.m. there was
|
||
gunfire to be heard every 30 minutes. Usually there wasn't a fifteen-
|
||
minute stretch of time that went by without some shooting going on, many
|
||
times quite close to me, once or twice *very* near me. During the
|
||
twelve hours that I was there, I heard and saw ambulance runs about
|
||
nine times. I only saw police five times. Possibly the extra four
|
||
runs by medical personnel were for non-gunshot related reasons, but
|
||
somehow I doubt it.
|
||
|
||
From where I sat on the edge of the park, I could see the towers on
|
||
"Radio Mountain". I could see the tallest of the buildings in downtown
|
||
Birmingham. Early in the night I even saw a searchlight racing across
|
||
the clouds, most likely from some car dealership letting everyone know
|
||
they had the best prices on cars you didn't need. From where I sat you
|
||
could tell there was something else out there besides the gunfire and
|
||
the crack houses pointed out to me by the city guard in the projects
|
||
nearby. But it didn't matter. No one outside cared about what was
|
||
going on inside, and those on the inside had gotten so used to it that
|
||
they rarely noticed until the shots were directed towards them. The
|
||
city guard on duty near the park was slightly surprised that I, the only
|
||
white guy for miles, didn't jump every time someone fired off a few
|
||
rounds. The city guards refuse to work the park I was working, for
|
||
obvious reasons, and he was expecting me to refuse as well. He, and the
|
||
man that relieved him later, thought I was crazy for doing it. City
|
||
guards are paid nearly twice what I make, get plenty of benefits from
|
||
the city, and rarely have to work past midnight. I, a supervisor, am
|
||
paid $5.25/hr, no benefits, and I work all night long nearly every
|
||
night. But I still did my job.
|
||
|
||
Why? Simple. Because I'm stupid. You see, this world is
|
||
actually falling apart around you, but you don't see it. Why don't you?
|
||
Several reasons. One, because you don't want to. If you cared to find
|
||
out how things are out here you could. All you'd have to do is be
|
||
stupid yourself. Get in your car and drive through neighborhoods you've
|
||
heard about but never seen. You won't make it home, but it WILL be
|
||
educational. (DON'T do this; this is sarcasm, in case you couldn't
|
||
tell.) And two, the worst reason, because it's not important enough to
|
||
tell you. Sad, but true. I sat there and watched the police and the
|
||
ambulances run all night long. It didn't stop at 3 a.m., it just slowed
|
||
down a little. But did any of it make the newspaper or the news on TV?
|
||
Nope. I looked. Do you know why? BECAUSE IT ISN'T NEWS! Simple
|
||
enough answer. It isn't news because it happens EVERY NIGHT. If you
|
||
tried to write it up in the paper, you'd run out of room. If you tried
|
||
doing a news story about it on television, you'd soon just be giving
|
||
body counts. This goes on all the time, all day, all night, and no one
|
||
*really* tries to do anything to stop it. The police make the attempt,
|
||
but police work in the country is little more than clean-up work. When
|
||
someone breaks the law, they try to catch them and put them away. It
|
||
doesn't stop anything, it's just cleaning up after the mess. Social
|
||
workers preach long and hard to people that are tired of hearing the
|
||
same thing day-in and day-out, and other than helping a few more people
|
||
sign up for different forms of government aid, do little good. Teachers
|
||
work too long and too hard in classrooms too full to allow them to
|
||
really reach their students in any more than a superficial way. In all
|
||
these cases there are too few people trying to do too much with too
|
||
little to have any more effect than one man with a paper cup trying to
|
||
bail out the Titanic.
|
||
|
||
Until *everyone* wakes up and starts paying attention, starts
|
||
addressing some of the very real and very deadly problems we have
|
||
staring us in the face these days, not a damn thing is going to be done
|
||
about it. People are going to keep getting killed for stupid little
|
||
reasons. Nothing is going to change. Why not? Because it's easier to
|
||
let people kill each other than it is to do something about it. It's
|
||
easier to sit back and let things happen. It's easier to ignore it. The
|
||
problem is, people, this time it's *not* going away. This time it's
|
||
coming closer. This time the wolf is walking right up to your front
|
||
door, and this time he's coming inside. Don't believe me? Read the
|
||
papers. See about where it *is* still news. When it moves out of the
|
||
projects and the neighborhoods on West End and starts coming across
|
||
town, *then* it makes the news. You can find it if you look, it's in
|
||
there. Every now and then there is a story about something a little
|
||
closer to home. Every now and then there is a story about something
|
||
that happened that *could* have happened to you. Every now and then.
|
||
|
||
Why wait? Why wait until it is your daughter that gets carjacked,
|
||
raped, or killed? Your wife? *You*? Why wait until it gets personal?
|
||
Why isn't it personal *now*? These are people getting murdered out
|
||
there every day, and we never hear about it until it happens to some 16-
|
||
year-old girl minding her own business, or some elementary school kids
|
||
shot in a crossfire, and even then it's just "Oh, that's sad. Pass the
|
||
sugar, please," over the paper at breakfast. This is not the way it
|
||
should be. That's not the way it has to be. This city is the way
|
||
it is because of each and every person that lives in it. As they say,
|
||
"If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem."
|
||
|
||
I can show you people the magical parts of this city. I can take
|
||
you by the hand and lead you through a wonderland in this city at night.
|
||
I can show the Ladies romance they never dreamed of in this very city.
|
||
And I can take you by the hand and lead you down into hell, all without
|
||
leaving this one little city. Is that the city you want?
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
CONSPIRACY KLATCH
|
||
Rebecca Krypton Ellery
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
Conspiracies turn the world, and don't let anyone tell you any
|
||
different.
|
||
|
||
Conspiracy theorists are all too often tarred with the brush of
|
||
paranoia. Is it paranoid to consider that the public-at-large is *not*
|
||
made fully aware of what goes on behind closed doors? Is it paranoid
|
||
to think that somewhere, someone has a secret? A man named Thomas L.
|
||
Scholz said that the only sane way to behave is as if everything is a
|
||
conspiracy, because most of it probably is. He was murdered by a
|
||
"burglar" who left behind stains of some kind of strange purple ink on
|
||
the floor.
|
||
|
||
I've been asked to provide some food for thought about some
|
||
contemporary conspiracies here, and that I shall endeavor to do. First,
|
||
let me say a couple of words about myself. I've been involved in
|
||
conspiracy research for some time now, but I make it a habit to shy away
|
||
from conventions and gatherings of other theorists. A disturbing
|
||
practice among such people is the tendency to create "conspiracy
|
||
policy", the party line as it were. The more popular an idea becomes in
|
||
conspiracy circles, the more likely it is to be believed as fact, just
|
||
as in mainstream media. As a result, much of what I consider to be
|
||
"popular conspiracy" is just as distorted and biased as the mainstream
|
||
media. Therefore, I try to work on my own, more or less, so my research
|
||
isn't affected by the think tank factor. So, a lot of my ideas don't
|
||
"jibe" with what fashionable conspiracists may be saying this week. I
|
||
used to go to a number of workshops and meetings. My name has been
|
||
placed on two government lists that I know of, Suspected Threats To
|
||
National Security and Suspected Organized Anarchists (those two, plus
|
||
the big list of subversives that just about everyone gets their name on
|
||
at some point).
