Volume 6, Number  9                              27 February 1989
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    |        International                          |     | \   \\  |
    |     FidoNet Association                       | (*) |  \   )) |
    |         Newsletter               ______       |__U__| /  \//  |
    |                                 / FIDO \       _//|| _\   /   |
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    |                                                     (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.  1:1/1 is available  for network  mail between  NMH-1
    hour to NMH+1 hour.  At all other times,  netmail is not accepted
    although submissions can be uploaded.

    Copyright 1989 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.

    Fido  and FidoNet  are registered  trademarks of  Tom Jennings of
    Fido Software,  164 Shipley Avenue,  San Francisco, CA  94107 and
    are used with permission.

    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
       Graphic GroupMail (OR... How GroupMail REALLY works!)  ....  1
       MSGHOLD - Holds your user's Group/EchoMail for them!  .....  4
       SEA Letter: A Sample Script  ..............................  5
       It won't happen in America!  ..............................  6
       UNITEX: More Than Just Echo Mail  .........................  9
    2. COLUMNS  .................................................. 15
       Let's YACK about Why Anyone Would Run a BBS  .............. 15
    3. LATEST VERSIONS  .......................................... 16
       Latest Software Versions  ................................. 16
    4. NOTICES  .................................................. 17
    And more!
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 1                   27 Feb 1989


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

    Graphic GroupMail  -OR-

    How GroupMail REALLY Works

    In the interests of clearing up some of the misinformation
    regarding GroupMail technology that has been spread around the
    networks, I have worked up this short graphic representation of
    how a pure GroupMail conference works.  It is hoped that with
    this documentation, the reasons for the impossibility of
    duplicate messages and faulty topologies will become clear as
    crystal.

    Let's take the WARNINGS conference, for example, and set it up as
    a GroupMail conference.  We have a Top Star, 440/1, several
    middle stars at the net level, and the leaf nodes (YOU).  Here's
    how it might look:


                           +----------------+
                           |   Top Star:    |      +------------+
                           |   Conference   |----> |WARNINGS.XXX|
                           |   Moderator    |      +------------+
                           | WARNINGS 440/1 |        GroupMail
                           +----------------+       ARChive File
                             ^      ^     ^     (Distributed to ALL)
                             |      |     |
            ------------------      |     -----------------
            |                       |                     |
    +----------------+     +----------------+     +----------------+
    |    NET 100     |     |     NET 200    |     |    NET 300     |
    | MID LEVEL STAR |     | MID LEVEL STAR |     | MID LEVEL STAR |
    |    7:100/1     |     |     7:200/1    |     |    7:300/1     |
    +----------------+     +----------------+     +----------------+
      |    |   |   |         ^      ^               |  |  ^  |  |
    Other Net 100 Nodes      |      |            Other Net|300 Nodes
                             |      |                     |
            ------------------      |                     |
            |                       |                     |
    +----------------+     +----------------+     +----------------+
    |    Node 201    |     |    Node 202    |     |    Node 301    |
    |    7:200/201   |     |    7:200/202   |     |    7:300/301   |
    +----------------+     +----------------+     +----------------+
                   ^                ^               ^
                    Any of these can be your system.

    Please notice that all arrows go in ONE direction ONLY (UP).

    Now lets trace the way a message entered on, say 200/201 would go
    about being distributed to the network in general.

    User Alan enters a message on 201.  Later that day it is removed
    from the message base and packed up and sent to his uplink, mid
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 2                   27 Feb 1989


    level star Net 200 (when using non-Group-aware echo processors,
    the message might have to stay in the message base - small price
    to pay).

    When the ARCmail file (identical in every way to a normal
    echomail bundle) hits the midlevel star, he unpacks it, usually
    into his netmail area.  Then, his group processor realizes that
    since the message is for the WARNINGS conference, it has to be
    bounced on up to the next uplink, so rather than moving into his
    message base, he redirects it to 440/1, packs it up for shipment
    (the same way that 200/201 did it!), and removes the message from
    his netmail area (a native GroupMail processor will do this for
    you).

    Finally, the message, in a normal ARCmail 'echomail' packet
    arrives on 440/1, the 'top star' for the conference.  Since he's
    the top star, 440/1's group processor unpacks the message into
    his message base, where the moderator can peruse it for possible
    off-topic content, flame content, etc.  The moderator then packs
    up Alan's message, along with ALL the other messages that have
    been passed along from nets 100 & 300, into one GroupMail style
    ARCmail file named WARNINGS.xxx (where 'xxx' is a base 36 minute
    of the month ARCmail naming convention), and is made available
    for pickup.

