Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!nycmny1-snh1.gtei.net!news.gtei.net!newsfeed.mathworks.com!kibo.news.demon.net!news.demon.co.uk!demon!mail2news.demon.co.uk!not-for-mail
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.mail-news,comp.answers,news.answers
Subject: comp.os.msdos.mail-news FAQ (01/02) intro
Followup-To: comp.os.msdos.mail-news
Date: 07 Jul 2002 01:00:00 -0600
Organization: Private System, Edmonton, AB, Canada
Approved: [email protected]
Expires: 07 Aug 2002 12:00:00 GMT
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Summary: uucp, mail, and news for msdos or ms-windows or os2 (part 01/02)
X-Trace: mail2news.demon.co.uk 1026026668 mail2news:28636 mail2news mail2news.demon.co.uk
X-Complaints-To: [email protected]
X-Mail2News-Path: news.demon.net!scanner.worldgate.ca!alpha3.uucp!locutus.ofb.org
User-Agent: trivdb (uufree)
Lines: 870
Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.os.msdos.mail-news:7955 comp.answers:50592 news.answers:233539

Archive-name: msdos-mail-news/intro
Original-Archive-name: comma-intro
Comp-os-msdos-mail-news-archive-name: intro
Posting-Frequency: monthly
Last-modified: 2001-Apr-07
Posting-Via: news.demon.net (mail2news)
Not-Posting-Via: my connectivity provider who doesn't do news for uucp now
Not-Posting-Via-The-Cable-Modem-Because: I don't want to

Comp.Os.Msdos.MAil-news == c.o.m.ma == comma
FAQ == Frequently Asked Questions

The FAQ lists for comp.os.msdos.mail-news can be found on the Internet:
 <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/comp.os.msdos.mail-news/intro>
 <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/comp.os.msdos.mail-news/software>
 <http://www.faqs.org/faqs/msdos-mail-news/intro/>
 <http://www.faqs.org/faqs/msdos-mail-news/software/>

========================================================================

Contents:

Part 1:

   1. Disclaimer
   2. Spam
   3. Where are the Questions?
   4. Charter
   5. QWK
   6. `offline'
   7. Related Groups/Mailing Lists
   8. Books and Online Resources
   9. ftp and how to get files from the Internet
     a. help is easy to obtain
     b. where to find software
     c. archie
     d. not on the Internet:  accessing ftp archives
     e. not on the Internet:  accessing archie
  10. RFCs
  11. announcements
  12. other FAQs
  13. What do the technical or jargon terms mean?
  14. How can I get mail/news on my PC at home?
     a. I have a UNIX login, but don't want to tie up the phone lines.
     b. I can get a `feed' -- but what do I do with it?
     c. I'm reading over someone's shoulder.
     d. I want better software than what I've got now.
  15. How can I use waffle newsreaders with other packages?
  16. How can I decode proprietary Microsoft TNEF attachments?
 998. spelling
 999. credits

Part 2:

1000. notes and index
  1001. Disclaimer
  1002. I want mail and/or news on msdos!  what software is there?
  1003. summary only - no reviews
  1004. what the addresses mean
  1005. maintainer index
  1006. location index

2000. uucp
  2001. discussion
  2002. waffle
  2003. uupc, uupc-msw [msw], uupc-os2 [os2]
  2004. fsuucp
  2005. mks-uucp
  2006. internetanyw [msw]
  2007. uuslave
  2008. pduucp/pcuucp
  2009. dcp
  2010. xp/crosspoint
  2011. fxuucico
  2012. mail-it-rem [msw]
  2013. minihost [msw]
  2014. winnetmail [msw]
  2015. uufree
  2016. ntnetnews [nsw]
  2017. uulink

3000. mail/news transport agents, batchers, servers
  3001. discussion
  3002. filesystem
  4000. network

5000. mail/news user agents
  5001. discussion
  5002. filesystem
  6000. network