|
||
|
||
That being said, I am fairly new to bulletin boards, and to be
|
||
honest, I don't trust them very much. Once information is converted
|
||
into electronic form, it can be manipulated much, much easier, by both
|
||
the individual, and those with less pure interests. An Orwellian
|
||
scenario, with Winston Smith churning out tubes of rewritten history in
|
||
the Ministry of Truth, is now one step closer to plausability. However,
|
||
I am also something of a cheerful nihilist, and as such, I recognize the
|
||
fact that the world of information is Darwinian as well as Orwellian,
|
||
for as with physical society, the strongest survive, and that winner is
|
||
usually the powermongers. So I don't have much of a problem with
|
||
setting my ideas adrift into this medium. If reprisals come, then so be
|
||
it. Unlike many of my fellow conspiracists, I am not a crusader for
|
||
justice. I don't think there's any way in the world to turn things
|
||
around. Breaking one's back to reveal the truth will only work to their
|
||
advantage, in the long run.
|
||
|
||
Pseudo-President Clinton was recently ordered by his superiors to
|
||
kick out Defense Secretary Les Aspin and replace him with one of their
|
||
own, retired admiral Bobby R. Inman. Thus is set into motion a deep,
|
||
wide agenda that has been in the making for over twenty-five years.
|
||
Inman, as the general public knows, was the National Security Advisor
|
||
under Jimmy Carter, and also one of the architects behind the
|
||
drug-and-gun Iran/Contra deal as the number two man in the CIA in the
|
||
early months of the Reagan administration. Inman was shoehorned out of
|
||
his job by the Reagan camp (Reagan, Casey and Baker), who didn't know
|
||
anything about what was really going on. Perhaps sensing how these
|
||
bunglers were doomed to blow the operation into the sunlight, Inman went
|
||
pretty quietly. He's been kept on the blue list, or unofficial
|
||
consultant payroll, throughout the administrations of more cooperative
|
||
presidents Bush and Clinton. Certain elements have recently taken
|
||
decisive action, however, to veer Inman into another role, of which I'll
|
||
talk about in a second.
|
||
|
||
Mere days before Aspin's departure, the American media was awash
|
||
with reports of a new figure on the Russian political scene, that of
|
||
Vladimir Zhirinovsky. Concidence? Don't believe it.
|
||
|
||
Zhirinovsky is in favor of an ultranationalist Russia. He is on
|
||
record as being in favor of an active, aggressive nuclear policy, and
|
||
claims that he will use nukes to liberate portions of the globe for
|
||
the betterment of Russia. He plans on taking Alaska back with military
|
||
force. He believes the Jews were "responsible" for both World Wars,
|
||
and doesn't see anything particularly wrong with the ethnic cleansing
|
||
atrocities of Bosnia.
|
||
|
||
And, by certain accounts, he is also an operative for the CIA.
|
||
|
||
I don't like to keep going back to Orwell, but remember the slogan
|
||
"War is Peace"? Orwell prophecied the Cold War with those words. The
|
||
Cold War was a war that was not a war. Not only that, but unbeknownst
|
||
to most, there was indeed a *true* peace, a true unity of nations. The
|
||
reason for this is because, from 1945 up to Boris Yelstin's rise to
|
||
power, both the USA and Soviet Russia have been controlled by the same
|
||
people, with the same interests. The Cold War was the first stage of a
|
||
true world government. The next stage, with Mikhail Gorbachev as the
|
||
conspiracy's man in Russia, was to be a full, adorned peace between the
|
||
superpowers, from which the resources of the wealthy nations like the
|
||
USA, Japan and Canada could be used to improve the standard of living
|
||
in Russia and its satellites. Boris Yeltsin, without even knowing it
|
||
probably, proved to be a major setback to this agenda. A loud,
|
||
stumbling, meddling blowhard, Yeltsin was the one thing the worldwide
|
||
conspiracy didn't want, a megalomaniac who wasn't on *their* side.
|
||
Yeltsin trashed the KGB and other intelligence agencies in Russia; he
|
||
ordered the dismissals and secret executions of many of the essential
|
||
personnel behind the Russian arm of the New World Order. He's like a
|
||
Russian Nixon, almost, a man who didn't play by the established rules,
|
||
and surrounded himself with enough trustworthy allies to fend off
|
||
his position. Whether he'll continue to be able to do so is extremely
|
||
questionable.
|
||
|
||
The solution: back up, try again. Zhirinovsky, who is only a
|
||
fiercer, more militant version of Gorbachev, is brought in.
|
||
Zhirinovsky has long been involved in the joint-cooperation between the
|
||
CIA and the underground Russian fascists who have quietly pulled a good
|
||
many of the strings in Moscow over the last forty years. Like Inman,
|
||
Zhriniovsky has been kept on the back-burner until very recently.
|
||
|
||
My strongest information reveals that Inman's people, who are sort
|
||
of renegades in their own right, are interested in setting Inman up
|
||
as a public office-holding figure, which is, ironically, not in the
|
||
interests of the conspiracy. My guess is that Inman secretly likes the
|
||
media attention, a somewhat common malady with gray men, and is having
|
||
his people set him up for "daylight" work, fronting for the real policy-
|
||
makers. Like many before him, Inman is making the mistake of thinking
|
||
that he can still stay in touch with the inner workings, and
|
||
unfortunately for him, it doesn't work that way--as Inman's predecessors
|
||
in the game, like Brzezinski and Carlucci, could tell him, it's either
|
||
in or out. So the policy has been reluctantly shifted so that it can
|
||
work around him. Taking a cue from the back-pedalling Russians, Inman
|
||
is now being poised to take the presidency in 2000, a few years after
|
||
Zhirinovsky is due to take the Russian presidency. (1996's American
|
||
election will probably go to Dan Quayle, in a narrow victory over
|
||
Clinton; entertainingly, Quayle will have very little work to do, as his
|
||
public policy will be virtually the same as Clinton's, circa 1996.)
|
||
|
||
The New Cold War, then, is set to launch, with the Inman presidency.
|
||
Inman, whose boyish smile and military sensibility will win him the
|
||
public, will be the bold American hero standing toe-to-toe with the
|
||
vicious, fascist dictatorship of Vladimir Zhirinovsky. And then what?
|
||
That's still a way into the future, even for conspiracy theory, but I
|
||
don't turn away a figure of 10 years or so for the New Cold War before
|
||
the two ends of this organization can meet again and be wed, like
|
||
the globalists have been planning for most of the century.
|
||
|
||
They can afford to wait a little while longer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
TAMING THE
|
||
UGLY BEAST:
|
||
Installing UnixWare 1.0 Gary Hasty
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
Let me start this off by admitting, "I Like UNIX!"