    You will notice that at no time did my hands leave my arms, er,
    at no time did the message touch any other systems message base.
    Alan's message was not ECHO'd ANYwhere.  It was simply passed
    along, sight-unseen by all the star systems between 200/201 and
    440/1.  At this point, it exists only on the top star's system,
    and in that GroupMail packet, sitting on 440/1.

    Meanwhile, the midlevel stars have finished their daily
    processing, and are ready to call to pick up the new day's mail.
    Since their high water mark files (WARNINGS.!) have a date/time
    stamp of the last WARNINGS.xxx file they processed, when they do
    a File UPDate REQuest, their systems will see that the new
    WARNINGS file is 'later' than their high water mark file, and
    pick it up.  They import the file into their message base, then
    turn around and make the WARNINGS.xxx file available to the next
    level of systems WITHOUT MODIFYING IT AT ALL.  Alan's message now
    resides in the message bases of 440/1, 100/1, 200/1, and 300/1.
    They change the date time stamps of their WARNINGS.! file to
    match the date/time stamp of the WARNINGS.xxx file (for
    tomorrow's update request).

    However, what happens if one of the mailers that's being run on
    the mid-level star isn't running a program capable of generating
    a File UPDate REQuest?  There exists in some GroupMail processors
    the ability to DELIVER the GroupMail ARChives by generating a
    File ATTach message to a specific list of nodes anytime it does a
    Group PACK (for Top Stars) or a Group IN (for mid-level stars).
    In this way, people without mailers sophisticated enough to
    perform the necessary requests can participate.  This is a
    definite short-term kludge, however, since delivering a confer-
    ence is NOT the way GroupMail should work (think about what could
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 3                   27 Feb 1989


    happen if a node had a conference delivered to it by more than
    one node, or if it also requested the conference!)  Hence, this
    short-term fix may disappear in the near future, as most mailers
    are brought up to date.

    Finally, the leaf nodes get their turn.  They use their own high
    water marks (WARNINGS.!) to generate File UPDate REQuests to
    their uplinks, the mid level stars, and pickup WARNINGS.xxx.
    This is the SAME file that was distributed to 100/1, 200/1, &
    300/1, and now resides on 200/201, 200/202, and 300/301.  Since
    everybody has the same file, there is no need for SEEN-BY lines
    (non-group-aware echomail processors may need a SEEN-BY with just
    the uplink, or mid-level star in it, else they might resend the
    whole file back up the chain again.  Still, its better than 3 or
    4 lines of them!)  Alan's message now resides on every system in
    the net.  If 200/201 is running a non-groupmail-aware echomail
    processor to 'kludge' this process, it may have 2 copies of his
    message in its base, unless it has a sophisticated dupe killer,
    which would catch it on the way back.  Either way, that'd be the
    ONLY message that appeared twice.  As more and more GroupMail
    processors are developed for the different boards, this problem
    will become extinct.

    As you can see, only two boards handled Alan's message twice.
    200/201, and its uplink, 200/1.  No boards handled ALL the
    messages twice.  And of course, with no SEEN-BYS or DUPES (or
    even FLAMES or off-topic messages if the moderator fully edits
    his conference), the GroupMail ARC files are much smaller and
    more quickly processed.  No dupes can be generated because the
    conference isn't ECHO'd anywhwere.  Alan gets positive confirma-
    tion that his message was seen by EVERYONE in the net (sort of
    like having electronic receipt mail!), and that the whole net
    probably saw it faster than echomail could ever possibly
    distribute it.

    Well, 'nuff said.  I wanted this to be brief, but I also wanted
    it to be understandable.  If you have any questions, or if you
    want to file-request GROUP (for FidoNet sysops), GMAIL (for QBBS
    sysops), or GMM (for Phoenix sysops), feel free to contact me at
    7:520/583, 1:107/583, 9:807/1, or just plain ol' 1-201-935-1485.

    Phil Buonomo

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 4                   27 Feb 1989


        MSGHOLD - Holds your user's Group/EchoMail for them!

        Phoenix RCS BBS SysOps can now keep Group- and EchoMail
    messages addressed to their users. MsgHold V1.02
    prevents message-base maintenance utilities, such as
    LRH's DOM (Delete Old Messages), from deleting messages
    addressed to users of that BBS. MsgHold keeps the message on
    the system for 4 weeks, or until the addressee has seen the
    message. It then releases it to be processed by the system.
    Registration of the shareware package allows SysOps to set
    the number of days to hold the message.

