Volume 5, Number  3                               18 January 1988
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    |                                                 /  \          |
    |                                                /|oo \         |
    |        - FidoNews -                           (_|  /_)        |
    |                                                _`@/_ \    _   |
    |        International                          |     | \   \\  |
    |     FidoNet Association                       | (*) |  \   )) |
    |         Newsletter               ______       |__U__| /  \//  |
    |                                 / FIDO \       _//|| _\   /   |
    |                                (________)     (_/(_|(____/    |
    |                                                     (jm)      |
    +---------------------------------------------------------------+
    Editor in Chief                                       Dale Lovell
    Editor Emeritus:                                   Thom Henderson
    Chief Procrastinator Emeritus:                       Tom Jennings
    Contributing Editors:                                   Al Arango

    FidoNews  is  published  weekly  by  the  International   FidoNet
    Association  as  its  official newsletter.  You are encouraged to
    submit articles for publication in FidoNews.  Article  submission
    standards  are contained in the file ARTSPEC.DOC,  available from
    node 1:1/1.

    Copyright 1987 by  the  International  FidoNet  Association.  All
    rights  reserved.  Duplication  and/or distribution permitted for
    noncommercial purposes only.  For  use  in  other  circumstances,
    please contact IFNA at (314) 576-4067. IFNA may also be contacted
    at PO Box 41143, St. Louis, MO 63141.

    The  contents  of  the  articles  contained  here  are  not   our
    responsibility,   nor   do   we   necessarily  agree  with  them.
    Everything here is  subject  to  debate.  We  publish  EVERYTHING
    received.



                            Table of Contents

    1. ARTICLES  .................................................  1
       Why all the Hoopla?  ......................................  1
       Gateways to the Future, Usenet, FidoNet and Public Acce  ..  4
       ALTERNET - It was a nice try, guys  ....................... 13
       DOCUMENTATION FOR OZONE.EXE  .............................. 15
       Patches For Quick Basic 4.0  .............................. 16
    2. WANTED  ................................................... 19
    3. NOTICES  .................................................. 20
       The Interrupt Stack  ...................................... 20
       Latest Software Versions  ................................. 20
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 1                   18 Jan 1988


    =================================================================
                                ARTICLES
    =================================================================


                         Why all the Hoopla?


         Yup, I am part of the "enemy". I find that all the  hoopla
    and ado about AlterNet  is just  what  it  sounds like, a   bunch
    of  noise. I "joined" AlterNet to keep in touch with some people
    I had typed messages to over the last 3 years (I have been around
    that long, yes) and the instant it became known I was immediately
    shunned by some people with whom I had  been communicating simply
    because I chose to also talk to others in another network.  Never
    mind my reasons  for joining AlterNet, hang me cause  I  joined
    it. Never  mind that  my  reasons   were   neither  political nor
    anti-IFNA, simply tie the noose  tighter  because  I  "defected".
    This alone is reason enough for any sane person to leave.  People
    who will not  listen to  any  reason why.  This attitude has been
    the major factor in my decision to also  "take  my  ball  and  go
    home". I hold no hatred  or ill  feelings  for anyone in FidoNet.
    In fact I wish FidoNet luck and  continued  growth.  I  forsee  a
    lot  of problems in that everyone wants  to make IFNA a toothless
    tiger (which it is now, so I guess they have suceeded).  I wanted
    IFNA  to  be  one  thing and one thing  only.  A  governing  body
    elected  by the "line sysops" who would  have  the  authority  to
    take whatever action necessary to remedy sticky  problems  in the
    net.

         AlterNet  would  have  no  need for being if everybody would
    sit  back  and  remember   one   simple   premise   of   FidoNet,
    co-operation  plain  and simple. So maybe you do not like the way
    something is done, big deal! Is is going to kill  you  to  simply
    forget  it  and continue on? Is is going to do you bodily harm to
    say "Ok there has got to be a  better  way  BUT  until  that  way
    comes  along  then  this  is  "as  good  as  it gets" (to quote a
    commercial). I think not.

         As I stated before my reasons were not political in  nature.
    While  I  disagree  with the way IFNA is now, I have NEVER said a
    word against it since right now this is "as good as it  gets".  I
    am  a  firm  beleiver  in  the  old addage of not bad-mouthing an
    organization as long as I am a member of  that  group.  Outsiders
    may  bad-mouth  away,  but  insiders should always show a "united
    front" and not bite the hand that feeds them. Yes you  are  being
    fed.  You  are  having  your "habit" of telecommunications fed by
    FidoNet. Yet with all the "good things"  FidoNet  has  done  over
    the  past  few years, this latest item in the "bad things" column
    has overshadowed everything else in my mind.

         Look back, who ran the net in  1984/85?    Ken  Kaplan,  Ben
    Baker,  Thom  Henderson,  Tom  Jennings, and others. These people
    poured everything they had into FidoNet only to have it  turn  on
    them and bite them.

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 2                   18 Jan 1988


         Tom  Jennings  gave  us  the  means (via FIDO <tm>?) to even
    have a FidoNet in the first place. He made it PD even  though  he
    didn't  have  to,  he did. Now there are almost 2500 nodes in the
    net. Back when it was still just Fido and SEADOG there were  1200
    nodes  in the net (or there-abouts). Shareware was the "rage" but
    shareware didn't work. Tom now SELLS  Fido  software.  It  is  no
    longer  the  free  bbs  of the future. It is now the finely tuned
    commercial package he markets to "make a few dollars"

         Ben Baker wrote the nodelist format for us. The same  format
    that,  for  the  most  part is exactly the same as it was in 1984
    when it all started. Ben automated the process.  I  can  remember
    when  FidoNet  nodelists  would have to be "updated" by hand. Try
    that with the  current  nodelist  (and  bring  your  lunch).  Ben
    didn't charge a dime for his software either. And still doesn't.

