1249 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
1249 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 7, Number 33 13 August 1990
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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| / \ |
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| /|oo \ |
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| - FidoNews - (_| /_) |
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| _`@/_ \ _ |
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| FidoNet (r) | | \ \\ |
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| International BBS Network | (*) | \ )) |
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| Newsletter ______ |__U__| / \// |
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| / FIDO \ _//|| _\ / |
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| (________) (_/(_|(____/ |
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| (jm) |
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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Editor in Chief: Vince Perriello
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Editors Emeritii: Thom Henderson, Dale Lovell
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Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
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Copyright 1990, Fido Software. All rights reserved. Duplication
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and/or distribution permitted for noncommercial purposes only.
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For use in other circumstances, please contact Fido Software.
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FidoNews is published weekly by the System Operators of the
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FidoNet (r) International BBS Network. It is a compilation of
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individual articles contributed by their authors or authorized
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agents of the authors. The contribution of articles to this
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compilation does not diminish the rights of the authors.
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You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
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FidoNews. Article submission standards are contained in the file
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ARTSPEC.DOC, available from node 1:1/1. 1:1/1 is a Continuous
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Mail system, available for network mail 24 hours a day.
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Fido and FidoNet are registered trademarks of Tom Jennings of
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Fido Software, Box 77731, San Francisco CA 94107, USA and are
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used with permission.
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Opinions expressed in FidoNews articles are those of the authors
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and are not necessarily those of the Editor or of Fido Software.
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Most articles are unsolicited. Our policy is to publish every
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responsible submission received.
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Table of Contents
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1. EDITORIAL ................................................ 1
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2. ARTICLES ................................................. 2
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Fight-O-News! ............................................ 2
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A View From the Edge ..................................... 4
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Long Distance Competition Comes to Canada? ............... 6
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MYBEEF.ART ............................................... 8
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Networking the U.S.S.R ................................... 10
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3. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR .................................... 16
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Letter to the Editor ..................................... 16
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4. LATEST VERSIONS .......................................... 22
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Latest Software Versions ................................. 22
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And more!
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 1 13 Aug 1990
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=================================================================
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EDITORIAL
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=================================================================
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This week, I gave the whole archiving issue some serious thought.
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As usual, I went through the gamut of emotions and kept vacillating
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between wanting to write the flame of the century, and just quietly
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pulling the plug. All foolish thoughts. I think that's what friends
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are for. To help keep foolish thoughts from becoming foolish deeds.
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I should probably consult them even more often than I do.
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I have pretty much decided what I am going to do vis-a-vis
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compression methods for FidoNews. But I'm not up to composing the
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entire explanation right now. Besides, between Isaac Aziza and Saddam
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Hussein, I think we're busy enough for this week.
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On another front, we're trying something different this week. We're
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publishing an article that includes a picture. This picture is in GIF
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format. The filename syntax I have decided on is based on the current
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FidoNews issue and picture number, so the one picture this week will
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be named FN073301.GIF, which means the first picture in FidoNews
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Volume 7 Number 33.
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I don't know how all this is going to work out. It might be the only
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time I ever try this. We might find a format other than GIF that
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makes more sense for FidoNews. But it seems relatively harmless to
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try it once and see what happens. Besides, the story it accompanies
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is funny enough anyway!
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Cheers,
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Vince
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 2 13 Aug 1990
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=================================================================
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ARTICLES
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=================================================================
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[Editor's Note: This article was found, in leaflet format, at
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the recent Conclave '90 convention. With our usual efficiency,
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we located the responsible parties and arranged for permission
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to republish it here. After all, why shouldn't those of you who
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didn't get to Jersey have to miss out? I hope it goes without
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saying that this is all tongue-in-cheek. Please try to take it
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that way.]
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Fight-O-News!
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Volume 1, No. 6 Fidocon '90 Edition August 1, 1990
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MORAVSIK TAKES OVER FIGHT-O-NET!!!
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----------------------------------
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[Photograph in File FN073301.GIF]
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Morristown, NJ -- in an unexpected turn of events, Robert J.
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Moravsik, an attorney from Morris Plains, NJ has been named
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International Coordinator of Fight-O-Net, taking office
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immediately, according to wire services. Moravsik replaces
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Waylon & Madam as IC, and has already begun work on the tedious
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task of restoring control of the network to the general
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membership.
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In a press conference scheduled for later today, Moravsik is
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expected to announce the first phase of his "power monger"
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purge, naming several Fight-O-Criminals to face the
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excommunication squad. Reliable sources indicate that several
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persons have been arrested by the Echomail Police and will face
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prosecution for serious socioecho violations committed over the
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last several years. Moravsik is also expected to announce the
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lifting of the Iron Curtain that has kept most Fight-O-Net
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members in New Jersey under the heavy handed rule of the
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Deathnet Group Censor.
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A Moravsik spokesman, shortly after the IC appointment
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announcement, was quoted as saying "It's Bob-O's intention to
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liberate Nyet 107, the last bastion of totalitarianist rule in
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New Jersey, and possibly in all of Fight-O-Net North America."
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Moravsik is expected to announce his new cabinet later in the
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week.
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 3 13 Aug 1990
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SSS WORRIED
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-----------
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The Secret Sissy's Society (SSS), the governing body of DeathNet,
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issued a statement shortly after being informed of the Moravsik
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appointment. SSS Spokesthing Lord Dimwit Buonozo the Excessive
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stated that no democratic takeover of Fight-O-Net would be
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tolerated while the SSS says it's in control. "The appointment of
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Moravsik is meaningless. Any attempt at democracy that is not
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drafted or at least approved by the SSS will not be permitted and
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will not be tolerated. If Moravsik thinks he can have democracy
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without our approval, then we'll just have to invent enough nodes
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to cast enough votes to vote him out."
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When informed of possible opposition by the SSS, the Moravsik
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camp simply responded that "excommunicated nodes have no say in
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matters that concern the network."
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According to insiders, one of the first people to be charged with
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serious socioecho violations will be Emperor Fabozo Gordinski.
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Gordinski has been charged with doctoring origin lines and node
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numbers in order to deceive conference participants. It is not
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known at this time if Gordinski is actually in custody.
