496 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
496 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
*******************************************************************************
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In Japan there are no GT BBS, but there are some English based BBS.
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The following is the list of Hong Kong and Singapore FidoNet BBS
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******************************************************************************* [0m
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HOST 600 Singapore Area 65-2854136 SINGAPORE
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1) Singapore Link 65-2854136 2) Wing Tech Exchange 65-4435681
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3) Deckel 65-4668847 4) Net Link 65-7787393
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5) Roy's Realm 65-3442977 6) Spacenet 65-7425347
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7) Epson BBS 65-5338669 8) My Friend 65-5676750
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10) MENUS 65-7722137 11) FEPLAN 65-2249287
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12) Powerline 65-2524652 13) ISS High Technology 65-7722517
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14) CompuAdd 65-2511274 17) Micron Information 65-4671519
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18) OOSH! 65-5651792 19) Tropical Express 65-4439181
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20) Inner Circle 65-2841856
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===============================================================================
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HONG KONG REGION
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===============================================================================
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1) TAIC OPUS 852-3-789-1267 Kowloon
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2) C F C OPUS 852-5-873-2289 HK Island
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3) DataWorld Twin Net/1 852-5-41-3631 HK Island
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4) Dial-A-Net 852-3-778-7753 Kowloon HK
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5) MedInfoNet -Unpublished- Kowloon HK
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6) Stand Up Board 852-3-38-0970 Kowloon HK
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7) Nice-Net 852-3-69-8647 Kowloon HK
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10) CATNet Fido/1 852-5-46-6341 HK Island
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12) DbMadNet 852-3-760-7742 Kowloon HK
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13) SEANet/2 852-5-77-5621 HK Island
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15) Alex's Board 852-0-412-1577 Kowloon HK
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16) Cordy's Board 852-0-432-2538 Kowloon HK
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17) Satellite Board/3 852-5-806-1048 HK Island
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18) Electronic BBS 852-3-311-2816 Kowloon HK
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19) ElfNet OPUS 852-3-729-5600 Kowloon HK 20) Ziggy BBS 852-5-819-4042 HK Island
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21) Rookie's Board 852-5-50-8602 HK Island
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22) Oriental HST 852-5-77-3389 HK Island
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23) CompuNet Advanced RB 852-3-88-0580 Kowloon HK
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24) Support Board 852-5-29-3353 HK Island
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25) Macao InfoXchange 853-57-9266 Macao
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26) PC Connection 853-8-4427 Macao
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===============================================================================
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04/30/90
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THE GREATER TOKYO INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN BOARD SYSTEMS LIST
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The 5th Edition (BBSTOK5.DOC)
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This edition compiled by: Yoshi Mikami, Fujisawa, Japan
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All the known public access bulletin board systems in the Greater Tokyo area
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in Japan that cater to English or bilingual English/Japanese speaking people
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are listed below:
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------------------------------------- --------- -------------------------------
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<system name> <phone no.> <v><a><b> <c> <notes: contents, node number>
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<sysop> <city, prefecture><bbs prog> <notes continued>[;<hours>]
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===================================== ========= ===============================
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AMIGA NET N.A. # 12 Write to c/o Mansoh, 26-4 Zo-
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Amiga Life Mag. Toshima-ku, Tokyo N.A. shigaya 2-chome, ZIP 171
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Asian Express Netwk 03-964-6548 # 24 Eng., Jpnese, Chinese & Korean
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Fumio Suzuki Tokyo QuickBBS Int'l FidoNet 3:370/10
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ASIJ BBS 0422-33-0381 V 24 At the American School in Japan
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Matan Arazi Chofu, Tokyo WWIV (K-12), largest int'l school
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AVXIA 03-355-4395 V 24 Free exchange of ideas.
