826 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
826 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
F I D O N E W S -- Vol.12 No.11 (13-Mar-1995)
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+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
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| A newsletter of the | ISSN 1198-4589 Published by: |
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| FidoNet BBS community | "FidoNews" BBS |
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| _ | +1-519-570-4176 |
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| / \ | |
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| /|oo \ | Sheep affairs desk: |
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| (_| /_) | Doc Logger 1:163/110 |
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| _`@/_ \ _ | Rev. Richard Visage 1:163/409 |
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| | | \ \\ | |
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| | (*) | \ )) | Editors: |
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| |__U__| / \// | Donald Tees 1:221/192 |
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| _//|| _\ / | Sylvia Maxwell 1:221/194 |
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| (_/(_|(____/ | |
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| (jm) | Newspapers should have no friends. |
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| | -- JOSEPH PULITZER |
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+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
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| Submission address: editors 1:1/23 |
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| MORE addresses: |
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| |
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| submissions=> editor@exlibris.tdkcs.waterloo.on.ca |
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| Don -- don@exlibris.tdkcs.waterloo.on.ca |
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| Max -- max@exlibris.tdkcs.waterloo.on.ca |
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| Tim Pozar -- pozar@kumr.lns.com |
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| For information, copyrights, article submissions, |
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| obtaining copies of fidonews or the internet gateway faq |
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| please refer to the end of this file. |
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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========================================================================
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Table of Contents
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========================================================================
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1. Editorial..................................................... 1
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2. Articles...................................................... 3
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Dear Reverend Visage,....................................... 3
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Backbone Echo Changes [Jan-Feb]............................. 4
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Subject: File 4--Italian BBS Charged with "Subversion"...... 6
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WINDOWS 95 WILL HAVE THE COOLEST USERS EVER................. 8
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FIDO/K12Net:................................................ 9
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The Parable of the Bulletin Board........................... 12
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3. Fidonews Information.......................................... 14
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========================================================================
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Editorial
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========================================================================
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 2 13 Mar 1995
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I have been discussing the proposed ECROC standard with a
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sysop on the NEWSCHAT echo. He is all for it, as he wants to
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prevent moderators from ejecting anyone from an echo without
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"due process". That, of course, is defined in a huge document
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with who judges, who judges the judges, who appeals, who *they*
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appeal to, and who and where to counter appeal. Nowhere in the
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document does it require all of those judging to be regular
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readers of the echo.
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I, on the otherhand, would like to remove the stigma of
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asking someone to leave an echo all to-gether. It should be
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done on moderator whim, not with star-court proceedings. A
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moderator should be able to remove a user for as simple a
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reason as rudeness.
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Why? I liken an echo to opening my kitchen table to guests.
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It is pleasant to sit around with like minded people, and chew
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the fat. People that do not fit in, or who decide they want to
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take over my house, I would like to vanish. I do not wish them
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ill, nor do I wish to control them. I simply want them to find
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another kitchen table with people that they *can* get along
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with. Or even start their own echo, and fight constantly with
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like minded people ... I really do not care. I only want the
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right to enjoy the company that I/my friends choose for ourselves
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without having to call the police to get rid of people that I do
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not like. I feel I should be able to simply not invite them back.
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The best way to do that, as I see it, is with the current
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rules. A moderator should be able to ask for anybody to leave
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the echo and have them go without arguement. If neccesary, that
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should be backed up all the way up the chain. When they enter
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someone else's echo, they should also realize that they are in a
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different place, and different rules apply. If they do not like
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those rules, they should leave.
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I run an echo here locally. The rules are simple: courtesy
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to every other guest in the echo. Same as the rules in my house.
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If a person is rude, I attempt to engage them in polite
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conversation. I do not mention rules at all. If they start
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being rude back, I call the sysop of the board they are on, and
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ask that their access be removed. I do not threaten, nor do I
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attempt to teach them manners. That is not my job.
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That is absolutely no different than what I do for real
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parties at my house. Any guest can invite friends. If the
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friend swaggers in, elbows five people out of the way, and
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proceeds to pick fights with other guests, I do not see the need
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to patiently explain a rule book for the house. I simply assume
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they are a boor, and ask them to leave. Or ask the person that
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brought them to not bring them again. If I had to call the police
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to get the person to leave, I would not expect to have to take
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them to court to get them out of my house.
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 3 13 Mar 1995
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ECROC seeks to end that. It insists that every echo be run by
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a lawyer, and be totally permissive to anybody that knows how to
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file moderator complaints. Instead of having to deal with the
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odd bad moderator (turning off an echo is very simple) we will
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have to deal with every idiot on every echo, as each one works
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their way accross the backbone disrupting, looking for holes in
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rule books, and appealing for the sake of making their pet point.
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Far better to just start another 30,000 echos, one for each
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sysop.
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========================================================================
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Articles
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========================================================================
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Dear Editorbeings,
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Please indicate that the following was submitted by Charles
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Herriot (1:163/110) who wishes it known that Fidonet also
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embraces his version of religion: agnostic dyslexia. Mr.
