T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1669.1 | Closed MIND-L | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed May 20 1992 14:52 | 3 |
| The automatic listserver tells me (honest) that "MIND-L is closed".
Topher
|
1669.2 | Christian Thought and Literature in Late Antiquity | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Sep 21 1992 15:10 | 41 |
| ELENCHUS on [email protected]
or [email protected]
Christian Thought and Literature in Late Antiquity
ELENCHUS is devoted to discussions of the thought and literature of
Christianity during the period 100 to 500 a.d. (c.e.).
This will include discussions of patristics, gnosticism, asceticism,
monasticism, archeology, the Nag Hammadi and Manichaean corpora, the
canon of Scripture and the early translations of the Scriptures
(into, among other languages, Latin, Syriac, Coptic), the history of
exegesis (including the appropriation by Christians of the texts of
Judaism and other religious, philosophical, or ideological
groupings), as well as historical and theological developments from
the time of the Apologists to the fall of the Western Empire.
LANGUAGES: The languages of discussion will be English or French.
Submis- sions in either language are welcomed, and patience and
understanding on the part of all are encouraged!
TO SUBSCRIBE TO ELENCHUS: If you are on BITNET: send an interactive
message to LISTSERV@UOTTAWA as follows (CMS form shown):
TELL LISTSERV AT UOTTAWA SUB ELENCHUS your full name
or send a mail message to the same address with the following text:
SUB ELENCHUS your full name
in the BODY of the mail.
If you are on INTERNET or related network send a mail message to
[email protected] with the following text in the BODY of
the e-mail:
SUB ELENCHUS your full name
Owner:
L. Gregory Bloomquist
Saint Paul University / University of Ottawa
BITNET: GBLOOMQ@UOTTAWA
Internet: [email protected]
S-Mail: 223 Main St., Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 1C4 CANADA
Voice: (613) 782-3027 / 236-1393
FAX: (613) 567-2959 / 782-3005
|
1669.3 | 'Reflections' (WARN: high volume) -- see .10 | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu May 06 1993 18:04 | 138 |
| From: CRL::"[email protected]" "Reflections Mailing List Server" 30-APR-1993 14:11:42.36
To: cadsys::cooper
CC:
Subj: INTRODUCTION: Part 1 of 1
RRRRR fff ll ii
R R f ll tt ssss
RRRRR eeee ffffff ll eeee cccc ttttt ii oooo nnnnnn s
R R eeeeee f ll eeeeee c tt ii oo oo nn n ssss
R R ee f ll ee cc tt ii oo oo nn n s
R R eeee f ll eeee cccc ttt ii oo nn n ssss
================================================================================
REFLECTIONS||SNOITCELFER||REFLECTIONS||SNOITCELFER||REFLECTIONS||SNOITCELFER
================================================================================
Dear Prospective RELFECTIONS Member,
Welcome to REFLECTIONS: an alternative electronic networking medium
dedicated to the fullest realization of Humanity's spiritual potential.
It was formed early in 1993 to serve as a networking tool and information
service for those exploring alternative belief systems, as well as how
these unfolding paradigms (loosely umbrella'd under the term "new age")
relate to more established belief systems on Earth.
In any community, there is the challenge of deciding what is "appropriate"
for inclusion in that community and what is not. This issue always raises
a truckload of contraversy concerning rights, etc. etc. Most of us also have
our own issues around belonging and not belonging, around "appropriate"
speech and behavior. Throw the circumstance of an electronic network in
the picture and you can see things can really get messy. The issues are
complex, and I don't know if they are "ready" to be fully resolved. But
based on many years experience on the net, plus recommendations and ideas
of others, I think I've come up with some good guidelines for what's
"appropriate" for REFLECTIONS and what is not.
Part of the reason for REFLECTION's formation was to provide a forum free
of the "flotsam and jetsam" that seem to litter the bands of the NetNews
groups and mailing lists supposedly dedicated to personal growth
topics. For whatever reason, mystical or earthly, the pace of life
of those seeking healing now appears to be accelerating. In that acceleration
there seems less time (and patience) to have to weed out nonsensical,
postings from those of sincere exploration. Hopefully
since more control is available over a mailing list, REFLECTIONS will help
to filter out much of this "noise." I hope you can feel as I do that this
is not a we/they matter of "better than," but more a matter of "clearer than"
and a deep desire that many have now for clarity.