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Kaz Shinada Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo QuickBBS Int'l FidoNet 3:730/9
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B&B Shimokitazawa 03-419-1138 V D 24 M5 IBM. Model helicopter. TYMPAS. Shuichi Fujita Setagaya-ku, Tokyo Phoenix Net 40/1. Get 8bitNet # here.
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Big Blue Skies BBS 0466-24-6090 V 24 M4 Nature and astronomy. IBM.
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Yoshi Mikami Fujisawa, Kanagawa Phoenix Net 50/2
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Collie Yokohama 045-894-7656 V 24 M5 IBM software.
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Maki Ohtoh Sakae-ku, Yokohama Phoenix Net 50/1
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The First Amendment 03-813-1169 V 24 IBM & Macintosh. Talk about
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The Waszir Tokyo WWIV life in Japan.
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IMS-Net 03-408-0479 V 24 International Music Service.
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Jun Moriya Minato-ku, Tokyo QuickBBS Int'l FidoNet 3:730/6
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INN 045-671-9727 V 24 Inter-school News Network, at
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Ed Bracha Yokohama, Kanagawa ProDOS St. Joseph's School/College.
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JANET II 03-417-2455 V 96 U Macintosh and Apple software.
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Frank Onda Tokyo RedRyder
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JANIS II 03-255-8856 V 96 U IBM software. On-line games &
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Pete Perkins Akihabara, Tokyo PCBoard news. MRT computer store.
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JUG-BBS 03-944-8193 V 12 Japanese Users Group. CP/M and
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(Multiple Sysops) Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo N.A. MS-DOS (PC Blue of N.J.)
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Kodaira Messenger 0423-45-8923 V 24 Excellent library of IBM soft-
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Jack Cook Kodaira, Tokyo Wildcat ware.
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MacEvent Network 0473-97-0922 V 24 Macintosh software. One of
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Nobuo Hayashi Urayasu, Chiba RedRyder oldest BBS networks in Japan
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Media Source II 03-593-1379 V 24 M4 Macintosh and Apple. Bilingual.
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Tadashi Mori Minato-ku, Tokyo RedRyder Also -593-0089 (3-1200bps)
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Micro Comm Network 0471-85-1088 V 96 M9 MCN. Contact point of FidoNet
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Junsei Yamada Abiko, Chiba Fido Japan. Int'l FidoNet 3:730/2
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NIS BBS 03-798-2462 # 96 M5 Nishimachi International School
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Josh Thayer Minato-ku, Tokyo Phoenix (K-12). W/N & W/E.
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P and A 0425-46-9143 96 UM5 IBM software. Parlez-vous
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Patrick Hochner Akikawa, Tokyo Wildcat fran ais aussi?The Polyglot 03-464-0537 V 24 IBM & NEC *.DIFs. Translaters
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Arturo Perez Tokyo WWIV and copywriters.
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St. Mary's BBS 03-709-3463 V 24 M3 St. Mary's Int'l School, K-12.
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Joseph Kaye Setagaya-ku, Tokyo Phoenix IBM & Mac. Net 40/2
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The Sanko Mall 045-641-3240 # 24 New BBS host program, born in
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Art Balfour Yokohama VBBS Yokohama, Japan (Ray Penas)
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Snoboard 0482-86-1307 - 24 M4 SNOBOL4, pattern matching lang.
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Masao Sekido Kawagoe, Saitama Magpie W/N & W/E
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SPL-BBS 045-314-0130 V 24 Software developers. Southern
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(Tech. Service) Yokohama, Kanagawa WWIV Pacific, Ltd., SW distributor
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The Space Board 045-832-1177 V 12 Astronomy data and notices. Run
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Yoshiro Yamada Yokohama, Kanagawa GBBS by Yokohama Science Museum
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SurfSide-Net 045-761-9406 - 96 M9V32 IBM & Apple software.
