F I D O N E W S --       Volume 14, Number 13          31 March 1997
    +----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
    |  The newsletter of the     |   ISSN 1198-4589 Published by:          |
    |    FidoNet community       |   "FidoNews"                            |
    |          _                 |        1-904-409-7040    [1:1/23]       |
    |         /  \               |                                         |
    |        /|oo \              |                                         |
    |       (_|  /_)             |                                         |
    |        _`@/_ \    _        |                                         |
    |       |     | \   \\       |   Editor:                               |
    |       | (*) |  \   ))      |        Christopher Baker  1:18/14       |
    |       |__U__| /  \//       |                                         |
    |        _//|| _\   /        |                                         |
    |       (_/(_|(____/         |                                         |
    |             (jm)           |     Newspapers should have no friends.  |
    |                            |                    -- JOSEPH PULITZER   |
    +----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
    |               Submission address: FidoNews Editor 1:1/23             |
    +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
    |  MORE addresses:                                                     |
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    |    submissions=> [email protected]                                |
    +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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    |    please refer to the end of this file.                             |
    +----------------------------------------------------------------------+


       THE FIDONET <> INTERNET GATING IS STILL WORKING


                       Table of Contents
    1. EDITORIAL  ................................................  1
       The uucp Gates STILL work and a NEW Section!  .............  1
    2. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR  ....................................  2
       Letter to the Editor: Comments on Fidonews  ...............  2
    3. ARTICLES  .................................................  4
       Where'd Guucp 1:13/10 go?  ................................  4
       AOP Plans Summit '97!  ....................................  9
       Impressed and Encouraged!  ................................ 10
       More bugs in MS Internet Explorer & Netscape in Windows  .. 13
    4. GETTING TECHNICAL  ........................................ 18
    5. COORDINATORS CORNER  ...................................... 34
       Nodelist-statistics as seen from Zone-2 for day 087  ...... 34
    6. COMIX IN ASCII  ........................................... 35
       Another Dumb-ASCII Pun  ................................... 35
    7. ADVERTISE YOUR FREE SERVICE/EVENT  ........................ 36
       Nanet Nodes take note  .................................... 36
    8. NOTICES  .................................................. 37
       Future History  ........................................... 37
       Opus marches on starting 1 May 97!  ....................... 38
    9. FIDONET SOFTWARE LISTING  ................................. 39
       Latest Greatest Software Versions  ........................ 39
    10. FIDONEWS PUBLIC-KEY  ..................................... 44
       FidoNews PGP public-key listing  .......................... 44
    11. FIDONET BY INTERNET  ..................................... 45
    And more!
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 1                   31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                                EDITORIAL
    =================================================================


    I inadvertently stirred up some panic last week with the news that
    1:13/10 was down and the FidoNet - Internet gate was closed. Cancel
    that panic. [grin]

    1:13/10 IS down but I have been informed of hundreds of alternates
    in action as we read. Burt Juda still operates the FidoNet DNS and
    although those linked to him for such transfers thru 1:13/10 are now
    traffickless, those linked to one of the other Gates should still be
    moving mail. I wouldn't have noticed if I hadn't been a registered
    user of that particular linkage.

    There is an article down the pages that applies to the 1:13/10 ops
    ONLY! It has been updated since it was pre-published in several of
    the major Sysop Echos. The updated version will likewise appear in
    those Echos to clear up any excitement and misapprehension.

    On FidoNews, there is now a Letters to the Editor Section. It is the
    first Section that appears after the Editorial info areas. There you
    may rant or rail or wax poetic to me, as Editor, or the rest of
    FidoNet if you're not in the mood to send your stuff in as an article
    [.ART].

    The new extension for this area is: .LET and the first one appears in
    today's Issue at the suggestion of that writer. An updated ARTSPEC has
    already been hatched into the FIDONEWS and SDS SOFTDIST file echos as
    well as being copied into the FIDONEWS Echo and placed on the FidoNews
    webpage.

    [Just happened: The addition of the .LET file extension created a
     conflict for MAKENEWS so the extension for retractions has just been
     changed to .RTX and the ARTSPEC doc and .ZIP rehatched.]

    On another front, any news on the IC election?

    C.B.

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 2                   31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                          LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
    =================================================================


    Letter to the Editor: Comments on Fidonews
    by Dave Aronson, Sysop of Air 'n Sun, 1:109/120.0

    Okay, Chris, you asked a while back for comments on the changes in
    Fidonews...  you got it.

    Firstly, something I've always disliked about Fidonews.  In fact, I
    have the same bone to pick with lots of shareware authors who do this
    in their .doc files.  This is an electronic publication, so WHY is it
    formatted for printing ON PAPER?  Gimme plain ASCII text, with no
    formfeeds or page numbering (tho LINE numbering could be useful!) or
    other junk that's utterly useless for viewing online.  Of all such
    bogosities, especially, NO LEFT MARGINS!!!  This thing is being
    shipped and stored all over the world, plus there are a gazillion
    trivial little programs out there to *add* a left margin (and even
    to break into pages and number the pages), so why make us ship and
    store all that useless empty space?  Restricting the RIGHT margin to
    column 70 is fine --that won't force fugly rewrap on most systems, and
    gives those who WANT to print it out, some room for a margin.  But
    forcing a LEFT margin on us all???  That might even force fugly rewrap
    on some BBS systems notorious for not liking text over 72 columns
    wide....