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Herriot stays up all night wondering if there is a dog. Roll
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'da flic, Sylvia....
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Swamp Swine Magazine,
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Shuckmagosh, Ohio
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Dear Reverend Visage,
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It is with a large measure of trepidation that I mention the
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ongoing Region 12 election to select a new target...er, I
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mean RC. There are sixteen candidates lusting after the
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position. If voter turnout remains true to tradition, they
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should each garner half a vote. The candidates appeared
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likely to escape dealing with the most serious issue of the
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campaign: hamsters. Mercifully, they have bowed to intense
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public pressure and come clean. Sales of duct tape have
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skyrocketed.
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C'mon, admit it. You took George Peace with you when you
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snuck off to some disreputable locale where you are probably
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both scarfing down scotch and doing unspeakable things with
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tubas of easy virtue. How else to explain that George Peace
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*still* hasn't rendered a decision with respect to Stein vs.
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Kolin?
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You will be pleased to know that I took the cheque issued to
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repay your Snooz petty cash vouchers and invested them with
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a fellow named Nick Leeson. You and about a billion other
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creditors should be able to recapture about three cents on
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the dollar. The Queen was also stiffed in Leeson's gambling
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adventures but I understand that they are going to give her
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the Province of Quebec as compensation.
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Avast ye swabs. I am pleased to report that I now belong to
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a nation of pirates. It seems that the mighty Canadian Coast
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Guard armed with awesome water canons subdued a Spanish
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fishing boat on the high seas. The Spanish were depriving
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 4 13 Mar 1995
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our fur seal population of sustenance and they had to be
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stopped before Brigitte Bardot broke out into another public
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crying jag. A nice warm trout for the Coast Guard I say, and
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may the farce be with them.
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On the downslope of brilliance, I see that our lil' buddy,
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John Denver has successfully beaten the charges which
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resulted from his highly intoxicated defoliation of Aspen,
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Colorado with his Porsche. Breaking new and stunning ground
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in jurisprudence, the judge held that since the motor
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vehicle bureau had already held a hearing to revoke John's
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license, that a court case could not proceed because it
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would represent double jeopardy. I'll bet that O.J. is real
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upset that he didn't get a motor vehicle hearing for
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illegally parking the Bronco so that he could escape the
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murder trial.
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I must go Visage, your secretary has started to wallpaper
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the walls with GIANT pictures of Newt Gingrich. This is
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surely a sign of dementia. As the good and decent people
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that we are, we ought to send her to Spain disguised as a
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halibut.
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Regards,
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Doc Logger
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FlinFlon School of Ballet & Trout Ranching,
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FlinFlon, Manitoba
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Backbone Echo Changes [Jan-Feb]
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by Lisa Gronke, 1:105/6
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lisa@m2xenix.psg.com
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Summary of backbone & quasi-backbone echo changes during Jan & Feb
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Brought to you courtesy of (unix) diff.
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diff (fidonet.na + fidonet.no) 01-Jan-95 (ditto) 05-Mar-95 [edited].
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Added to the backbone
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---------------------
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> 4DOS_TC 4DOS and Take Command Support Conference/Echo
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> ACCT_TAX Accounting and Tax Information
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> ALASKA_CHAT Alaska Off Topic Chatter
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> AMIGA_PD Amiga Public Domain
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> AMTGARD AMTGARD
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> ANIMAL_DOC Animal health and your veterinarian
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> ATHEISM Intra-atheist education and discussion echo.
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> BAHAI The Baha'i International Echo
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> BGFAX BGFAX Support Echo
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> BIKE-N-RIDER Motorcycle Riders, Bike Safety and Riding
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> BIRDING Birdwatching
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> CAN_FREECHAT CANADA FREE CHAT
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 5 13 Mar 1995
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> CARDIAC International Cardiac Conference
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> CAROLINA_GEN Carolina Genealogy
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> CLASSICAL Classical Music Discussion
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> CORELDRAW the CorelDraw graphics package discussion echo
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> DAIRY_FARM Dairy Farming Discussions
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> DENTISTRY Dentistry Discussion Area
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> EARTH2 Earth 2 General Discussion
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> ECSTASY Music of McLachlan, Amos, Bush and others
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> FALKEN Falken BBS Discussion Echo
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> FLYING International Flying Conference
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> FMS False Memory Syndrome
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> GAY_FAITH Gay Faith
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> GAY_PRIDE Gay Pride
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> HELP_MANKIND Help For Mankind
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> HOLY_BIBLE Bible, Wholly Bible Related Discussions
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> HOLY_BIBLE_II Bible, and Biblical Related Discussions
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> ICOM Intellicomm (ICOM) Support Echo
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> IMUS IMUS in the Morning Radio Show Discussion
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> INTERFAITH Interfaith Distribution Network Core Conference
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> ISDN ISDN
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> ITALIANO.GEN Italian Genealogy Conference
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> LORE LORE Online Game Support/Discussion Forum
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> MAGICK Witchcraft, Occult and Numerology
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> MALUM_PROHIBITUM Discussion of Laws against Consentual Activities
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> MFILEPMSUP MaxFile/PM-MaxFile/2 Support Conference
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> MUPPETS Muppet Discussion Conference
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||
> NATURIST Naturist/nudist discussion
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> NETXPRES NetXpress Software Support
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> NIGHT_SHIFT_ART-BELL Art Bell All Night Radio Talk Show Discussion
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> NIGHT_SHIFT_BASH_POLI Bash (Or Defend) Politicians, etc.