|
||
|
||
Okay...calm down now. It's been *the* 32-bit operating system for
|
||
years, long before Windows NT ever came out--err, will be coming out,
|
||
but will it ever shake the ghost of being the most cryptic and user-
|
||
unfriendly OS known to man? With this in mind, and the slew of new and
|
||
improved Graphical User Interface (GUI) based UNIX SVR4.2s on the market
|
||
waiting to take the wind out of Microsoft's sails, I decided to take a
|
||
look at what was to be the leader of the pack.
|
||
|
||
UnixWare 1.0 from UniVel (a joint venture between UNIX System
|
||
Laboratories and Novell) is being heralded as the UNIX that will make
|
||
the OS a household name... but this time a good household name. After
|
||
reading over all the sales literature received after this years Spring
|
||
Comdex it sounded too good to be true: pure UNIX SVR4.2 compatibility,
|
||
runs DOS-Unix-Windows applications, integrates easily into a Netware
|
||
LAN, Multitasking, Multi-user and a Motif or Open-Look based GUI. It
|
||
may have been too good to be true.
|
||
|
||
UnixWare comes in two different configurations: a 2-user Personal
|
||
Edition retailing at $249 and an unlimited Application Server retailing
|
||
at $1089. So the order was placed for the UnixWare Personal Edition for
|
||
evaluation; thus starts the experiment.
|
||
|
||
The only way to receive UnixWare is either on CD-ROM or tape, so I
|
||
opted for the CD-ROM. It was on backorder. One week later, the package
|
||
arrived, along with the NEC-74 CD-ROM and the NEC SCSI adapter I had
|
||
ordered to install it with into a 486sx/25 with 8M and a Quantum
|
||
ProDrive LPS 240M SCSI drive. The minimum requirements for UnixWare are
|
||
a 386 or better, 80M HD, and 8M RAM, stated in the minimal documentation
|
||
that accompanies UnixWare (one 80-page installation handbook and one
|
||
210-page user manual, in *big* type, with an entire chapter explaining
|
||
such accessories as Using The Clock and Using Calculator). The install
|
||
consist of loading three diskettes, and then the rest is loaded from the
|
||
CD. Thirty minutes into the install, I was asked how to continue the
|
||
installation. The CD-ROM option was not offered! A quick call to
|
||
UniVel Tech Support revealed that the NEC-74 IS supported but the NEC
|
||
SCSI controller is *not*, and that they would fax me an up-to-date list
|
||
of supported hardware options. I asked if there was any way to receive
|
||
UnixWare on floppies because the installation program asked me if I was
|
||
installing from diskettes (it only takes up around 30 meg on the CD) and
|
||
was told that they are working on a diskette version that would be ready
|
||
in two to three weeks. Now on to phase two of the experiment.
|
||
|
||
After receiving the fax, I ordered an Adaptec 1542C from my
|
||
distributor. (Only B and A were listed on the "updated" supported
|
||
hardware sheet, but C has replaced both of them.) When it was received,
|
||
I quickly tore into it and put it in the machine. Hmmmm, the cable I
|
||
needed to connect to the NEC-74 was SCSI-to-SCSI, and I received
|
||
SCSI-to-Parallel with the drive. Here we go again! Out of frustration,
|
||
I called UniVel one more time and asked if the diskette version was
|
||
shipping yet (through all the backorders and delays, I was now on week
|
||
three of the evaluation with nothing actually running yet) and was
|
||
told, "That has been promised but is at least two to three months from
|
||
now." I asked if they had been getting a lot of complaints about the
|
||
required hardware and was told they have had some "request" for other
|
||
media. I called a client who luckily had external SCSI cables lying
|
||
all over the place, and he loaned one to me for the experiment. I
|
||
started the *real* install late on a Friday afternoon and let it run all
|
||
night. (If I see the message, "This will take a few minutes"
|
||
again, I'll blow chunks.) After returning Saturday morning to my
|
||
office, I was greeted with another hour of answering some more prompts
|
||
and waiting.
|
||
|
||
IT'S DONE! Finally I was told that the UnixWare installation was
|
||
now complete, and that I may now reboot the system to bring it up. I
|
||
rebooted. I waited! I waited more. At this point I knew I was in for a
|
||
let-down when it took almost six or seven minutes to ask for my
|
||
login/password. Once into the OS I found it very simple to connect to
|
||
my in-house LAN, play a mean version of Tetris, run some DOS
|
||
applications and even some UNIX apps--but all deathly S-L-O-W! Tech
|
||
Support was closed on Saturday, so I called back on Monday morning to
|
||
ask:
|
||
|
||
ME: "Is it supposed to be this pathetically slow?"
|
||
|
||
THEM: "How much memory do you have?"
|
||
|
||
ME: "8 Meg on a 486sx/25 with SCSI HD."
|
||
|
||
THEM: "Oh yeah, you need atleast 16Meg."
|
||
|
||
ME: "It says I need 8 Meg!"
|
||
|
||
THEM: "Oh, it'll *run* on 8 Meg..."
|
||
|
||
ME: "$!&^$&*$!&!$^%$(*"
|
||
|
||
|
||
At this point I decided the experiment had ended. Most of my time
|
||
evaluating had been spent on simply installing the OS and acquiring the
|
||
required parts to do so. Sure! UnixWare may work on a "standard
|
||
system" (I hardly call 16M standard) but you can't *load* it on a
|
||
run-of-the-mill PC. I wish I could encourage a user to put 16 Meg in
|
||
his personal station so he could run a version of the ultimate operating
|
||
system, UNIX, but I'm afraid that just won't happen. I have taken into
|
||
my thoughts that this is a 1.0 version and that it will/must improve,
|
||
but for now, I do not see UNIX becoming the OS of choice even if it is
|
||
not "vaporware" like some of the other 32-bit OS's.
|
||
|
||
Installation time: One month, give or take an hour!
|
||
|
||
Recommendation: Skip it...
|
||
|
||
|
||
(RevHasty@aol.com)
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
UNNAMED
|
||
COLUMN Mark Maisel
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
I just got back from Fall Comdex. I headed out to see what the
|
||
computer and software industries have been up all year and what they
|
||
plan for the future. I'll be using this column each month to tell you
|
||
about these things and try to explain them in easy to understand terms.
|
||
Unfortunately, specialization seems to come with its own language as a
|
||
prerequisite, thus excluding the majority of the citizenry, even those
|
||
who are users or otherwise directly affected by these products and
|
||
ideas.
|
||
|
||
I'll also solicit ideas for this column from you. If there is some
|
||
computer or software technology you'd like to learn more about, please
|
||
send me e-mail or send a letter to the editor. He'll make sure I hear
|
||
about it. There is so much happening. It should be no problem at all
|
||
to come up with topics. Research could be tricky but that is a core
|
||
component of my business.
|
||
|
||
For now, I've nothing further to add. Please feel free to start
|
||
sending those requests in now. I'll have a huge stack of information to
|
||
pore through in a few weeks, so we'll have a lot to talk about!