    Secondly, this huge conglomeration of stuff that's essentially the
    same from week to week.  Mostly, that's the lists, like of Fidonet
    compatible software or of web pages about Fidonet.  That could be far
    more efficiently replaced by a list of CHANGES from last week, and
    maybe a reference to where we could freq a list.  (Yes, FREQ, not
    ftp, or browse a @#$%^&* web page!)  Then there's the boilerplate junk
    at the end.  Come on, do we really need all that every week?  Again,
    just give us the bare bones and tell us how to get the whole megillah.
    To placate those whining "but freqing is sooooo expensive!", perhaps a
    "docserver" could be setup, whereby someone would email a given name
    at a given node, and be emailed back a copy of the document, all of
    which could take place via cheap netmail routing.  The latest version
    of NetMgr claims to be able to do this, and at the moment, I am trying
    it; send email to "docserv" (w/o quotes) at 1:109/120.0, with subject
    line including the word(s) "description", "echolist", "gunflyer",
    and/or "jewishflyer" (again, w/o quotes), to try it out --it should
    get you one emailed document back per such message.

    Thirdly, I dunno about you, but I suspect that the vast majority of
    even the regular readers have been skipping past the reposted Fidonet
    Technical Standards.  I sure have, aside from an occasional brief
    skimming of the first couple screens!  Stuff like that is why so many
    call it "da Snooze"!  Once again, a summary, plus an announcement of
    where such things could be freqed or docserved (or, <sigh>, ftped or
    browsed) would be a lot more efficient.  Perhaps instead if someone
    who has taken the time to read and understand this stuff could post a
    brief "review" of each of the standards in turn, including their
    significance to Fidonet's modern operation, IMHO that could be QUITE
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 3                   31 Mar 1997


    "newsworthy".

    Fourthly, I suggest a new "extension", .LET, specifically for "Letters
    to the Editor".

    Fifthly... where's all the smart folks, er, articles at?  B-)  Yeah,I
    know, I know... some more ASCII art is on the way!

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 4                   31 Mar 1997


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


    [The following is the digest of a conversation between Alan Rackmill
     and your Editor. He responded to my posting in FIDONEWS Echo asking
     about the disappearance of 1:13/10 and the fidonet.org Internet Gate.
     It is published with his permission.] Ed.

    [This applies to the uucp Gate at 1:13/10 ONLY!! fidonet.org mail IS
     flowing at other gates according to other sources.] Ed.

    --- Following message extracted from NETMAIL @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Tue Mar 25 20:38:32 1997

    From: Alan Rackmill @ 1:107/101
    To: Christopher Baker @ 1:18/14
    Date: 25 Mar 97  15:13:10
    Subj: FidoNews 1412 is in the can!

    * Forwarded (from: FIDONEWS) by Alan Rackmill using timEd/2 1.01.
    * Originally from Alan Rackmill (1:107/101) to Christopher Baker.
    * Original dated: Mar 25 '97, 14:57

    Christopher Baker wrote in a message to All:

     CB> Where DID Guucp 1:13/10 go and why?
     CB>

    Sorry about that.
    I should have spread the word further than I did.

    13/10 as known and loved in the past is dead.

    During an equipment move, the equipment decided enough was enough and
    refused to restart when plugged back in.
    Sort of like a fatal heart attack.

    At the same time, Burt's personal machine also went south and didn't
    return.

    The gateway machine is/was owned by Burt's employer, and the decided
    to not replace the computer, so 13/10 had nothing to run on.

    The good news is that we are working on a replacement for the gateway
    and should have it back up in two or 3 weeks.
    It will not be physically located where it was, nor will Burt be
    running it, but it will be the gateway again for internet<>fidonet
    Email.
    He is, however, very involved in getting the gateway back in action

    The usegroups may become available in the future, but that is not
    certain.

    I will keep everyone up to date as things develop.
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 5                   31 Mar 1997


    Alan

    Team OS/2,
    Fidonet 1:107/101, ibmNET 40:4371/101, OS2NET 80:135/15
    internet: [email protected]

    ___ timEd/2 1.01
     - Origin:  The Maven's Roost * MAX/2 * WARP * v.34 1-908-821-4533
       (1:107/101)

    --- Following message extracted from NETMAIL @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Tue Mar 25 20:39:04 1997

    From: Christopher Baker @ 1:18/14
    To: Alan Rackmill @ 1:107/101
    Date: 25 Mar 97  19:59:56
    Subj: Re: FidoNews 1412 is in the can!

    > Sorry about that.
    > I should have spread the word further than I did.

    are you the Guucp guru now?

    > 13/10 as known and loved in the past is dead.

    what happens to fidonet.org mail in the meantime?

    > During an equipment move, the equipment decided enough was enough
    > and refused to restart when plugged back in.
    > Sort of like a fatal heart attack.

    okay. i've been able to get that much info.

    > At the same time, Burt's personal machine also went south and didn't
    > return.

    conspiracy? [grin]

    > The gateway machine is/was owned by Burt's employer, and the decided
    > to not replace the computer, so 13/10 had nothing to run on.

    been there.

    > The good news is that we are working on a replacement for the
    > gateway and should have it back up in two or 3 weeks.

    and in the meantime?

    > It will not be physically located where it was, nor will Burt be
    > running it, but it will be the gateway again for internet<>fidonet
    > Email.
    > He is, however, very involved in getting the gateway back in action

    who is in charge?

    > The usegroups may become available in the future, but that is not
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 6                   31 Mar 1997


    > certain.

    the what?

    > I will keep everyone up to date as things develop.

    why you?

    thanks. can i have this in a FidoNews article after the questions are
    answered or can i publish the response?

    QOFM.
    Chris

    --- Following message extracted from NETMAIL @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Wed Mar 26 16:21:44 1997

    From: Alan Rackmill @ 1:107/101
    To: Christopher Baker @ 1:18/14
    Date: 25 Mar 97  23:30:21
    Subj: FidoNews 1412 is in the can!

    Christopher Baker wrote in a message to Alan Rackmill:

    > Sorry about that.
    > I should have spread the word further than I did.

     CB> are you the Guucp guru now?

    No, but Burt called me voice when the crash happened, and I sent out a
    few messages about it.