Let's take a look at some guidelines that will help you determine if
what you have to post is appropriate:
* Does the tone of the article invalidate any other belief system or path?
Note that by invalidation I mean to say or write something that puts
someone or system as being "inferior" to your approach. We need to keep
in mind that different approaches are necessary depending on "where you
are" in the highly non-linear world of belief systems.
* Have you removed all extraneous "quoted" material of the story to which
you're writing a followup?
* Have you made every effort to ensure your thoughts are somewhat organized
and intelligible? Please refrain from posting drivel (you know, those
four lines of subconscious utterings that leak out of your brain when you
can't really come up with something to say).
* Is your response perhaps best directed at the individual, and NOT the
entire list? Imagine you are approaching the podium before a live audience
before you send a post to the whole list.
The above is acutally just basic "netiquette"... nothing really unusual.
But THOSE THAT REPEATEDLY HAVE TROUBLE WITH THESE GUIDELINES WILL BE
PERMANENTLY REMOVED FROM PARTICIPATION IN REFLECTIONS. It's in some ways
unfortunate that this needs saying, but I feel it's vital in order to keep
REFLECTIONS a safe and positive experience for those participating.
I would like to add a few other guidelines that I think would make REFLECTIONS
something very special.
* I would like to see postings come from the gut and from the heart. Head
stuff is good, but with so many of us moving into the Heart and into our
real feelings, it seems natural to try and continue this expansion into
our correspondence. I'd like REFLECTIONS to be considered a "safe" space
for this kind of sharing.
* I'd encourage submissions of complete articles, transcriptions, poems, etc.
Standalone items such as these can then be placed in the archives for
future members to access and become inspired. Submit things that have
you have in your archives, as well, as a number of readers have not
been on the NetNews. Basically, as facilitator for REFLECTIONS, I will
put postings that seem fairly complete in the archive; there is no
special submission proceedure. I will let authors know if something
they have submitted will be archived.
* One model I see in terms of our group interaction is one of a Circle.
When I write, I do see all of "you" sitting in a "sacred" circle. In one
way, this means I don't post anything that I would not say to you in
such a setting. It also means I may address feeling issues, in a sacred
manner if that is appropriate.
* I feel that most topics are appropriate for REFLECTIONS, since most things
can, if intended, have a spiritual side to them. Many of those
topics will be represented in our archive subdirectory structure. But do
keep in mind that the New Age is not *just* about psychic phenomena. These
are certainly part of the unfoldment now, but by themselves, IMHO they are
empty. If you wish to post on these, please attempt to relate these topics
to *personal growth and healing*. The same goes for UFOs... if you can
relate the information clearly to something happening in terms of planetary
import, then great. But if you're just recanting a neat story you read in
the Inquirer, then please refrain.
* I know this may offend some, but this is not an "airy-fairy" new-age list.
I would like to set the tone to address gutsy, dark, and scary, earthy things
as well as the positive, "light" oriented stuff. Being an evolutionary
being means being very real, very honest about where you are. I'd like
to encourage people to be as competent and fulfilled on the Earth plane
(you know, everyday, "real" life) as well as the more expansive spiritual
planes. Do your best to ground your vision. That will help us understand
you better, as well!
Well, 'nuf said. I hope you find your time in the REFLECTIONS community
enjoyable, informative, helpful, uplifting and energizing! Please feel
free to make suggestions and comments at any time; let me know what
you'd like to see to make your experience in REFLECTIONS that much more
enjoyable.
With Exuberance for a New Way of Being,
Steve Dahmen,
REFLECTIONS Facilitator
P.S. You can subscribe to the REFLECTIONS mailing list by sending
an email the words "SUB BOUNCE" in the subject, and the word QUIT
as the body of the text. Send the email to:
[email protected] (except use lower case).
You can then get help from the server by sending the word HELP
on the subject line to the same address.
|
1669.4 | 'Reflections' archive -- see .10 | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu May 06 1993 18:05 | 120 |
| Archive listing for the Reflections archives.