         Ken  Kaplan  ran the net from St Louis simply because TJ was
    so busy upgrading Fido. Ken made sure  new  nodes  were  welcomed
    into  FidoNet, he answered a LOT of the questions about how to do
    this and how to do that or who to contact to  find  out  how.  He
    was  in  essence  every  help  node all rolled into one. He built
    this net (along with the others) from the ground up.  And  he  is
    still active it it, though maybe not as much as before.

         Thom  Henderson  was  the publicity arm of FidoNet. He wrote
    the  news  (mostly  himself)  for  about  a  year  or  more   and
    distributed  this  sometimes monsterous file from his offices. He
    dedicated a machine (back then not  a  cheap  item)  strictly  to
    news  and  distribution of same. He dedicated a business line (in
    NJ again not a cheap item) to a hobby. and most of  all  he  gave
    of his time, as did all the others who made FidoNet great.

         Without  these individuals there simply would be NO FIDONET.
    There would be no echomail, no electronic email outside of a  pay
    service  like CompuServe <tm> or the Source <tm> etc. There would
    be far less telecommunications junkies  in  this  world  and  far
    more  money  in ma bells pockets from all the long distance calls
    to "log onto a bbs"

         Now if associating with these great folks  (and  not  all  of
    them  are  in  AlterNet)  is  treason or selfishness, then I am a
    traitor. I am selfish.  And  YES  I  am  in  AlterNet  for  these
    reasons.

         If  you  find  this  offensive  then  look  at  the  FidoNet
    nodelist   and  locate  the  various Coordinators and help nodes.
    Would you say they  are "trying  to  help?"  Would  you  say  the
    Echo  coordinators are "trying to help?" Would you even go so far
    as to say that the various help nodes are selfless to a fault.  I
    would.

         Now  I  guess  I will simply have to do as you say and "take
    my ball and go home", right? You tell me  what  I  should  do.  I
    want  to  maintain  contact  with my "electronic" friends in BOTH
    nets, however those in FidoNet are  slamming  me  for  trying.  I
    want  to  maintain meaningful discussions on a variety of topics.
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 3                   18 Jan 1988


    Not don my Nomex undies and crank up the  flamethrowers.  I  want
    to  have  FUN,  not  wonder  who I will offend next by stating my
    position. Tough decision, you bet it is. I would be giving  up  a
    lot  to  dump  either  of  the "nets", yet like most of the other
    AlterNet sysops, I too am a burnout, I too am 1 flame  away  from
    "pulling  the  plug" and I too am tired of all the fighting, name
    calling, and back-stabbing going on. If I have to  give  up  some
    friends  simply  because  they will not assiciate with me because
    of who I am friends with, I will give them up. Therefore  FidoNet
    be  forwarned  that  I will dump FidoNet and all it's BS if I get
    just  one  more  flame.  That  is  the  reason for the "anonymous
    writer" theme behind this. Not because I want to hide  who  I  am
    but because I do not want to quit.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 4                   18 Jan 1988


    Gateways to the future:
    Concerning FidoNet, Usenet, and the Future of Public Access
    Wide Area Networking              -- Doug Thompson, 221/162


         It's New Years (actually a little past) and the time for a
    review of the past 365 days and some forecasts for the next.

         I initially sat down to write this the week *before* the
    Alternet announcement in Fidonews. That event, it seems, has
    suddenly eclipsed most other discussions and brought a number of
    major issues into sharp relief. I suppose thanks is due the
    Alternet folks -- and I can't help wonder if this might not be
    part of their intent?

         The very fact of a having a choice of a technically similar
    alternate network provides an impetus for FidoNet to come to
    grips with what it is, and what it is not. In an area of such
    phenomenal growth as wide area computer networking, we must
    wrestle just as seriously with what we are to become, and what we
    wish not to become.

         There are three things I want to talk about:

         1) Growth -- the Future
         2) Usenet Gateways
         3) Expanded public Services
         4) Our Financial Base

         1) Growth rates

         First some numbers.  The oldest nodelist I have is from May
    2, 1986. That's 19 months ago. (from time of writing, Dec. 86)

    May 2        1986      789
    June 19      1987     1523 + 13 mos
    Dec 18       1987     2275 + 6 mos

    Avg monthly growth rate May '86 June 87=   56.46 nodes per month
    Avg monthly growth rate June - Dec   86=  125.33 nodes per month

         Over the past 6 mos FidoNet has grown at the rate of 125.33
    nodes per month. If this rate continues for the next year, we
    will see nearly 4,000 nodes in FidoNet by next Christmas. The
    limited stats here also suggest that the rate of growth more than
    doubled between May of 86 and December of 87. If that increase in
    the rate of growth continues, we could conceivably find ourselves
    with five or six thousand nodes by next Christmas.

         FidoNet seems to be doubling in size roughly every year. If
    anyone has more thorough stats drop me a line!