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Tatsuyuki Arai Yokohama, Kanagawa Fido Int'l FidoNet 3:730/1
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Telecom-Board 0424-89-0384 V D 96 U IBM software, telecom programs. Masa Kawamura Chofu, Tokyo RBBS-PC W/N & W/E
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Tokyo PC 03-707-4689 V $ 24 M5 Solidly IBM. Club BBS of Tokyo
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Maynard Hogg Tokyo WWIV PC Users Group members.
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Urb Network 03-797-4460 # 24 M4 FM "J-Wave". The Mainichi Daily
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(Urb Magazine) Minato-ku, Tokyo WWIV News. Call 03-797-6520 M-F.
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===================================== ========= ===============================
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*** The original list was created by Yukio Iura, Tokyo, in April, 1989 ***
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*** The list was significantly enlarged by Yoshi Mikami in Dec., 1989 ***
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WHAT'S NEW IN THE BBSdom IN GREATER TOKYO:
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1. Effective March, 1990, NTT reduced the telephone charges by approximately
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30 percent. The night time rate (11:00pm-8:00am) of local calls, for
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example, is now 10 yen per 4 minutes, vs. 10 yen per 3 minutes for the day
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time rate (8:00am-11:00pm). KDD also reduced our overseas telephone
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charges by about 30 percent.
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2. VBBS, a new BBS host program made by Ray Penas, Yokohama, is running on The Sanko Mall, Art Balfour, Sysop. It's a bilingual BBS.
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3. T. "Teddy" Matsumoto, Tokyo, donated LHEXE Version 1.50 to public domain
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in February, 1990. It unarchives the files in *.LZH storage (archived by
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H. "Yoshi" Yoshizaki's LHarc) into memory and executes them. The "Dynabook
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generation", who started to carry their notebook PCs such as Dynabook
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(Toshiba J3100SS) or On-Line Note (IBM 5499) with limited physical and VRAM
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disk space from September 1989, should find it extremely helpful.
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LEGEND:
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ACCESS <a> is the access information:
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= Open access
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D = Open access, but validation delay for full access
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R = Registration required; Extended access available
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$ = Registration & payment required
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MAXIMUM LINE SPEED <b> is the line speed code in bits per second:
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3 = 300 12 = 1200 24 = 2400
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96 = 9600 144 = 14400 192 = 19200MODEMS <c> is the modem code:
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Mn= MNP Class n (Microcom, Aiwa, Omron, NEC, Fujitsu, IBM, etc.)
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V4= V.42 (Hayes 9600 and 19200 V.42, Aiwa 2400 V.42, Omron 2400 V.42, etc.)
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/Should also be able to connect to MNP 1-4 modems/
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F = FastComm 9600
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U = U.S. Robotics 9600 HST or Dual HST/V.32-MNP5
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T = Telebit Trailblazer or Trailblazer Plus
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V3= (USR V.32-MNP5, Aiwa 9600 V.32-MNP4, Omron 9600 V.32-MNP5, etc.)
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VERIFICATION <v> of systems:
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V = Verified
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B = Busy
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- = No answer
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! = No answer; apparently closed. To be deleted in the next revision.
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# = New BBS or phone number
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TERMINAL PARAMETERS:
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All systems are 8-N-1 (i.e., 8 data bits, no parity bit, 1 stop bit),
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unless (7-E-1) is seen, then set up for 7 data bits and even parity.
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HOURS:
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All systems are on 24hrs/day, unless note mentions otherwise. W/D = Weekdays. W/E = Weekends (Saturday, Sunday & Local Holiday)
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W/N = Weekday Nights (approximately, 10:00pm to 7:00am)
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NOTES:
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- 7-bit NetMail was started by Tom Jenning's Fido BBS, using 7-bit data
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in the 8-bit frame. EchoMail is used to exchange bulk messages between
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two nodes. International NetMail started in January, 1990, on MCN and
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other Fido nodes, with Tokyo (Net 730) defined as part of Far East
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(Region 57) in Western Pacific (Zone 3) under the control of Sydney,
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Australia. 8-bit NetMail is exchanged in Taiwan and Japan only.