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> NU_SUPPORT I'natl NodeList UpDater Support
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> PIERS Piers Anthony Fans echo
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> PINK Pink Floyd Discussions
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> QFRONT QFront Support Conference
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> QUR'AN Islam and the Holy Qur'an
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> RAR I'natl RAR Support
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> RCP Respiratory Care Professionals
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> RIGHTS_RONGS Political discussion and positive action echo
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> ROBO_LINK RoboBOARD BBS discussions.
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> SEEDSWAP Seed Exchange
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> SHAREWARE_SUPPORT ShareWare Software Support Conference
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> SINGLE_PARENT Single Parent Information Exchange
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> SMOKERS_RIGHTS Issues Dealing with Smokers' Rights to Smoke
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> SOAPS SOAP OPERA FANS ECHO
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> SPORT-FISHING.WEST Fishing the North
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> SQDSV seaQuest DSV General Discussion
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> STEP_PARENTS STEP_PARENTS
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> SYNCDATA Synchronet Distributed Databases
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> TAG_OS2 OS/2 support for TAG Sysops
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> THE-BIBLE Mainstream Bible Discussions
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> THEIST_WATCH American Atheist Watch on Religious Shenanigans
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> THERAPY_SERVICE_DOG Therapy & Service Dog Conference
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||
> TREK_FAN_ORG Star Trek fan organization discussions
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> TURNCOAT_USA Black_Conservatism
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> ULTRABETA UltraBBS Beta-Testers Support Conference
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 6 13 Mar 1995
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> ULTRASUP UltraBBS Support Conference
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> WIN95 Windows95
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> Z1_WINTERS Discusss Steve Winters Here
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NOTE: CAROLINA_GEN is a returning echo (only off the backbone for a
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few weeks). HOLY_BIBLE [moderator Steve Winter] is a returning
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echo.
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Echotag change
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----------------
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< INTERMAIL InterMail/InterEcho Software [old name]
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> IM_USER InterMail/InterEcho Software [new name]
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Extreme topic drift back on course
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----------------------------------
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< DEUTSCH STOCKS & BONDS
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> DEUTSCH German Language Chat Echo
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[the echo participants just shrugged, in German]
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Removed from the backbone or quasi-backbone
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-------------------------------------------
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< BBS_STANDARDS Standards for Authors and Users of BBS
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< BIMODEM Bimodem Technical Support
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< GMD Grunged Message Detector User Forum
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< HISTORIA (not in EchoList since 12/1/94)
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< ITRACK Itrack Support Echo
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< MAINFRAME Mainframe Computing Discussions
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< PS_2 PS/2 Hardware Discussions
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< SKYDIVE Skydiving, Prachuting and Paragliding
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< THEDRAW The Draw - ANSI Editor - Echo Conference
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o There are 741 echos in fidonet.na [05-Mar-95] (up 58)
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o There are 6 echos in fidonet.no [05-Mar-95] (up 3)
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o for a total of 747 backbone & quasi-backbone echos (up 61)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: Luc Pac <lpaccagn@RISC1.GELSO.UNITN.IT>
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Subject: File 4--Italian BBS Charged with "Subversion"
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STATE CHARGES ITALIAN COMPUTER BULLETIN BOARD WITH 'SUBVERSION'
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On Tuesday, 28 February, at seven in the morning, members of the
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Carabinieri Anti-Crime Special Operations Group raided the homes of a
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number of people in Rovereto and Trento associated with the local
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Self-managed Social Centre 'Clinamen'. Some of those raided are also
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active in the Italian anarchist movement.
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The warrant from the Rovereto court spoke of 'assocation with
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intent to subvert the democratic order' (art.270 bis CP), a charge
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which carries a very heavy penalty for those convicted of 7 to 15
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years imprisonment. The absurdity of the charge speaks for itself.
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Confiscated in the raids were journals and magazines, leaflets,
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diaries, notebooks and video tapes, all of which were either publicly
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 7 13 Mar 1995
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available or else for strictly personal use.
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Also seized was the personal computer which hosted 'BITS
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Against the Empire', a node in the Cybernet and Fidonet networks.
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Stored on the computer was a vast number of documents concerning
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the social use of new technologies, Italy's Self-managed Social
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Centres and independent music production, along with hundreds of
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elctronic reviews publicly available throughout the world computer
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network. Having decided quite explicitly from the onset not to hold
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any software whatsoever, the founders of the bulletin board (BBS) had
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dedicated themselves exclusively to communication through public
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electronic conferences and the consultation of texts held in the BBS
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archives. There can, therefore, be no substance to any charge of
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computer piracy or abusive software duplication, an accusation often
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advanced in earlier cases against Italian BBSs.