         Tom Jennings' hobby in 1984 has grown beyond what I imagine
    were his wildest expectations at the time. It seems to be an idea
    whose time has come, and is being more widely recognized as a
    good idea all the time.
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 5                   18 Jan 1988


        -- Rapid growth means most of us are relative newcomers --

         Growth of this pace inevitably causes strains, and we see
    lots of those in FidoNet. Having had some academic training in
    history, I grew accustomed to looking at the "flow" of events
    over the years rather than simply isolated snapshots. Among other
    things shown by these stats is that at least half the sysops in
    FidoNet have been participating less than 18 months.  Given that
    there is a drop-out rate as well as a growth rate, it may be that
    about half have been participating less than one year and about
    75% less than two.  That makes the vast majority of us relative
    newcomers, and our view of FidoNet is short enough to be called a
    snapshot.  But let's try to develop some snapshots into a movie.
    The figures in use here are rough approximations.  We do seem to
    have an exponential growth curve though. At current growth rates,
    by 1990, we could well have 30,000 nodes!

         I am not saying this *will* happen for certain, but I am
    persuaded at the moment that it is likely to happen. Forces which
    will encourage continued growth include:

         - declining costs and increasing capabilities of hardware
         - better and more user friendly software and interfaces
           which help non-experts jump in.
         - recent expansion into new countries and new continents.
         - self-propulsion: e-mail's value increases with the number
           of people you can reach. The bigger the net becomes the
           more the incentive to join.
         - Gateways to other networks making FidoNet an access point
           to many other and larger networks.
         - faster modems which reduce phone bills, making
           communication cheaper.

         I want to think about the implications of some of these
    things.  Rapid growth means that we will continue to have a
    majority of sysops with relatively brief experience in the net.
    We will remain "amateur" in more ways than one.

         I want to think about what it means to move from a hobbyist
    playing with an idea that society at large doesn't understand to
    the role of an operator in a world-wide computer network which
    more and more people will be depending on as an important channel
    of communication.

         I want to think about the economics of this: who is going to
    be carrying the cost of this international communication, and who
    might become interested to try to build a private business around
    the idea?


         2) Usenet Gateways

         During 1987 a number of FidoNet systems installed software
    which enables the exchange of mail and echoes with another and
    much larger computer network, Usenet.

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 6                   18 Jan 1988


         Usenet consists of about 10,000 machines around the world.
    Technically, Usenet is very similar to Fidonet and therefore
    gateways are not all that difficult.  There are vast differences
    in the character of the two nets however.

         Hardware in Usenet tends to be large computers owned by
    universities or businesses. While there are a small number of AT
    class IBM micros involved, for the most part the machines are DEC
    Vax minis.  Owners are commercial or educational institutions and
    the operators are employees of those institutions. The users are
    usually members of those institutions.

         Unlike FidoNet, the communication work of these computers is
    often a very small part of the computer's purpose.  The computers
    usually have other reasons to exist, and the communication work
    is incidental. To the extent that the owners support Usenet
    participation, they do so because of a perceived benefit for
    their employees and/or students.

         There is a lot of overlap in the type of people attracted to
    the two nets, and a great commonality of purpose. The major
    difference is that while the typical FidoNet sysop is an
    owner-operator who is really accountable to no one (except to be
    able to receive mail), the typical Usenet system administrator is
    an employee of an institution responsible to the accountants and
    managers for the system use.  He is also very much more
    responsible to his users, they pay him to keep the news and mail
    flowing.

         In these respects there is quite a difference, FidoNet
    consisting of "free-agents", paying their own way, and Usenet
    consisting of "corporation men" who do it as a job (although they
    may well greatly enjoy it). Where a FidoNet sysop pays for his
    mail (usually) a Usenet user or operator is rarely personally
    charged.  The institution absorbs the costs as part of the
    overhead.

         Another major difference is that Usenent is big. Some 10,000
    machines, the smallest of which are on par with the largest
    FidoNet systems. Usenet also has gateways to other networks,
    including ArpaNet, Bitnet, CSNet, and other national and regional
    networks around the world. The total number of users who have
    access to e-mail on all these networks is very hard to estimate,
    but I am pretty sure it is in the millions when you consider all
    the nets to which Usenet gateways.

         Accustomed to gatewaying to other networks, Usenet sites
    generally seem reasonably receptive to installing FidoNet
    gateways.  The perception generally seems to be that the value of
    Usenet increases in proportion to the number of e-mail addresses
    that can be reached. Fidonet represents some tens of thousands of
    addressable users, and is therefore worthwhile.

         My experience in "grovelling" for a news and mail feed from
    a Usenet site at a local university illustrates some other issues
    which are probably of general relevance. I was aided in my effort
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 7                   18 Jan 1988


    by the fact that I personally knew some of the Usenet operators
    and had other campus affiliations. The major concerns of the
    Usenet people were financial and technical. "How much is this
    going to cost us?" They wanted to know what kind of controls, if
    any, there would be on e-mail sent to them for forwarding, on
    their dime.  The second concern was technical reliability; "will
    your gateway cause us any hassles?"

         After providing much in the way of personal guarantees, a
    gateway was approved, although it was clearly pointed out that
    the approval could be suspended at any time. This raised a number
    of concerns for me. The first had to do with accounting. If mail
    was going to be moving through my system in both directions, I
    had to keep track of how much it was costing me, and how much it
    was costing the Usenet host. The second concern was my users. If
    I gave them access to Usenet newsgroups, what kind of problems
    might arise?

         There were two concerns about the users. I suppose we've all
    had problems of naive users not understanding that an echo area
    is not for private messages to local users. And most of us have
    experienced the twit problem, a user who is needlessly abusive
    and enters inappropriate messages. Should such material get into
    Usenet, I would receive the flak. I found myself in the
    uncomfortable situation of being personally responsible to tens
    of thousands of Usenet readers for whatever anyone might do on my
    system, as well as being responsible for any errors I might make
    :-).