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- 8-bit NetMail is exchanged by the BBS's shown by Net xx/y of the above
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list, at 10:45-11:00pm. It transmits the full 8-bit information (double-
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byte Japanese JISCII characters as well as the 256 8-bit single-byte
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English ASCII characters) over NetMail, not just the 128 7-bit ASCII
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characters as in the Fido or Phoenix NetMail in U.S. The oversight
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of Phoenix 1.07 of treating ASCII code 227 (hexadecimal E3, Greek pi)
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as end-of-text character in the Message areas (which causes the double-
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byte Japanese characters to split into two single-byte characters in two
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lines) and masking/unmasking NetMail messages to pass only the 7-bit
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information in the 8-bit NetMail (which makes it impossible to send full
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8-bit-based Japanese characters in NetMail) was corrected in August, 1988, by the so-called "E3 Patch" by Fumio Matsuura, Shinza City.
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Some extremist Sysops in Japan call FidoNet "intolerable" because it denies
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the freedom of speech in the languages written in the characters other than
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the American English alphabet (ASCII codes 1-128), in a way similar to how
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the young Mme. Marie Joliot-Curie was denied to speak her native Polish
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language under the Russian occupation of Poland, and because this situation
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is extremely harsh against the "double-byte" languages of Chinese, Japanese
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and Korean, which are expressed in two sequential characters in ASCII codes
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129-256. But, a more accurate statement of this subject would be that the
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FidoNet and the FidoNet compatible people networks do have an inherent
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ability to handle this new requirement and that they should start allowing
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transmission of full 8-bit information. The 8-bit Chinese and Japanese
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message transmissions already started in Taiwan and Japan.
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The problem stated above was discussed by a group of Japanese Sysops with
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the attendees of the RBBS-PC Conference that was held in U.S. in October,
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1988, in a well documented paper (BBSML3.ZIP - "Multi-lingual Requiremnts
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to the BBS Host Programs Made in U.S."). Unless we manage it carefully,
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it will become another explosive issue in the Japan-U.S.-Europe
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relationship of the 1990s because the Japanese networks will start throwing
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in 8-bit information to the 7-bit based networks in U.S., resulting in chaos everywhere.
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To foster international communication, the legend has been changed to the one
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similar to that of "THE ATLANTA BULLETIN BOARD LIST Revision #22" (Copyright
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(c) 1989 by OAS, Inc., a non-profit organization of the Atlanta area sysops).
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A warm welcome to Shuichi Fujita by OAS at their October, 1989, meeting was
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much appreciated. The Line Speed codes in the OAS list have been made more
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"generic" in this list and a few codes have been added.
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SOME TIPS ON BBSING IN JAPAN
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Your modem, say, from U.S., supporting Bell 212A at 1200bps and CCITT V.22bis
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at 2400bps, would technically work in Japan, because most BBS host modems here
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entertain all protocols: Bell 103/CCITT V.21 at 300bps, Bell 212A/CCITT V.22
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at 1200bps and CCITT V.22bis at 2400bps. Legally, however, you must use in
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Japan, like in any other country of the world, a modem authorized by the
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industry-wide organizations of that country (JATE and VCCI), for compliance to
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the telecommunications, electro-magnetic interference and other laws. Yes, the
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U.S. Robotics 9600 HST modem has its own devotees here; the modems with MNP
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(Microcom Networking Protocol) are quite often used; and many Sysop are now
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deciding if the new V.42 (2400 bps, MNP4), V42bis (2400 bps, MNP5) and V.32(9600 bps) modems would give any benefits.
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Wall outlets for telephone attachment, hitherto mostly hard-wired, are quickly
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being converted to the U.S.-type "modular plugs" (RJ11), for easier attachment
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of the new, fancier, more expensive telephone sets or modems. (NTT's 3-prong
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telephone plugs never became popular.) Conversion kits to the modular plugs
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are sold at the local radio shops ("denki-ya" in Japanese) or large retail
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stores.