        This is believed to be the first utility of its kind! On
    systems that import large volumes of Echo/Group Mail, the
    problem arose that the message bases were becoming intolerably
    large. While message-base packing utilities took care of the
    size of the message areas, users of the BBS had to be sure to
    log in each and every day to check for replies to their
    messages, new information, etc. This is just an unreasonable
    task. Hence, the birth of MSGHOLD.

        This package is FREQ'able from 7:520/557 1:107/557
    9:807/2 (The County Jail II BBS - 300-9600 HST/PCP) by the
    magic filename MSGHOLD, to be sure you always get the latest
    version.

        Other versions of MsgHold will soon be available for
    QBBS and TBBS systems. Look for their announcement here.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 5                   27 Feb 1989


                         What's Happening at SEA?


    SEAdog 4.00 was the first network  mailer  to  provide  a  script
    capability  for  establishing  a  mail  session over an alternate
    carrier.  That  original  script  driver  was  rather  primitive,
    because  at that time we did not yet know how many people (if any
    at all!) would be interested in such a thing.

    Well, now we know -- a LOT of people are interested!


    When we were designing version 4.50 one of our priorities was  to
    develop  a  script  language that could negotiate complex foreign
    networks, as well as provide a platform for netmail sessions with
    "foreign" systems.  Since most of the present  users  of  scripts
    use  them to navigate Telenet's PC Pursuit service,  we used that
    as our primary test case.

    The result in SEAdog 4.50  is  a  flexible  and  powerful  script
    language  that can handle the worst that an alternate carrier can
    dish out.  A SEAdog script can handle not only the  ordinary  and
    expected  cases,  but  can  also  respond  intelligently to error
    conditions as they arise.

    We've developed a script for our own use that can take  advantage
    of  PC  Pursuit,  and can handle all of the occasional vagarities
    that arise -- everything from an offline dialout to a modem  left
    in Racal-Vadic mode.

    The full script is too large to post here with an explanation, so
    we've  gone  through  it  and added copious comments.  We added a
    route  file  to  show  how  the  script  ties  into  the  routing
    schedules.  We've  compiled  an exchange list database for use by
    the script.  And lastly,  we've packaged it all in an archive and
    made it available for download or file request.

    If you're using SEAdog with PC Pursuit,  get a copy of our sample
    script and make YOUR system PC Pursuit smart!


    Files mentioned this week:

                  SCRIPTS.ARC         A SEAdog script for PC Pursuit

    SCRIPTS.ARC may be downloaded from our technical support bulletin
    board  at  (201)  473-1991,  or may be file-requested from either
    520/1015@AlterNet or 1:107/1015@FidoNet.


    Next week:  Kitten 2.00

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 6                   27 Feb 1989


    Claude F. Witherspoon
    Fido 1:288/525

                    ONCE UPON A TIME MAYBE IN AMERICA

    Once upon a time there was a nation founded upon the priciples of
    reason  and  moral  responsibility.  Blessed  with an industrious
    people and abounding in natural resources, it became one  of  the
    most prosperous and self-sufficient nations on this great earth.

    Then  one  day  it grew accustomed to ease and plenty, to many of
    its people grew self-indulgent  (anyone  you  know?).  Foreigners
    were  quick  to exploit this weakness. The way they did this, was
    to provide something that the great nation had little of, illicit
    DRUGS!...

    Drug smugglers established their headquarters in a southern city.
    In a matter of years, their  poison  had  seeped  into  virtually
    every  town  and  village  via a weblike distribution system that
    flourished under the noses  of  judges,  politicians  and  police
    (sometimes  even  with  their  assistance), for drugs can corrupt
    anyone.

    Now, to show "all was not  lost",  some  INTELLECTUALS  initially
    extolled   the  psychic  and  medicinal  benefits  of  drugs  and
    minimized their harm. Ironically, these intellectuals, along with
    the RICH and PRIVILAGED, were the first to succumb. The Army  was
    next. The last, most tragic victims were the poor.

    In  the  final  stages  of the plague, addicts whom drugs did not
    kill outright became susceptable to  infectious  diseases,  which
    they unwittingly spread to loved ones.

    And  in  time,  this  once great and noble nation was so withered
    that it fell victim to countries a fraction of its size.

    Now,  if you think this story is about 20th-century America, your
    wrong. This is a capsule acoount of  what  actually  happened  to
    China in the 19th century.