         Dealing with Usenet differs from dealing with FidoNet both
    in scale, and in the level of professionalism expected. Usenet
    operators are professionals. In dealing with Fidonet they expect
    a similar professional attitude. Expensive errors are costing not
    just a few dollars of *personal* money, but corporate or
    institutional money.  An inconvenience can effect hundreds or
    thousands of people on whose approval the Usenet administrator's
    *job* depends.

         Running a gateway stretches the definition of hobby to the
    limit.

         Another very critical difference between FidoNet and Usenet
    is revealed here, the users. FidoNet is accessible to virtually
    anyone with a terminal and modem. Usenet is only accessible to
    the public at a very few "public access Usenet" sites. My first
    networking experience was in Usenet. I was so keen on it, I
    wanted to extend the capability to everyone, and became
    interested in creating a public access system. FidoNet nodes
    running gateway software appeared to be the cheapest way to
    establish public access to Usenet.  A relatively friendly user
    interface existed in Fido and Opus BBS systems, PD software was
    available, and the hardware needed was affordable.

         3) Financing

         Some serious difficulties are revealed in opening access to
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 8                   18 Jan 1988


    the public. Usenet is free. However, "free", in this context
    simply means that someone else pays for it.  Presently no device
    exists to charge back to the user the cost of services rendered.
    This is not because systems cannot charge users on a per message
    or per hour basis, but because the costs of any given message may
    be borne by hundreds, even thousands of different systems.  A
    large circulation newsgroup may end up occupying clusters on
    10,000 or more hard-disks, and be telephoned to sites all over
    the world.  As in FidoNet, Usenet sites do not generally charge
    each other for service.  At the moment this is quite workable.
    However, each Usenet site has a ceiling, a ceiling on funds and
    cpu cycles and disk space for the network.  General public access
    could, if it did become popular, come to swamp the network.  This
    will not happen tomorrow.  But, if network growth continues, it
    is a real possibility.

         Long term growth and general public access can only be
    accommodated through a system of financing that allows for some
    cost recovery when providing telecommunication services to
    others.  At the moment, extending services costs money. There is
    thus a financial *disincentive* to expanding services. If there
    were even the slightest financial *incentive*, and the money to
    buy new boxes, service could be expected to expand more rapidly.

         I would like to be in a position to "buy into" usenet,
    rather than beg into it. I'd like to advertise my tiny "public
    access" system and let it reach capacity. I'd like to be able to
    earn enough money from that user public to buy more machines and
    install more phone lines and bigger hard-disks. I'd like to know
    that in using the services of other systems, in Usenent and in
    FidoNet I was paying my way *and* making a financial contribution
    to those other services, and not stuck in a dependency
    relationship where every message was transferred as a favour.

         In short I'd like to see the system opened up, and service
    expanded. This cannot happen under current financing arrangements,
    where every expansion is a financial burden which must be
    limited.

         Reciprocity is basically the name of the network game. Each
    independent node or site in both networks provides value to
    others.  Some pay more than others, but it is in all our best
    interests to keep the connections open as best we can. The
    network's value *is* a function of how many people you can reach
    .  .  .  up to the saturation point.

         That saturation point worries me. With continued growth,
    traffic volume in echo mail (newsgroups in Usenent) will come to
    exceed the storage and throughput capacity of all but the largest
    systems.  Newsgroups also seem to have a maximum participation
    rate.  When the traffic volume in a newsgroup reaches hundreds of
    messages per day, it is impossible to keep up without some new
    kind of sophisticated "screening" software. The best one to date
    is the moderated "Digest". In this model, a moderator receives
    all submissions, and compiles them into a digest which is very
    similar in appearance and size to FidoNews. Unlike FidoNews,
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 9                   18 Jan 1988


    Usenet moderators usually cull inappropriate material (and often
    announce that they have done so).

         Optimizing the use of resources, and sharing the cost burden
    of expanded resources, can do much to increase the network
    capacity with minimum resource allocation. The price of that
    cooperation is a certain amount of autonomy.  A site cannot
    participate in a wide area cost-sharing plan to operate and
    manage collective resources without sacrificing a little
    autonomy.  Without that cooperation, however, many economies
    cannot be realized.  With it, the cost of inter-continental
    e-mail should drop to a few pennies per message.  The fee is
    nearly insignificant to the individual user.  The cost to
    individual gateway and zonegate systems, though, is crushing.

         I am not the first one to point out that continued growth
    will require centralized "network" services, rather than simply
    "site" services. Large machines with large disks and fast modems
    could be subsidized by the respective networks as store and
    forward facilities for mail. The use of leased lines and batched
    processing could bring the cost of reliable net-mail down to the
    vanishing point. But achieving those savings requires consider-
    able capital and a lot of labour.

         Individual sites could then subscribe directly, or groups of
    sites in a geographic area could pool their resources for a
    routed link to a central machine.

         In this manner, a skeletal device would be created whereby
    the actual costs of providing efficient services could be
    recovered.  It seems obvious that the funding and labour
    necessary to expand facilities to meet ever-increasing demand
    will exceed the capacity of individual site and node operators.
    There would also be a great deal more incentive for operators at
    every level to provide better service if the bulk of the costs
    were being borne by a large group of users, rather than the
    individual operator himself.

         One other fringe benefit -- based on the experience of
    Usenet -- an employee responsible to the net for his job is
    likely to provide a consistently high level of professionalism in
    network services.

         It would appear that the next few years will require us to
    solve these problems one way or another. The only alternative
    would seem to be to attempt to create a device to carefully limit
    the size of the network, and restrict access to a select few.
    While any particular network *could* do this, the public demand
    for electronic mail is unlikely to abate until virtually every
    phone line in the world has a telecommunication computer attached
    to it.