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We use 100 Volts/50 Hertz in eastern Japan (in Tokyo) and 100V/60Hz in western
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Japan (in Nagoya and Osaka), with the actual boundary being on the Fuji River
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that flows a little west of Mt. Fuji. This electric cycle difference should
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not bother you because no modern personal computer equipment is made sensitive
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to the electric cycle. (Electric shavers and refrigerators are sensitive.)
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The 240/120-to-100 stepdown transformers can be bought at the souvenir shops
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of the Tokyo City Air Terminal (TCAT) at Hakozaki-cho, or at the transformer
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shops of the Akihabara, Tokyo, and Edison Plaza, Yokohama, districts, for
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3-6,000 yen. Choose the transformers with right wattage capacity: up to 20W for
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recharging the battery of your laptop, 50W for your AC-powered laptop or
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Japanese "word processors," and 400-1,000W for your personal computer systems.
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We use the U.S.-type 2-flat blade plugs on electric outlet on the wall. The
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third round earth pin is used on the plugs in business offices, but rarely usedon the wall outlets in the homes. 3-prong-to-2-prong converter plugs can be
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easily bought at the transformer shops if your machine is equipped with the
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3-prong pw
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Fo information about the BBS's outside of the Greater Tokyo area, contact
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in Nagoya City FPUC BBS (Foreign PC User Club) 0563-57-0914 (Toshi Omi, Sysop;
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Net 70/1) and in the Osaka-Kyoto-Kobe area MacRadyo 06-765-9680, Aegis BBS
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075-954-0118 or Kerry Reuter's BBS (Kansai IBM PC User Group) 0727-66-4410.
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They should be able to tell you of more BBS's in their respective areas.
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Aside from these BBS's, there are over 700 other BBS's in Japan which are
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operated in the Japanese language, according to the BBS Denwacho published
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quarterly by Dempa Shimbun-sha (Phone: 03-445-6111) and the BBS directory
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included in the "NETWORKER" magazine published quarterly by ASCII Corp., both
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available in the local bookstores. Their computer talks are mostly on NEC 9801
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and its clone from Epson which are the dominant personal computers here in
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homes and in medium-sized and small businesses. Toshiba J3100/DynaBook, Apple
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Macintosh as used in the Japanese mode, Fujitsu (FMR and TOWNS), IBM (5550,
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PS/55 and JX) and AX machines from various companies are also often discussed.
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The Japanese characters on your IBM PC would look like full of the special
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characters in positions 129-256 of the 8-bit 256-character ASCII code table.Commercial networks with many access points all over Japan, some of them in
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special relationship to the U.S.-based networks, are also available. Contact:
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ASCII Net (ASCII 03-486-9661; tied to DELPHI), PC-VAN (NEC 03-454-6909 ; tied
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to GEnie), NIFTY-Serve (NIF 03-221-7363; tied to CompuServe), The Space Club
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(Space Communications 03-971-8111), JALNET (Japan Air Lines 03-456-7293),
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TeleStar (TeleStar 03-357-3800), EYE-NET (Fujimic 03-357-1738), J&P HOTLINE
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(Joshin Denki 06-632-2521), MasterNet (MasterNet 03-305-3511), Nikkei MIX
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(Nikkei MIX 03-380-6011; tied to BIX), etc. TWICS BeeLINE (contact Jeffrey
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Shapard at 03-351-5977 voice) is operated by a non-profit organization with
|
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interest to foster international people communication, using PARTIcipate
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conferencing system. (TWICS offers connection to other networks, such as MCI
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Mail and Internet, through DASNET in California.) Contact Comnex 03-260-7711
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for easier access to DELPHI in U.S. and Chollian in Korea.