    In  the  early  1800s, China was amoung the wealthiest, most self
    sufficient  nations  on  earth.  Its  rulers  had  governed   for
    centuries  under  ancient system ethics set down by the followers
    of Confucius. China's very name for itself, Zhongguo, the "Middle
    Kingdom," understood its glorious  position  between  heaven  and
    earth. Nothing could bring it down. Except itself.

    Western  nations ran up huge trade deficits with China to pay for
    porcelain, silk and tea. But China remained wary of outsiders and
    had little interest in  purchasing  foreign  goods.  Thus  little
    could  be done to redress the imballance of trade...until Britian
    discovered China's secret taste for opium and began  shipping  it
    into the country from British fields in India.

    The  pernicious drug had been severely restricted by law in 1729,
    but as imports rose, some  scholar-officials  argued  that  opium
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 7                   27 Feb 1989


    should  be  "decriminalized"  and  its  distribution regulated by
    the government. Others declaired that  is  was  beneficial  to  a
    weary psyche and cured stomach ailments.

    Opium  was  disparingly called heitu, "black dirt," for the tarry
    substance placed in long bamboo pipes. Addicts  smoked  it  while
    stretched  on  benches  in  "dens"  not too unlike today's "crack
    houses."  In  the  early  stages,  opium  induced  euphoria.  But
    habitual use left victims burnt-out husks of their former selves.
    In the final stages of addiction, it caused dementia and death.

    And  victims  more and more included nonaddicts. As opium smokers
    gathered, coughing and spitting, they unknowingly became infected
    with, and then spread to others, diseases as deadly in those days
    as AIDS is now, tuberculosis and influenza.

    At a  time  when  such  pressures  as  overpopulation,  political
    infighting  and  declining  revenues were also taking their toll,
    addiction raged  through  China's  army  and  invaded  the  civil
    service.   The   effect   was   a  rapid  decline  in  provincial
    administration.  Canals  collapsed  out  of  neglect,  disrupting
    China's vital system of transportation. Pushing beyond endurance,
    the  Chinese government closed its doors to all foreign goods and
    destroyed crates of opium stored in British warehouses in Canton.

    England declared war and its navy brutally defeated an inadequate
    Chinese fleet. As part of the treaty settling the "Opium War"  of
    1839-42,  a  shocked  and  demoralized  China  ceded the southern
    island of Hong Kong to  Britain.  This  city,  much  like  Miami,
    became  the hub of the drug trade, from which criminal societies,
    like  Mafia  today,  joined  forces  with  foreign  smugglers  to
    disperse the drug everywhere.

    Peasant  discontent  erupted into a massive civil war, called the
    Taiping Rebellion, which cost as many as 30 million lives. Taking
    advantage of chaos, England, France, Germany and Russia carved up
    China like a ripe melon. By the end of  the  19th  century,  five
    percent  of  China's  population  was  addicted,  over 22 million
    people. So much bullion  flowed  out  of  the  country  that  the
    economy  teetered  on  the  verge  of collapse. In 1912, the last
    emperor, Puyi, was forced from the throne.

    China floundered in the bloody strife of civil  war  and  foreign
    invasion  for  almost  four decades. Then Mao Zedong's Communists
    crushed all opposition,  taking  another  30  million  lives  and
    forcing millions out of their villages and into communes. Mao did
    away with opium, by eliminating the smokers.

    Only  recently  has  China  begun  to stem its nearly two-century
    decline, which begun with the first  self-indulgent  puff  on  an
    opium pipe.

    HISTORY  RECORDS  a  sad  cycle:  the  great civilizations; Greek,
    Roman, Spanish and Chinese; fell  by  their  own  inner  weakness
    before their military forces were vanquished.

    FidoNews 6-09                Page 8                   27 Feb 1989


    And if the United States ever does succumb, here too it will have
    been by our own hand.

    NOTE:  Reprinted from readers Digest. Also, our address has
    changed  here  at  KidsNews  headquarters.  Please  note  the
    1:288/525 address for correspondence with the folks at KidsNews.


    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 9                   27 Feb 1989


    THE UNITEX ECHO IS NOW AVAIlABLE ON THE FIDONET BACKBONE

    The UNITEX CONFERENCE is now nationally distributed via the
    'backbone' links in Fidonet. It is also available on uucp
    networks in the form of a Usenet mailing list.  The
    conference  originates from the UNITEX Network (1:107/701).
    UNITEX  operates at 9600(PEP), 2400 and 1200 baud.  Our data
    phone  is (201) 795-0733.