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Moravik's rise to power began with his uncontested election to
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the post of Moderator of the SYSOP conference, his hard-hitting
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investigation of the ConGate scandal, and his revelation of
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echomail profiteering in the network. Once an unwilling member
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of the DeathNet regime, Moravsik defected in May of 1989 and
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devoted his energies to uncovering rampant abuses, censorship,
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and coverups in that organization.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 4 13 Aug 1990
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Preston McMurry
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A Sometime Sysop
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A View From the Edge
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Is it just me, or does it seem like there is a general lack
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of tolerance in some echoes? Specifically, the HUMOR echo and
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some of the adult echoes. Users seem to take the controversial
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nature of those echoes as an license to violate the FidoNet
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rule against flaming. Constantly. With great vehemance.
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Granted, some people are going to be offended by the very nature
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of certain echoes (GAYNEWS, for example). But that is not an
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excuse to join an echo just to criticize it. Nor is THAT an
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excuse to turn on full afterburners in response. You don't need
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to respond to twits. You shouldn't respond to twits.
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If you see an attack on something you believe in, or on
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someone you like, it is human nature to want to answer the
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challenge. Instead, think about whether you really should
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reply. If you violently disagree with what you just read,
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a reply may not be the best idea ...
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Chances are if you don't respond, the twit will not continue
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his/her disruption. The only reason twits do twit-like things
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is to get attention. Call them 'Terro-twits.' Remember, humor
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is the best response. And a string of expletives isn't, despite
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what Eddie Murphy might believe, funny.
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I can deal with 'terro-twits.' I know what their game is, and I
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don't let it bother me. But what really gets me is those folks
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who respond to 'terro-twits': They cause the problem to get
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blown up out of all proportion to the original damage done and,
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in my opinion, are even more annoying than the original dummy
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who started the whole fracas.
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USERS, if you feel that another user has been 'excessively
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annoying,' let your sysop know. S/he can do something about it.
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You can't. Especially not by escalating the verbal war. Let the
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moderators and sysops handle the twits - it's their job.
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SYSOPS, if the twit is on another board, let the twit's home
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sysop know - not the whole echo. Try to deal with the problem
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at the lowest level possible.
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MODERATORS, keep a closer eye on your echoes. If a 'terro-twit'
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strikes, don't try to reason with him/her. Just send netmail
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to the originating board letting the sysop know that one of
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his/her users is being a weenie. If the behavior continues to
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occur (and don't forget the inherent delays in echo - there may
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still be some twit garbage in the system), cut that board off.
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 5 13 Aug 1990
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As a user, it bugs me when I have to wade through a single
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'terro-twit' incursion, and several dozen indignant responses,
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just to get a few on-topic messages. As a sometime sysop, it
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costs me.
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I now return you to your regularly scheduled newsletter ...
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 6 13 Aug 1990
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Jack Decker
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1:154/8
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LONG DISTANCE COMPETITION COMES TO CANADA?
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An article in the August 6, 1990 issue of _Communications Week_
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(a U.S. telecommunications industry publication) tells how
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Toronto-based Unitel (a company jointly owned by the Canadian
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Pacific Railway and Rogers Cable) wants to build a long
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distance voice network and link it to the networks of the local
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exchange carriers owned and operated by Bell Canada. Of
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course, Bell Canada is opposed to this, saying that Canada is
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too small in terms of population (25 million as opposed to some
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250 million in the U.S.) to support two networks carrying long
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distance traffic. Unitel feels that competition would force
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Bell Canada to lower its rates and improve its network.
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What's interesting and potentially important to Canadian sysops
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is one statement in the article: "Unitel ... already competes
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with Bell Canada for long distance data traffic."
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A previous article, in the January 29, 1990 issue of _Network
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World_ (another U.S. telecommunications industry publication)
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clarifies the situation: "Although [CNCP Telecommunications,
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the predecessor to Unitel] provides some switched services
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today on its long-haul, fiber-optic, microwave network, it is
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prohibited from dumping switched voice onto the public
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network."
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Later in the same article: "If CNCP was able to enter the
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switched voice market ... the company would follow the same
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tack it has taken with facsimile service, which it began
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offering in 1989 at prices 25% to 30% below those available
|
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through the public switched network.
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"CNCP offers fax service over a network of several Northern
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Telecom, Inc. DMS-250 switches, which also handle the
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company's private switched voice traffic."
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Stop and think about this for a moment... don't fax machines
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use plain old ordinary garden variety telephone lines to
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communicate with each other? So the question arises, if CNCP
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(now Unitel) can handle fax transmissions, why couldn't someone
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sign up for that service, then unplug the fax machines, plug in
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a couple of telephones, and carry on a conversation at rates
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30% below the rates offered by their local phone company?
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Well, apparently, the answer is that they could, except that
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it's not "legal", and some equipment has been installed to
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prevent this. To further quote from the Network World article:
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"Users access the fax network by dialing into their local
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carriers, which maintain dedicated links to the CNCP long-haul
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network. Although this network could be used to transmit
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switched voice to the local exchange, CNCP is currently
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required to install devices that shut down a circuit if voice
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traffic is transmitted for more than a minute."
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 7 13 Aug 1990
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If I were a Canadian sysop, and were moving any volume of mail
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via long distance within Canada, I'd sure want to investigate
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the availability and pricing of access to that Unitel fax/data
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network. After all, modem tones are modem tones, whether they
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come from the modem within a fax machine or the modem attached
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to a personal computer. Their network should be able to handle
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either one perfectly well. If the folks at Unitel aren't
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currently courting personal computer users as customers, it's
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probably only because they don't realize that there's a market
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out there.
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Personally, I live about two miles south of the border, so this
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service is of no real use to me. But since most Canadian
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sysops probably don't have access to these U.S. publications, I
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thought I'd at least pass the word on this.
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If you'd like to have competition in voice long distance
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traffic as well (and get some of the lower long distance rates
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that we in the states have enjoyed for the last few years),
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this might be a good time to let the CRTC know about it. The
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CRTC has already rejected competition in switched voice
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services once, back in 1985, but if you want it now, perhaps
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you can convince them that the time is right. In the meantime,
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let me know if you have any success in getting your echomail
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via Unitel's network, and if the savings are as good as
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claimed.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 8 13 Aug 1990
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Richard Bash
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1:161/357
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MY BEEF
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Dear whomever:
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OK, I read with considerably less than glowing
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enthusiasm the comments of the person who wrote the
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editorial in FIDO731.NWS. That genius did not leave a name
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for all his/her efforts. Perhaps that name is familiar to
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more senior SysOps (I have played this Fido game for about
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a year). I presume that because there was no name that
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he/she decided to hide behind the skirt of obscurity.
