T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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478.1 | Some addresses... | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Fri Oct 07 1994 15:16 | 20 |
| Here are a few addresses you can use:
[email protected] -- Comments on WAVM
[email protected] -- Our "viewer hotline"
[email protected] -- Superintendent of Schools
I will post a more comprehensive list within a week or two.
Please send any suggestion to me here at Digital or (preferably):
[email protected]
- dave
|
478.2 | excellent | 7361::RUZICH | Realtime Software Engineering | Sun Oct 16 1994 11:48 | 7 |
| Dave, this is great news. The connection will be useful for students
and faculty, as a resource for information, and to encourage them to
join in the World culture of the Internet.
I've already sent mail to my daughter and to Dr. Kennedy.
-Steve
|
478.3 | Teacher had problem responding to a mail message | KEENIE::NEWMAN | OpenVMS Marketing - DTN 293-5360 | Thu Oct 27 1994 13:59 | 7 |
| Dave - I successfully sent a message to my son's teacher at Fowler
Middle School. My son said that when they typed REPLY to respond to
the message they got some sort of error message and were not able to
send a response.
If the teachers/students want to send a mail message to someone on the
Internet, what is the format of the mail address?
|
478.4 | More on the error replying | KEENIE::NEWMAN | OpenVMS Marketing - DTN 293-5360 | Fri Oct 28 1994 16:12 | 12 |
| More on .3
Dave - I had the opportunity to be at Fowler School today (it was
Parents Day) and saw my son's teacher. When she tries to reply to the
mail message I sent she gets the following message...
MX-E-NOACCESS, You are not authorized to send mail using MX
How can teachers become "authorized" to send mail via MX. I assume
that this is a message router.
Thanks
|
478.5 | A bit more detail (as of Nov 1) | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Tue Nov 01 1994 10:37 | 64 |
| The Internet mail access is currently not wide open. Teachers who want
to use it should contact the system administrators (Pat Hebert and Judy Wing)
for access. Student access is still up in the air.
There are good reasons for this, but there are relatively easy ways to "get on
the net".
Here is the basic set of ideas around restriction:
o The school system has not established a set of policies governing the use
of the Internet -- for both teachers and students.
o The school system has not yet established any formal training mechanisms
for use of the Internet -- for both teachers and students.
Because of point #1, the system isn't (currently) wide open. The restrictions
make sure that the people who do have access understand what the "rules of the
road" are -- even though they aren't all written down yet.
Point #2 keeps the school user population from becoming a nuisance and
administrative personpower sink.
At this writing about a dozen or so teachers have outbound access. This list is
growing every day. I do not know how the information or procedures regarding
access is being disseminated within the school system. I just point them
at the right people (above).
A few students have access. I (currently) demand only two things for students to
allow outbound access: 1. They have a reason for using the Internet; and 2. They
have a "sponsor" that will assure that the student is using the Internet
appropriately. The sponsor is anyone who I feel knows a bit about Internet
etiquette and the acceptable use policies of the Internet.
Anyone in Digital who would like to exchange mail with their children via the
Internet can send me mail, preferably at the school ([email protected])
and I'll enable Internet access for the student with the understanding that you
are the sponsor.
It is my sincere hope that within a couple of months all this gibberish will be
gone and there will be no hoops to jump through -- which is as it should be.
- dave
p.s. The 10 second lesson for sending mail from the school to the Internet
is:
mail> send
To: mx%"user@host"
The address must be in quotes and preceded by the mx% symbol -- which identifies
it as an Internet address. Replies work great too.
p.p.s. The current connectivity makes the Internet access good for daily
exchanges, but do not expect that messages sent will arrive in a matter of minutes
or hours. There are delivery windows for mail (both inbound and outbound).
|
478.6 | Maynard in the Globe | ICS::IGNACHUCK | Native Maynardian | Wed Apr 24 1996 17:03 | 20 |
| FYI, Sunday Globe (April 21, 1996) Real Estate Section:
Very nice article about how people choose to live in a community
based on the quality of education in that community. Maynard was
pointed out for the low median home price compared to neighboring
towns as well as the high $$$ per student that Maynard spends on
education, which has resulted in high academic achievements.
I think back to just a few years ago when the people of Maynard
decided that if we were to have our own school system, we would
make it the BEST school system that we could. That message was
made loud and clear at several town meetings and the Globe article
proved that, while we may be paying for it in taxes, we really are
getting both what we asked for as well as what we're paying for.
A round of applause to the School Committee, School Department Staff
and Administration and, of course, the students themselves!
Frank
|