    > 13/10 as known and loved in the past is dead.

     CB> what happens to fidonet.org mail in the meantime?

    Unfortunately all mail that went through the gateway is being
    returned.

    We are trying to get everything setup so that fidonet.org remains as
    an entity and get the mail flow back to normal.

    > During an equipment move, the equipment decided enough was
    > enough and refused to restart when plugged back in.
    > Sort of like a fatal heart attack.

     CB> okay. i've been able to get that much info.

    > At the same time, Burt's personal machine also went south and didn't
    > return.

     CB> conspiracy? [grin]

    Of course.
    Or sympathy.  ;-))

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 7                   31 Mar 1997


    > The gateway machine is/was owned by Burt's employer, and the decided
    > to not replace the computer, so 13/10 had nothing to run on.

     CB> been there.

    > The good news is that we are working on a replacement for the
    > gateway and  should have it back up in two or 3 weeks.

     CB> and in the meantime?

    In the meantime, it is like a bridge collapse:  nothing gets from one
    side of the river to the other until the bridge is rebuilt.

    > It will not be physically located where it was, nor will Burt
    > be running it, but it will be the gateway again for
    > internet<>fidonet Email.
    > He is, however, very involved in getting the gateway back in action

     CB> who is in charge?

    Steven Reinen, 107/700 has a dedicated connect to the internet and
    Burt is working with him to get everything moved over to his system.

    > I will keep everyone up to date as things develop.

     CB> why you?

    Why not?

    I can get to Burt voice, and I dug up Steven as a replacement for the
    gateway ** accidently, I must admit ** and I am the new NC here in net
    107.

    And being retired, I have the time to keep up with everything.

     CB> thanks. can i have this in a FidoNews article after the
     CB> questions are answered or can i publish the response?

    You may publish this response, since I am not good at writing "formal"
    articles.

    Alan

    Team OS/2,
    Fidonet 1:107/101, ibmNET 40:4371/101, OS2NET 80:135/15
    internet: [email protected]

    --- timEd/2 1.01

    --- Following message extracted from NETMAIL @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Wed Mar 26 16:22:10 1997

    From: Christopher Baker @ 1:18/14
    To: Alan Rackmill @ 1:107/101
    Date: 26 Mar 97  16:16:01
    Subj: Re: FidoNews 1412 is in the can!
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 8                   31 Mar 1997


    > No, but Burt called me voice when the crash happened, and I sent out
    > a  few messages about it.

    okay. i didn't see any. did you tell ZC1? he was unaware of it until i
    asked him last week.

    > Unfortunately all mail that went through the gateway is being
    > returned.

    that explains a failure i had last week.

    > We are trying to get everything setup so that fidonet.org remains as
    > an  entity and get the mail flow back to normal.

    will Juda maintain that?

    > In the meantime, it is like a bridge collapse:  nothing gets from
    > one side of the river to the other until the bridge is rebuilt.

    okay. at least we now know what's going on.

    > CB> who is in charge?

    > Steven Reinen, 107/700 has a dedicated connect to the internet and
    > Burt is working with him to get everything moved over to his system.

    okay.

    > Why not?

    just asking.

    > I can get to Burt voice, and I dug up Steven as a replacement for
    > the  gateway ** accidently, I must admit ** and I am the new NC here
    > in net 107.

    okay.

    > And being retired, I have the time to keep up with everything.

    i can relate.

    > CB> thanks. can i have this in a FidoNews article after the
    > CB> questions are answered or can i publish the response?

    > You may publish this response, since I am not good at writing
    > "formal" articles.

    thanks. a condensed version of the conversation will appear in
    FidoNews 1413 next Monday. an Echomail version will appear in FIDONEWS
    Echo today and will be cross-posted to several major Sysop Echos for
    information to all in the meantime.

    QOFM.
    Chris

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 9                   31 Mar 1997


     -30-

    THIS INFORMATION IS CORRECT ONLY AS IT PERTAINS TO THE OPERATIONS OF
    THE uucp GATE AT 1:13/10. THE EFFECT OF THE DEMISE OF 1:13/10 IS NOT
    GLOBAL ON THE fidonet.org EMAIL MOVEMENT AT THE OTHER GATES.

    There are hundreds of other gates linked to the FidoNet DNS that are
    still functioning without ever having stalled. Burt Juda IS the DNS
    guru with or without the presence of 1:13/10 at present.

    My apologies for any undue panic amongst the users of the Internet
    gates this discussion of 1:13/10 may have caused.

    Ed.


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

    Submitted by Michele Stewart
    1:369/21

                        Online Summit '97
                  The AOP 2nd Annual Conference

    Planned for September 11-14, Online Summit '97 will be held at the
    Town & Country Resort and Conference Center in San Diego, CA.  Senator
    Ron Wyden (D-OR), the keynote speaker for Online Summit '97 will
    address Congress' role in the future of the online world and the
    internet.

    We are anticipating approximately 500 members to OS'97.

    Cost for the event is:
                              AOP Members           Non AOP-Member
    Before August 1, 1997        $200                   $350
    After August 1, 1997         $300                   $450

    AOP Online Summit '97 Exhibition Rates:

                              AOP Members           Non-AOP Members
    10' x 10' booths only        $250                   $1,000

    AOP Online Summit Hotel Information and Rates:

        Garden Rooms        $95
        East Tower Rooms    $105
        West Tower Rooms    $115

    (prices are for single or double occupancy)

    For room reservations call:

        Town & Country Resort and Conference Center
        500 Hotel Circle
        San Diego, CA 92108
        (800) 542-6082 (inside CA)
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 10                  31 Mar 1997


        (800) 854-2608 (outside CA)
        FAX: (619) 291-3584

    960 rooms, in-room movies, beauty salon, barber shop, access to
    Health club, complimentary newspapers 6 days, walk to Fashion Valley
    shopping.