    A large portion of the information provided by UNITEX is
    generated from information obtained from the interrogation
    of both mainframe United Nations databases and Dialcom
    database  services. We have recently acquired access
    privileges to the  UNICEF mainframe database in New York and
    to the UN databse in Geneva, Switzerland.  We designed an
    automated procedure that  scans several database index files
    and then selectively downloads  key information areas into
    ascii text files.  These files are  then  'cleaned-up',
    edited and parsed for subject headers and  TO: fields and
    are processed into FTSC compatible echo mail  messages.
    These in turn are bundled into network packets and  then
    routed via the network.

    In addition to the Echo Mail, we create a weekly file that
    consists of all the 'raw' source material that goes into the
    UNITEX Echo as 'official' news source material. Since we
    create these files every Friday, the naming convention is
    analogous to that used in Fidonet for weekly nodediffs and
    has the same file extension used for NODEDIFF.A??, etc.
    This  facilitates file maintenance for those that maintain a
    weekly  files area.  The arced weekly files are called
    UNITEX.A?? and are, at present, file requestable from
    107/701 between the hours of 11:00 PM and 3:00 AM. The file
    size ranges from 50K to 150K. If there are many requests for
    these files on a weekly basis, other distribution methods
    will be arranged.


    NOTE:
          An important issue that has come up from time-to-time
          is whether UNITEX is a read-only conference.  The
          answer is NO.  UNITEX encourages user response and
          inquires to the issuses raised. Please see below,
          Section C: Conferenece Rules & Guidelines for more
          details.

    A description and overview of UNITEX will follow.

    James Waldron, Ph.D is the Conference Moderator and Senior
    Director of UNITEX Network.

    Dorothy Nicklus is the Associate Conference Moderator and
    Co-director of the UNITEX Network.

    UNITEX: Data phone  (201) 795-0733
            Voice phone (201) 653-2806
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 10                  27 Feb 1989


    A. CONFERENCE OVERVIEW

    UNITEX supplies and disseminates information that we obtain
    from United Nations mainframe databases and related sources.
    We have been a major advocate for the distribution of 'raw',
    uncensored and un-edited material obtained from official UN
    sources and are palying a key role in the acquistion and
    distribution of this information. It consists of UN press
    Releases, UN Radio News, International Press News, UNICEF
    Press Releases, Electronic Publishing (DIPA) and related
    UNICEF documents and Wordwide Disaster News and Relief Plans
    from UNDRONET.  The conference was establised 18 months ago
    and had a limited distribution in the United States, Canada
    and Australia. I maintained approximately 12 to 16 direct
    links at any given time. Due to the interest generated in
    general and to the timely internatioanl news coverage in
    specific, vis a vis Soviet-US current affairs,
    Nobel Peace Prize Award to UN, renewed interest in US space
    efforts, etc., there has been a mushrooming effect resulting
    in many requests to receive the UNITEX Echo via the national
    'backbone' distribution.


    B. CONFERENCE DESCRIPTION

    The issues that UNITEX presents are many and are dependent
    on  current political topics of interest and timely
    international news.  The key areas that we focus on are the
    following:

    Human Rights, Disarmament, Amnesty International (Action
    Alerts), African News, news from and about 3rd World and
    Developing Countries, World Peace Issues, Space News/NASA
    and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, Worlwide Disaster News &
    Relief Programs, Technology Transfer and  Information
    Exchange, International Ecological and Environmental Issues,
    World Health Organization Reports (International health
    issues, vaccines, etc), Reports from the General Assembly
    and World Bank (International finance, multi-national and
    inter-governmental  joint ventures, etc)


    C. CONFERENCE GUIDELINES and RULES

    Currently, the readers of UNITEX are concerned scientists,
    educators, teachers and students, as well as governemnt
    officials, UN delegates and  news journalists. Through the
    vehicle of this conference, UNITEX provides information and
    promotes information and data exchange on a two-way basis.
    One should exercise a certain level of 'diplomacy' when
    addressing issues or people in this conference.  There is
    much to be gained by good-will, patience and understanding
    and nothing by rash, insensitive and  mindless chatter.
    Think before you write and try to make intelligent thought
    provoking commentary and stay focused on the issues
    presented.
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 11                  27 Feb 1989


    UNITEX welcomes reader replies and user feedback. It is not
    a Read-Only conference *but* due to the sensitive nature of
    many of the international issues that are addressed and the
    scope and  breadth of the distribution, it is strongly
    *advised* that the UNITEX  Area allow only *private* replies
    to UNITEX (107/701) via netmail to allow for appropriate
    conference moderation. Individual inquires of a specific
    nature can be sent via netmail to UNITEX.  Systems running
    Confmail or  MGM as an echomail processor can allow echomail
    with private netmail  replies. Simply define the UNITEX echo
    area as a local private area  then Export using Confmail
    with UNITEX defined as an echo area in  areas.bbs  If the
    inquires are useful and of a general interest, then  we will
    publish it in the UNITEX echo. This facilitates conference
    moderation since absolute moderation on the backbone is not
    possible.