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So much for the niceties. I have a major beef about
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the use of the LZH style archive. Regardless of whatever
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possible merits it may have (meaning that it is in the
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public domain, it's free to all the cheapos in Fido, etc.),
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the LHARC routine and its LZH tag on files archived with it
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are anything BUT standard. Look, folks, there are two
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standards: ARC and ZIP. If you don't like ARC, go to ZIP.
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Another point (you folks'll love this one) is that
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LHARC is a Japanese product. Frankly, I'm fed up to my
|
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eyeballs with Japanese products! So, show a little
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patriotism and pick an American archiver, for Pete's sake.
|
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All right, you say, this bozo's upset about our
|
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Japanese cousins, doesn't understand the love-hate
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relationship the gurus of Fido have with SEA, doesn't
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understand that an amatuer network requires a free software
|
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package, and doesn't understand that Phil Katz (author of
|
||
the ZIP method of archiving) requires registration.
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Wrong on all counts, sweetheart. I am certain there
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are far more articulate SysOps out there than this tired,
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greying head. Those who are can better phrase this:
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frankly, I don't care about your romance or lack of it with
|
||
SEA. They seem to be a barrier here, so let's go around
|
||
them. Fido should have dropped ARC a zillion years ago in
|
||
favor of ZIP. Katz has a good product. Let's use it and
|
||
move on. Enough of this LZH nonsense.
|
||
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Dear leaders of Fido, either ARC the files or ZIP the
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files. But do one or the other and do it now, please. No
|
||
more surprises. Thanks for your apt attention.
|
||
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 9 13 Aug 1990
|
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|
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|
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Love and kisses,
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||
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|
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Richard Bash
|
||
Combat Arms BBS - 1:161/357
|
||
2869 Grove Way
|
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Castro Valley, CA 94546
|
||
BBS: 415-537-1777
|
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Voice: 415-538-6544
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|
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 7-33 Page 10 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
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|
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Dennis McClain-Furmanski
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Fido 1:275/2.1
|
||
|
||
|
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Networking The Soviet Union
|
||
|
||
Since the Iron Curtain has been pulling aside, communications
|
||
with what was the Eastern Bloc has been on the increase. This
|
||
is due to the relaxation of what's called security restrictions
|
||
on both sides, and to the interest and commitment of some of the
|
||
just plain people involved. Already, there has been a regular
|
||
Aeroflot flight scheduled across the Bering Straits to Nome,
|
||
Alaska, carrying visitors and mail between newfound friends.
|
||
Several Soviet citizens involved in that nation's computer
|
||
community have been travelling here regularly for conferences,
|
||
and last June held one of their own in Moscow.
|
||
|
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The time is right for the opening of the East, and its
|
||
introduction into our network. As Fido grew, the idea that it
|
||
was for everybody to be able to communicate with everybody else
|
||
has been maintained. We are now at the point where we can act to
|
||
expand that principle significantly. As they said in "The Six
|
||
Million Dollar Man", we have the technology. First, some
|
||
background.
|
||
|
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I'm the senior editor for an international newsletter for Apple
|
||
users called The Road Apple. Last summer, the publisher, Al
|
||
Martin of Portland, OR was at an Apple conference in Kansas
|
||
City, MO where he met Vladimir Federov of Moscow. Vladimir is
|
||
the chief of a Soviet company called LIDAR which produces laser
|
||
spectrography equipment for pollution research, that runs on
|
||
their Apple //e clone, the Pravetz-82. Last January, Al made a
|
||
visit to the Soviet Union to visit LIDAR and the Pravetz
|
||
factory, and asked Vladimir to act as our Soviet Union editor.
|
||
Vladimir is also part of the International Computer Club in
|
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Moscow, and helped to arrange a conference in Moscow last June
|
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for any hardware and software companies to introduce themselves
|
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to the Soviet marketplace, and make connections with Soviet
|
||
outlets so we may import what is produced there. With currency
|
||
still not convertable, business arrangements are slow going. But
|
||
the personal contacts are booming.
|
||
|
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The International Computer Club consists of users of the Soviet
|
||
computers, the Apple clone - Pravetz-82, and the IBM clone,
|
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Pravetz-86. (Pravetz is the birthplace of the president of
|
||
Bulgaria, where the original computer factory was built. The
|
||
number is the year of that model's introduction). There's also
|
||
some western computers that have found their way there, and a
|
||
domestic CP/M machine, but these are vastly outnumbered by the
|
||
Pravetz models.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 11 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Pravetz-86 is given primarily to engineers and scientists,
|
||
while the Pravetz-82 is distributed to the schools around the
|
||
country, and to the Red Army. (The Red Army's administration
|
||
uses a Cyrillic alphabet version of the thrice superseded
|
||
AppleWorks 1.3 to take care of things, meaning either that
|
||
program is much more powerful that most suppose, or else that we
|
||
have little to fear from the Red Army in terms of organization).
|
||
There are enough of these machines in use that many people are
|
||
familiar enough with them to perform their own modifications,
|
||
and to undertake tasks other than what were originally planned
|
||
for the machine. As yet, the machines are not available for
|
||
private ownership, but that may change along with everything
|
||
else, and there are enough of them installed and used for
|
||
hobbyists to have access at the workplace.
|
||
|
||
Those hobbyists have banded together, and are taking every step
|
||
they can to expand their computing horizons beyond their
|
||
national borders. I propose that the time is right for us to
|
||
reach towards an already outstretched hand, and offer our
|
||
expertise and especially our existing software, so that we can
|
||
form a bond with these fellow computerists.
|
||
|
||
To accomplish the extension of the network to the Soviet Union,
|
||
we first of all need to transfer software to them. Since there
|
||
is no Apple compatible Fidonet software available (I'm working
|
||
on rewriting PUPPY, with Tom Jenning's blessings, but it's slow
|
||
going) they would need to have MS-DOS compatible versions of
|
||
BBSs, mailers and FOSSILS. All of their computers use 5.25 inch
|
||
drives, the IBM compat drives being 360 K only.