    For Conference Registration or information contact:

                  Susan Merkel, Director Member Services
                  ASSOCIATION OF ONLINE PROFESSIONALS
                  6096 Franconia Road, Suite D
                  Alexandria, VA  22310
                  703-924-5800 (voice)
                  703-924-5801 (fax)
                  [email protected] (email)
                  Fidonet: 1:109/255

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


    Impressed and Encouraged!
    By: Clay Tannacore  (1:372/136)

    I have just recently completed reading FIDONEWS (1412), dated 24 March
    97.  In a guest editorial by a FidoNet SysOp named Carl Hultay
    (1:259/546) I believe I detected the traits of the old "comrade in
    arms" attitude that at one time was prevalent in the FidoNet
    community.  It is possible that I misunderstood his rationalization,
    but I don't think so.  I positively think I have found someone within
    the association that literally cares about the imminent problems of
    FidoNet.  While I can not agree with his introspection regarding the
    forecast for FidoNet, I applaud his tenacity.  It is heart warming to
    hear (read) a fellow Fido-Nut (OOPS) SysOp, at least proclaim his
    convictions as to the forthcoming future of our brotherhood.

    I can relate to his predicaments concerning the "death of hardware",
    and the instinctive feeling of doom, when you are faced with the loss
    of a BBS.  I (like many thousands before me) have had to endure
    similar conditions, on a number of occasions.  I sympathize with him
    regarding the loss of users, especially due to financial obstacles,
    and especially due to the death of a family member (the computer, and
    accessories. . .[g] )  However, what disturbs me the most, is his
    reference to the "loss of users."  For this gentleman to believe that
    he will again be able to boast of a user base near one thousand (or
    maybe more) without admitting that MANY radical changes will have to
    be contrived in the way FidoNet is operated, is a very discouraging
    supposition.  At present there are just to many opposing forces in
    FidoNet, for a restoration to a position once held by this
    organization.  To many "I want" attitudes , as well as to many "I
    gotta' have more power" points of view.  Nothing will ever be the
    same, not in FidoNet's present mode.

    Mr. Hultay speaks of the "commercialism" associated with The Internet.
    What he has apparently dismissed in his attempt to disallow the
    thought of a FidoNet "doomsday", is that FidoNet is no longer an
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 11                  31 Mar 1997


    association completely dominated by hobbyist, but has partially
    fallen into The Internet  like, "Profit For Me" temperament.  Many,
    many bulletin boards systems are at the present time directly
    competitive with the Internet, in that they conclude that a "pay-for-
    use" system is the way to go.  "If the Internet can do it, then so
    can I" is something that has become an everyday behavior, a behavior
    which if it is not discontinued, will eventually bring down FidoNet.

    Mr. Hultay goes on to explain his feelings when his computer (hard
    drive) developed a *brain fart*, and pooped out.  He states that it
    was at that this in his life that, "I knew that I was a true SysOp.  I
    could not give up.  I *WANTED* my BBS." Mister, if that was your
    *TRUE* sentiment at the time.  I SALUTE YOU!  However, I believe my
    old professor (psychology 101) might take exception to that.  I tend
    to believe he would more than likely classify you as (in direct
    English) a Hilter-like-wannabe. . .[g]  Of course, you have to take
    into consideration that Professor Freedmen, pulled a Dr. Jack, and
    blew his own brains out about 10 years ago!  Another predominate trait
    that FidoNet SysOps seem to have acquired over the last eight or ten
    years is the *power for me* temperament.  For some reason there seems
    to be a growing number of SysOps that feel compelled to attain as much
    power, or influence (ability to intimidate) as possible over their
    users.  Why?  I have no idea, except to say what everyone else who has
    studied this formidable swing in human nature says, that it is a "sign
    of our times."  Of course, this is probably of bunch of horse hockey!
    Whatever the reason, it is not exclusive of SysOps alone within the
    FidoNet community.  We have an abundance of Network Coordinators with
    the same, or like, philosophy, not to leave out a number of Regional
    Coordinators who have become "Hooked On Power", and they think it
    "Works For Them."   Consequently we have a network that will become a
    little known fleck in history, if  "we" do not recognize the problems,
    and do something about it.

    Brothers, I beseech you to take a very close look at FidoNet as it is
    today.  Then try to visualize it five or ten years from now.  Look
    into the prospective for FidoNet, if present conditions prevail, and
    try to visualize it with all these problems confronted, and corrected.
    I'll tell you right now, I can see a FidoNet similar to the early
    years, when Tom Jennings and a few more (caring and dedicated) people
    produced a telecommunications system unequaled from its conception to
    the present day.  The Internet you say is bigger and has many more
    features.  Maybe!  Just keep in mind the *GRANDFATHER* who led the
    way for The Internet, and is still *BIGGER* than that inception.
    FidoNet was the trailblazer for all the nets which subsequently
    evolved from it, and with the dedication of those who care about it.
    It will be again!  We can not allow the "me first" people who care for
    nothing but their own personal gratification to prevail.  We can not
    tolerate those who would bring nothing but hopelessness within the
    net, to remain.  These people *must* be identified by those who care,
    and be weeded out.