7000. other

8000. source
  8001. discussion
  8002. dcp
  8003. uuslave
  8004. pduucp/pcuucp
  8005. uupc
  8006. uupc-msw
  8007. uupc-os2
  8008. snews
  8009. hackticnr
  8010. rnr
  8011. winelm
  8012. mit-red
  8013. pcrrn
  8014. smaildos
  8015. pmnews
  8016. snuz
  8017. barbnews
  8018. olsenews
  8019. slnr
  8020. rexxnews-os2
  8021. procc
  8022. wsmtpd
  8023. trn
  8024. trn-os2
  8025. tin-os2
  8026. winvn
  8027. nexp
  8028. mimelite
  8029. wrn
  8030. appsig
  8031. aser
  8032. solar
  8033. makenews
  8034. mailqueue
  8035. tmailpostnews
  8036. nnrnews
  8037. uufree
  8038. mpack
  8039. mime64
  8040. unpost
  8041. nntpd-dvx
  8042. nn-dvx
  8043. brn
  8044. paperboy
  8045. wafpegasus
  8046. edrhr
  8047. newsmerg
  8048. foldscan
  8049. multimail

========================================================================


1. Disclaimer

Read at your own risk.  The current, previous, or original authors
make no claim as to fitness for any purpose or absence of any errors,
and offer no warranty.  Do not eat.


2. Spam

you wouldn't believe how much spam I get to this address.


3. Where are the Questions?

most of them are implicit.  this is more of a `Frequently Wanted
Information' listing than a FAQ listing.

just pretend you're on `Jeopardy!', and everything will be fine.


4. Charter

``
Date: Wed, 19 May 1993 19:54:41 MDT
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Subject: CFV: comp.os.msdos.mail-news
Sender: [email protected]

Charter:

 [ use of `msdos' can be interpreted as `msdos and compatibles' ]

 [ traffic relating to ms-windows and os/2 would be welcome until such
   a time (if ever) that traffic warranted creation of groups under
   comp.os.ms-windows and/or comp.os.os2 ]

 on-charter topics include:

   - almost anything involving running uucp under msdos
   - almost anything involving usenet (RFC1036) under msdos
   - almost anything involving DNS mail (RFC822) under msdos
   - almost anything involving PCMAIL (RFC1056) under msdos
   - almost anything involving Post Office Protocol (RFC1225) under msdos

 similar RFCs will also be discussed, as they become available.
''

note:  see the section `RFCs' for updated numbers

``
Date: 21 Jun 1993 16:27:00 -0400
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Subject: RESULT: comp.os.msdos.mail-news passes 140:21
Sender: [email protected]
Approved: [email protected]

RESULT: comp.os.msdos.mail-news PASSES 140:21
''



5. QWK

as QWK has several built-in limitations in its headers, many (or
most) QWK-to-news programs produce articles which are not compliant
with RFC1036, thus these topics are off-charter.

however, there are notices of QWK packages that get around these
limitations, in much the same way normal news articles do -- by
including the full text of the headers in the text, separated by
a blank line.  in addition, there are hopes of QWK user agents
which recognize these headers and work with them as well as any
non-QWK user agent.  and finally, the reported official successor
to QWK will support `Internet' (sic) headers.

discussion of _these_ topics is, of course, directly on-charter.


6. `offline'

the word `offline' means different things to different people, and
it seems sometimes that neither group understands what the other
is talking about.  naturally, this leads to confusion.

for some, `offline' means:  using local processing power to
 compose messages locally, manage files, and do various other
 things, instead of using your PC as a $10 surplus terminal.
 this is often accomplished using such tools as uucp.

for others, `offline' goes further, and means:  using local
 processing power to do things, without having the PC set up
 as a distinct site.  very, very similar tasks are done in
 very, very similar (but occasionally weirdly incompatible)
 ways.  this is often accomplished using such tools as uqwk.
 there is a very good standards document available known as
 `soup12.zip' which outlines a way to eliminate some of the
 incompatibilities.  (see the section on `ftp' for how to
 find a location near you.)  soup (simple offline usenet
 packets) is based on hdpf/hpf (helldiver packet format)
 and an enhanced hdpf named slnp (simple little news packets).