         Read that last sentence again.

         A question which concerns me greatly is that of addressing
    the issue of *organizing* and *financing* a public access e-mail
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 10                  18 Jan 1988


    network.  There appear to be two possible routes.

         One is commercial. Where there is a public demand, there
    will be businesses which attempt to meet that demand. The other,
    already foreshadowed to some degree in both Usenent and Fidonet,
    is the idea of a publicly owned, cooperatively managed,
    self-financing network.  The latter differs from the former in a
    number of ways.  While the end-product of the two might be quite
    similar, the public system is owned by the public, and its owners
    control it. Instead of subscribers, or customers, the user is a
    participant -- a citizen of the net, if you will -- rather than a
    customer of a service industry.

         A public network could provide a huge scope for volunteer
    participation. In doing so it would encourage innovation and
    reduce overall network expenses. Both these attributes would not
    only preserve some of the flavour of the amateur e-mail network
    we have grown to know and love, but would enable a public network
    to provide service at a cost well below that which a commercial
    enterprise would have to charge.

         The days of FidoNet being a small, exclusive club of
    dedicated hobbyists are numbered. The network is too good, too
    popular, too successful. Many who are not computer buffs in any
    real way now want in in order to *communicate*.

         It seems to me rather clear that some years down the line
    there will be an international wide-area networking system which
    is accessible to anyone for a fee. Either the present telecom
    using public will create it and keep it under public ownership
    (while keeping fees to a minimum) or private enterprise will
    provide it as a consumer service (maximizing profit, of course).


         -- Public vs. Private is not the same as Fee vs. Free --


         Why would a public, co-operatively owned system be better
    than a commercial one? This slips over into political philosophy,
    but there are a few things worth considering.

         1.) Because it doesn't have to earn a profit, it should be
    able to provide cheaper service.

         2.) Being already owned by the general public, it should be
    freer of government regulation than a strictly commercial
    enterprise.

         3.) Adverse government regulations will be less likely when
    the owners of the telecom utility and the voting public are
    precisely the same people.

         4.) Public control of network policy is much more likely to
    be meaningful under public ownership.

         5.) The user, rather than being a consumer whose only power
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 11                  18 Jan 1988


    is to not subscribe, becomes a full and equal participant, as
    active as s/he cares to be.

         6.) Continued dependence on a large amount of voluntarism
    could well not only encourage innovation and development but keep
    user fees absurdly low.

         7.) As the network grows in size, its influence in the
    computer industry and over government regulation nationally and
    internationally will also grow. In an age when high technology
    and regulatory decision-making is more and more removed from the
    ordinary life of the ordinary citizen, this would counter-balance
    present tendancies toward technological elitism and dependence on
    government "experts" to tell us what's good for us. The end-user
    would have a much larger influence.

         I guess my bias is out of the bag now :-)

         I am *very* much aware that many different perspectives
    exist on the large number of specific matters this paper touches
    upon.  My view is only one, and I'm not sure it is even the best.
    Too many of the discussions on these matters I've read and
    participated in seem to occur without an historical overview. I
    hope this paper can contribute to our thinking about where we are
    going in terms beyond simply "more of the same". The character of
    the network will inevitably change with growth, and with changing
    technology.  We do not have the luxury of choosing to keep things
    just as they are.  Events will overtake us and change our network
    whatever we choose to do, or not do.

         If a commercial service comes along, for instance, that
    offers access to news and e-mail cheaper than FidoNet itself,
    (distinctly possible) what point will there be to an amateur
    e-mail network?

         There is no such thing as "free" e-mail. There is only
    e-mail which you get someone else to pay for, or e-mail which you
    pay for yourself. Currently, the costs in FidoNet are very un-
    evenly distributed, and we depend not only on large volunteer
    efforts, but on large volunteer financial contributions. A big
    network, paid for only by a few of its most important links, does
    not strike me as having much potential

         I cannot begin to take the space to address each of the many
    reservations I can already hear being expressed. I can offer some
    points of departure for discussion, though.

         An International FidoNet co-op, funded by its members, could
    do two things almost immediately: it could provide cheap central-
    ized services such as echo-mail and software backbones and zone-
    gates.  It could begin to build an organizational infrastructure
    to reflect the will of the membership and influence the future of
    wide-area telecommunication.

         The latter involves many, many aspects, and could include
    such things as negotiations with other networks and standard-
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 12                  18 Jan 1988


    ization of gateway structures to assure universal access,
    negotiation with hardware manufacturers concerning standards and
    bulk discounts, establishing policies to prevent discrimination,
    injustice, and abuse, provide legal advocacy and defence in the
    murky waters of BBS liability, promote the expansion of network
    links to new parts of the world, sponsor public education efforts
    to promote intelligent use of e-mail and tele-conferencing,
    sponsor promising research in new areas, coordinate research
    internationally, liase with commerical and educational institu-
    tions where mutual benefit might accrue, study ways in which
    network services might be "sold" to subsidize cheap private
    correspondence, work toward international telecommunication
    standards and freedom of communication in other parts of the
    world .  .  .  etc.  etc.  etc.  And all in the name of the
    public, the public good, and the public's access to information,
    rather than solely in the name of profit, control, and restric-
    tion.

         There are some who would say that IFNA, with its elected
    Board, and wide-ranging, though largely undefined responsibility
    for the net could be that International Network Co-Op. I guess
    I'm one.

         We're riding a fast-rolling snowball here in FidoNet today.
    It's been five years since Tom Jennings' first preposterous
    experiments, and nine years since Usenent's first two sites made
    that first phone call. The snowflake has become a large snowball
    accelerating down the hill. What may be less apparent is that
    this snowball is on its way to becoming an avalanche.