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The seizure of BITS Against the Empire strikes at one of the
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most prominent nodes within the Cybernet network, the first place in
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Italy to open itself up to the voices of the non-aligned, to those who
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refuse to be represented by the political parties, choosing instead
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- both in the virtual and real worlds - the path of self-management.
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Nor has Cybernet ever accepted the use of authoritarian instruments
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tp police the BBS, whether these be 'the laws of cyberspace' or
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conference moderators (cybercops), preferring instead to leave
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all responsibilities - and thus freedom of action and thought - to
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each individual.
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It is precisely these freedoms which are daily negated in the
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physical world by the State and its demokracy. Cyberspace has now
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been discovered as a new consumer market, and above all as a new
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cultural terrain for the legitimation of the first, second and
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all subsequent Italian Republics.
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Alongside the sensationalism surrounding their direct actions
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against small, insignificant episodes of domestic computer piracy,
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the Italian magistrates and police forces have for some years now
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shown a certain fascination for places such as Cybernet and the
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European Counter Network, places which have experimented with new
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forms of social relations, new forms of contaminating culture and
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knowledge in the light of digital media.
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It is not surprising that the repressive organs of the State
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have reacted to their own technical and social ignorance by seizing
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an instrument of communication like a BBS: if they don't understand
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something it means they can't control it, and what can't be
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controlled is dangerous for a social order based upon fear and
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institutionalised violence.
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All those charged have formally applied for the return of the impounded
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goods, as they await more information concerning the progress of the
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investigation.
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Messages of support and requests for further information can be
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sent to:
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FidoNews 12-11 Page: 8 13 Mar 1995
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Internet:lpaccagn@riscl.gelso.unitn.it
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Bitnet: lpaccag@itncisti
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European Counter Network: Luc Pac 45:1917/2.1
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Cybernet: Luc Pac 65:1400/6
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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WINDOWS 95 WILL HAVE THE COOLEST USERS EVER
|
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From: mason@acheron.middleboro.ma.us (Mason Bliss)
|
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WINDOWS 95 WILL HAVE THE COOLEST USERS EVER
|
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|
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REDMOND, WASHINGTON -- In order to calm growing impatience among PC users
|
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concerning the repeated delays of its new Windows 95 operating system,
|
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Microsoft Corporation announced what it calls the "Cool User Program for
|
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Windows 95." To participate in this offer, a user pays US$10,000 at which
|
||
time he or she will be placed in a cryogenic suspension. The user will
|
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then remain in a state of hibernation until about a week before the Windows
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95 ship date.
|
||
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"We expect that the users will need a few days to recuperate and acquaint
|
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themselves with the changes that will occur in society between the onset of
|
||
cold sleep and the release of Windows 95," explained a Microsoft spokesman.
|
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These may include "the OJ Simpson trial ending, another momentous
|
||
Congressional election, faster-than-light travel and possible leaps in
|
||
human evolution."
|
||
|
||
Because Microsoft expects a large response to this offer, a vast area will
|
||
be needed for the storage facility. "We have chosen the state of Utah,"
|
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stated Microsoft,"because nobody lives there, anyway." Spokespeople for
|
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Novell and Wordperfect were reached for comment on this remark, but their
|
||
words were not suitable for publication.
|
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IBM corporation, which has previously responded to Microsoft promotions
|
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with competing offers for their OS/2 Warp said they would not be matching
|
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Microsoft's "Cool User" program. "Freeze people? What for? Warp has
|
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already been shipping for months," said a source who asked not to be
|
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identified.
|
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|
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Some industry analysts have wasted no time hailing Microsoft's plan as a
|
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"bold, innovative" move. In columnist Michael S. Brown's opinion column
|
||
"M.S. Brown Knows" which appears in PC Weak, Brown claims,"IBM has missed
|
||
the boat again with their failing OS/2 strategy. Users clearly want to be
|
||
frozen in liquid Nitrogen and sealed in coffin-like units for an
|
||
indeterminate period of time." Michael S. Brown made national headlines
|
||
three years ago when he claimed that if "Windows NT didn't completely
|
||
replace DOS in six months" he would chain himself to grating comedian
|
||
Gilbert Godfried. Today he clarifies that "I didn't say *which* six
|
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months."
|
||
|
||
The cryogenic facility in Utah is expected to be on line April 1, 1995, but
|
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users wishing to beta test the system may do so for a reduced fee of
|
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US$3,000.