    D. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND and PERSPECTIVE

    The United Nations plays a key role in several areas, such
    as, population and agricultural studies, world health and
    medical issues (imunization, new vaccines, treatment
    programs, etc), international peace agreements, treaties and
    security, international laws, peaceful uses of outer space,
    equal rights, human rights and the  disemmination of
    information and international news.  UNITEX is an  advocate
    for these issuses and is also strongly commited to modern
    computer applications in the areas of software design and
    network  development.  Apart from our main goals as
    technology and information providers, UNITEX helps to make
    the goals and efforts of the  United Nations more widely
    know, add to international understanding  and reduce or
    eliminate misunderstanding.

    International news and new technological developments
    occuring in both the industrialized nations and in the
    developing nations is transmitted by UNITEX to all direct
    private links as well as to the Fidonet backbone
    distribution system.

    E. PURPOSE

    INFORMATION and THE CHALLENGE OF THE 90's

    The following is a summary of several points that were
    introduced by UNITEX to be discussed at the United Nations
    Special Session on Information occurring on
    June 13 - June 27, 1988:


    Advances in communications technology has exacerbated the
    gap between the developed and developing countries.
    Information and communications  in an interdependent world
    effect the economy, trade, culture and the development of a
    nation.  Aside from this, confusion about the United Nations
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 12                  27 Feb 1989


    is enormous.

    The ever widening gulf that exists between the developed
    industrialized nations and the undeveloped countries has
    been referred to as the "North-South information
    inequality".  A pre-occupied concern of the developing
    countries is freedom of information (article 19 of the
    Universal Declaration of Human Rights) and the information
    inequality that currently exists. To address these specific
    areas of concern, the UN has referred to the general topic
    of international co-operation and communication as the "New
    World Information and Communication Order" Co-operation
    between the North-South will provide the developing
    countries with up-to-date know-how and assist in the
    dissemination of fair coverage of the news about developing
    nations.

    Hopefuflly, UNITEX and the asscoiated nodes that link into
    this  conference can help narrow this gap using effective,
    low-cost  communication technology and decentralized wide-
    area networks that  are a trademark of both the
    microcomputer networks (FidoNet) and  the uucp networks
    (UseNet, etc).



    F. ASSOCIATED FILES

    Much of the original material that goes into the UNITEX Echo
    is abstracted from our weekly source text files (created
    from UN database sources) and are named UNITEX.A??.  Since
    we create these files every  Friday, the naming convention
    is analogous to that used in Fidonet for  weekly nodelists
    and has the same file extension used for NODEDIFF.A??, etc.
    This will facilitate your file maintenance should you desire
    to acquire these files.  At the present time, they can be
    file requested from 107/701 between the hours of midnight
    and 3:00 AM. The file size ranges from 50K to 150K.  If
    there are many requests for these files  on a weekly basis,
    other distribution methods will be arranged.


    If there are any questions on any of this material, please
    direct them, via private netmail to:

       James Waldron
       Director, UNITEX

       Fidonet            1:107/701
       Alternet           7:520/701
       uucp --> Fidonet   rutgers!rubbs!107!701!James_Waldron
       uucp --> UNITEX    rutgers!rubbs!unitex
                          [email protected] or
                          cucard!dasys1!jwaldron
        TCN               4005

    FidoNews 6-09                Page 13                  27 Feb 1989


       Thank you for your co-operation and support...........

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

    UNITEX is including the following article by Kevin Axleson
    to best describe the role of UNITEX as a host system
    for Action Alerts produced by AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL:


    SUBJECT: ai announcement for fidonews

    ---------------------------------------------
    An Invitation to Sponsor Amnesty International Activities on
    your Fido BBS

    AI is a worldwide nongovernmental organization working for
    human rights.  When AI learns of a person anywhere in the
    world who is being tortured, executed, held incommunicado
    ("disappeared") by unidentified abductors, or detained for
    non-violent political reasons, AI's millions of members
    worldwide work together to pressure the responsible
    government officials to cease the abuse.