I will attempt to avoid use of the word `offline' here.

==begin FAQ caption==
 From: Rahul Dhesi <[email protected]>
 Newsgroups: comp.mail.pine,news.software.readers,comp.mail.misc
 Message-ID: <[email protected]>
 Date: 15 Mar 1995 09:28:08 GMT

Suppose I have a high-powered Sun machine that gets, oh, 6 incoming
newsfeeds totalling a couple of hundred megs a day.  If I read or
post news on it, am I reading or posting offline?  (Probably not, you
might say.)

What if I cut it down to, say 2 incoming news feeds and 50 megs a day?

One incoming newsfeed and 3 megs a day?  A sporadic incoming newsfeed
that's rather selective based on my tastes, a couple of hundred
kbytes a day?

Just what is meant by offline news reading?
==end FAQ caption==


7. Related Groups/Mailing Lists

(note:  these are suggestions for posting, not laws.  but people
do tend to be happier when everyone is on-charter, I would guess.)

comp.os.os2.mail-news   Mail and news apps/utils (on- & offline) under OS/2.
- OS/2-specific mail and news issues

comp.bbs.waffle         The Waffle BBS and USENET system on all platforms.
- anything to do with waffle probably should be at least crossposted here.

alt.usenet.offline-reader       Offline readers for usenet
- ``I have an account, but want to read news without tying up the
 phone line - how can I do it?''

alt.usenet.offline-reader.forte-agent
                       Discussion of Forte, Inc.'s Agent offline readers
- Forte's Agent and Free Agent readers

alt.comp.shareware.nettamer
- Net-Tamer

news.software.readers   Discussion of software used to read network news.
- news-reading software

comp.mail.uucp          Mail in the uucp network environment.
- uucp software, and using mail with it

comp.mail.misc          General discussions about computer mail.
- mail in general

comp.os.ms-windows.apps.winsock.mail \  for the use of winsock-compatible
comp.os.ms-windows.apps.winsock.news  > mail, news, and other applications
comp.os.ms-windows.apps.winsock.misc /  (including SLIP/PPP access)

comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc     TCP/IP for IBM(-like) personal computers.
- ``how do I get SLIP working under msdos?  ftp?  telnet?''

comp.mail.pegasus-mail.misc  Pegasus Mail for DOS and Macs, and Mercury Mail.
comp.mail.pegasus-mail.ms-windows     Discussion of Pegasus Mail for Windows.
- anything to do with Pegasus or Mercury should at least be crossposted here.

bit.listserv.pmail      Pegasus Mail Discussions.
- Pegasus mail in general

 to get via mail, from `[email protected]':  Send a message with text of
 `SUBSCRIBE PMAIL Firstname Lastname'

comp.mail.eudora.ms-windows     Eudora email software for MS Windows.
- Eudora (appears intended to replace the Eudora mailing list)

[email protected]      Eudora
- to subscribe, send mail to [email protected] with
 `subscribe windows-eudora-forum' in the body

de.comm.software.crosspoint
- Discussion of Crosspoint (XP)

<not-given>@ua1vm.ua.edu               Mercury
 to subscribe, mail [email protected] any Subject, with the message body
 containing only the line (no sig!)
 SUBSCRIBE MERCURY Firstname Lastname

[email protected]           Microsoft Mail
- anything to do with ms-mail

[email protected]           cc:Mail Interest Group
- anything to do with cc:mail
- send a message to [email protected] with
 "subscribe CCMAIL-L Full Name" to subscribe
- rumor has it that address is now [email protected]

[email protected]                      uupc
- send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

[email protected]                zipnews
- send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

[email protected]                fsuucp
- send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

# (old)
# [email protected]             fsuucp
# - send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

[email protected]            fxuucico
- send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

<not-given>@jpunix.com                 rnf
- send email to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.