    By now, most of you people are sick and tired of hearing (reading) me
    complain about what is faulty with FidoNet.  Some would even like to
    *see* me get off the pot, and make some useful suggestions for the
    betterment of it.  So would I!  I could sit hear on my duff, day in
    and day out spreading my philosophy and criticisms.  Chastising the
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 12                  31 Mar 1997


    *C structure, the SysOps, and most of all, that piece of garbage that
    is referred to as POLICY 4.  I could do all that, and never add to the
    prosperousness of the Net.  The trouble is, *I* could do all these
    things, but nothing would be gained.  NOTHING at all!  Nothing that
    is, without *Y*O*U* making a contribution.  I (we) need input of
    everyone who cares one tiny bit about the future of our association.
    You (the members) SysOps out there who have been sitting on your
    opinions, for all these many years, and you Regional Coordinators who
    *have* opinions for your regions upward movement.  The Network
    Coordinators, who *know* what is wrong within their individual
    regions, but are to damned worried about their positions as NC to
    voice those conceptions for fear of retaliation.  Those users out
    there who read FIDONEWS, who would like to be a part of FidoNet, but
    because of the antiquated rules, procedures and the general *cut
    throat* mentality that is so obviously prevalent, have been reluctant
    to join.  Now is the time to voice your opinions.  Join in this
    endeavor with those who truly care.  Let your voice be heard, by those
    who must *listen* if FidoNet is to have a reincarnation.  Remember,
    there is safety in numbers, and more importantly, a greater pool of
    intellect to draw upon.  With many voices, there comes many
    suggestions, and with those many suggestions comes many intelligent
    and significant recommendations which leads to a aggrandized
    membership, and a more equable association.

    If anyone out there has any hesitancy in believing that I intend to
    accelerate the demise of those who have been responsible for the
    shortcomings of FidoNet, let them be assured I fully intend to raise
    enough hell to either cause sufficient change in the way FidoNet
    operates, or find myself without a node number, again.

    If there are any inhabitants out there who consider themselves *real*
    FidoNet people, and would like to join in this crusade, by all means
    send me some mail (FidoNet, not Internet [gag]) with your suggestions.
    I am particularly interested in those who have suggestions pertaining
    to a *NEW* POLICY document.  Those who have any complaints about the
    monitory provisos dictated by EchoMail Coordinators.  Anyone who is
    infuriated with the multitude of Bulletin Boards (BBS) which indulge
    in the practice of charging users for access.  Anyone who has ever had
    (what you consider) an unfair decision rendered by your NC, or RC, or
    both, let me know.  Let *us* right a wrong that has been going on much
    to long.  Do you have any suggestions concerning the EchoMail Policies
    in the different Nets you have been associated with?  How about a
    *REAL* EchoMail POLICY for FidoNet, itself?  Any ideas on how to
    better the present procedures or policies?  Do you know of any person
    who is a part of the *C structure of FidoNet (also including SysOps)
    who have allowed his/her personal opinion of you (or someone else) to
    influence a rendering of a fair and impartial decision?  Have you (or
    anyone you know) ever been denied a reasonable appeal process by
    anyone in the position to deny it (NC, RC, SysOp, ZC, et al).  These
    are all questions that must be taken under consideration when
    attempting to reestablish a network such as FidoNet.

    I realize with all the criticism I have expressed in this wonderful
    outlet (FIDONEWS - Thanks, Chris Baker) concerning FidoNet.  I have
    irritated the hell out of the *good-old-boy-network* who in all
    likelihood will now attempt the FidoNetSqueeze.  It may even work!
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 13                  31 Mar 1997


    But, who cares?  I've said my piece, expressed my opinions, got others
    to take a closer look at what is going on.  I have actually received a
    few positive responses to the articles printed in FIDONEWS, shocking
    isn't it?  Look folks, I'm not the only one with the desire to better
    this organization, there are many out there who would like to be proud
    of FidoNet, again.  Perhaps some of these people are worried about
    what sort of retribution would be forthcoming if they were to speak
    out, or maybe they are just being a little overly circumspect than is
    absolutely necessary.  Or perhaps their reluctance is justified in
    light of what has been a trend in FidoNet, of late.  Whatever the
    reason, I believe this open challenge and solicitation for help, just
    may instigate these people to finally stand up and have their
    convictions noted.

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


    From: "Mike Riddle" <[email protected]>
    To: "Baker, Christopher" <[email protected] (Christopher Baker)>
    Date: Tue, 25 Mar 97 08:20:52 -0600
    Reply-To: "Mike Riddle" <[email protected]>
    Subject: Fwd: Warning: Latest Win95, Win97 & NT Browser/Networking
    Security

    ==================BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE==================
    Received: from austin.onu.edu (austin.onu.edu [140.228.10.1]) by
    monarch.papillion.ne.us (8.7.4/8.6.9) with ESMTP id BAA13578 for
    <[email protected]>; Tue, 25 Mar 1997 01:37:15 -0600
    (CST) >Received: from austin.onu.edu (localhost.onu.edu [127.0.0.1])
           by austin.onu.edu (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id CAA35433
           for <[email protected]>; Tue, 25 Mar 1997
           02:34:14 -0500
    Date: Tue, 25 Mar 1997 02:34:14 -0500
    Errors-To: [email protected]
    Reply-To: [email protected]
    Originator: [email protected]
    Sender: [email protected]
    From: Jeff Beard <[email protected]>
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Warning: Latest Win95, Win97 & NT Browser/Networking Security

    These security bugs are really starting to bug me -- seriously!  IMHO,
    this one is very disturbing, as it has the very definite potential to
    compromise security for an entire network.

    I do apologize in advance that this message is lengthy, because it
    requires some technical explanation of what SMB is, and how it relates
    to the latest (and perhaps greatest) security problem.  I also
    included the Wired news site article (at the bottom of this message)
    that explains it in plainer language.

    THE SECURITY PROBLEM:  If you are running either Win95, Win97, or NT,
    and use either MS IE 3.xx, Netscape 3.xx, or Netscape Communicator
    4.0, there is now yet another bug (a whopping SIX security bugs for IE
    this month! and I think the second one for Netscape) THAT WILL SEND
    OUT YOUR WINDOWS LOGIN NAME AND PASSWORD TO A REMOTE SERVER which can
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 14                  31 Mar 1997


    capture it!  And for most network users, their Windows login name and
    password are also their network login name and password, which of
    course puts the entire network at risk for break-ins.  For example, a
    person's Win95 login name and password is often the same for their
    Novell Netware and MS Windows NT server.  Cute, huh?