All file names are *case* *sensitive*.
File size is in *bytes*.
** echanges/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** gms/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
10297 ECR.4.93 Latest on EC from Scallion
13301 inreview493 Prophecies in Review from April 93 ECR
7357 ECR.3.93 GMS Prophesies for Jan. 27 1993 and beyond
13189 nexusexcerpt Gordon Micheal-Scallion's Predictions - Nexus Excerpt
1898 ECR.subscribe Earth Changes Report Subscription Info
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
7154 bluestar The Blue Star (Excerpt from EC Report March 93)
5606 marysumrain No-Eyes' EC Predictions and status
2083 quakesonline OnLine INformation About Recent Earthquakes
22882 abraham_on_EC Abraham on Earth Changes (Channeled)
27312 nostradamus
2125 dovesnmen EC Poem: The Doves, The Men, and The Wave
17732 POJ_POF Hi-level, very personal article about Earth Changes
10458 iamamerica The I AM AMERICA Group
20171 aboutEC Earth Changes (LONG)
12757 hopi_message The Hopi Message to the UN General Assembly
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** channeling/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4656 nuclear Space People's Advice About Using Nuclear Energy.
22882 abraham_on_EC Abraham on Earth Changes (Channeled)
11691 thirdmillenium An excerpt from Ken Carey's book
15067 rose_ray The Gift of the Rose
14531 mafu Embracing Feeling, some inpsiring thoughts
19159 mideast_crisis A Channeled Message Re: State of Planet Earth
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** bodyhealing/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1641 polaritybreath Breathing and Polarity
13934 reikitraining A Personal Experience with Reiki Training
3445 reikichakras Reiki, Chakras, and Chants
2740 chakramed A Chakra Exercise
16147 beefandu Facts about Meat Consumption
5070 chakras.ref Intro to Chakras
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** articles/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
7255 natalmoon Your Natal Moon Phase and You
15613 calltohealing Astrology, Healing, and Music
2815 holistic HOLISTIC Discussion Forum Information!!
5204 observations Observations and Suggestion
5854 tenbulls TEN BULLS: a Zen Story
2005 rulesposter Rules For Being Human
9635 saturnkarma Astrology Excerpt about Saturn, POF, & life mission
10783 karmablast Alternative Views of Karma
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** poetry/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
985 restwhileucan Some Earth Poetry
194 oceanoflife Re: Relationships (Oneness)
571 moondance Moon Dance
2125 dovesnmen EC Poem: The Doves, The Men, and The Wave
948 link
1250 stargoddess Hear Ye the Words of the Star Goddess
5567 satori A Poem about a Satori (altered state) experience
4041 pleasehear Please Hear What I'm Not Saying
8637 movingthru Some Cosmic Poetry: Moving Through
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** essays/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3984 journey.gurj Gurdjieff on the Journey
26462 oakendoor Gaining Access to Spiritual Experience In the New Age
26103 personalpower On power and personal responsibility
14392 steve_dec91 Healing End of Year Thoughts for 91
11081 newmythos Towards a New Mythology
4923 deathnsex Death & Sexuality
12684 altsocfut Our Changing Planet's Futures
6522 balance Earthing, Grounding, Butt-Kicking
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** shaman/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
7423 smudging Smudging (Clearing energy the Earth Way)
5628 neat_shaman_essay Visionary Excerpt From 'The Shamen:Boss Drum' album
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** tech/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
14926 free_energy FREE-ENERGY TECHNOLOGY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** emotions/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2722 aboutrow About the Right Use of Will Mailing List
10256 emotionsnmeditation anger,meditation,balancing,healing
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** cosmic/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
32231 11.11 11:11 - The Next Major Planetary Activation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
** old2new/...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4306 onchrist A Perspective on Christ
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
Session ended.
For more information, send a HELP request to
Reflections Serv: [email protected].
Perl List Manager v1.0
The human being who runs this mail server,
can be contacted at [email protected].
|
1669.5 | How to get outside of DEC. | 6308::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon May 10 1993 14:42 | 174 |
| It seems that there was some confusion as a result of my previous note
about the "reflections" mailing list.