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
BBS
|
||
BEHAVIOR
|
||
Part I of III Damion Furi
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
There seems to be some disagreement as to how words on a BBS should
|
||
be taken.
|
||
|
||
One group believes that words on a bulletin board system have no
|
||
substance, no effect, and no reality.
|
||
|
||
The other group believes that words have power, in any media.
|
||
|
||
I don't understand why some people believe that words are "Nerf
|
||
bats" on a bulletin board system, yet simultaneously believe that words
|
||
have power in newspapers, magazines, television, radio, and everyday
|
||
face-to-face discussion.
|
||
|
||
No, I don't buy that. Words have power. You can get mystical
|
||
about it if it suits you, but the bottom line fact of the matter is that
|
||
wars have been fought over nothing more than words. If that doesn't
|
||
prove anything to you, then I would suggest that you might be a bit
|
||
simple.
|
||
|
||
There seem to be a number of people on the boards that find it
|
||
convenient to set aside their manners while online. I don't know why
|
||
that is, but I regret it.
|
||
|
||
It has happened a few times where I have suggested that an offending
|
||
party "put up or shut up," as the saying goes. I've been heavily
|
||
criticized for it, too, primarily by "Cardinal Dean" Costello, a man
|
||
known for his propensity for flames. On the other hand, he is not
|
||
alone in having criticized me for this.
|
||
|
||
I admit that I may be in the wrong for extending such invitations.
|
||
I don't think I am, though, obviously, or I wouldn't do it. I simply
|
||
accept the possibility for the sake of argument.
|
||
|
||
My terms for dealing with people are simple: if you don't insult
|
||
me, I won't insult you. If you *do* insult me, I expect you to be man
|
||
enough to be willing to take responsibility for your words and defend
|
||
them, if necessary. If you are unwilling to defend harsh words, you
|
||
should be willing to keep your biscuit trap shut. Anything else is
|
||
simply cowardice.
|
||
|
||
I think our society has gotten soft. Too many people are wandering
|
||
around loose, whining, doing everything they can to avoid taking
|
||
responsibility for their words and deeds. Bulletin boards suit these
|
||
people well, since there is absolutely nothing about a BBS that requires
|
||
a person to say, "Yeah, that was me." On the rare occasions when that
|
||
does happen, it's a bonus.
|
||
|
||
I've done a lot of heavy thinking recently about personal
|
||
responsibility because of a couple mistakes I've made recently. I don't
|
||
make these little mistakes where I could say, "I'm sorry" and everything
|
||
is alright again. No, when I screw up, it's strictly FUBAR.
|
||
|
||
Between these recent mistakes and yet another argument with Dean,
|
||
I've come to the conclusion that, though I'm not always in the right, I
|
||
can live with it. But whichever way things work out, I am willing to
|
||
accept responsibility for whatever it may be that I've done or said.
|
||
|
||
I'm too aggressive, and I know that. I'm not entirely happy with
|
||
it, but I've been working on it. And I don't think I'm out of line to
|
||
ask that someone step up to bat if they've called me an asshole or
|
||
whatever. Nor do I think it's out of line for someone to call me on it
|
||
if they feel the need. (As a matter of fact, I pretty much expect to be
|
||
called on something fairly soon. In this case, though, I will simply try
|
||
to avoid being damaged; I know I'm in the wrong. I'm not masochistic
|
||
enough not to defend myself, but I'm not sadistic enough to add injury
|
||
to insult.)
|
||
|
||
If you judge yourself to be a non-combatant, don't get into
|
||
combative situations. Don't write something in a post to someone that
|
||
you would not be willing to say to their face. Don't get into
|
||
situations of any sort that might require an aggressiveness that you
|
||
can't back up.
|
||
|
||
Dean's fond of calling me a "stud" when I start in on this, but I
|
||
have nothing to prove to anyone. I simply have no tolerance for
|
||
stupidity, not even mine, and these mistakes that I've been alluding to
|
||
were stupid. I know myself well enough to know that I'm going to be
|
||
touchier than normal because of it.
|
||
|
||
And that's one of those behind-the-scenes sort of things that you
|
||
won't always know about when you post something obnoxious to someone
|
||
while online. Maybe you will accidently push a button that causes the
|
||
other person to step out from behind the corner of a building one day
|
||
and--*surprise!*--put an aluminum baseball bat across the bridge of your
|
||
nose.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
NOTES FROM
|
||
THE TRENCHES:
|
||
All This, And Offline Readers! Dean Costello
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
I am writing today as a result of attending the latest BTN party.
|
||
A curious thing, these BTN parties. At one time, their purpose was to
|
||
bring together the writing staff of "Birmingham Telecommunication News"
|
||
and allow discussion as to the means and ends of putting out a
|
||
newsletter. Now... Well, lets just say that attendance is a tad more
|
||
open than in the "old days".
|
||
|
||
I am writing from the point of view of what I consider to be a
|
||
middle modem user. I am not one of those that drove a Commodore 64 and
|
||
coded communication programs in assembler to allow the computer to use a
|
||
1200-baud modem and disk drive. I did, however, come in before offline
|
||
mail readers (OLRs), the scourge of any True Believer (and I blame the
|
||
OLRs on Jay Enterkin, who bitched and moaned to sysops to get them to
|
||
install OLR systems, which he then never used, and then left town). So,
|
||
I refer to myself as a middle person: I came after hardcoding programs
|
||
in binary, but before any buffoon could call and use a BBS.
|
||
|
||
We were a fairly tight group, we of the middle ground: myself, Jet
|
||
Thomas, Brett Thorn, Chris Mohney, and to a greater or lesser extent
|
||
Scott Hollifield, Maggie Harden, Kathy Maisel, and Kelly Rosato. We
|
||
would see each other at parties, chit-chat over the phones (real-time),
|
||
eat with each other, and discuss Deep Things (again, to a greater or
|
||
lesser extent). Others that we came in contact with were the old
|
||
timers, They That Used 300 Baud: Tim Straughn (king of the batch file),
|
||
Ed O'Neil (designer of EZNet), Mark Maisel ("Oh yeah? Well, I remember
|
||
[insert improbable event here]"), Bill Freeman ("Don't do anything
|
||
foolish: I have a honorary deputy's badge"), and Mark Kieskowski
|
||
(Master of South Central Bell, except for that one unfortunate
|
||
incident). And that was pretty much it. Well, not really 'it', but that
|
||
was the core group. And we were happy.
|
||
|
||
Sometime around 1990, or so, OLR became all the rage. "Yeah, yeah,
|
||
uh-huh, and get this: You can READ messages without actually being
|
||
logged on! No, really!" As a result, a new kind of user came about.
|
||
This user rarely if ever leaves messages "live", by being able to employ
|
||
OLR software at all times. I would argue that at this point (the
|
||
individual user using very little online time through the use of OLR), a
|
||
shift occurred in the average user. By using the OLR software, any yutz
|
||
could (and did) use BBSs. And on top of that, the average user refused
|
||
to not use OLR software to talk to BBSs.