    First, let me explain briefly what the SMB protocol is, because it is
    key to the security flaw -- then the rest of the message will make
    more sense.  I compiled the following information from several web
    sites that did a good job of describing it:

    It has to do with embedding a link (e.g., an image link) in the web
    page to an SMB server rather than the normal HTTP server.  SMB, which
    stands for Server Message Block, is a protocol for sharing files,
    printers, serial ports, and communications abstractions such as named
    pipes and mail slots between computers.  It is a higher level protocol
    which can be transported over TCP/IP, NetBEUI and IPX/SPX.  If TCP/IP
    or NetBEUI is in use, then the NetBIOS API is being used.  If SMB is
    used over TCP/IP or NetBEUI, then NetBIOS names must be used in a
    number of cases.  NetBIOS names are usually the name of the computer
    that is running NetBIOS.  (In many instances, the computer names are
    referenced by the "\\" prefix to designate a different computer on the
    network -- this is an important aspect of the security flaw -- read
    on.)

    For more info about SMB and its security problems, you can go to:

    http://samba.anu.edu.au/cifs/docs/what-is-smb.html    (Describes SMB)
    http://www.sur.fr.net/ftp/supports/96/netbios-3.html  (re: Security
    Problems)

    (I'm sure there are a lot of other great SMB sites too, but these were
    among the first two I found using Alta-Vista when researching this.)

    Okay, enough of the SMB explanations.  Now that you know what SMB is,
    here's how the security flaw/bug works:

    In a web page, the webmaster can insert a link reference uses a
    combination of the "file://" URL command followed by the "\\"
    reference that Win 95, 97, and NT use to refer to and access other
    servers (as I mentioned above).  Then, because your browser sees this
    link (e.g., an image tag) as a reference to a different server (the
    SMB server), Win95, 97 & NT automatically send your Windows login name
    and password to the remote server to log in (the "\\" makes it think
    that the other PC is part of its network), ALL BEHIND THE SCENES, so
    the user has no idea whatsoever that this is happening!!!  Basically
    the guy discovered this security flaw by combining different things
    that were in the previous IE bug reports this month -- very clever.
    The article below tells network administrators how to block this on
    their firewall setup, to block access to the SMB server.  It appears
    that the rest of us using Win 95, 97 and NT are just out of luck for
    now.

    The article posted at the end of this message is from the Wired news
    site, at:

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 15                  31 Mar 1997


    http://www.wired.com/news/technology/story/2702.html

    The web site referred to in the article is authored by the guy who
    discovered the bug, and gives a lot more info about it, as well as
    demonstrating the bug in real time to you.

    WARNING!!! IF YOU GO TO THE FOLLOWING WEB SITE USING WIN95, 97, OR NT,
    IT *WILL* MOST LIKELY CAPTURE YOUR LOGIN NAME AND PASSWORD, AND THE
    SITE POSTS A TABLE SHOWING THE LAST 10 CAPTURED LOGIN NAMES, PASSWORDS
    (but only shows the beginning of the password for your protection),
    HOST NAME AND IP ADDRESS, SO YOU CAN SEE IF YOU ARE VULNERABLE, AND
    THEN TELLS YOU TO CHANGE YOUR LOGIN AND PASSWORD ASAP TO PROTECT
    YOURSELF!  I used my standalone Win 3.1 laptop with no problem (hey,
    right now Win 3.1 apps are more secure on the Net, IMHO -- so don't
    knock it <g>).  BTW, the "bug" web site mentions that "Notice that the
    most common account & password I get is 'Administrator' ".  So it's
    capturing administrator logins and passwords as network administrators
    hear about the bug and visit his site -- full access, good grief.  If
    any of you would like to read the full text from the site without
    going there, send me an e-mail and I will send it to you, since my Win
    3.1 laptop system does not support that security flaw.

    The URL for the bug site, if you are curious, is (but remember my
    WARNING!):

    http://www.ee.washington.edu/computing/iebug/

    (The following URL is okay to go to:)

    http://www.wired.com/news/technology/story/2702.html
               Another Windows Networking Bug Discovered by Toxic

               11:56am  21.Mar.97.PST Yet another security-related browser
    bug has been uncovered, the sixth to affect Microsoft Internet
    Explorer this month. This latest bug, in the file sharing protocol
    of both Windows 95 and Windows NT, allows someone to set up a rogue
    Web site that obtains your username and Windows network password.

               Windows NT users of all versions of Microsoft Internet
    Explorer and many versions of Netscape are vulnerable to this attack
    - which is not addressed by Microsoft's 12 March browser fix.

               As with the rash of recent Internet Explorer security bugs
    and holes, Aaron Spangler, the bug's discoverer, has created a
    Web page to demonstrate the vulnerability.

               "My bug is twofold," said Spangler, a systems administrator
    at the University of Washington. "It takes advantage of two exploits.
    The elegance lies in putting the two together to come up with grabbing
    people's passwords. That's a pretty scary thing," he said. Spangler
    has captured more than 940 passwords, many from administrator accounts
    using weak passwords such as "horse" and "dog."

               Spangler said both bugs have affected IE for some time. He
    first tried contacting both Microsoft and Netscape on 13 March, and
    created his Web page the next day. He says he received a note from
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 16                  31 Mar 1997


    Microsoft saying that they were working on the bug.  "But every time I
    send any more email they don't respond," he says.  "They're completely
    ignoring me. It's frustrating."

               Netscape sent an auto-generated response to his email, but
    has not contacted him since, he said.