         As we debate these matters I would really like people to
    devote 1% of their thought to where we might be in ten, twenty or
    thirty years.

         Forgive me for taking so long, if you have grown bored, and
    forgive me for leaving so much out, if you are still interested.
    In future weeks I hope to take time to probe some of the issues
    touched on here in greater detail (depending on the response to
    this piece).

         I'd be really happy to hear thoughts and opinions from
    readers. You can send me mail at any of the following
    addresses:

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Fido      1:221/162 -- 1:221/0                         280 Phillip St.,
    UUCP:     !watmath!fido!221!162!Doug_Thompson          Unit B-3-11
         !watmath!orchid!imprint                      Waterloo, Ontario
    Bitnet:   fido@water                                   Canada  N2L 3X1
    Internet: [email protected]                 (519) 746-5022
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    watmath can be reached through utzoo and most backbone sites. My BBS
    number is 519-747-1332.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 13                  18 Jan 1988


    Larry A. DiGioia
    Sysop NEVERBOARD 129/17, Alternet 522/2



                    ALTERNET: It might have worked...

       When I first saw the announcements for ALTERNET, I was
    overjoyed. This was what I had been waiting for. A network
    devoted to the "hobbyist spirit." Devoid of all of the silly
    politics and petty bickering that has become a part of our
    present network... I particularly admire the PEOPLE who took
    the initiative and declared their independence. Because after
    all, what is a network except a group of PEOPLE?

       I looked forward to seeing all my friends, both locally and
    nationally, in the new network. In fact, I did see some of them
    in the alternet nodelists that started trickling out. My old NC,
    a person who has helped me a lot these past years and whose
    opinion I have always respected, was also among the first to
    "jump on the bandwagon."

       I never in a million years expected that a group of sysops,
    most of whom spend THOUSANDS of dollars on hardware and phone
    bills, would go COMPLETELY BONKERS over a proposed $20 a year
    membership fee.

       OK, fine. They didn't have to join. That was the choice:
    ALTERNET is an ALTERNATIVE. They were free to stick with the
    existing network, and not worry themselves to death about what
    some of us others CHOSE to join. But no-o-o-o-o....  Then the
    great, unseen network people started getting together on the
    subject. They too, objected to the fee. These are the people
    who run multi-line systems with multiple 9600 modems... I guess
    they had pictures of ALTERNET coordinators driving off into the
    sunset in Cadillacs bought with the poor, unsuspecting sysop's
    hard-earned $20.

       So, what do they do? Why of course, refuse echomail feeds to
    anyone on the ALTERNET nodelist! What this really comes down to,
    of course, is the same old thing: personality conflicts. It
    isn't really the $20 that most people object to; it's the PEOPLE
    in ALTERNET. Many have had the honesty to come out and say as
    much.

       So, we are being persecuted. The "powers that be" (and don't
    think for a minute that I mean the IFNA) have decided that they
    will do their best to prevent their old partners-in-argument
    from doing something new, simple and exciting. Unfortunately,
    they have the power to succeed, by the time-honored methods of
    misinformation, character assasination and innuendo. They have
    succeeded in shaping "popular opinion" to their own opinions.

       None of this would matter to me if the callers to my board
    had not gotten used to the excellent conversation and exchanges
    of help and information that is provided by the wonderful links
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 14                  18 Jan 1988


    of echomail. But you see, even if ALTERNET were composed of "the
    cream of the BBS community," (which some might say it is,) it
    would still not provide my callers with the variety of help and
    discussion that the "old boy" network does now. And I no longer
    have the choice to keep "the best of both worlds."  So, sadly, I
    must say goodbye to the pioneering people such as Thom, Ryugen,
    and all the others who bring a breath of fresh air to this world
    of ours. I wish them all the best of luck, in the pursuit of
    something even better than we have now.

       ||Larry||

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 15                  18 Jan 1988


    Released 01-05-88

    WHAT IS OZONE.EXE
    =================

    OZONE is a crude but useful utility designed to make the
    incorporation of the Anetlist into the Nodelist.

    Using Xlatlist 2.85 you can add nodes from the Anetlist
    into the nodelist using the OZONE statement in the control
    file you use with Xlatlist.

    However, as the Anetlist gets larger, this will mean
    adding new entries by hand. So OZONE.EXE was born to help
    in making this task easier.

    OZONE.EXE will read the Anetlist and produce a straight
    text file you can add to the Xlatlist.ctl file. It saves
    you from typing in new OZONE statements each week.


    HOW DO I RUN OZONE.EXE
    ======================

    Simply type OZONE ANETLIST.XXX with XXX being the number
    of the Anetlist you wish to process. The resulting text
    file will be produced and called OZONE.LST in the same
    directory.

    Please be sure OZONE.EXE and ANETLIST.XXX are in the SAME
    directory. OZONE does not in any way alter either the
    Anetlist or the Nodelist.


    WHERE CAN I GET OZONE.EXE
    =========================

    You can either file request it from 107/246 or download
    it from that same board. The request name is OZONE and
    will be honored at all times except NMH and the hour
    before and after NMH.


    DO I HAVE TO PAY TO USE OZONE.EXE
    =================================

    No payment is required. This utility will only be
    used for a short period of time so no payment is required
    or expected.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 16                  18 Jan 1988


    Here are the latest patches for Quick Basic 4.0. The
    first one is to eliminate the DTR problem encountered
    when running a Quick Basic program.