Most of us are probably accessing this notes conference over the "enet"
(a.k.a. EASYnet; nee engineering-net) from VMS. Since that is what
I have experience with, this note will be addressed to such users.
Anyway: when we wish to send mail to people using the VMS mail system
we use an address which looks like this:
CADSYS::Cooper
That tells the mailer to find the node named "CADSYS" (a node is either
a single machine or a bunch of machines which look to the enet like
a single machine) and send it to the account named "Cooper", i.e., me.
But that style of addressing only works on networks, such as the enet,
based on network software called DECNET, and the address itself will
only work on enet since that is the only network in which the specific
node which I work on resides. There are a lot of other networks
which use a lot of other conventions for sending mail.
Many of these networks are tied together by special machines -- called
gateways -- which are on and understand the mail conventions of two or
more of the networks. These gateways then translate mail -- and some
other network traffic -- and transfer them between the different
networks. Because of the gateways all the networks which have been
tied together can be considered a sort of super- or meta- network.
Since it isn't really official -- it isn't one thing which belongs to
some specific group of people with the right to name it -- there is
no official name for it. Sometimes you will see it called the Internet
-- but that is really just the name of one pretty big piece of it,
an official attempt to tie together some of the individual networks.
Other names I've seen in use are WorldNet, The Matrix (there is a book
on it of that name), or just The Net (I tend to favor The Net or
WorldNet myself).
There are a number of different ways that people are addressed on
WorldNet, but there is a standard which is widely used. It is called
domain addressing. Here is my address on the WorldNet:
[email protected]
This says that the mail is to be addressed to "Cooper" at location
"cadsys.enet.dec.com" something like my enet address but with two
important differences:
1) My name comes first.
2) There is more than one piece to the name used for the location.
To understand what the location name means you have to start at the
end. Each piece of the name is separated from the others with "."s
so the last part -- called the "domain" is ".com". The domain name
is meant to divide the computing world into a reasonable number of
pieces which "everyone" (i.e., all the gateways at least) can know
about without creating a huge burden. There are basically two
sets of "domains". What you see most often is that there are a bunch
of domains which are based on the kind of organization involved. Off
the top of my head (and therefore, presumably including the most
commonly seen domains) you have:
.com commercial organizations
.edu educational organizations, i.e. mostly schools
.mil military organizations
.org organizations -- social organizations, clubs, etc.
There is also a two letter domain name -- taken from an international
postal standard -- for every country. E.g.:
.us United States (rarely used -- mostly by org)
.uk United Kingdom
.se Sweden
.de Germany
.nl Netherlands
Some gateways also have their own pseudo domains which allow you to
talk about systems on the WorldNet which don't follow this system. For
example, to talk through DEC's gateway to user "Foo" on node "BAR" of
the network called BITNET, you can address it to "[email protected]".
Anyway, the idea is that only some nodes have to know anything about
anything to the left of the domain name (sometimes called the
"top-level domain"), and they need to do so only for a specific domain.
All other nodes only need (after, presumably, making sure that it
isn't they themselves being addressed) to send the mail to the most
convenient node which advertises itself as handling that domain. That
node will take care of the rest.
The next piece of the name to the left is called the sub-domain, and is
handled by the "domain server" (a node which understands the particular
domain). The domain server looks at the sub-domain and that determines
where, or how, the rest of the address is to be interpreted. The
domain server then sends the mail to the (or one of the) nodes which
are part of that domain server. (In the .com domain, sub-domains are
usually the names of companies). Sometimes, that is all that is
needed. My wife, for example, is the system manager for a company
called Kurzweil Applied Intelligence. To send mail to someone named
"jones" at her company you would send it to:
[email protected]
In other cases there are further sub-domains requiring further
interpretation, perhaps by forwarding the mail to someplace else which
understands that sub-sub(-...)domain. For example, my address:
[email protected]
The ".com" says that I can be found somewhere in the commercial domain.
The ".dec.com" says that I can be found more particularly at Digital
Equipment Corporation. The ".enet.dec.com" tells DEC's gateway that it
needs to convert the rest of the address to the form used for the enet
at DEC. Finally, the "@cadsys.enet.dec.com" says that I can be found
on node cadsys on the DEC's enet.