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Digital network services: DDX-TP (NTT 0120-169163), TYMPAS (NIS 03-262-8844;
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also connected to TYMNET in U.S. and U.K. ), Tri-P (Intec 0120-03-3317; also
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connected to Telenet in U.S. and U.K), VENUS-P (KDD 03-275-4311) and services
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by most large telecommunications/computer companies in Japan (NEC C&C-VAN,
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Fujitsu FENICS, IBM NMS/Information Network, etc.). Electronic business mail
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services: WorldMail (called "MCI Mail" in U.S., contact NCL Communication
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03-851-9705 or NI+C International 03-221-8010), etc. Because of Lotus Express
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program which provides easy, economical on-line naviagation, MCI Mail is oftenused here in Japan, too. Please let the author know about EasyLink, DialComm
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and other electronic mail services that may be offered here.
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Examples of the access points of these nationwide networks are:
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CompuServe/NIF: 1200, 03-730-4944, 044-752-5691, 045-313-3718
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GEnie/C&C-VAN: 1200, 03-452-0034 (.A3212024,LOGON,GENIE), 045-664-4824
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(.A4512009,LOGON,GENIE), 0468-26-0929 (.A4512009,LOGON,GENIE)
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Tri-P: 1200/2400, 03-5371-4295, 045-321-6290
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TWICS: 1200/2400MNP5, 03-351-8244/7905; DDX-TP 1200, 163-060-361-2065;
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TYMPAS 524
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TYMPAS: 1200, 03-555-9562; 2400, 03-555-9696; 1200/2400, 045-453-7637
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VENUS-P: 1200, 03-343-1201, 003612; 2400, 03-342-2400, 003613; 2400MNP,
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03-340-2400 (domestic tolls are included in overseas charges)
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When calling Japan from overseas directly over the telephone network, set your
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modem with ATS7=60 to allow the modem to wait 60 seconds after dialing for
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carrier detect. Otherwise, your Hayes compatible modem at default setting will
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disconnect after 30 seconds and display a "No Carrier" message, leaving not
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enough time for your modem to detect the carrier signal being transmitted across
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the Pacific Ocean over the satellite link from the BBS host modem in Japan."PC-Pursuit" and "Starlink" are the services offered in U.S. by Telenet, a U.S.
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Sprint subsidiary, and by TYMNET, a British Telecom subsidiary, respectively,
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allowing the Telenet/TYMNET users to call in a local Telenet/TYMNET port and to
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"remotely" dial up any BBS in the region where such services are offered.
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If you are traveling in Japan and want to use PC-Pursuit, use the Telenet ports
|
||
in Japan such as 03-794-6381 in Tokyo or 06-365-9188 in Osaka (1200/2400/MNP5)
|
||
or contact Telenet Japan, Inc. (Tomoko Furukawa, 03-794-6602). For Starlink,
|
||
call the TYMPAS numbers listed above.
|
||
|
||
A service similar to PC-Pursuit/Starlink is offered as TYMPAS 777 service by
|
||
NIS, a TYMNET affiliate in Japan. As a user, you can call anyone of the
|
||
TYMPAS ports in Japan, key in I at the terminal identifier: prompt and USER-ID;
|
||
777;PASSWORD at the please log in: prompt and continue to select from the menus
|
||
till you reach, for example, B&B Shimokitazawa. You can call B&B Shimokitazawa
|
||
through TYMNET ports overseas, such as 312-922-6571 in Chicago, 213-578-7514
|
||
in L.A., 212-809-9660 in N.Y.C., 3-735-3623 in Hong Kong, 2-906-3473 in Sydney,
|
||
3-820-9088 in Melbourne, etc. You would need to key in O at the terminal
|
||
identifier prompt, NISJPN at the please log in: prompt, and USER-ID:777;
|
||
PASSWORD at the second please log in: prompt. Travelling other countries in
|
||
Asia, you will find the countries like Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand where
|
||
telecommunications is still under the governments' tight control and you must
|
||
first get a local company's service, such as, in Taiwan, PACNET from DataCommunications Institute (886-2-344-3117) or UDAS from International Telecom-
|
||
munications Administration (886-2-344-3770), and then pass through to TYMPAS by
|
||
specifying the DTE address of 44082100010.