[email protected]     solar
- To subscribe, send mail to [email protected] with
`subscribe solar' in the body of the message.

[email protected]    yarn
- To subscribe, send mail to [email protected] with the
contents of the message being `subscribe yarn-list <your-full-name>'

[email protected]              V-MailServer
- To join the list, send the command `subscribe vmail-l' in the body of
the message, to [email protected]. Or, send the command `HELP'.

[email protected]          Waffle on OS/2
- send mail to `[email protected]'.  In the body on the first two
lines enter:  `join WaffOS2-L' and `quit' (case is not important).

[email protected]                wsomr
- to subscribe, mail [email protected] -- in the body put
 `subscribe wsomr-l'
- to get digest format, mail [email protected] -- in the body put
 `subscribe wsomr-d'

<not-given>@mvmpc9.ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de   uka_ppp
- to subscribe mail to [email protected]
 with "subscribe uka_ppp" in subject or body

<not-given>@wcape.school.za     uuplan
- To join the list, email [email protected] with the message
 subscribe uuplan-users

[email protected]     Deutsch waffle
- To register write to: [email protected]
 First line of message text: GET WAFFLE




(these following ones seem to be permanently down -- no response)

[email protected]        snews
- send mail to [email protected] to subscribe/unsubscribe.  seems
 oriented more towards developers/power users.

[email protected]          snews
- Send a message to [email protected] with a body of
 "SUBSCRIBE PC-UUCP-L" for discussions on this software.
 (not sure how drastically this is intended to be different from
 snews-dev-l, and the name seems misleading)



8. Books and Online Resources

there are a large number of books on every shelf I've seen about how to
connect your PC to the Internet via SLIP, and a lot of them come with
sampler packs.  there are other FAQs that list them.  I want to concentrate
on books which cover uucp, or focus on mail/news, not on a run-of-the-mill
SLIP connection.

DOS User's Guide to the Internet
 ISBN 0-13-106783-3
 Includes disk with uucp, mail, and news software
   Mortice Kern Software
   [email protected]

 is about uucp, not Internet

> From: [email protected] (Bob Tiptrie)
> Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.mail-news
> Message-ID: <[email protected]>
> Date: Mon, 22 Jan 1996 20:45:03 PDT

> A note on [DOS User's Guide to the Internet]:  I purchased
> this a couple of years ago.  Overall it's fine, but the
> mailreader is terribly broken and is not likely to be made
> to work soon -- if ever.  The news-handler they promised was
> (if I remember right) sold to another outfit.

> Don't expect to get a full working UUCP with the software
> included with this book -- contact MKS first!


Low Cost E-Mail with UUCP
 ISBN 0-442-01849-5
 Includes disk with uucp, mail, and news shareware
 Copyright date 1995
   Van Nostrand Reinhold
   115 Fifth Ave.
   NY NY 10003
 or
   Nelson Canada
   1120 Birchmount Road
   Scarborough, Ontario
   Canada M1K 5G4
   +1 416 752 9100 x 444


emai

 simtelnet:msdos/mailnews/em_ai111.zip

> EM_AI v1.11 is a monthly publication that is a menu driven executable
> manual for accessing the Internet by email with search and save and
> print features.  The manual contains Dr. Bob's and Gerald E. Boyd's
> offline access to the Internet, pix4u and email4u manuals, in easy to
> search and save and print format.  The manual also contains email
> letters from mailing list that provide useful information and troubled
> problems that others have had with workable solutions to accessing the
> Internet by email.