|
||
|
||
I have already sent them a series of disks from a local sysop,
|
||
with the complete Technical Standards and Policy statements,
|
||
Remote Access, X00 and Front Door. The SPACE Echo moderator, Bev
|
||
Freed, has offered to send me a complete version of OPUS. What
|
||
I would ask of the members of this network is that they send
|
||
complete working copies (unconfigured, of course) of the
|
||
available software of all sorts, so that it can be transferred
|
||
to them for use. Also, any technical assistance and advice that
|
||
can be written down and passed along would be appreciated.
|
||
|
||
To get this to them, couriers must be used. The Soviet postal
|
||
systems has taken it upon themselves to protect the Motherland
|
||
from subversive elements, by promptly losing packages containing
|
||
disks, or X-raying them into oblivion. Hand carrying them is
|
||
allowed, and no problems have been encountered with Soviet
|
||
customs over bringing disks into the country. Security
|
||
restrictions have been lifted, but only in person it seems.
|
||
Micromanagement appears to be an international concept.
|
||
|
||
To get this software to them, then, I would ask everybody
|
||
interested in participating to send the disks to me. I am in
|
||
contact through business and hobby with several people who make
|
||
trips between us, from either origin. I can arrange for the
|
||
packages to be at the appropriate place for delivery to the
|
||
person who will in turn get them to Moscow. This is STRICTLY due
|
||
to the problem with the postal service there, and not to any
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 12 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
security situation. Baggage is often checked, as many of the
|
||
people who make the trip can attest. They can also attest that
|
||
they have no questions asked of them by customs concerning the
|
||
content of the disks. Besides, I'm not asking for anything that
|
||
isn't available publically already. If the KGB wanted it, they
|
||
would have logged on to our systems long ago and downloaded it.
|
||
|
||
Shareware fees are somewhat of a problem. Since the currency
|
||
isn't convertable from the Soviet Union (in fact even *within*
|
||
the Soviet Union) payment arrangements are tough. The I.C.C. is
|
||
dedicated to honoring all copyrights and fees for software, as
|
||
opposed to most of the rest of the USSR, since there's no
|
||
copyright adherence agreement between them and anyone. I can't
|
||
speak for the I.C.C., but I do know that they would try to make
|
||
any arrangement possible with software authors. I will go out on
|
||
a limb, and request that in the interest of this project,
|
||
shareware fees be forsaken. This would of course be entirely
|
||
voluntary, but this is after all a good will gesture. Please
|
||
consider it. If you can figure out how to create a trade
|
||
agreement with them, I'm certain it will be honored. Money
|
||
saide, copyrights and anti-piracy measures are strictly enforced
|
||
by the I.C.C.
|
||
|
||
Lest someone get the idea that this is a (not so) clever ruse to
|
||
obtain software for my own use, let me state that my own MS-DOS
|
||
compatibility is in the form of a daughterboard in my Apple
|
||
IIgs, called a PC/Transporter. It has no BIOS, but only a
|
||
translator program to allow the Apple side to take care of all
|
||
the details. I do not have the ability to run *any* FOSSIL, so
|
||
this software will do me absolutely no good. If I could run
|
||
something myself, would I be rewriting PUPPY for the Apple? If
|
||
you wish, sealed packages with description on the outside can be
|
||
sent. I have no intention of opening or inspecting any package
|
||
addressed to them.
|
||
|
||
(A thought occurs to me here, that this would be the optimal
|
||
time to create a network library of the available software. If
|
||
there's enough response, it could be started at this time. Y'all
|
||
decide that.)
|
||
|
||
Once sufficient software is in the hands of the people from the
|
||
I.C.C., they can go to work building a network of their own, and
|
||
learning what is necessary to keep it running. From what I've
|
||
seen of their work, that will take nearly no time at all.
|
||
|
||
The next step, of course, will be for the net to make the
|
||
arrangements as to where they will fit in. I.E., will they be an
|
||
extension to Zone 2? (Unlikely. Ground line communications in
|
||
the U.S.S.R. is notoriously bad. Calling out to western Europe
|
||
probably won't work). Will they be a Zone of their own? What is
|
||
needed here is (1) educating them as to how to work with a gate,
|
||
and (2) setting one up on this end. These details are beyond my
|
||
humble comprehension, being a mere User and Moderator. I defer to
|
||
the FidoPowers to forge this concept. [Sorry, I didn't finish
|
||
this in time for the New Jersey meeting. I trust you all found
|
||
enough to argue about anyway. ;) ].
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 13 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
With the administration of the network connection decided, the
|
||
final step will be to create a stable and consistent network
|
||
signal feed. There's been some investigation done along these
|
||
lines. I've been working with NASA on a volunteer basis, trying
|
||
to arrange network access information for all the schools
|
||
involved in the S.E.E.D.S. project (the tomato seed growth
|
||
experiment with seeds kept on the Long Duration Exposure
|
||
Facility satellite for 6.5 years), and the Video Teleconference
|
||
project. Our plans are to augment these projects with
|
||
information on how to access the net, and therefore the SPACE
|
||
Echo, so that participants, children, educators, scientists,
|
||
administrators and astronauts/cosmonauts alike, can carry on
|
||
follow-up conversations pertaining to the subjects they're
|
||
involved in.
|
||
|
||
The SPACE Echo moderator, Bev Freed, has already agreed to offer
|
||
her services to administrate the traffic through her National
|
||
Space Society BBS (1:129/104). Tom Jennings has given his
|
||
copyright release for the public distribution of NODELIST
|
||
divided up into area codes (contingent on the concurrent
|
||
availability of the unaltered NODELIST), for the use by the
|
||
schools to find their nearest available nodes. NASA has been
|
||
deeply interested in the project, to the point of assigning a
|
||
representative of the Educational Services division at Langely
|
||
Research Center to act as point of contact. NASA Administrator
|
||
Admiral Richard Truly has expressed personal interest in this
|
||
project, and requested a synopsis of the structure and operation
|
||
of Fidonet, which I subsequently provided.
|
||
|
||
The majority, but not the entirety, of my involvement of this
|
||
project has been altrusitic. One of the Video Teleconference
|
||
projects was to be a link between Johnson Space Center and
|
||
Moscow, to reunite the Apollo-Soyuz cosmonauts and astronauts.