    DEBUG BCOM40.LIB

    -D 100 L 5
    xxxx:0100

    Take the first <3> numbers of 'xxxx' and add 85.

    Example:  if you had something like  114F:0100  then
    you would add 85 to 114 and get 199.

    The new number you come up with will be 'yyy'.

    -S yyy0:0 FFFF 83 C2 04 32 C0

    DEBUG will now give TWO locations where these bytes
    are located. Lets call the first address  xxxx:yyyy

    -U xxxx:yyyy L 6

    You should see three lines. The  'xxxx:yyyy' should be
    represented by an 'XOR AL AL'

    -A xxxx:yyyy
    xxxx:yyyy MOV AL, 1  (hit enter here)

    Now repeat the process with the other number.  (starting
    at the U command) After you have done that, be sure to
    save the file:

    -W
    Writing xxxx bytes
    -Q

    And there you have it!

    Here is the recipe to remove the HALT which
    QuickBASIC executes when an unrecoverable error is
    encountered. This patch is only good for version 4.0 of
    QB. However this may serve as a guide for future
    versions of QB.

    Note: Make sure you have backups of any files your are
    going modify with DEBUG.....Edsel Murphy is not
    dead........

    A> debug BCOM40.LIB

    -S xxxx:1 FFFF 75 FD E2 F8
    Where xxxx equals the DS register

    xxxx:A046

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 17                  18 Jan 1988


    -U A042 A052
    xxxx:A042 B8E803        MOV     AX,03E8
    xxxx:A045 48            DEC     AX
    xxxx:A046 75FD          JNZ     A045
    xxxx:A048 E2F8          LOOP    A042
    xxxx:A04A B8070C        MOV     AX,0C07
    xxxx:A04D CD21          INT     21      <----- this is
    the wait for KYBD input
    xxxx:A04F E80000        CALL    A052
    xxxx:A052 CB            RETF

    -E xxxx:A04d 90 90
    This places NOP's where it used to wait for KYBD input.

    -U A042 A052
    xxxx:A042 B8E803        MOV     AX,03E8
    xxxx:A045 48            DEC     AX
    xxxx:A046 75FD          JNZ     A045
    xxxx:A048 E2F8          LOOP    A042
    xxxx:A04A B8070C        MOV     AX,0C07
    xxxx:A04D 90            NOP
    xxxx:A04E 90            NOP
    xxxx:A04F E80000        CALL    A052
    xxxx:A052 CB            RETF


    -W
    -Q

    Once you have done this now comes the fun part of re-
    LINKing all of your programs. However if use the compile
    option in QB that uses BRUN40.EXE (no /O option) then
    this next patch is for you. This patch takes effect
    immediately and requires no re-compilation of your
    programs.

    A> rename BRUN40.EXE BRUN40.ORG
    A> debug BRUN40.ORG

    -S xxxx:1 FFFF 75 FD E2 F8
    Where xxxx equals the DS register

    xxxx:5288

    -U 5271 5294
    xxxx:5271 F6067C0A03    TEST    BYTE PTR [0A7C],03
    xxxx:5276 751C          JNZ     5294
    xxxx:5278 E81BE1        CALL    3396
    xxxx:527B B80780        MOV     AX,8007
    xxxx:527E E8EFE0        CALL    3370     <----- this
    outputs "PRESS ANY .."
    xxxx:5281 B9C800        MOV     CX,00C8
    xxxx:5284 B8E803        MOV     AX,03E8
    xxxx:5287 48            DEC     AX
    xxxx:5288 75FD          JNZ     5287
    xxxx:528A E2F8          LOOP    5284
    FidoNews 5-03                Page 18                  18 Jan 1988


    xxxx:528C B8070C        MOV     AX,0C07
    xxxx:528F CD21          INT     21       <----- this is
    the wait for KYBD input
    xxxx:5291 E802E1        CALL    3396
    xxxx:5294 CB            RETF

    -E xxxx:527E 90 90 90
    This NOP's the "PRESS ANY ..." output message.

    -E xxxx:528F 90 90
    This places NOP's where it used to wait for KYBD input.

    -U 5271 5294
    xxxx:5271 F6067C0A03    TEST    BYTE PTR [0A7C],03
    xxxx:5276 751C          JNZ     5294
    xxxx:5278 E81BE1        CALL    3396
    xxxx:527B B80780        MOV     AX,8007
    xxxx:527E 90            NOP
    xxxx:527F 90            NOP
    xxxx:5280 90            NOP
    xxxx:5281 B9C800        MOV     CX,00C8
    xxxx:5284 B8E803        MOV     AX,03E8
    xxxx:5287 48            DEC     AX
    xxxx:5288 75FD          JNZ     5287
    xxxx:528A E2F8          LOOP    5284
    xxxx:528C B8070C        MOV     AX,0C07
    xxxx:528F 90            NOP
    xxxx:5290 90            NOP
    xxxx:5291 E802E1        CALL    3396
    xxxx:5294 CB            RETF

    -W
    -Q

    A> rename BRUN40.ORG BRUN40.EXE

    Thanks To Ray Horton For The Second Set Of Patches.

    For those of you that have not seen Quick BBS yet,
    I urge you to call a system running it and take
    a good look at what it is.


    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 19                  18 Jan 1988


    =================================================================
                                 WANTED
    =================================================================



    TRW Real Estate Information Systems, in Anaheim, CA is seeking a
    creative Senior Programmer/Analyst to aid in the analysis,
    design and implementation of a new generation of micro/mainframe
    systems running in an IBM PC-AT compatible multitasking
    environment.