9. ftp and how to get files from the Internet

9a. help is easy to obtain

there are many good introductory materials on how to use ftp and
transfer files around the Internet (and beyond).  some are available
as books in your local library/bookstore (go ahead, ask the person
behind the counter), and some are available as other FAQ files.

if you're confused, your best first action is to ask someone locally.
ask the person or machine from whom/which you got this file you're
reading right now for help.  they're a lot more likely to know the
commands that will work for you than anyone across the planet.

or, if it's 4 a.m., you might try sending mail to the id
``[email protected]''.  if prompted for a Subject: to
use, just use ``help''.  when entering text, just use one line,
and again, just use ``help''.

if you have a web browser, it will probably ftp files for you
automatically, and you can skip this section.

if you're on an Internet-connected machine, you might want to try
going through the following, to see if it works.  if not, your best
bet is again:  asking someone local who's in the know.

(we'll assume your email address is [email protected] for this section)

you see something like... you type...
----------------------    --------
%
                ftp rtfm.mit.edu

ftp: Command not found.
                (well, it won't work.  talk to someone local.)



CONNECTED to random-name.mit.edu.
200 random-name FTP server ready.
Name (rtfm.mit.edu:chris):
                anonymous

331 Guest login ok, send e-mail address as password.
Password:
                [email protected]

230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply.
ftp>
                cd /pub/usenet

250 CWD successful
ftp>
                cd news.announce.newusers

250 CWD successful
ftp>
                ls

200 PORT command successful.
150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for file list.
[lots and lots of file names you can grab]
226 Transfer complete.
2048 bytes received in 2.00 seconds (1.0 Kbytes/s)
ftp>
                hash

Hash mark printing on (1024 bytes/hash mark).
ftp>
                binary

200 Type set to I.
ftp>
                bell

Bell mode on.
ftp>
                get Answers_to_Frequently_Asked_Questions_about_Usenet faq

           old name ^^^                                       new name ^^^

200 PORT command successful.
150 Opening binary mode connection for Answers_to_Frequently_Asked_Qu
estions_about_Usenet (40960 bytes).
###################...####
226 Transfer complete.
local: faq remote: Answers_to_Frequently_Asked_Questions_about_Usenet
40960 bytes received in 40.0 seconds (1.0 Kbytes/s)
ftp>
                close

221 Goodbye.
ftp>
                quit

%
                more faq


not all of those steps were absolutely necessary, but they work.


9b. where to find software

much of the software discussed in c.o.m.ma can be obtained via ftp
from these (and many other) places:

        ftp.gte.com:/pub
    ftp.halcyon.com:/pub/waffle

      ftp.coast.net:/Coast/msdos/uucp (also waffle, offlinemail)

{following 3 are unknown -- simtel was coast.net, then simtel.net}
wuarchive.wustl.edu:/systems/ibmpc/msdos/uucp
         ftp.uu.net:/systems/ibmpc/msdos/simtel/uucp
    oak.oakland.edu:/SimTel/msdos/uucp

{following 2 are unknown -- cica=>winsite.com}
ftp.cica.indiana.edu:/pub/pc/win3
 gatekeeper.dec.com:/pub/micros/msdos/win3

      ftp.coast.net:/Coast/win3/winsock (also offline)


9c. archie

for help with archie, which can locate files for you on ftp sites
world-wide, send mail to (for instance)

 [email protected]
 [email protected]
 [email protected] [the original site]

for a Subject: line, use `help', and in the text of the message,
just use one line -- `help'.

there may an archie server nearer to you.  any of these will be
able to tell you.

you may already have an `archie' command installed on your
machine.  you will likely get quicker responses from the server
if you do, and you use that version instead.  but it's up to
your system administrator and network connection.


9d. not on the Internet:  accessing ftp archives

first, ask someone local -- they may already have the files you need!