|
||
There was talk of including computer communications with this,
|
||
and subsequent conferences. It occured to me that if they can
|
||
make it happen whne they want to, then perhaps with enough
|
||
reason, they would maintain one measley voice channel over their
|
||
satellite network for an hour a night, so that all of us might
|
||
benefit from the connection. To this end, I'm still working on
|
||
the project, and doing my best to give NASA reason for gratidue
|
||
enough to do this.
|
||
|
||
An alternate technology that could be used is amateur
|
||
packet-switched radio. Although I've been given contacts to
|
||
discuss this with, I've not yet persued it. It's a more likely
|
||
channel to work out for the connection, but I have a personal
|
||
habit of persuing the pipe dreams first. They're more imbued
|
||
with "neatism" when they work out.
|
||
|
||
What I am proposing then, is a three part involvement in this
|
||
project by the members of Fidonet.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 14 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
(1) Collection and shipping of software to the Soviet Union,
|
||
specifically the International Computer Club, that will give
|
||
them the ability to form a network, with the expressed intention
|
||
of joining Fidonet. As I am already involved doing this, I
|
||
offer my services as the collection and distribution center.
|
||
Other offers of people heading over there, to carry software to
|
||
the I.C.C., would be gratefully accepted. The point is to get it
|
||
there, not who is to do it.
|
||
|
||
(2) Network arrangement as necessary to link the Soviet Union's
|
||
net into our own. You've done it before, although the process is
|
||
beyond me. You can do it again.
|
||
|
||
(3) Electronic communication to be established by whatever means
|
||
available, with a signal to noise ratio able to handle modem
|
||
quality transmission, and with a consistency to allow regular
|
||
network mail. I have some ideas and running projects, and am
|
||
quite open to any suggestions and/or offers on this matter.
|
||
|
||
The final message I have is to answer those who might ask why
|
||
I'm doing this, and what my underlying concerns are. The answer
|
||
is very simple.
|
||
|
||
World peace.
|
||
|
||
I figure that if enough just plain old citizens become friends,
|
||
and learn to communicate with each other, then ultimately, their
|
||
respective governments will do the same. The sooner we do this,
|
||
the sooner it will come about. Sure, it's a corny reason to
|
||
some. This is what happens when a hippie grows up, but doesn't
|
||
grow out of it. If my intentions are still suspect, then by all
|
||
means, question them. Even cut me off for being excessively
|
||
idealistic and weird. But if you do, please, somebody carry out
|
||
this project. The means is unimportant. The end is very
|
||
important. Don't confuse the government with the people.
|
||
Fidonet has always been for the people to communicate through.
|
||
We have a power to change things that's not often considered,
|
||
since it's very much a background operation.
|
||
|
||
Bill Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, the most
|
||
successful self-help organization in the world, once said "No
|
||
group will ever change the world by setting out to do so. If
|
||
there is any hope for our troubled world, it will be from those
|
||
groups who merely give each of us the ability to change our own
|
||
little part of it." We can change our own little part of it. We
|
||
already have. Let's help some others change their own little
|
||
part of it, and join with our part. We've nothing to gain,
|
||
except friends.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dennis McClain-Furmanski
|
||
Moderator, APPLE Echo, and Computer Hippie
|
||
1:275/2.1
|
||
1:275/32 (netmail)
|
||
2565 Shore Drive
|
||
Virginia Beach, VA 23451
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 15 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
(804) 496-3839 (voice)
|
||
|
||
Al Martin, Publisher
|
||
The Road Apple
|
||
1121 NE 177th
|
||
Portland, OR 97230
|
||
(503) 254-3874
|
||
|
||
International Computer Club, and Vladimir Federov:
|
||
103813, Moscow, Centre, CCCP
|
||
PROEZD Serova, 4
|
||
"ZNANIE" Building
|
||
V. Federov / ICC - A2 LINK
|
||
USSR
|
||
Phone Moscow, 921-0902, Fax 1500 to 0500 Greenwich Mean Time
|
||
voice at other times.
|
||
Telex, 411630 (prefered).
|
||
A SASE will get you an I.C.C. brochure. Snail mail is
|
||
notoriously slow.
|
||
|
||
My thanks to Bev Freed, George Peace and Tom Jennings for all
|
||
the assistance and encouragement I've received.
|
||
|
||
Peace.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 16 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Jack Decker
|
||
1:154/8
|
||
|
||
Letter to the Editor:
|
||
|
||
This is my response to Steve Bonine's "Letter to the Editor"
|
||
regarding the use of LHARC as a compression method for
|
||
FidoNews. Normally, I would not jump on someone who's only
|
||
expressing their opinion, even if I disagree. But for some odd
|
||
reason, Steve felt the need to drag my name into the issue by
|
||
making the comment: "Considering the content, I was led to
|
||
wonder why Jack Decker had been asked to write a guest
|
||
editorial for FidoNews."
|
||
|
||
Now, it should be fairly obvious to anyone who knows anything
|
||
about FidoNews that I had nothing to do with that editorial.
|
||
For one thing, the writer begins the article by saying, "Vince
|
||
foolishly keeps handing me the keys to FidoNews." I can think
|
||
of a few people that Vince might hand the "keys to FidoNews"
|
||
to, but somehow I doubt that I'm one of them. For another
|
||
thing, the writer later goes on to say: "Systems requesting
|
||
FidoNews, FNews*.Arc, or anything similar WILL have their
|
||
requests honored, but with LHArc flavored files. If this means
|
||
my system will no longer be listed as 1/1, so be it. There's
|
||
nothing special about having a 1/ listing; it's actually a pain
|
||
in the butt, done only because someone I respect greatly
|
||
asked." Now Steve knows that I am not now and never have been
|
||
listed as 1/1. In fact, if you look in the nodelist for the
|
||
listing for 1/1, and then do a search for the same phone number
|
||
elsewhere in the nodelist, you quickly discover that this node
|
||
is operated by Randall Greylock.