|
||
|
||
Continuing to use TYMPAS as an example, you can call CompuServe from a TYMPAS
|
||
port in Japan. Set your term program to 7-E-1 and type A for the terminal
|
||
identifier and USER-ID;3106001133;PASSWORD for TYMPAS service, and then the
|
||
regular CIS/user-id/password sequence for CompuServe. CompuServe, of course,
|
||
can be accessed in a variety of ways, such as via NIFTY-Serve or Venus-P.
|
||
Yes, TAPCIS (a shareware program) for IBMPC and Navigator (a commercial
|
||
program) for Macintosh are used frequently here too, for easier on-line
|
||
navigation on CompuServe.
|
||
|
||
If your are a UNIX or AIX fan and would rather talk about System V, 4.3BSD,
|
||
Mach, uucp or OSF/1, rather than the MS-DOS based subjects, my recommendation
|
||
for you is to write to:
|
||
|
||
Yoh Hitomi, juice administration offce
|
||
c/o J.M.A. Systems Co., Ltd., Nihon Seimei Minami-Azabu Bldg.
|
||
8-12, Minami-Azabu 2-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106
|
||
|
||
juice (Japan Un*x I* Communication Environment) is a volunteer-operated, UNIX-based, personal communications network in Japan with approximately 30 sites.
|
||
You'll meet there the nice people like Norihiro Mita, the UNIX guru. It is
|
||
connected through a gateway to JUNET, a Japanese network of about 300 sites
|
||
including major universities and corporations, and through another gate way to
|
||
USENET in U.S. If your interest by the way is in the academic world,
|
||
regardless of MS-DOS or UNIX, there are BITNET nodes in Japan, too. The
|
||
contact point of BITNET here is Tokyo Science University (Tokyo Rika Daigaku).
|
||
|
||
The Ministry of Post and Telecommunications's consultative committee recommeded
|
||
in March 1990 to split the giant NTT corporation in 1995 into three entities:
|
||
the local access, long distance and mobile communications companies. (The
|
||
further split of the local access company, as in the case of AT&T in U.S., was
|
||
not in the recommendation.) While the Ministry of Finance (which still holds
|
||
the majority of NTT's shares) insists on a delay of the split decision till
|
||
1995 because of the recent nosedive of the NTT share price and the national
|
||
debate continues, NTT itself is in the midst of their ISDN (Integrated Services
|
||
Digital Network) implementation. Their INS (Information Network Service) Net
|
||
64 provides two 64K bps data channels and one 16K bps control signal channel
|
||
(2B+D) on the existing copper wire and started in the capital cities of Japan's
|
||
48 prefectures in 1988. INS Net 1500 use optical fibers to serve 23B+D
|
||
channels since 1989 and, if legally allowed, can provide movie channels etc.
|
||
that are now typically served by the cable networks or satellite broadcasts.
|
||
As of March 1990, there are 200 cities in Japan that are served by both INS Net
|
||
64 and Net 1500. By March, 1991, this number will grow to 940, which means all
|
||
major cities with population of 100,000. Since my Fujisawa City is as of
|
||
December 1989 serviced by INS Net 64, I could convert one of my two phone lines
|
||
to ISDN by paying a little over 10,000 yen (or a new line for paying 72,000
|
||
yen) and get Net 64 service for the monthly basic fee of 4,600 yen, equivalent
|
||
to two tone-dialing lines. (I am told by the local NTT office that I must,
|
||
however, wait approximately six months to obtain a DSU from NTT that is
|
||
required for ISDN connection. Is it why Carla Hills, the U.S. trade
|
||
negotiator, has recently added the DSUs in her list of items for the Japan-U.S.