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||
|
||
--
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||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 9 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
if you want to destroy my sweater | Mason Loring Bliss
|
||
pull this thread as i walk away | Mac System Extension Hacker
|
||
watch me unravel, i'll soon be naked | mason@acheron.middleboro.ma.us
|
||
lying on the floor, i've come undone | 1:109/370.6 @ FidoNet
|
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|
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
||
FIDO/K12Net:
|
||
FIDO/K12Net:
|
||
DIRT CHEAP GATEWAY TO THE
|
||
GLOBAL VILLAGE
|
||
FOR THE RURAL MASSES
|
||
|
||
(c) February 24, 1995 by Jack Crawford
|
||
Wayne-Finger Lakes Area Teacher Resource Center
|
||
FIDOnet 1:260/620
|
||
jack@rochgte.fidonet.org
|
||
jcc@aruba.nysaes.cornell.edu
|
||
|
||
There's a grassroots movement throughout the world that is quietly
|
||
empowering "have not" rural communities by introducing them to the
|
||
"global village" of international telecommunications on a local
|
||
phone call with no fees . Conspicuously absent from this is the
|
||
inherent exploitativeness of commercial environments or the taxpayer
|
||
burden of the "too-much-government" cost-ineffectiveness of
|
||
centralized technocracies.
|
||
|
||
Rural citizens, as a group, tend to remain unaware of the richness
|
||
of telecommunications-based activites and resources the big cities
|
||
enjoy because they are "long distance to the rest of the civilized
|
||
world". While fee-based online resources have been available to
|
||
rural folks for years, few seem to make much use of them. Whenever a
|
||
rural person is online, the "meter is running". The result is that
|
||
use of commercial and real-time Internet services is kept to an
|
||
absolute minimum. In most cases, that means no use at all. Rural
|
||
people are just not in the "habit" of using online resources as a
|
||
result.
|
||
|
||
The "toll booths" on the Information Highway turn rural people off
|
||
to telecommunications!
|
||
|
||
As a result of these factors, rural educators, students and
|
||
community members tend to have little or no initial experience with,
|
||
or even a working concept of, the online world. Most often they just
|
||
plain don't understand the critcal importance of becoming involved
|
||
with telecommunications in the first place and, therefore, are
|
||
unable to self-justify the significant costs of using of online
|
||
resources in their everyday lives. They are "out of the loop". They
|
||
need a place to start--something to "whet their appe tites" that
|
||
will allow them to spend hours and hours exploring the Net--and do
|
||
it very cheaply, if not for free! Rural people are beginning to
|
||
discover the unique advantages and affordability of FIDOnet BBS's,
|
||
not as as alternative to pay-for services, but as a starting point
|
||
toward them.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 10 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
As of February, 1995, FIDOnet is a worldwide community of nearly
|
||
35,000 inter-networked, yet independantly owned, operated and funded
|
||
electronic Bulletin Board Systems or "BBS's". (Five years ago there
|
||
were only 6,000!) Roughly half of these are in the United
|
||
States--that's slightly more than one for every one of the 14,000 or
|
||
so school districts in the country. Any medium-sized rural town in
|
||
the U.S. probably has at least one FIDOnet BBS that is open to the
|
||
general public with no fees. This is a non-comm ercial environment
|
||
that has been aptly described as "militantly free", both in terms of
|
||
cost and spirit. There are few "toll booths"! FIDOnet is a
|
||
community that is soley regulated by market forces. It is not an
|
||
"organization" nor is it subject to the fickleness, ineffficencies
|
||
or political agendas of any government, bureacracy or centralized
|
||
funding source. FIDOnet is not encumbered by technocracy. Maybe this
|
||
is why it works so well....
|
||
|
||
FIDOnet's store-and-forward technology has evolved through many
|
||
generations of incessant, international tinkering in the last ten
|
||
years to become surprizingly sophisticated yet still amazingly
|
||
affordable. The equipment, budget and technical expertise required
|
||
to set up and maintain a FIDOnet BBS capable of serving the
|
||
students, teachers and taxpayers of a rural community is usually
|
||
well within the range of any school district with a bit of resolve.
|
||
Startup costs, including software, modem and a brand new co mputer,
|
||
can easily be below $1,300 in the U.S and much cheaper if used
|
||
equipment is available! Technical and training expertise is
|
||
developed locally to meet the needs of local people and can provide
|
||
rural students with career-track experience pointing directly to the
|
||
telecommunications industry. The school and it's community learn
|
||
"how to fish" rather than being "fed a fish for the day"... Note,
|
||
too, that the bulk of the intial expense goes to tang ible assets
|
||
such as computers and software rather than consu mable services.
|
||
Telephone lines needed are inexpensive voice grade and costs for
|
||
substantial network content to serve the entire community, even if
|
||
obtained overlong distance, is similar to that of a few postage
|
||
stamps per day. It just doesn't get any cheaper than this...
|
||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||
In addition to providing the ability to send private "email" letters
|
||
between anyone on a FIDOnet BBS or the Internet, there are also
|
||
literally thousands of one-to-many public conferences available.
|
||
These allow people to publicly discuss, debate or ask questions
|
||
about the things that matter to them with other people all over the
|
||
world. The nature of these conferences may be very broad in scope
|
||
such as "politics" or "cooking" or can be narrowly defined to such
|
||
topics as "beekeeping", "quilting", issues involv ing church &
|
||
state, etc. An "article" posted in a conference will be "echoed",
|
||
without editing or censorship, to every other BBS on earth that is
|
||
carrying it where anyone may read and respond to it. This is like a
|
||
neural net which spans the planet, providing a place for a "meeting
|
||
of the minds" that is not limited by distance or time... and is
|
||
freely accessible to the general public on a local phone call! This
|
||
is the last real bastion of free press!