               The attack relies on the file structure of the Windows
    operating system, and the behavior of a browser when it encounters a
    URL that begins with the "file://" scheme. When Windows sees a file:
    URL, it attempts to read the specified file from the user's local hard
    disk. For example, file://C:\temp\foo.html will open C:\temp\foo.html
    from your local hard drive.

               However, the Windows file system is designed such that
    filenames that begin with a double backslash actually reside on
    another machine. If you take these two factors and combine them, you
    realize that the file in the example above could also be referenced as
    a URL, as in file://\\bar.wired.com\temp\foo.html.

               When a user attempts to access a file through this method,
    his Windows machine will connect to the specified server -
    bar.wired.com in the above example. The server will then attempt to
    authenticate the user by asking for a username and password. Windows
    will automatically send the information entered by a user when they
    logged into their own Windows network, which is what most users do
    when they first boot their machine. Windows will only prompt the user
    for a password if the values entered at startup are not accepted by
    the remote server.

               Spangler's demo page contains an "<IMG>" tag that
    references an image stored on his SMB server instead of his Web
    server.  When you load his page, your browser will attempt to load
    the image. It will connect to Spangler's Windows file server, and when
    requested, automatically send your username and password. You will
    receive the image, and Spangler will receive your password. Everything
    appears perfectly normal to the Web surfer.

               Spangler says the fix is really trivial. "All [Netscape and
    Microsoft] have to do is make it so their Web browser will not accept
    URLs that come from an SMB server. It's a little statement that they
    can put in their code," he said.

               Network administrators can protect users on their network
    by blocking TCP port 139 on their outgoing firewall (port 139 is the
    SMB port). An outgoing firewall configured in this manner will not
    allow traffic from a protected network to reach port 139 of any
    machine on an outside, untrusted network, and will thus thwart this
    kind of attack.

               "Microsoft is checking into all bug reports and taking them
    very seriously," said a Microsoft spokesperson. "If it is something
    [engineers] need to change, they will do something about it."

               Netscape could not be reached for comment.
    ______________________________________________________________
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 17                  31 Mar 1997


    Good grief!!! Now we have to stand in line to report browser/OS
    security flaws!

    John L., I think this is a pretty good illustration of our discussion
    re: increasingly serious security flaws, don't you?

    Jeff


    _____________________________________________

         Jeffrey J. Beard, Esq.
         Legal Systems Consultant
         MicroLaw, Inc., Milwaukee, WI

         E-mail:    [email protected]
         Web Site:  http://www.microlaw.com
    _____________________________________________



    ===================END FORWARDED MESSAGE===================

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 18                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                            GETTING TECHNICAL
    =================================================================

    FSC-0054 - The CHARSET Proposal

    [This is part of a continuing series of FTSC docs republished as part
     of FidoNet History. It has been reformatted to 70 columns where
     required.] Ed.


    Document: FSC-0054
    Version:  004
    Date:     27-May-1991

                               The CHARSET Proposal

           A System-Independent Way of Transferring Special Characters,
              Character Sets and Style Information in FIDO Messages.

                                  Fourth Release

                                   Duncan McNutt
                                 2:243/100@fidonet

    Status of this document:

         This is a finished specification, it is used in several FIDO
         products.

         This FSC suggests a protocol for the FidoNet(r) community,
         and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
         Distribution of this document is unrestricted.

         Fido and FidoNet are registered marks of Tom Jennings and Fido
         Software.

    Contents:
    ---------
      Purpose
      History
      Pros & Cons
      The Present System
      The Proposed System
      Technical Details
      Examples
      Summary
      Implementation Sample

    Purpose:
    --------

    This document is a proposal for a FIDO standard.

    This document describes a method of allowing international and other
    non-standard ASCII characters to be transferred via a network and
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 19                  31 Mar 1997


    interpreted by the receiving systems.  It also allows for expansion to
    multiple character sets and character sets that require more than one
    byte storage space per character.  Further the capability to include
    style and font changes are part of this proposal.

    This proposal is based on the ISO standard character sets.  It defines
    a mechanism to switch between all of the defined ISO sets.  Further it
    defines switches that allow style and font changes.  The FSC-0054
    standard also coexists with the extensions of the ISO LATIN-1
    characters set as defined in FSC-0051.  FSC-0054 and FSC-0054 use the
    same identifier (CHRS: LATIN-1 2) to indicate the LATIN-1 character
    set.  FSC-0051 (draft 3 and above) defines the codes unused in LATIN-1
    for additional characters.  At present these are the numeric super and
    subscripts as well as Polish characters.

    History
    -------

    All in all the author is aware of 6 initial proposals for including
    additional characters in FIDO messages, most of them did not get the
    critical mass to achieve widespread use.  Three of them actually
    managed to get FSC numbers.  FSC-0054 and FSC-0051 effectively merged
    as of this document.  FSC-0054 is backwardly compatible to FSC-0050.
    Another standard that was used in Denmark is no longer in discussion.

    The initial proposal was FSC-0050.  It had several drawbacks, most
    notably it was too limiting and it was based around a particular
    hardware platform.  Because of its implementation in Opus, FSC-0054
    tries to recognize the messages produced by that system.  There are
    several incompatible "flavors" of FSC-0050 floating around, so FSC-
    0054 can not always produce perfect results when translating FSC-0050
    messages.  Implementations that allow for FSC-0050 can use the same
    code for FSC-0054 but may need to generate different kludges and will
    need to be expanded a to make full use of the extra features.

    A second proposal FSC-0051 had the advantage of hardware independence
    but lacked (on its own) expandability as it only allows for roman
    characters (ie: western languages).  Because the FSC-0051 and FSC-0054
    methods both contain the LATIN-1 character set as the base set for
    western countries the authors agreed on a common identifier to allow
    the two systems to coexist.  FSC-0051 allows you to add Polish
    characters to the Latin-1 character set without necessitating
    compliance to FSC-0054 Level 3.  FSC-0051 is mainly used in Sweden.