(obviously, most of the following methods will cost you phone
charges of some sort, an access charge, or both.  know the
charges before transferring files)

for the (old) simtel collection:

- many BBSs carry the CD-ROM copy, and allow free X/Y/Zmodem downloads
- Detroit Download Central +1 313 885 3956 allows X/Y/Zmodem downloads
- ftp.uu.net 1-900-GOT-SRCS allows anonymous uucp (id uucp, no password)
 use `uucp uunet!~/help uunet-help' for the help file

waffle and offlinemail portions only:

- remote.halcyon.com allowed anonymous uucp (id: nuucp, password: nuucp)
 use `uucp remote!~/00-index.txt .' for the master file list for anon uucp
 note that remote also carries the ftp.halcyon.com collection!
 [currently unavailable, hoped to return]

for other collections:

there is a common service known as `ftp-by-mail' -- it allows you to
transfer files through email.  keep in mind that most mail transfer
setups are designed for very short messages (most mail that I get here
is under 4k), and that ftp-by-mail systems will happily send a 2 meg
file all at once (usually, it will be in a lot of pieces, but it
still takes unexpected amounts of disk space to store them).  thus,
I (personally) recommend this be used only when clear permission has
been obtained from the place that would be most affected by doing this.

I repeat:

check with the person who runs your site, or if you run your own site,
check with the site(s) that you connect to that would also have to bear
the burden.

once you have everyone's ok, send mail to any of the many archive
servers to get started.  for instance, for [email protected]
the subject=`help', text=one line, `help'.


9e. not on the Internet:  accessing archie

you can send mail to archie@<the archie server you want to use>, whether
you're on the Internet or not.


10. RFCs

RFC stands for ``Request For Comment''.  the RFCs are numbered
documents which lay out proposed standards for how machines
can communicate over the Internet (more or less).

if you are writing any news or mail software, you definitely want to
(actually, need to!) consult the relevant RFCs.  this is not only the
case if your machine is directly connected to the Internet, but also
if you intend to generate mail or news that may travel over the
Internet at some point.  they can be obtained via ftp from these
(and many other) places:

wuarchive.wustl.edu:/doc/rfc/rfc822.txt.Z
                   /doc/rfc/rfc1036.txt.Z
                   /doc/rfc/rfc1123.txt.Z
        ftp.uu.net:/inet/rfc/rfc822.Z
                   /inet/rfc/rfc1036.Z
                   /inet/rfc/rfc1123.Z
ftp.zoo.utoronto.ca:/pub/news.txt.Z  (this is a draft of 1036's successor)

other RFCs of interest:
 rfc1939: POP (Post Office Protocol)
 rfc2060: IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol)



11. announcements

much of the software discussed in comma is available for ftp and
announced in the group `comp.archives.msdos.announce'.  when
sending in the announcement, please take a moment to indicate at
the top which groups you feel the announcement should be crossposted
to (eg. comp.os.msdos.mail-news, or alt.usenet.offline-reader, or
comp.bbs.waffle).  this makes the c.a.m.a moderator's job easier,
as well as allowing everyone who reads comma and c.a.m.a to see the
announcements only once.

a c.a.m.a moderator writes:

> If the uploader includes the Usenet "Newsgroups: " and "Folloup-To: "
> information either in the header or as the first two lines of the upload
> announcement that is mailed to me, it will be automatically used for the
> posting - unless it is inappropriate, in which case it will be edited to
> delete the inappropriate newsgroup(s).


12. other FAQs

many FAQs are found at rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/ -- abbreviated to
just `rtfm:' below:

rtfm:comp.bbs.waffle/Waffle_Frequently_Asked_Questions_(FAQ)
rtfm:news.admin.misc/How_to_become_a_USENET_site
rtfm:comp.mail.uucp/UUCP_Internals_Frequently_Asked_Questions
rtfm:alt.usenet.offline-reader/intro
rtfm:alt.usenet.offline-reader/software
rtfm:alt.usenet.offline-reader/yet-another-faq
rtfm:news.answers/ibmpc-tcp-ip

The Good Netkeeping Seal of Approval
http://www2.thecia.net/users/rnewman/Good-Netkeeping-Seal
http://www.xs4all.nl/%7Ejs/gnksa/
http://http.bsd.uchicago.edu/%7Etwpierce/news/