|
||
|
||
So in essence you have the three groups that I spoke of in the
|
||
second paragraph. Well, that's all well and good. But something else
|
||
that I have noticed is what happens at parties since the Great OLR
|
||
Awakening. You see, at the party that I attended, there was very little
|
||
mixing of groups. It is almost as if everyone knows their place, and
|
||
refuses to associate (or limits contact to a minimum) with others. But
|
||
if you think about it, it makes sense. Each of the crowds has a common
|
||
start point (dinosaurs-early coding/debugging, middles-live messages/
|
||
commercial software, newbies-OLR; with each successive group having an
|
||
easier time of it), and as a result, they have a tendency to hang out
|
||
with their own type.
|
||
|
||
But that doesn't completely dismiss the idea of a newbie not using
|
||
OLR. As I was writing this, I thought of Judy Ranelli as being a good
|
||
example of that type of person. Even though she was relatively late to
|
||
the process (1990-1991), she doesn't use OLR, and she apparently fits in
|
||
with the middles better than to others. Another example is Scott
|
||
Hollifield, who has been using BBSs since approximately 1983 or so, yet
|
||
cannot code his way out of a paper bag.
|
||
|
||
The point in time when a person starts using BBSs appears to be an
|
||
important indicator of who you hang out with (BBS-wise). There is no
|
||
great sociological discovery there that any group of new people will
|
||
have a tendency to gather together. Mark Maisel, the evil dwarf sitting
|
||
to my left at the moment, noted that even though he was characterized as
|
||
a dinosaur, he uses OLR. I cannot dispute that. However the socially
|
||
decisive point in time is when he started using BBSs, which was before
|
||
easily accessible commercial software. His start was therefore with a
|
||
like-minded group, these are for the most part the individuals he
|
||
interacts with the most (to some extent; as time passes, the number of
|
||
individuals available in each group shrinks due to attrition), though he
|
||
takes time to chat with most individuals that want his attention.
|
||
Unfortunately, he doesn't fit into my paradigm very well. He suggests
|
||
that I just refer to him as an "enigma", but I think that that is
|
||
disingenuous, so I prefer the above fast-talk explanation instead.
|
||
|
||
So, what have we learned? Hard to say. I think that for the most
|
||
part there are three major types of users, each differentiated by the
|
||
type of interface with computers that was common to each group. The
|
||
first group, more or less the ones that came into BBSs first, is
|
||
characterized by slow, clunky machines and user-hostile interfaces. The
|
||
second group came about a bit later after communications software became
|
||
more commercially available, as well as better computers and modems to
|
||
allow BBS connection to be more easily accomplished. The latest group
|
||
are those that use both the more powerful machines and modems, as well
|
||
as software to allow utter ease of use of BBSs. And guess what? They
|
||
hang out with each other, with minimal interaction between the groups.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
PRESS RELEASE:
|
||
QmodemPro For Windows
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
*** Official Announcement ***
|
||
|
||
For more information contact:
|
||
Jim Harrer, President/CEO Sales (800) 999-9619
|
||
Mustang Software, Inc. Office (805) 395-0223
|
||
P.O. Box 2264 Fax (805) 395-0713
|
||
Bakersfield, CA 93303 BBS (805) 395-0650
|
||
|
||
Las Vegas, NV - November 15, 1993. Mustang Software unveiled the new
|
||
Windows version of its popular QmodemPro communications program during
|
||
COMDEX/Fall '93. Called QmodemPro for Windows v1.0, it is the first
|
||
communications program to offer support for both data and Fax
|
||
communication in one integrated package.
|
||
|
||
File transfers are supported using Zmodem, CompuServe B+, Kermit,
|
||
Ymodem, Ymodem/G, Xmodem/1K, Xmodem/1KG, Xmodem/CRC, Xmodem, or ASCII.
|
||
A built-in GIF viewer allows you to view GIF graphics files as they are
|
||
being downloaded. You can zoom any GIF or BMP file, and even mark and
|
||
copy portions of the picture to the Windows clipboard. Users can easily
|
||
upload files using drag-and-drop from the Windows File Manager to
|
||
QmodemPro's upload window.
|
||
|
||
QmodemPro for Windows offers a wide selection of terminal emulations
|
||
including: ADDS VP60, ADM 3A, ANSI, Avatar, DG 100, DG 200, DG 210,
|
||
Hazeltine 1500, Heath 19, IBM 3101, TTY, TVI 910, TVI 912, TVI 920, TVI
|
||
925, TVI 950, TVI 955, Vidtex, VT 52, VT 100, VT 102, VT 220, VT 320,
|
||
Wyse 30, Wyse 50, Wyse 60, Wyse 75, Wyse 85, Wyse 100, and Wyse 185.
|
||
BBS callers will appreciate the addition of Doorway and RIPscrip to this
|
||
impressive list of supported emulations. QmodemPro for Windows is the
|
||
first Windows product to offer support for RIPscrip, which is quickly
|
||
becoming the de facto graphics standard for bulletin board systems
|
||
worldwide, including Mustang Software's Wildcat! product.
|
||
|
||
Besides offering full data communication, MSI has also integrated both
|
||
send and receive Fax support directly into QmodemPro for Windows. Using
|
||
any Class 1 or Class 2 Fax modem, QmodemPro for Windows can send text
|
||
files as well as PCX and BMP graphics files. Cover pages can also be
|
||
attached to these documents. Automatic Fax receive is also supported
|
||
and a complete Fax viewer includes thumbnail sketches, zooming, copying,
|
||
and printing.
|
||
|
||
The phonebook allows you to view the dialing directory in a traditional
|
||
tabular form, or you can use the icon view mode to create a true icon
|
||
window of your online services, making it a simple double click to dial,
|
||
connect, and be online. Each dialing directory entry can hold up to
|
||
five phone numbers, the default device, emulation, transfer protocol,
|
||
user ID, password, login script, RIP icon directory, and macro file. A
|
||
note file can be attached to any dialing entry allowing you to add your
|
||
own notes and comments about the dialing entry.
|
||
|
||
QmodemPro for Windows even allows you to review the scrollback buffer
|
||
while you're capturing information online. You can customize the
|
||
terminal window using a variety of fonts. The screen behind the
|
||
terminal window can be customized with your favorite pattern or
|
||
wallpaper file giving you full control of your desktop.
|
||
|
||
Sporting a completely new Script Language Interface for QmodemPro
|
||
(SLIQ), QmodemPro gives you unparalleled power, speed, and flexibility.
|
||
Based on the popular BASIC language structure, it adds extensions for
|
||
the Windows communication environment and includes a Quicklearn feature
|
||
for creating scripts without having to learn the language. It even
|
||
includes a compiler for compiling the scripts so they run faster and are
|
||
more secure. A powerful script debugger and full editor are also
|
||
included.