|
||
|
||
For some reason, Steve Bonine seems to feel the need to drag my
|
||
name into conversations that I'm not participating in, and that
|
||
have nothing to do with me. He made a rather nasty (and
|
||
totally uncalled-for) crack about me in the REGION11 conference
|
||
shortly after he stepped down as ZC, and was rather roundly
|
||
castigated for it by other participants of the echo. On the
|
||
other hand, it's true that I have been a rather outspoken
|
||
proponent of using a more efficient archiving method than ARC,
|
||
first for echomail and then for FidoNews and the Nodediffs, so
|
||
perhaps this comment was intended as sort of a backhanded
|
||
compliment. Or maybe it's just that Steve and I rarely agreed
|
||
on anything, but more often that not, the opinions of the
|
||
"fellow sysops" that Steve seems so concerned about (so
|
||
concerned that he would keep sticking them with higher phone
|
||
bills than are really necessary by forcing everyone to keep
|
||
shipping stuff around that has been compressed with ARC) tended
|
||
to side with my opinions rather than his (it was a close call
|
||
sometimes, but I think Steve's opinions were more
|
||
representative of the old-line Fidonet power structure than of
|
||
the "average sysop").
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 17 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
Much as I hate to under the circumstances, I do have to agree
|
||
with Steve that it would have been nice to have at least one
|
||
week's warning that a change was coming. My batch file was
|
||
"broken" by the change, too. On the other hand, this was one
|
||
time when I was happy to have to fix my batch file! It's now
|
||
set up to receive and process FidoNews in LHARC format, and I
|
||
have no desire to change it back to using ARC.
|
||
|
||
Steve make the comment: "I was amazed, upon reading the
|
||
editorial, to find that I had been forced to use products of
|
||
SEA. Silly me! All these years I've been unpacking FidoNews
|
||
using non-SEA products, and that was wrong!" Well, in
|
||
re-reading the editorial I didn't find any statement saying
|
||
that anyone had been forced to use a SEA product. What I do
|
||
find is a statement that the creators of ARC are making
|
||
statements to the effect that ARC has become "the industry
|
||
standard." I disagree with that notion, since many sysops have
|
||
abandoned ARC for newer, better, and (in some cases) more
|
||
freely-available compressors. If ARC is making the claim to
|
||
being "the industry standard" in part because it's still seen
|
||
as the "official" compression method for Fidonet, then I feel
|
||
it is our duty to stop showing favoritism to the products of
|
||
one company when most of the sysops in Fidonet rarely use ARC
|
||
for any reason other than to unARC FidoNews and Nodediffs.
|
||
|
||
Please note carefully: I have been accused in the past of
|
||
being anti-SEA. I am NOT. In fact, I wish that the latest
|
||
version of GroupMail (which overcomes most of the deficiencies
|
||
of earlier versions) was more widely used in Fidonet. I just
|
||
happen to feel that Fidonet should not be lending "official
|
||
support" to the products of any one company over that of
|
||
another.
|
||
|
||
Steve concludes with: "I can remember when the editor of
|
||
FidoNews CARED about FidoNet." That's a cheap shot. Actually,
|
||
I think the editor of FidoNews cares a lot about Fidonet. He
|
||
cares enough to be part of a team that has released one of the
|
||
finest pieces of software available in Fidonet (BinkleyTerm), a
|
||
program that is superior to some of the commercial programs,
|
||
and has made it freely available, without requesting any
|
||
payment at all from non-commercial users. I think that shows
|
||
that he cares plenty about Fidonet. What software have you
|
||
given to the net, Steve? What have you ever done for the net
|
||
besides trying to find new and creative ways to kick people out
|
||
of it? (Okay, that's MY cheap shot for the day... but from my
|
||
vantage point, it was very true that Steve expended far more
|
||
energy trying to get certain people, me especially, kicked out
|
||
of the net than he ever spent in giving anything to the net as
|
||
a whole. I understand that he has some ardent supporters
|
||
within Net 115, but relatively few outside that net. Of
|
||
course, one could always take the view that anyone who was not
|
||
a supporter of Steve probably didn't last long in Net 115.
|
||
Steve was one of the most vocal proponents of keeping
|
||
geographic restrictions in Fidonet, and I still have to wonder
|
||
why).
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 18 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
I would like to conclude this article with the letter that I
|
||
sent to Randall Greylock on this issue:
|
||
|
||
Message #123, Area "NetMail"
|
||
From: Jack Decker
|
||
To: Randall Greylock Tue 07 Aug 90 10:52
|
||
Subject: FidoNews compression
|
||
|
||
cc: Vince Perriello 132/491
|
||
cc: George Peace 270/101
|
||
|
||
I just wanted to let you know that I for one very much
|
||
appreciate the fact that you have started using LHARC for
|
||
compression of FidoNews. I feel that it is highly appropriate
|
||
to do this for three reasons:
|
||
|
||
1) LHARC is about as close to a public domain product as you
|
||
can get, and is therefore highly suitable for use in an amateur
|
||
communications network,
|
||
|
||
2) LHARC compresses much better than ARC, and is sometimes even
|
||
better than ZIP (especially on text-based files), thus saving
|
||
everyone money on transfer times,
|
||
|
||
3) LHARC decompressors are available for just about every type
|
||
of computer for which Fidonet-compatible software is available,
|
||
due to the wide availability of source code.
|
||
|
||
I know that you know all of the above (indeed, I think you made
|
||
essentially the same points in your editorial) but it bears
|
||
repeating. Besides all of that, the fact is that the ONLY
|
||
reason that many sysops even keep a copy of ARC around anymore
|
||
is to have the ability to decompress fidonet-related files and
|
||
the OCCASIONAL ARC file that a user may upload (which is often
|
||
promptly converted to some other format, such as LZH, ZIP, or
|
||
PAK).
|
||
|
||
It's also worth pointing out that many of us had to change our
|
||
batch files to accommodate the .LZH format FidoNews... I did
|
||
not mind doing that a bit, since I realize the savings
|
||
involved! But if I have to change my batch files to go back
|
||
and handle FidoNews in the inefficient ARC format again, I
|
||
don't think I'll bother.
|
||
|
||
I would truly like to see the NODEDIFF's distributed in .LZH
|
||
format also. I think the time has come to make this change,
|
||
which would probably collectively save the sysops of Fidonet
|
||
several hundred dollars each year.
|
||
|
||
You will probably get a few complaints from those who basically
|
||
say "but we've never done it this way." Please ignore them.