    The reality of human rights abuse around the world is that
    many people suffer terrible fates in anonymity.  AI counters
    this by making real peoples' situations known and by coming
    rapidly to their protection. AI members have this great
    influence in the fate of others by virtue of specific and
    timely alerts members receive from AI's headquarters in
    London.  These alerts tell who is suffering, what background
    there is on the situation, what international principles and
    protections can be requested on the victim's behalf, and
    exactly which government officials to write to.

    There are 400,000 members of AIUSA, 2,000 regularly meeting
    groups, and a number of specialized activities for medical,
    legal and other tasks related to defending prisoners.  One
    of these activities is the "Urgent Action Network", which we
    invite you to consider hosting on your Fido BBS.

    We at the Urgent Action Network office postal-mail alerts
    about the most serious human rights concerns to a network of
    12,000 persons in the USA.  These alerts are telexed direct
    to us from AI's HQ, and often tell of persons who may be
    under torture or in other dire situations at the very moment
    we mail the alert.

    In addition to the US Postal network, we offer about 3
    "Urgent Action Alerts" a week to computer users over a
    growing network of hosting electronic communications
    systems.  We have delivered these alerts consistently now
    for a year and a half since we started on PeaceNet. In
    approaching the extensive world of PC BBSes, we have decided
    not to place this information over traditional echoes, but
    to offer it by file polling for systems who would be willing
    to work with us to present our information effectively and
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 14                  27 Feb 1989


    work with AI letterwriters on their systems.
    If you run a BBS which has a community interested in social
    issues, you may find our information to be a meaningful
    service to your readers.  We invite you to contact us if you
    would like more information.  We would like to have Fido BBS
    hosts throughout the USA. You would only need to make one
    file poll a week, receiving from 25 to 50kchar at up to 9600
    baud, to participate effectively in the Online Urgent Action
    Network.

    You may examine our basic materials in file area 6 of the
    UNITEX BBS 1:107/701 and 7:520/701, located in New Jersey,
    phone 201-795-0733.   We will be adding information to
    deepen the experience for letter writers;  what you will see
    here is our simplest offering.  Our information is also
    posted on many large commercial systems, most accessible of
    which might be CompuServe's "issuesforum", data library 15.
    Please do not repost these materials, rather, contact us to
    be tied in directly.

    The coordinator of the "Online Urgent Action Network" for
    AIUSA is Kevin Axelson, who may be reached at UNITEX:
    107/701 kevin axelson, CompuServe: 76414,447, and uucp:
    !rutgers!hombre!kaxelson.  If you have difficulty with any
    of these connections, you may also telephone to the UA
    office at 303-440-0913, between 9AM and 5PM weekdays,
    Mountain Standard Time.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 15                  27 Feb 1989


    =================================================================
                                 COLUMNS
    =================================================================

                                   YACK
                     Yet Another Complicated Komment

                           by Steven K. Hoskin
                       ( STEVE HOSKIN at 1:128/31 )

                 Episode 22:  Why Anyone Would Run a BBS


    Yes,  this is a strange hobby we partake in.  We spend a  lot  of
    money to buy a computer.  Then we spend more money getting a hard
    disk  for  it.   We  spend  more  money getting a modem.  Then we
    discover bulletin boards and decide to run one.  In  some  cases,
    this  warrants  more  hard  drive and maybe a faster modem.  More
    money invested  in  this  computer.   We  fight  with  unfriendly
    software  and  poor documentation.  We struggle with utilities to
    make our boards run more the way we'd like them to, and we change
    software when something new comes out that  does  something  we'd
    like.   We spend hours setting up programs and control files.  We
    wait anxiously  for  certain  events  to  happen  which,  due  to
    cost-effectiveness,  must  occur  at  wee  hours  of  the  o-dark
    hundred.   We  babysit  and  lament  our  machines,   and  tinker
    incessantly  with  the configurations.  And we argue and complain
    about the way things are or are not done.  All this just to  make
    our computers able to be used by OTHER people.

    Now wait a minute.  Where's the logic?

    Well,  as most of the diehards will tell you,  it's the sheer joy
    of running a BBS.  For some,  helping  other  people  (i.e.,  the
    users) is where the joy is at.  For some, it's the mastery of the
    system  and  software.   For  others,  it's the pure challenge of
    technowizardry.  And for some it's just a neat idea.