Similarly, the address:
[email protected]
Says the mail is to be addressed to "user" "reflections-request", in
the commercial domain, at "ford" (presumably the Ford Motor Company),
in "system" "srl" (at a guess, the something-or-other Research Lab),
on node "sl0091".
That only leaves how you get the mail to somewhere which understands
about "domain addressing" which VMS mail does not do. Basically,
the answer is that you send it over enet, just like any other mail,
to the gateway, using the complete domain mail address as the "user".
You enclose the domain address in quotes to keep the mailer from trying
to interpret it as anything else. The gateway is node "DECWRL". So
you would say (although I'll revise this a little in a moment):
DECWRL::"[email protected]"
It is strongly recommended that you used the special "NMAIL" program
though. DECWRL processes a lot of mail, and can easily become clogged.
NMAIL does two things:
1) It sends the mail to DECWRL in an efficient manner, reducing
the demands on that machine and making a clog less likely.
2) If it can't get through (because too many other people are
trying to use the gateway at the same time) it saves it in a file
and tries again in a little while.
The simplest way to use NMAIL if it has been installed on your system,
is to just use MAIL as you always have but to send to address:
NM%DECWRL::"[email protected]"
If that doesn't work, then talk to your system manager about getting
it installed, and in the meantime use the first form (but be prepared
to need to try several times sometimes).
You can also say to VAX Mail,
SET TRANSPORT "NM%"
which means that all your mail will be sent via NMAIL (lots of people,
including me, do this). This is an undocumented feature in most
versions of MAIL, but it is there -- just try it.
One other thing, if you try to send mail to the gateway directly
from the DCL command line, rather than using the SEND command inside
mail, DCL will "eat" your quote marks and it won't work. You have
to add extra quotes to keep DCL from doing that:
NM%DECWRL::"""[email protected]"""
Is the right incantation.
If you want to try this out, you can send mail to yourself,
NM%DECWRL::"[email protected]"
Topher
|
1669.6 | Any more tips? | ESSB::BROCKLEBANK | Looking at/for the more subtle things | Mon May 17 1993 13:12 | 12 |
| Topher,
I'v followed your instructions on how to access Reflections. The mails
I'v received have been very interesting.
However, even the first mail I received in response to the command
GET bodywrk/reiki (not exact spelling here)
appeared to be in the middle of a discussion, some of which referred to
Reiki and some which did not. Is there any way of getting all the
material from the start of the discussion? Is the labelling of the
subjects being addressed very loose?
Thanks for your info sofar.
Regards,
Dave
|
1669.7 | No, but you could try... | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon May 17 1993 15:36 | 13 |
| Some of these "listservers" keep archives of all the mail that goes
through them. Others don't keep any. This one has an intermediate
policy -- the person who runs it explicitly archives anything he thinks
people might want to look up later. That might turn out to be only
part of a "conversation". You might send mail to the people who
participated in the part you have and ask if they have kept the rest
of the discussion.
As for the labeling -- that's done by the list's "owner" and I'm too
new to this particular list to know how loose or tight his labeling
is.
Topher
|
1669.8 | | UHUH::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Wed May 19 1993 11:46 | 10 |
| Dave,
I'm on that distribution list and was part of Steve's old Reflections list
a few years ago. The list is very active so I suspect that there is
just too much volume to keep online.
My husband and I met Steve last year while we were down in the
Virginia area. He is a really nice guy. Try writing to him directly.
Ro
|
1669.9 | Ayurveda mailing list. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed May 19 1993 16:32 | 24 |
| This one may be of interest to some of you.
Topher
==============================================================================
From: DECWRL::"[email protected]" "Paul E. Hoffman" 16-MAY-1993 23:30:14.74
Subj: NEW: Ayurveda mail list
[email protected]
I have started a new mailing list to discuss ayurveda, the science of
life that has been practiced in India for at least 5000 years. If
you are currently practicing ayurveda or are just interested, please
feel free to sign onto the mailing list. (If you've never heard of
Ayurveda and are intrigued, two good books are _Perfect Health_ by
Deepak Chopra and _Ayurveda: Science of Life_ by Vasant Lad.)