|
||
|
||
QmodemPro for Windows allows you to take advantage of the Windows
|
||
multitasking environment. Download files or capture data in the
|
||
background, while working in a word processor or spreadsheet. QmodemPro
|
||
for Windows makes full use of the 16550 UART, Digiboard multi serial
|
||
port card, or any other intelligent serial interface with appropriate
|
||
Windows drivers. Also supported are Interrupt 14 compatible LAN modems
|
||
and other devices.
|
||
|
||
The newest member of the QmodemPro family now supports sound cards,
|
||
allowing you to assign standard Windows WAV files to certain events in
|
||
your communications session. For example, you can have a WAV file
|
||
played when you connect to a BBS or when your download is completed.
|
||
There are many events you can assign sounds to: connect, dialing, file
|
||
transfer success and failure, and many others.
|
||
|
||
QmodemPro for Windows has a suggested retail price of $139.00. This
|
||
product will be available within the next few weeks in the over 300
|
||
Software Etc. stores throughout the United States. Software Etc. has
|
||
also put QmodemPro for Windows on their "Reservation System" so your
|
||
local store can reserve your copy. To find the Software Etc. store in
|
||
your area dial (800) 328-4646.
|
||
|
||
Qmodem, QmodemPro, and Wildcat! BBS registered owners can upgrade to
|
||
QmodemPro for Windows for a limited time for only $50.00 plus shipping.
|
||
Have your registration number handy and dial Mustang Software at
|
||
(800) 999-9619 or (805) 395-0223 to place your order. Please expect a 4
|
||
to 6 week back order for delivery, order today to be one of the first to
|
||
receive this program.
|
||
|
||
Resellers in the United States can order QmodemPro for Windows directly
|
||
from INGRAM MICRO. The part number is 185415. YOu can reach INGRAM
|
||
MICRO by dialing (800) 456-8000.
|
||
|
||
Customers in the U.K. can reserve their copy by contacting Telesystems
|
||
LTD in London. Telesystems can be reached at +44 494 866365,
|
||
FAX +44 494 866050, or BBS +44 494 891903.
|
||
|
||
Customers in Scandinavia will be pleased to know that Swedish, Danish,
|
||
and Norwegian versions will be available soon after the U.S. version.
|
||
Please contact PC Security in Norway for additional information. PC
|
||
Security can be reached at +67 53 11 53, FAX +67 53 63 25, or
|
||
BBS +67 58 33 58.
|
||
|
||
Customers in Australia should contact Banksia Technology Pty. Ltd in
|
||
Lane Cove, NSW. Banksia can be reached at +61 2 418-6033,
|
||
Fax +61 2 428-5460 or BBS +61 2 418-7693.
|
||
|
||
For additional information regarding QmodemPro for Windows, QmodemPro
|
||
for DOS, or the Wildcat! Bulletin Board System, please contact Mustang
|
||
Software, Inc. P.O. Box 2264, Bakersfield, CA 93303-2264. Phone
|
||
800-999-9619, 805-395-0223, FAX 805-395-0713, BBS 805-395-0650.
|
||
|
||
MSI can also be reached via e-mail at sales@mustang.com, CompuServe (GO
|
||
PCVENA, section 9), America Online (Keyword = Mustang), and GEnie
|
||
(MUSTANG RT).
|
||
|
||
-END-
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
BTN PROFILE
|
||
This Month: Steven Wheeler The Bishop
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
The ProFile is a light-hearted attempt at allowing the BBS community
|
||
to get to know the selected user or sysop better. The harassees...er...
|
||
candidates for the ProFile are selected purely by random (or maybe not--
|
||
read up on "chaos"). If anyone has any suggestions for questions to be
|
||
included in the ProFile, or for users to be harassed by the ProFile, then
|
||
feel free to E-Mail them to me (THE BISHOP on the Crunchy Frog, or AARON
|
||
DEES on most other boards in town).
|
||
|
||
[Editor's Note: Steven Wheeler has moved out of Birmingham--so naturally,
|
||
we wait till he's gone to find this ProFile and run it. So consider this
|
||
just a fond tribute to one who is no longer with us. Ladies and gentleman,
|
||
I give you: the local user was *was*... Steven Wheeler.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
ProFile: Steven Wheeler, a.k.a. Dr. Strangelove
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Age: Too old to change, too young to retire. 39
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Birthplace: Cullman, AL (yeah, I know.....)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Occupation:
|
||
Electronic Tech, AL Army National Guard. Jack of all trades,
|
||
actually. I do everything nobody else can... and don't get paid
|
||
damned near enough for it.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
My hobbies include:
|
||
Between work, family and BBS'ing who has time for hobbies? Oh yeah,
|
||
I do collect belly-button lint and fish sometimes.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Years telecomputing: About 5, going on 20.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Sysop, past/present/future of:
|
||
Co-Sysop, past, of Crow's Nest and most recently, Night Watch BBS.
|
||
Hopefully it will be back up soon. Are you reading this Lamar? <G>
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
My oddest habit is:
|
||
Does this qualify? No, okay, chasing cars and howling at the moon.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
My greatest unfulfilled ambition is:
|
||
To make it to tomorrow.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The single accomplishment of which I am most proud is:
|
||
Making it to today.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
My favorite performers are: Tull, Led, Doors, Rundgren, Bowie,
|
||
Aerosmith, Lords and Lynne.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The last good movie I saw was:
|
||
You think I want Jimmy Evans on my butt?
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The last good book I read was:
|
||
See the answer above.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
If they were making a movie of my life, I'd like to see my part
|
||
played by:
|
||
Me.....I need the bucks.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
My pet peeves are:
|
||
Modern civilization (?) Who needs it?
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
When nobody's looking, I like to:
|
||
None of your business. If I wanted everyone to know I'd do it while
|
||
they were looking. Give me a break.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
LOCAL MUSIC
|
||
IN JANUARY Judy Ranelli
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
Judy Ranelli is on vacation from her duties here this month, so
|
||
feel free to go out on the town and see whatever bands you want,
|
||
without fear of recrimination! Next month: more mandatory
|
||
directives from Judy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
SPECIAL INTEREST
|
||
GROUPS (SIG's)
|
||
[COMPUTER RELATED] compiled by Eric Hunt
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
|
||
BIPUG Alabama UniForum
|
||
Birmingham IBM-PC Users Group Homewood Public Library
|
||
UAB Nutrition Science Blg 1st Tuesday
|
||
RM 535/541 Shawn Cleary 870-6130
|
||
1st Sunday (delayed one week
|
||
if meeting is a holiday)
|
||
Marty Schulman 967-5883
|
||
|
||
Birmingham Apple Core
|
||
Informal breakfast meeting every Saturday, 9am - 11am
|
||
@ Kopper Kettle, lower level Brookwood Village Mall
|
||
Formal meeting held second Saturday of each month, location
|
||
variable (to be announced at breakfast meetings and in the
|
||
user group's newsletter "The PEEL".)