|
||
|
||
Graphical and multi-media interfaces, multi-gigabyte harddrives and
|
||
multi-disc CD-ROM drives on many FIDO BBS's make massive file
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 11 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
resources available in an environment that is attractive, easy to
|
||
use and available on a local phone call. FIDOnet technology is also
|
||
quite at home with satellite distribution as well as the gating of
|
||
USEnet newsgroups and Internet email. FIDO BBS system software is
|
||
usually dirt cheap if not free and can be surprizingly adept at
|
||
dealing with multiple phoneline and local area netw ork
|
||
environments.
|
||
|
||
Approximately 600 FIDO BBS's worldwide also carry the K12Net feed
|
||
which provides content directly oriented to elementary and secondary
|
||
school curriculum and student use. (There are over 100 K12Net BBS's
|
||
in New Zealand, alone!) Most of the three dozen K12Net conference
|
||
areas, which cover the the traditional curriculum areas and provide
|
||
vehicles for teacher-designed international classroom projects, are
|
||
also gated to the Internet as the k12.* hierarchy. Some schools use
|
||
a "sneaker net" approach to allow the ir students to interact in
|
||
email and conferences in classrooms without phonelines or modems
|
||
using offline mail readers. (Lack of phone lines in the classrooms
|
||
and the prospect of sizeable phone bills are the single biggest
|
||
barrier to any kind of telecom in schools!!!)
|
||
|
||
As rural schools are usually at the geographic center of activities
|
||
for their local communities, they are probably the most logical
|
||
organization to house, operate and provide institutional credibility
|
||
to a FIDO/K12Net BBS to serve that community. BBS's operated by a
|
||
rural school can provide a valuable public service that helps to
|
||
promote further understanding, collaboration and support between
|
||
schools and their communities. Schools which set up and operate
|
||
their own FIDO/K12Net BBS's develop their own in-ho use base of
|
||
technical and training expertise. They learn how to "fish to feed
|
||
themselves" rather than being "fed a fish for the day".
|
||
|
||
I have set up and provide technical support to over a dozen
|
||
FIDO/K12Net BBS's in schools within an hour's drive from where I
|
||
live out here in a rural area of western New York State
|
||
characterized by cow pastures, cornfields and long distance phone
|
||
bills. The demand for them is growing steadily, probably because
|
||
schools are finding that setup and operational costs are so low
|
||
that funding is simply not an issue in many cases. My observation
|
||
is that their use is helping to build a base of community advocacy
|
||
for greater telecom capabilities. For the first time, rural
|
||
students, teachers and taxpayers can now spend *hours* exploring
|
||
the online worlds of email, newsgroups and file libraries without
|
||
running up a phone bill or blowing their VISA cards or classroom
|
||
budgets into oblivion or placing a burden on their taxpayers. They
|
||
finally have a reason to buy one of those "modem-thingies" and to
|
||
support funding for even greater telecom capabilites in their
|
||
schools. (This lack of advocacy is a very important, though ofte n
|
||
overlooked or underestimated aspect of getting people involved with
|
||
telecom, particularly in schools.) People first need to learn how
|
||
to ride a bicycle before you can expect them to want...or be
|
||
willing to pay for a Harley! Those that have been logging onto our
|
||
FIDO/K12Net BBS's are beginning learn how to "ride"...
|
||
|
||
FIDO/K12Net may not be have the Web-wonder or gopher-glitter of the
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 12 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
real-time Internet or commercial services but it is far more
|
||
affordable and accessible to the average rural neophyte modem user
|
||
at home or in school. It is also vastly less intiimidating. It is
|
||
introductory telecom for the rural masses that can provide more
|
||
"bang for the buck" than any other technology. Period! And, overall,
|
||
it really does a pretty good job with email, conferencing and file
|
||
libraries which are the real "meat and potatoes" of online use in
|
||
the first place. It is the "bicycle path" next to the information
|
||
highway... It is a sensible way for the "have-nots" of the world to
|
||
start learning how to "ride a bicycle" so that, some day soon,
|
||
they'll want a "Harley"...
|
||
|
||
Jack Crawford, Wayne-Finger Lakes Area Teacher Resource Center, 703
|
||
E. Maple, 10 Eisenhower Hall, Newark, NY, 14513-1863. Voice:
|
||
315/331-1584, fax: 315/331-1587, Email: FIDOnet 1:260/620,
|
||
jack@rochgte.fidonet.org or jcc@aruba.nysaes.cornell.edu
|
||
|
||
Widespread dissemination of this document in its entirety with copyright
|
||
statement intact for strictly non-commercial purposes is both authorized
|
||
and encouraged.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Originally from Brian Sorensen (1:109/195) to All.