|
||
If Fidonet had never changed, we'd still all be using 1200 bps
|
||
modems, XMODEM derivatives for file transfers, and ARC only for
|
||
compression of echomail (hardly any major echomail distributor
|
||
uses ARC as the primary compression method anymore). In the
|
||
near future I suspect we will be looking at a new nodelist
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 19 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
format, a new format for message packets, and other changes
|
||
that will make Fidonet more efficient (and give it greater
|
||
ability to interconnect with other networks). The only things
|
||
that don't change are DEAD. The change to the use of a more
|
||
efficient compression method for FidoNews and Nodediffs is LONG
|
||
overdue, and I'm glad to see that you've taken this initiative.
|
||
THANK YOU!
|
||
|
||
Jack
|
||
|
||
[end of copied message]
|
||
|
||
One afterthought... here's a suggestion for Fidonews: It would
|
||
be nice if there were a piece of software running on 1:1/1 that
|
||
could scan the netmail area for messages starting with a
|
||
certain keyword sequence, and if such a message is found,
|
||
convert the text of the message to an article file. For
|
||
example, if the message started with the line:
|
||
|
||
ARTICLE: MYTEXT.ART
|
||
|
||
...and ended with the line:
|
||
|
||
ARTICLE END
|
||
|
||
...then the text found between those keywords would be
|
||
converted to an article file for Fidonews! This would make
|
||
submission of short articles much easier for some (especially
|
||
those in other Zones, who may be reluctant to attempt a file
|
||
attach to 1:1/1), since it would allow those short articles to
|
||
be submitted via netmail. I don't know if Vince or Randall
|
||
would be open to using such a piece of software, though... what
|
||
do you think, guys?
|
||
|
||
[Editor's Response:
|
||
|
||
I find myself in the interesting situation of agreeing with you.
|
||
Harry thinks that's about the funniest thing that has happened
|
||
to me this year. Maybe he's right.
|
||
|
||
I do have two comments to make on your message, however. I think
|
||
that you slammed Steve just a trifle harder than was necessary,
|
||
and I believe that, in retrospect, his time at the helm in Zone
|
||
1 was about as good as it could have been. I see no need to spit
|
||
on his grave now. We can wait and see how it all looks in about
|
||
a year, when it's easier to look at his tenure in the proper
|
||
perspective. Maybe you'll be surprised at how you feel then.
|
||
|
||
As for your submission idea, Send Code <chuckle>.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 20 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 21 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
From: Bob Beilstein of 260/369.0
|
||
To: Vince Perriello of 1/1.0
|
||
Subj: Please don't change things yet AGAIN (please?)!
|
||
|
||
I just read your Fidonews editorial, Vince.
|
||
|
||
While I was NOT happy with the change to LHARC, I would be even
|
||
less happy with having to change my batch files yet again!
|
||
|
||
I really hope you will just leave things as they now are, and
|
||
continue to use LHARC.
|
||
|
||
I just wish the nodelist came LHARC'ed!
|
||
|
||
/ Bob
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Thanks for the support. We'll have an editorial next week in
|
||
which we'll announce our decision. -- Vince]
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 22 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
LATEST VERSIONS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Latest Software Versions
|
||
|
||
MS-DOS Systems
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
DMG 2.93 Phoenix 1.3 TAG 2.5f*
|
||
Fido 12s+ QuickBBS 2.64 TBBS 2.1
|
||
Lynx 1.30 RBBS 17.3A TComm/TCommNet 3.4
|
||
Kitten 2.16 RBBSmail 17.3A Telegard 2.5
|
||
Maximus 1.00 RemoteAccess 0.04a* TPBoard 6.1
|
||
Opus 1.13+* SLBBS 1.77* Wildcat! 2.15
|
||
PCBoard 14.2 Socrates 1.00 XBBS 1.13
|
||
|
||
Network Node List Other
|
||
Mailers Version Utilities Version Utilities Version
|
||
|
||
BinkleyTerm 2.40* EditNL 4.00 ARC 7.0*
|
||
D'Bridge 1.30 MakeNL 2.20 ARCAsim 2.30
|
||
Dutchie 2.90C ParseList 1.30 ARCmail 2.07
|
||
FrontDoor 1.99c* Prune 1.40 ConfMail 4.00
|
||
PRENM 1.47 SysNL 3.11 Crossnet v1.5
|
||
SEAdog 4.51b XlatList 2.90 EMM 2.02
|
||
TIMS 1.0(Mod8)* XlaxDiff 2.35* Gmail 2.05
|
||
XlaxNode 2.35* GROUP 2.16
|
||
GUS 1.30
|
||
INTERPCB 1.20
|
||
LHARC 1.13
|
||
MSG 4.1
|
||
MSGED 1.99
|
||
PK[UN]ZIP 1.10
|
||
QM 1.0
|
||
QSORT 4.03
|
||
Sirius 1.0w
|
||
SLMAIL 1.35
|
||
StarLink 1.01
|
||
TagMail 2.20
|
||
TCOMMail 2.2
|
||
Telemail 1.20
|
||
TMail 1.15
|
||
TPBNetEd 3.2
|
||
TosScan 1.00
|
||
UFGATE 1.03
|
||
XRS 3.40
|
||
ZmailQ 1.12*
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 23 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
Macintosh
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software Network Mailers Other Utilities
|
||
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
Red Ryder Host v2.1b10 Tabby 2.2 MacArc 0.04
|
||
Mansion 7.15 Copernicus 1.0d* ArcMac 1.3
|
||
WWIV (Mac) 3.0 StuffIt 1.6b1*
|
||
FBBS 0.91* TImport 1.331
|
||
Hermes 0.88* TExport 1.32
|
||
Timestamp 1.6
|
||
Tset 1.3
|
||
Import 3.2
|
||
Export 3.21
|
||
Sundial 3.2
|
||
PreStamp 3.2
|
||
OriginatorII 2.0
|
||
AreaFix 1.6
|
||
Mantissa 3.21
|
||
Zenith 1.5
|
||
UNZIP 1.02b
|
||
|
||
Amiga
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software Network Mailers Other Utilities
|
||