To get on the mailing list, please send a message including your
preferred mailing address to: [email protected]
To send a message to the mailing list, use: [email protected]
Owner: Paul E. Hoffman [email protected]
|
1669.10 | Node change for Reflections. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed May 19 1993 17:48 | 15 |
| RE: .3,.4
Reflections has just moved. It is now at:
[email protected]
For subscriptions, etc, and at:
[email protected]
For contributions.
I assume the archive is now also on dsg43.nad.ford.com.
Topher
|
1669.12 | Steve Crabtree. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Dec 03 1993 16:25 | 5 |
| RE: .11
From what I know of him, Steve is a good choice as moderator.
Topher
|
1669.13 | Can we get to it ? | DWOVAX::STARK | There ain't no sanity clause. | Mon Dec 06 1993 10:05 | 5 |
| re: alt.paranet.psi
Has anyone else had trouble finding this newsgroup on the servers
available through Digital ?
todd
|
1669.14 | Should come through eventually. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Dec 06 1993 16:53 | 6 |
| The newsgroup creation message hasn't apparently reached DEC's gateway
yet. I expected that it would come through this weekend and I would
find it this morning, but this was not the case. If it doesn't show
up in the next few days, I'll contact the paranet administrators.
Topher
|
1669.15 | (;^) | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Mon Dec 06 1993 17:26 | 4 |
|
No doubt coming from the paranode...
Cindy
|
1669.16 | parapunishment | DWOVAX::STARK | There ain't no sanity clause. | Tue Dec 07 1993 10:03 | 10 |
| > No doubt coming from the paranode...
... located by the waterside on the paramours, or perhaps the paradox
by the bay ?
If I roll a paradise, will paranet come up with snake eyes ?
sorry, I'm paragon from here ...
todd
|
1669.17 | paramount of paranoidness (;^) | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Dec 07 1993 11:04 | 4 |
|
You best be, after that one Todd.
Cindy
|
1669.20 | much appreciated, Marcos | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Feb 18 1994 14:38 | 7 |
|
If anyone has the address for Clarion Call magazine, I'd really
appreciate it.
Thanks,
Cindy
|
1669.21 | ParaNet access | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Feb 23 1994 14:00 | 44 |
| I've gotten a request for information about "subscribing" to ParaNet.
ParaNet was originally (and still is) distributed via a number of
individaul bbs. Basically, you have to join the bbs (which may simply
consist of connecting to it) and to have the phone number to connect
your modem to. This cannot, generally, be done from within DEC.
ParaNet is now also available as part of USENET -- with newsgroups
named "alt.para.xxx". USENET is (grossly simplified) the Internet's
version of NOTES (the most important differences are that most
"newsgroups" -- basically the same as a NOTES conference -- are
completely unmoderated, and postings only stay around for a limited
period of time, typically 2 weeks).
To access USENET you need two things. A "newsreader" program which
you can run on your system, and a "feed" (a node) from which you can
access the USENET notes.
Basically, there are three newsreaders generally available within DEC:
DXRN & MXRN are variants of the same program. They work in a
DECWindows environment. DXRN is based on the old UCX standard
while MXRN is based on Motif. A NOTES file devoted to these
programs can be found at "UFP::XRN".
VNEWS is a newsreader for character cell terminals. Believe me,
if you can, you should use DXRN or MXRN. The VNEWS notes file
is at "CLO::VNEWS".
You should probably start by looking around your system and seeing if
any of these programs is already set up.
As far as obtaining a "feed" the NOTES conference
"UPSAR::NEWS-BACKBONE" tells you how to go about that if it isn't
already set up for you.
When you first run the program, you'll be offered a list of a gajillion
or so newsgroups (actually 5363 at last count), which you should sort
through one way or another (for example, just skip to alt.para*, or
search for names of interest to you).
Good luck!
Topher
|
1669.22 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Hedgehog on the Info Super Highway. | Thu Feb 24 1994 09:03 | 7 |
| >This cannot, generally, be done from within DEC.
I find it no problem, but then on of the many screens on my desk is not
a terminal, but a rather battered old PC, which has a modem, I pick up
data off other nets and then download it with Kermit to my VMS account.
Jamie.
|