|
||
President: Sam Johnston - 322-5379
|
||
Vice-Prez: Marie Prater - 822-8135
|
||
|
||
The SIG listing is being re-verified. If you know of an active
|
||
Computer Related user's group, please let me know.
|
||
|
||
I can be reached via Internet email at
|
||
eric.hunt@the-matrix.com or drop me a note directly on The
|
||
MATRIX.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
||
|
||
################################################################
|
||
KNOWN BBS NUMBERS
|
||
FOR THE
|
||
BIRMINGHAM AREA
|
||
################################################################
|
||
|
||
Sysops, PLEASE check your listing to make sure everything is
|
||
correct, especially the networks. Corrections should be mailed on
|
||
the Matrix or Crunchy Frog to Scott Hollifield or Mark Maisel.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ADAnet One (Nodes 1-3) 250-0013 1200-2400 PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, fi, ad]
|
||
ADAnet One (Node 4) 254-6050 2400-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, fi, ad]
|
||
Alcatraz BBS 608-0880 300-9600 PCBoard 15.0
|
||
[he, vi]
|
||
Alter-Ego BBS 925-5099 1200-9600 USR HST PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, mn]
|
||
Baudville (Nodes 1-7) 995-0013 300-2400 Major BBS 6.12
|
||
[none]
|
||
Bus System 987-5419 300-2400 PCBoard 14.2
|
||
[none]
|
||
Byte Me! 979-BYTE! 2400-14400 USR HST WWIV 4.12
|
||
[none]
|
||
Castle, The 841-7618 300-2400 Image 1.2
|
||
[none]
|
||
Channel 8250 (Node 1) 744-8546 300-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, un]
|
||
Channel 8250 (Node 2) 744-5166 300-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, un]
|
||
Cherry Tree 681-1710 1200-14400 TriBBS 4.01
|
||
[wm, ca]
|
||
Christian Apologetic 808-0763 1200-14400 V.32bis Wildcat! 3.90
|
||
[ez, cp]
|
||
Crocodile Country BBS 477-6283 1200-16800 USR DS Searchlight 3.5 *RIP*
|
||
[sl, fi]
|
||
Crunchy Frog (Node 1) 823-3957 300-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, mn, lu, ll]
|
||
Crunchy Frog (Node 2) 823-3958 300-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, mn, lu, ll]
|
||
Crystal Village 856-3749 1200-2400 VBBS 6.10
|
||
[cr, cs, al, ho, co, fn, vi]
|
||
Den, The 933-8744 300-9600 USR HST ProLogon/ProDoor
|
||
[ez, mn, il]
|
||
Digital Publishing 854-1660 300-9600 V.32 Wildcat! 3.60
|
||
[pl]
|
||
Electro-BBS 491-8402 300-14400 V.32/42 Maximus 2.01
|
||
[fi]
|
||
Family Smorgas-Board 744-0943 300-2400 PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, fi, mj, bc, fa, ic, cf, cd, np, ag, ve, ad]
|
||
Final Frontier 838-5634 300-14400 VBBS 6.11 *RIP*
|
||
[al, he, re, fn]
|
||
Genesis Online(Nodes 1-6) 620-4150 300-14400 V.32bis Major BBS 6.11
|
||
[mr]
|
||
Guardian, The (Node 1) 425-1951 1200-14400 V.42bis VBBS 6.11
|
||
[vi]
|
||
Guardian, The (Node 2) 425-1956 1200-14400 V.42bis VBBS 6.11
|
||
[vi]
|
||
Hardeman's BBS 640-6436 1200-14400 Wildcat! 3.51
|
||
[wi, di, bc]
|
||
Homewood's Hell Hole 987-7823 2400-14440 V.32bis VBBS 6.10
|
||
[he, bi]
|
||
Joker's Castle 664-5589 300-14400 USR DS PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, mn, un]
|
||
KickAxis BBS 733-0253 1200-14400 USR DS PCBoard 15.0
|
||
[he]
|
||
Leaping's Lounge 856-2521 1200-14400 GTPower 18.00
|
||
[gt, ez, mn, wm, di]
|
||
Lions Den 969-5733 300-14400 USR DS Wildcat! 3.90
|
||
[wi, fi]
|
||
Lumby's Palace 520-0041 300-14400 VBBS 6.0
|
||
[he]
|
||
Magic City (Node 1) 664-9883 300-14400 USR DS Wildcat! 3.90
|
||
[di, wm, wi, ca, cm, pe]
|
||
Magic City (Node 2) 664-0435 300-2400 Wildcat! 3.90
|
||
[di, wm, wi, ca, cm, pe]
|
||
Magnolia BBS 854-6407 300-14400 USR HST PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[ez, mn]
|
||
MATRIX, The (Nodes 1-14) 323-2016 300-2400 PCBoard 15.0 *RIP*
|
||
[ez, mn, th, il, in, al, sh, sc, gl, ic, ri, fr]
|
||
MATRIX, The (Nodes 20-23) 323-6016 9600-14400 USR DS PCBoard 15.0 *RIP*
|
||
[ez, mn, th, il, in, al, sh, sc, gl, ic, ri, fr]
|
||
MATRIX, The (Node 25-26) 458-3449 9600-14400 V.32bis PCBoard 15.0 *RIP*
|
||
[ez, mn, th, il, in, al, sh, sc, gl, ic, ri, fr]
|
||
MetaBoard 854-4814 300-14400 USR DS Opus CBCS 1.73
|
||
[fi, ad]
|
||
MetroMac BBS (Node 1) 323-6306 1200-14400 V.32bis TeleFinder 3.1
|
||
[none]
|
||
MetroMac BBS (Node 2) 252-0582 1200-14400 V.32bis TeleFinder 3.1
|
||
[none]
|
||
Milliways BBS (Node 1) 956-3177 1200-2400 Major BBS 6.11 *RIP*
|
||
[none]
|
||
Milliways BBS(Nodes 2-6)956-2731 1200-2400 Major BBS 6.11 *RIP*
|
||
[none]
|
||
Missing Link 853-1257 300-16800 USR DS C-Net Amiga 2.63
|
||
[cl, cn]
|
||
Neon Moon 477-5894 300-14400 TriBBS 4.0
|
||
[none]
|
||
Outer Limits (Node 1) 426-5611 1200-16800 ZyXEL Wildcat! 3.90 *RIP*
|
||
[fi, do, ec, er, pn]
|
||
Outer Limits (Node 2) 425-5871 1200-16800 ZyXEL Wildcat! 3.90 *RIP*
|
||
[fi, do, ec, er, pn]
|
||
Outer Limits (Node 3) 426-2939 1200-16800 ZyXEL Wildcat! 3.90 *RIP*
|
||
[fi, do, ec, er, pn]
|
||
Party Line 856-1336 300-14000 V.32bis TriBBS 4.0
|
||
[cc, wm, di]
|
||
Penny Arcade 699-4625 300-2400 Running Force! 3.75
|
||
[none]
|
||
Playground 681-5070 1200-14000 V.32 TriBBS 5.0
|
||
[wm, di, al, ez]
|
||
Posys BBS 854-5131 300-9600 V.32 PCBoard
|
||
[none]
|
||
Programmer's Shack 988-4695 2400-14400 HST DS Renegade
|
||
[ws, fi, it]
|
||
Quiet Zone 833-2066 300-2400 ExpressNet
|
||
[none]
|
||
Safe Harbor (Node 1) 665-4332 300-2400 GTPower 18.00
|
||
[gt, ez, mn, il, lg]
|
||
Safe Harbor (Node 2) 665-4355 300-14400 USR DS GTPower 18.00
|
||
[gt, ez, mn, il, lg]
|
||
Sam's Domain 956-2757 1200-14400 VBBS 6.0
|
||
[da, he]
|
||
Safety BBS 581-2866 300-2400 RBBS-PC 17.4
|
||
[none]
|
||
Southern Stallion 322-3816 300-16800 ZyXEL PCBoard 15.1
|
||
[ez, lu, th, rs, ss, it]
|
||
Sperry BBS 853-6144 300-2400 V.32/42b PCBoard 15.0
|
||
[none]
|
||
ST BBS 836-9311 300-2400 PCBoard 14.2
|
||
[ez]
|
||
StarBase 12 647-7184 300-2400 TriBBS 4.0
|
||
[ez, mn, wm]
|
||
The Light 979-0368 300-14400 V.32bis PCBoard 15.0
|
||
[ch, nl]
|
||
Thy Master's Dungeon 940-2116 300-57600 V.32/42b PCBoard 14.5
|
||
[fr]
|
||
Torch Song 328-1517 300-9600 V.32 Wildcat 3.6
|
||
[pr, se, st, do, fs]
|
||
Travelog BBS 491-3898 300-2400 TriBBS
|
||
[none]
|
||
Weekends BBS 841-8583 2400-16800 USR DS Wildcat! 3.9
|
||
[ca]
|
||
Willie's DYM (Node 1) 664-9902 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