|
||
trade discussions?) NIFTY-Serve since 1988 has demonstrated ISDN connection,
|
||
although formal service never materialized. Should I switch to ISDN? Will
|
||
ISDN offer a solution to this country where the long distance rates are
|
||
believed to be three times as expensive as in U.S.? We'll see!
|
||
|
||
Alternatives to NTT's long distance service are available since 1988. Call for
|
||
further information the "free dial" (toll free) numbers: 0120-11-0077 for DDI
|
||
(Daini Denden, Inc.; microwave towers), 0120-0088-82 for Japan Telecom (Nihon
|
||
Telecom; optical fibers along JR railroad tracks) and 0120-03-0077 for Teleway
|
||
(Nihon Kosoku Tsushin; optical fibers along expressways). Their service areas
|
||
are now limited to the Tokyo-Nagoya-Osaka-Sendai corridor, but their chargesare 20-30 percent less expensive and service areas expanding. Prior registra-
|
||
tion by mail is required. My experience with JT shows their lines a lot less
|
||
susceptible to noise, not requiring me to use MNP error correction.
|
||
|
||
KDD (Kokusai Denshin Denwa or "International Telegraph and Telephone") has long
|
||
had monopoly on Japan's overseas telecommunications. Alternatives to KDD's
|
||
overseas service began in October, 1989: instead of KDD's 001- overseas prefix,
|
||
use 0041- through ITJ (contact 0120-44-0041 for more information) or 0061-
|
||
through IDC (0120-03-0061). Service countries are in December 1989 limited to
|
||
U.S., Hong Kong and U.K., but being expanded month by month. Their services do
|
||
not require prior registration, and so can be used immediately.
|
||
|
||
The non-Japanese speaking people have made a great contribution to the BBS
|
||
movement in Japan in its short history. Japan's first BBS was run by Steve
|
||
Bellamy at a small store in the Sanno Hotel, downtown Tokyo, with his Apple
|
||
computer (was it in 1983?). His Kanto Central BBS later at 0473-79-0098,
|
||
now out of service, became in 1986-87 the largest personal computer-based BBS
|
||
in Japan and also made a big influence to the near-by BBS's such as MacEvent
|
||
Network. Asia Pacific BBS at 03-436-2180, sometimes erroneously called APG
|
||
BBS, now also out of service, ran on IBMPC/XT and RBBS-PC with Stovy Brown as
|
||
Sysop, and in 1986-88 boasted one of the best collections of public domain
|
||
software. Tokyo PC's superb, first generation BBS 03-374-2774 was operated1986-88 on RBBS-PC by "The Rabbi" (Alan Duboff). When he left in January 1987,
|
||
a multi-node on-line farewell party, the first of this kind, was held for The
|
||
Rabbi and his newly-wed wife Satoko, who watched with their lap-top at their
|
||
hotel in Tokyo the farewell speeches from Stephen Campbell, then TPC President,
|
||
in Tokyo PC, Ed Bracha on INN, and others on the other BBS's in the Greater
|
||
Tokyo area. In March 1990, Ray Penas started open test on his "first made-in-
|
||
Japan" bilingual BBS host program, VBBS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FURTHER CONTACT ABOUT THIS LIST
|
||
|
||
This list is available in Japan at the above BBS's, in U.S. at The OASis BBS,
|
||
Decatur, GA, 404-288-0547, the contact BBS of the Online Atlanta Society, and
|
||
in other countries of the world.
|
||
|
||
Contact by BBS: Sysop, Big Blue Skies BBS
|
||
0466-24-6090 (or from U.S. 011-81-466-24-6090)
|
||
Contact by mail: Yoshi Mikami
|
||
8-6, Kataseyama 4-chome
|
||
Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa-ken 251
|
||
Japan(The author of this edition of the Greater Tokyo International BBS List is
|
||
looking for persons who can continue to update it on a quarterly basis.)
|
||
|
||
End of BBSTOK5.DOC File
|
||
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