|
||
---- Begin Forwarded Message
|
||
From: Wulf Losee <WLosee@Getty.Edu>
|
||
The Parable of the Bulletin Board
|
||
|
||
Once there was a wealthy city-state whose populace was extremely literate.
|
||
In every square and market place of the city there were bulletin boards.
|
||
Some of the boards were provided by Council of Elders (who managed the
|
||
city); some were provided by private citizens; some by merchants; some by
|
||
the temples; and some by academic institutions of the city-state. Anyone,
|
||
citizen or non-citizen, could post to these boards, and much of the
|
||
intellectual, political, and commercial discourse of the city-state played
|
||
itself out on the thousands of scraps of paper stuck to the boards each day.
|
||
|
||
It came to pass that an anonymous accusation was pinned to one of the
|
||
boards, accusing a wealthy and influential merchant of financial misdeeds.
|
||
The merchant, with all his heart, believed that these accusations were lies.
|
||
So he went before the Council of Elders and said to them, "See, I have been
|
||
libeled, and my good name defamed. My business will surely suffer, and, if it
|
||
does, I will no longer be able to make the generous financial contributions to
|
||
your Council that I have in the past." The Council, not wanting to show
|
||
overt favoritism to the merchant, decided that from hence forth
|
||
anonymous postings would be outlawed. Any posting to any bulletin board
|
||
in the city would need to bear the signature and the address of the person
|
||
who posted it (hmmm, sounds like Los Angeles, doesn't it? -- ed.). The
|
||
board owners would be obliged to remove any anonymous postings from
|
||
their board or face severe fines. Some of the board owners did not have the
|
||
time to check all the hundreds of postings that appeared every hour on their
|
||
boards, so they opted to tear down their boards. And the discourse of the
|
||
city was muted somewhat by the law against anonymous postings.
|
||
|
||
The wealthy merchant was satisfied with this arrangement, though "Now no
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 13 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
one can anonymously libel me," he thought. But the next day thousands of
|
||
leaflets, bearing the wealthy merchant's signature and address, were posted
|
||
on the remaining boards of the city. On them were printed a public apology
|
||
from the merchant confessing his financial misdeeds. "These signatures are
|
||
forgeries!" cried the merchant. "I have been libeled by someone using my
|
||
good name falsely!"
|
||
|
||
The merchant went back to the Council of Elders, and proposed that each
|
||
posting to the city's boards would need to bear the unique seal of the person
|
||
posting. The Elders agreed to the suggestion and proclaimed that only
|
||
postings with complex and intricate seals (which would be 'impossible' to
|
||
forge) would allowed on the bulletin boards of the city-state. Now it was no
|
||
coincidence that only the expensive government-sponsored seals
|
||
manufactured by the Seal-makers Guild (who were patrons of the Elders)
|
||
could be used. Only the wealthiest fifty percent of the citizens of this
|
||
city-state could afford these expensive seals, and so the discourse of the
|
||
city was again diminished.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, the Seal-makers, thinking no one else had the technology of
|
||
metal-working, carelessly threw their molds in the trash. Soon a thriving
|
||
black market in forged seals (made from the discarded molds) sprang up. For
|
||
seals were now the key to trust, and unscrupulous individuals could use them
|
||
for their own profit. Within a week the postings defaming the wealthy
|
||
merchant reappeared on the bulletin boards of the city -- each bearing the
|
||
merchant's 'unforgeable' seal.
|
||
|
||
Enraged, the wealthy merchant went back to the Council of Elders, and
|
||
demanded that the board owners be made legally responsible for the content
|
||
of the postings on their boards. The Council agreed. The small board
|
||
owners cried, "Alas, we cannot afford to violate the law, for we do not have
|
||
the time nor the resources to read every message that crosses our boards.
|
||
Nor do we precisely know what is a libelous posting and what is merely an
|
||
outspoken posting." Of course, the Lawyers Guild offered to advise them
|
||
and protect them from courts for 'very reasonable' fees, but the small board
|
||
owners did not have the money. So it came to pass that only the three
|
||
wealthiest board owners could stay in business, for only they could afford
|
||
the lawyers to dispute the merchant's claim of libel.
|
||
|
||
And still the scurrilous messages appeared on the remaining three bulletin
|
||
boards of the city. After long and intricate legal maneuvers, the merchant
|
||
was unable to extract damages from the wealthy board owners. But each
|
||
party had spent so much on their lawyers that they now were willing to
|
||
compromise. The board owners agreed to restrict access to their boards.
|
||
Only authorized users could enter through the locked and guarded gate to the
|
||
boards, and those users needed to show extensive proof of their identity and
|
||
sign all sorts of logs accepting their liability for libelous postings. The
|
||
merchant was now content. "No one, but no one, will be able to libel me
|
||
now without leaving a trail to his doorstep!" Only those people wealthy
|
||
enough to be able to afford the fees of the Town-Criers Guild and fees of the
|
||
Messenger's Guild (who by the way were immensely happy with the
|
||
disappearance of the bulletin boards) could continue to do business. So the
|
||
discourse of the city was muted to a small fraction of what it once was.
|
||
|
||
Still the scurrilous postings appeared on the three big boards. The merchant
|
||
persuaded to Council of Elders to use its watchmen to observe the boards.