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
Paragon 2.06+ BinkleyTerm 1.00 AmigArc 0.23
|
||
TrapDoor 1.50* AReceipt 1.5*
|
||
WelMat 0.35 booz 1.01
|
||
ConfMail 1.10
|
||
ChameleonEdit 0.10
|
||
ElectricHerald1.66*
|
||
Lharc 1.10
|
||
MessageFilter 1.52*
|
||
oMMM 1.49b
|
||
ParseLst 1.30
|
||
PkAX 1.00
|
||
PK[UN]ZIP 1.01
|
||
PolyxAmy 2.02*
|
||
RMB 1.30
|
||
TrapList 1.12*
|
||
UNzip 0.86
|
||
Yuck! 1.61*
|
||
Zoo 2.00
|
||
|
||
Atari ST
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 24 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software Network Mailer Other Utilities
|
||
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
FIDOdoor/ST 1.5c* BinkleyTerm 1.03g3 ConfMail 1.00
|
||
Pandora BBS 2.41c The BOX 1.20 ParseList 1.30
|
||
QuickBBS/ST 0.40 ARC 6.02*
|
||
GS Point 0.61 LHARC 0.51
|
||
LED ST 0.10*
|
||
BYE 0.25*
|
||
PKUNZIP 1.10
|
||
MSGED 1.96S
|
||
SRENUM 6.2
|
||
Trenum 0.10
|
||
OMMM 1.40
|
||
|
||
|
||
Archimedes
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
BBS Software Mailers Utilities
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
ARCbbs 1.44* BinkleyTerm 2.03* Unzip 2.1TH
|
||
ARC 1.03
|
||
!Spark 2.00d*
|
||
|
||
ParseLst 1.30
|
||
BatchPacker 1.00*
|
||
|
||
|
||
+ Netmail capable (does not require additional mailer software)
|
||
* Recently changed
|
||
|
||
Utility authors: Please help keep this list up to date by
|
||
reporting new versions to 1:1/1. It is not our intent to list
|
||
all utilities here, only those which verge on necessity.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 25 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
NOTICES
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
The Interrupt Stack
|
||
|
||
|
||
17 Aug 1990
|
||
Start of first ever Searchlight SysOps convention in Chicago, IL.
|
||
Contact Marge Robbins at 1:283/120 for details.
|
||
|
||
5 Oct 1990
|
||
21st Anniversary of "Monty Python's Flying Circus"
|
||
|
||
6 Nov 1990
|
||
First anniversary of Van Diepen Automatiseert, 2:500/28
|
||
|
||
14 Nov 1990
|
||
Marco Maccaferri's 21rd Birthday. Send greetings to him at
|
||
2:332/16.0
|
||
|
||
1 Jan 1991
|
||
Implementation of 7% Goods and Services Tax in Canada. Contact
|
||
Joe Lindstrom at 1:134/55 for a more colorful description.
|
||
|
||
16 Feb 1991
|
||
Fifth anniversary of the introduction of Echomail, by Jeff Rush.
|
||
|
||
7 Oct 1991
|
||
Area code 415 fragments. Alameda and Contra Costa Counties
|
||
will begin using area code 510. This includes Oakland,
|
||
Concord, Berkeley and Hayward. San Francisco, San Mateo,
|
||
Marin, parts of Santa Clara County, and the San Francisco Bay
|
||
Islands will retain area code 415.
|
||
|
||
1 Feb 1992
|
||
Area code 213 fragments. Western, coastal, southern and
|
||
eastern portions of Los Angeles County will begin using area
|
||
code 310. This includes Los Angeles International Airport,
|
||
West Los Angeles, San Pedro and Whittier. Downtown Los
|
||
Angeles and surrounding communities (such as Hollywood and
|
||
Montebello) will retain area code 213.
|
||
|
||
1 Dec 1993
|
||
Tenth anniversary of Fido Version 1 release.
|
||
|
||
5 Jun 1997
|
||
David Dodell's 40th Birthday
|
||
|
||
|
||
If you have something which you would like to see on this
|
||
calendar, please send a message to FidoNet node 1:1/1.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 7-33 Page 26 13 Aug 1990
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
CIVIL LIBERTIES ECHO AVAILABLE
|
||
|
||
The Arizona Civil Liberties Union, an affiliate of the national
|
||
ACLU, sponsors the new CIVLIB echo. Focusing on the Constitution
|
||
and Bill of Rights, CIVLIB is a no-holds barred forum for
|
||
conservative and liberal viewpoints on subjects including, but
|
||
not limited to abortion, gun control, free speech, separation of
|
||
church and state, capital punishment, privacy rights, search and
|
||
seizure, drug laws, victimless crime, and more.
|
||
|
||
CIVLIB is moderated by Arizona Attorney Bob Hirschfeld, and is
|
||
distributed (until it achieves backbone status) by direct poll
|
||
of NCM BBS 1:114/74, HST, 24 hrs/day.
|
||
|
||
(AzCLU BBS, (602) 271 9357 evenings/weekends only, operates as
|
||
point 74.6 from NCM BBS; therefore please send all inquiries,
|
||
netmail and Areafix requests regarding CIVLIB to moderator/Sysop
|
||
Bob Hirschfeld at the distributing node, 1:114/74.)
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
VICTIMS OF FALSE ALLEGATIONS OF ABUSE - NEW ECHO
|
||
|
||
The new VFALSAC Echo focuses on the growing phenomenon of false
|
||
allegations of child abuse, especially in the context of
|
||
domestic relations custody battles. Subjects include the
|
||
McMartin preschool case, the Elizabeth Morgan/ Eric Foretich
|
||
matter, excessive actions by Child Protective Services, whether
|
||
"children never lie about molestation", the SAID Syndrome
|
||
(Sexual Allegations In Divorce), etc.
|
||
|
||
While not directly connected with the nationwide VOCAL
|
||
organization (Victims of Child Abuse Laws), VFALSAC deals with
|
||
most of the issues addressed at VOCAL meetings.
|
||
|
||
This is NOT an echo condoning actual child abuse; rather it
|
||
seeks to enlighten and inform about the horror of innocent
|
||
persons being FALSELY accused of physical or sexual abuse.
|
||
|
||
VFALSAC is distributed via direct poll from NCM BBS, 1:114/74,
|
||
HST. Please address netmail inquiries, Areafix requests, etc. to
|
||
Sysop/Moderator Bob Hirschfeld.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|