||
[or]
|
||
Willie's DYM (Node 2) 664-9903 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
||
[or]
|
||
Willie's DYM (Node 3) 664-9895 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
||
[or]
|
||
Willie's DYM (Node 4) 664-9896 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
||
[or]
|
||
Ziggy Unix BBS 991-5696 300-1200 UNaXess
|
||
[none]
|
||
|
||
*RIP* = BBS Software is RIP Graphics capable. You must be using a RIP
|
||
compatible term software to view them. RIPTerm or QmodemPro v1.50 are
|
||
the only two I know of that support it at this time. RIPTerm is shareware
|
||
and can be downloaded from most BBS's. QmodemPro is a commercial product.
|
||
|
||
The two-letter abbreviations you see on the line below the names of
|
||
many of the bbs' in the list signify that they are members of one or
|
||
more networks that exchange or echo mail to each other in some organized
|
||
fashion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ad = ADAnet, an international network dedicated to the handicapped
|
||
ae = ANet, uncertain at press time
|
||
ag = AgapeNet, a national Christian network, multi-topic
|
||
al = AlaNet, a local network, multi-topic
|
||
an = AnnexNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
at = AdultNet, a national network, adult-oriented
|
||
bc = BCBNet, a local network, religion-oriented
|
||
bh = BhamTalk, a local network, multi-topic
|
||
bi = BitchNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
ca = CafeNet, a local network, restaurant/dining, recipes, etc.
|
||
cc = Coast2Coast, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
cd = CDN, a national Christian network for file distribution
|
||
cf = CFN, a national Christian network, multi-topic
|
||
ch = ChristNet, a national Christian network
|
||
cl = CLink, uncertain at press time
|
||
cm = CompuLink, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
cn = CNet, multi-topic
|
||
co = ComicNet, a local net for comic book readers
|
||
cp = CAPNet, a national Christian network, multi-topic
|
||
cr = CrystalNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
cs = ChaosNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
cy = Cybernet, uncertain at press time
|
||
da = DateNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
de = DevNet, an international network for programmers and developers
|
||
di = Dixie Net, a regional network, multi-topic geared toward the south
|
||
eastern United States
|
||
do = DoorNet, a national network for the distribution of BBS doors
|
||
ec = EchoNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
er = ErosNet, an international network, adult oriented, files & messages
|
||
ez = EzNet, a local IBM compatible network
|
||
fa = FamilyNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
fi = FidoNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
fn = FrontierNet, a local network, multi-topic
|
||
fr = FredNet, a regional network, political discussion
|
||
fs = FSNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
ga = GameNet, a local network, uncertain at press time
|
||
gl = GlobalLink, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
gt = GTNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
he = HellNet, a local network, multi-topic
|
||
ho = HobbyNet, a local network for hobbyists
|
||
ic = ICDM, an international Christian network, multi-topic
|
||
ie = Intelec, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
il = ILink, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
in = InterNet, an international network, linking businesses,
|
||
universities, and bbs', multi-topic
|
||
it = ITCNet, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
lg = Local GT Net, a local network, connecting GT Power systems
|
||
ll = LlamaNet, a national network, freeform correspondence
|
||
lo = LocalNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
lu = LuciferNet, an international network, adult oriented
|
||
ma = MAXnet, a local network, connecting WWIV and VBBS systems
|
||
mj = MJCN, an international network for Messianic Jews
|
||
mn = Metronet, an international network which echoes RIME, multi-topic
|
||
mr = MajorNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
nl = NewLife, uncertain at press time
|
||
np = NPN, a national network for new parents
|
||
or = OraNet, a national E-mail network
|
||
pe = Planet Earth Network, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
pl = PlanoNet, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
pn = PoliceNet, an international network, law-enforcement only
|
||
pr = PrideNet, a local homosexually oriented network
|
||
rf = RF Net, a national network for ham radio users and hobbyists
|
||
ri = RIME, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
rb = RoboLink, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
re = RealityNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
rp = RPGnet, a local network for role-playing games
|
||
rs = RoseNet, a national network, technically orient*ed
|
||
ru = RushNet, a national network for Rush Limbaugh fans
|
||
sc = Science Factor Net, a national network, science and technology
|
||
oriented
|
||
se = SEC, a regional network, homosexually oriented geared toward the
|
||
southeastern United States
|
||
sh = Shades N Shadows Net, a national network for role-playing games
|
||
sl = SearchlightNet, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
sm = SmartNet, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
sn = ShadowNet, a national network for role-playing games
|
||
ss = SexSations!, a national network, adult-oriented
|
||
st = StudsNet, a national network, homosexually oriented
|
||
te = TECHnet, a local network, hardware and utility oriented
|
||
th = ThrobNet, an international network, adult oriented
|
||
un = U'NI-Net, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
ve = VETLink, a national network for military veterans
|
||
vi = VirtualNet, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
wi = WildNet, a national network, multi-topic
|
||
wm = World Message Exchange, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
ws = WishNet, uncertain at press time
|
||
ww = WWIV-Net, an international network, multi-topic
|
||
|
||
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
|