    It's a hobby.  No matter how you look at it, it is a hobby.  Some
    take it more seriously than others, but in all respects it can be
    lived without.  It's a way to fill up some spare time.  Okay, ALL
    of your spare  time.   But  it's  a  time  filler.   That's  all.
    Everything  else  -  the  helping  part,  the  mastery part,  the
    challenge part,  the nostalgia -  these things are extra benefits
    obtained by running a BBS.

    Unfortunately,  as  with  most  things in life,  the benefits are
    accompanied by some drawbacks:  The late hours,  the  frustrating
    configuration  processes,  the flames,  the hardware investments,
    the hackers trying to break in and the viruses that succeed.  YOU
    have to decide whether or not it's worth  it  for  you.   Do  the
    benefits outweigh the drawbacks in YOUR mind?  If not,  don't run
    a BBS.  Run a Point node or just be a user.  But  don't  complain
    to me because you made a bad choice.  You made it.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 16                  27 Feb 1989


    =================================================================
                             LATEST VERSIONS
    =================================================================

                         Latest Software Versions

                          Bulletin Board Software
    Name        Version    Name        Version    Name       Version

    Fido            12K*   Opus          1.03b    TBBS           2.1
    QuickBBS       2.03    TPBoard         5.0    TComm/TCommNet 3.2
    Lynx           1.22    Phoenix         1.3    RBBS         1.71D


    Network                Node List              Other
    Mailers     Version    Utilities   Version    Utilities  Version

    Dutchie       2.90C*   EditNL         4.00    ARC           5.32
    SEAdog         4.50*   MakeNL         2.12    ARCmail        2.0*
    BinkleyTerm    2.00    Prune          1.40    ConfMail      4.00
    D'Bridge       1.10    XlatList       2.90*   TPB Editor    1.21
    FrontDoor       2.0    XlaxNode       2.32*   TCOMMail       2.0
    PRENM          1.40    XlaxDiff       2.32*   TMail         8901*
                           ParseList      1.30    UFGATE        1.02*
                                                  GROUP         2.04*
                                                  EMM           1.40
                                                  MSGED         1.96

    * 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 6-09                Page 17                  27 Feb 1989


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

                         The Interrupt Stack


     8 May 1989
       Digital Equipment Corporations User Society (DECUS) will be
       holding its semi-annual symposium in Atlanta, GA. Runs
       through May 12. As usual sysop's will get together and chat.

    19 May 1989
       Start of EuroCon III at Eindhoven, The Netherlands

    24 Aug 1989
       Voyager 2 passes Neptune.

    24 Aug 1989
         FidoCon '89 starts at the Holiday Inn in San Jose,
         California.  Trade show, seminars, etc. Contact 1/89
         for info.

     5 Oct 1989
       20th Anniversary of "Monty Python's Flying Circus"

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

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

    FidoNews 6-09                Page 18                  27 Feb 1989


           OFFICERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL FIDONET ASSOCIATION

    Hal DuPrie     1:101/106  Chairman of the Board
    Bob Rudolph    1:261/628  President
    Matt Whelan    3:3/1      Vice President
    Ray Gwinn      1:109/639  Vice President - Technical Coordinator
    David Garrett  1:103/501  Secretary
    Steve Bonine   1:115/777  Treasurer



                        IFNA BOARD OF DIRECTORS

        DIVISION                               AT-LARGE

    10  Courtney Harris   1:102/732?    Don Daniels     1:107/210
    11  Bill Allbritten   1:11/301      Hal DuPrie      1:101/106
    12  Bill Bolton       3:711/403     Mark Grennan    1:147/1
    13  Rick Siegel       1:107/27      Steve Bonine    1:115/777
    14  Ken Kaplan        1:100/22      Ted Polczyinski 1:154/5
    15  Larry Kayser      1:104/739?    Matt Whelan     3:3/1
    16  Ivan Schaffel     1:141/390     Robert Rudolph  1:261/628
    17  Rob Barker        1:138/34      Steve Jordan    1:102/2871
    18  Andrew Adler      1:135/47      Bob Swift       1:140/24
    19  David Drexler     1:19/1        Larry Wall      1:15/18
     2  Henk Wevers       2:500/1       David Melnik    1:107/233

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FidoNews 6-09                Page 19                  27 Feb 1989


                                     __
                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
                  PO Box 41143
                  St Louis, Missouri 63141
                  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 second elected Board of Directors
    was filled in August 1988.  The IFNA Echomail Conference has been
    established on FidoNet to assist the Board.  We welcome your
    input to this Conference.

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