    We are looking for motivated, independent thinker with a minimum
    of two years MS-DOS micro programming in C or Macro Assembler
    and two years mini/mainframe programming.  Experience in
    structured development techniques and systems analysis/design
    required.  Familiarity with micro-mainframe communications,
    micro hardware, and networks is desirable.  Direct customer
    interface is common, so good written and oral communication
    skills are needed.

    Please forward your resume with work history and references to:
    TRW Real Estate Information Systems, Professional Employment,
    Dept. DL-101, 2000 S. Anaheim Blvd., Suite 100, Anaheim, CA
    92805.  An equal opportunity employer.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 20                  18 Jan 1988


    =================================================================
                                 NOTICES
    =================================================================

                         The Interrupt Stack


    25 Aug 1988
       Start  of  the  Fifth  International FidoNet Conference, to be
       held  at the Drawbridge Inn  in Cincinnatti, OH.  Contact  Tim
       Sullivan at 108/62 for more information. This is FidoNet's big
       annual get-together, and is your chance to meet all the people
       you've  been talking with  all this time.  We're hoping to see
       you there!

    24 Aug 1989
       Voyager 2 passes Neptune.


    If you have something which you would like to see on this
    calendar, please send a message to FidoNet node 1:1/1.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

                         Latest Software Versions

    BBS Systems            Node List              Other
    & Mailers   Version    Utilities   Version    Utilities   Version

    Dutchie        2.80*   EditNL          3.3    ARC            5.21
    Fido            12e*   MakeNL         1.10    ARCmail         1.1
    Opus          1.03a    Prune          1.40    ConfMail       3.31*
    SEAdog         4.10    XlatList       2.85*   EchoMail       1.31
    TBBS           2.0M                           MGM             1.1
    BinkleyTerm    1.30*

    * Recently changed

    Utility authors:  Please help  keep  this  list  up  to  date  by
    reporting  new  versions  to 1:1/1.  It is not our intent to list
    all utilities here, only those which verge on necessity.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 21                  18 Jan 1988


                                     __
                The World's First   /  \
                   BBS Network     /|oo \
                   * FidoNet *    (_|  /_)
                                   _`@/_ \    _
                                  |     | \   \\
                                  | (*) |  \   ))
                     ______       |__U__| /  \//
                    / Fido \       _//|| _\   /
                   (________)     (_/(_|(____/ (tm)

           Membership for the International FidoNet Association

    Membership in IFNA is open to any individual or organization that
    pays  a  specified  annual   membership  fee.   IFNA  serves  the
    international  FidoNet-compatible  electronic  mail  community to
    increase worldwide communications.

    Member Name _______________________________  Date _______________
    Address _________________________________________________________
    City ____________________________________________________________
    State ________________________________  Zip _____________________
    Country _________________________________________________________
    Home Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
    Work Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
    Zone:Net/Node Number ____________________________________________
    BBS Name ________________________________________________________
    BBS Phone Number ________________________________________________
    Baud Rates Supported ____________________________________________
    Board Restrictions ______________________________________________
    Your Special Interests __________________________________________
    _________________________________________________________________
    _________________________________________________________________
    In what areas would you be willing to help in FidoNet? __________
    _________________________________________________________________
    _________________________________________________________________
    Send this membership form and a check or money order for $25 in
    US Funds to:
                  International FidoNet Association
                  c/o Leonard Mednick, MBA, CPA
                  700 Bishop Street, #1014
                  Honolulu, Hawaii 96813-4112
                  USA

    Thank you for your membership!  Your participation will  help  to
    insure the future of FidoNet.

    Please  NOTE  that  IFNA is a general not-for-profit organization
    and Articles of Association  and  By-Laws  were  adopted  by  the
    membership in January 1987.  The first elected Board of Directors
    was filled in August 1987.  The IFNA Echomail Conference has been
    established  on  FidoNet  to  assist  the Board.  We welcome your
    input to this Conference.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    FidoNews 5-03                Page 22                  18 Jan 1988


                    INTERNATIONAL FIDONET ASSOCIATION
                                ORDER FORM

                               Publications

    The IFNA publications can be obtained by downloading from Fido
    1:1/10 or  other FidoNet compatible  systems, or by purchasing
    them directly from IFNA.  We ask that  all our  IFNA Committee
    Chairmen   provide  us   with  the  latest  versions  of  each
    publication, but we can make no written guarantees.

    Hardcopy prices as of October 1, 1986

       IFNA Fido BBS listing                       $15.00    _____
       IFNA Administrative Policy DOCs             $10.00    _____
       IFNA FidoNet Standards Committee DOCs       $10.00    _____

                                                 SUBTOTAL    _____

                     IFNA Member ONLY Special Offers

       System Enhancement Associates SEAdog        $60.00    _____
       SEAdog price as of March 1, 1987
       ONLY 1 copy SEAdog per IFNA Member

       Fido Software's Fido/FidoNet               $100.00    _____
       Fido/FidoNet price as of November 1, 1987
       ONLY 1 copy Fido/FidoNet per IFNA Member

       International orders include $10.00 for
              surface shipping or $20.00 for air shipping    _____

                                                 SUBTOTAL    _____

                   HI. Residents add 4.0 % Sales tax         _____

                                                 TOTAL       _____

       SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER IN US FUNDS:
       International FidoNet Association
       c/o Leonard Mednick, MBA, CPA
       700 Bishop Street, #1014
       Honolulu, HI.  96813-4112
       USA

    Name________________________________
    Zone:Net/Node____:____/____
    Company_____________________________
    Address_____________________________
    City____________________  State____________  Zip_____
    Voice Phone_________________________

    Signature___________________________

    -----------------------------------------------------------------