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 14 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
And the watchmen returned with an explanation. "Oh, noble sir," they said,
|
||
"these libelous postings are pegged to the board by an ingenious method.
|
||
They are shot on darts over the city's wall and thus they are posted on our
|
||
boards." The merchant replied, "Well go outside the city's walls and capture
|
||
the man who is shooting these darts." The watchmen replied, "Alas, noble
|
||
sir, that is outside our jurisdiction." The merchant went to the Council of
|
||
Elders and demanded that city-state declare war on their neighbors, but the
|
||
Council replied that there had been a precipitous drop in the tax revenues,
|
||
and all the mercenaries had been discharged. The merchant in a helpless
|
||
rage started foaming at the mouth, and he died there on the Council Room
|
||
floor from apoplexy. No one mourned his passing, though, since most of
|
||
the inhabitants had left the city-state to find a living elsewhere.
|
||
|
||
One of the Elders got the bright idea to repeal all the ordinances regulating
|
||
the bulletin boards, but his fellows replied, "Are you crazy? The bulletin
|
||
boards were what got us into this mess in the first place!"
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
========================================================================
|
||
Fidonews Information
|
||
========================================================================
|
||
|
||
------- FIDONEWS MASTHEAD AND CONTACT INFORMATION ----------------
|
||
|
||
Editors: Donald Tees, Sylvia Maxwell
|
||
Editors Emeritii: Thom Henderson, Dale Lovell,
|
||
Vince Perriello, Tim Pozar
|
||
Tom Jennings
|
||
"FidoNews" BBS
|
||
FidoNet 1:1/23
|
||
BBS +1-519-570-4176, 300/1200/2400/14400/V.32bis/HST(DS)
|
||
|
||
more addresses:
|
||
Rev. Richard Visage -- 1:163/409
|
||
Don -- 1:221/192, don@exlibris.tdkcs.waterloo.on.ca
|
||
Sylvia -- 1:221/194, max@exlibris.tdkcs.waterloo.on.ca
|
||
Tim -- pozar@kumr.lns.com
|
||
|
||
(Postal Service mailing address)
|
||
FidoNews
|
||
128 Church St.
|
||
Kitchener, Ontario
|
||
Canada
|
||
N2H 2S4
|
||
|
||
voice: (519) 570-3137
|
||
|
||
Fidonews is published weekly by and for the members of the FIDONET
|
||
INTERNATIONAL AMATEUR ELECTRONIC MAIL system. It is a compilation
|
||
of individual articles contributed by their authors or their
|
||
authorized agents. The contribution of articles to this compilation
|
||
does not diminish the rights of the authors. Opinions expressed in
|
||
these articles are those of the authors and not necessarily those of
|
||
FidoNews.
|
||
FidoNews 12-11 Page: 15 13 Mar 1995
|
||
|
||
|
||
Authors retain copyright on individual works; otherwise FidoNews is
|
||
Copyright 1995 Donald Tees. All rights reserved. Duplication
|
||
and/or distribution permitted for noncommercial purposes only. For use
|
||
in other circumstances, please contact the original authors, or the eds.
|
||
Articles by Madam emilia may be retransmitted freely through
|
||
cyber-space.
|
||
|
||
OBTAINING COPIES: The most recent issue of FidoNews in electronic
|
||
form may be obtained from the FidoNews BBS via manual download or
|
||
Wazoo FileRequest, or from various sites in the FidoNet and Internet.
|
||
PRINTED COPIES may be obtained by sending SASE to the above paper-mail
|
||
address, or trade for copy of your 'zine.
|
||
|
||
INTERNET USERS: FidoNews is available via FTP from ftp.fidonet.org,
|
||
in directory ~ftp/pub/fidonet/fidonews.
|
||
|
||
Anyone interested in getting a copy of the INTERNET GATEWAY FAQ may
|
||
freq GISFAQ.ZIP from 1:133/411.0, or send an internet message to
|
||
fidofaq@gisatl.fidonet.org. No message or text or subject is
|
||
necessary. The address is a keyword that will trigger the automated
|
||
response. People wishing to send inquiries directly to David Deitch
|
||
should now mail to fidonet@gisatl.fidonet.org rather than the
|
||
previously listed address.
|
||
|
||
SUBMISSIONS: You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
|
||
FidoNews. Article submission requirements are contained in the file
|
||
ARTSPEC.DOC, available from the FidoNews BBS, or Wazoo filerequestable
|
||
from 1:1/23 as file "ARTSPEC.DOC". Please read it.
|
||
|
||
"Fido", "FidoNet" and the dog-with-diskette are U.S. registered
|
||
trademarks of Tom Jennings, and are used with permission.
|
||
|
||
"the pulse of the cursor is the heartbeat of fidonet"...
|
||
-- END
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|