13. What do the technical or jargon terms mean?

UUCP
 Unix-to-Unix cp (copy)

rmail

rnews

NNTP
 Network News Transport Protocol

SMTP
 Simple Mail Transport Protocol

POP
 Post Office Protocol; Point of Presence

IMAP
 Internet Message Access Protocol

feed

RFC
 Request For Comment

MIME
 Multimedia Internet Mail Extensions


14. How can I get mail/news on my PC at home?

14a. I have a UNIX login, but don't want to tie up the phone lines.

[not only will you not tie up the phone lines, but you'll be able
to use your favorite editor, take your time formulating and
revising text, easily archive all your outoing messages, etc.]

check out alt.usenet.offline-reader -- this may be the easiest
solution for you.  it requires little or no effort on your admin's
part, if your system lets you compile and execute random C source,
but the tools currently available may not be what you're looking
for if you want more than `n' groups (where `n' ranges widely
for different people)

or, you could ask for a `mail feed' or `news feed' and see:


14b. I can get a `feed' -- but what do I do with it?

you'll need to know a little about it -- is the data transmitted
to you via the UUCP standard, or the NNTP standard?  UUCP is a
general-purpose file transfer protocol, and often comes with
programs to handle (also called `transfer', `unbatch', or `toss')
mail and news.  NNTP transfers news over an Internet Protocol
connection (and for info on how to get one of those, check out
comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc).


14c. I'm reading over someone's shoulder.

will their site give you a feed?  will they give one the person
whose shoulder it is you're reading over, so they could feed you?


14d. I want better software than what I've got now.

what is it compatible with?  there's probably something out there
already.


15. How can I use waffle newsreaders with other packages?

for reading only:

I've done this with two packages, myself (alpha3!commafaq).  rnr
is much easier, since you can just pass it all the stuff it needs
on the command-line, in environment variables, or in a config file.

of course, rnr now works with waffle and uupc natively.

(for software locations, see that part of the Comma FAQ)

for helldiver, you have to also fake a password file:

first:  get rnr and read the section in rnr.doc on how to
use rnr without waffle installed.

then, create a dummy password file for helldiver in waffle/admin/
that is of this format:

<256 bytes of random junk>username#10#10#10#10#10Your Full Name#10

`username' is your user id
`#10' is ascii 10 -- the LF
`Your Full Name' is your human-readable name

make sure the file size ends up a multiple of 256 bytes (not
necessary possibly, but sure can't hurt)

I think that's what I did to make it work, but it's been a while
now and I may have missed a step.


16. How can I decode proprietary Microsoft TNEF attachments?

(TNEF=Transport-Neutral Encapsulation Format)
see <ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/developr/MAPI/UTIL/TNEFDUMP/td32.exe>


998. spelling

it's == it is, it has.         "It's a nice day."  "It's been great."
its ~= his, her, their.        "The dog is chasing its rival."
you're == you are, you were.   "You're right."
your ~= his, her, their.       "You should watch your spelling."
lose == make not findable      "Don't lose your watch."        (pron. looz)
loose == not well-fastened     "The steering wheel is loose."  (pron. looss)
they're == they are            "They're crazy."
their ~= his, her, your        "The dogs are chasing their rivals."
there == a place or situation  "He is over there." "There is no food."
supersedes has no c.
definitely has no a.
compatible and compatibility each have an a, but only one.
don't use "'s" to make a plural -- "two car's" and "two RFC's" are both wrong


999. credits

many software entries were found in:
 Setting up SLIP clients under DOS / Windows by [email protected]
 comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc FAQlet Posting by [email protected]
 comp.mail.mime FAQ by [email protected]
 comp.bbs.waffle FAQ by [email protected]
 list of IMAP software by [email protected]
 LAN Mail Protocols Summary by [email protected]