    The system described in this document gives the maximum in capability
    without breaking the FIDO message format.  It allows hardware
    independence and internationalization of FIDO software.

    To further enhance the capabilities of FIDO beyond what is described
    here a new message document format must be defined.  The author
    suggests this be done in connection with a type-3 format and that the
    Open Document Architecture (ODA) be included as the standard for that
    format.  ODA is the agreed standard for commercial mail systems and is
    being implemented by X.400 messaging systems.  Conformance to that
    standard would allow transfer between FIDO and other nets without
    translation.  ODA contains formatted text as well as graphics and
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 20                  31 Mar 1997


    sound.

    Pros and Cons:
    --------------

    Any form of non standard ASCII extension to the present messages
    must respect the following criteria.

    It should:
      o  be simple
      o  be backwards compatible
      o  be expandable
      o  be transparent
      o  allow for multiple levels of support
      o  allow for translation to the least common denominator

    Earlier proposals had several problems:

      1) They inserted non ASCII characters in the PRESENT stream of
         messages.

      2) They did not allow for an easy to read "standard ASCII" represen-
         tation on areas that do not support their special encoding
         scheme.

      3) They increased the size of messages by a larger amount than is
         necessary.

      4) They were hardware dependant.

      5) The implementation sample were too slow to be effective (a minor
          point).

      6) They limited the possibilities.
         They only allowed for a limited amount of graphic or other
         special purpose characters.  They did not allow for character
         sets that require storage space that are larger than one byte per
         character.  They were not expandable.

    The advantages of the system proposed here are:

    It does not have any of the failings of the prior systems (points 1-
    5).

      1) It does not insert any non ASCII characters in the present
         stream of messages.

      2) It allows for an easy to read standard ASCII representation.

      3) It does not increase message size.  It only includes the charset
         kludge in messages that use non-ascii characters (e.g.: Kanji).

      4) The presented algorithm is efficient.

      5) The presented algorithm is efficient.

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 21                  31 Mar 1997


      6) It support ALL international characters as well as graphic and
         other special characters.  It allows for character sets that
         require storage space that is greater than one byte per
         character.  It allows for future expansion.

      7) It allows for a simple method of converting non-standard
         characters to standard ASCII in present systems.

      8) It allows for character set coherence in message areas without
         double processing.

      9) It allows multiple levels of compliance.

      10) It concerns itself with gateway filtering of messages.

      11) The implementation allows non "charset kludge" aware programs
          to display and edit messages.

      12) It concerns itself with network representation as well as
          local storage.

    The present system:
    -------------------

    The present system "normally" only uses standard ASCII, unless an
    echomail conference moderator explicitly allows non ASCII characters.
    If a user does not conform to this and writes non standard ASCII in
    a message, then other users with different systems get garbage on
    their screens.  This can be (and in some areas is) a major problem.

    At present there is no way to display non Roman characters in FIDO
    messages.

    The proposed system:
    --------------------

    The proposed system will be able to help with messages that do NOT
    have the CHARSET kludge in them on an area by area basis.  However
    manual intervention by the user will allow it to translate the alien
    codes to the local ASCII extensions.  It will also allow editors to
    more easily make standard ASCII representations of extended character
    sets.  Which hopefully will make more users conform to standard ASCII.

    For messages with the charset kludge the method described below
    allows using extended character sets.  There are multiple levels of
    support:

    Level 0: STANDARD message (no charset kludge).  This method adds an
             option to convert non standard ASCII to ASCII.  Level 0 is
             straight forward: don't change anything, except remapping non
             standard ASCII to ASCII.

             This should be the initial default for any CHARSET message
             writer.

    Level 1: INTERNATIONALIZATION, accents and other language specific
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 22                  31 Mar 1997


             characters are supported.  This is needed for echomail areas
             that go through gateways to other systems that have a limited
             character set.  Level 1 can be supported by ALL types of
             computers!  It translates the standard US ASCII codes to the
             foreign ISO codes and back.

             Most software only needs to READ this type of message.  This
             is easily done with the sample implementation that is
             available via SDS.  Most software should directly support
             level 2.

    Level 2: Support for Level 1 plus EXTENDED CHARACTERS, included are
             graphic characters and special characters from other
             character sets such as Greek (for mathematical discussions
             for example).  This is intended to allow the different
             personal computer, workstation, mini and mainframe users to
             converse in text mode.

             The default for level 2 messages should be the LATIN-1
             character set.  It is still compatible with the present
             stream of messages.

             This is the most common level of support for most software.
             It is also what the sample implementation concerns itself
             with most.

    Level 3: Support for MULTIPLE CHARACTER SETS.  This requires a greater
             effort in implementation.  Level 3 is (of course) not
             backwards compatible.

             It is easiest to support level 3 if you use a pixel based
             display, it is probably not worth implementing on a text only
             display.  For example: if you have an X-Windows, Microsoft
             Windows, Macintosh or similar display then you should have no
             trouble implementing level 3.

    Level 4: Support for 16 BIT CHARACTER SETS.  Software authors
             that support products that are intended for use in Asia
             should concern themselves with this specification.

    The implementation algorithm which has been developed is a pop-in
    module that allows present message editor/display programs to offer
    Level 2 support for the 5 most popular systems (ASCII, IBM, APPLE, ISO
    Latin-1, VT100).  The Atari now uses the IBM character set, the Amiga
    and the VT200 displays use the ISO Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) character set.
    This implementation is also usable as a filter for fast translation of
    messages in gateway software or for a packet translator.  See the
    notes at the end of this document for further details.

    Levels 1 & 2:

    Levels 1 and 2 are based on a remapping system. The following must
    be supported:

      o  Level 1: remapping of non standard ASCII foreign characters,
         remaps characters that are less than decimal 128.
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 23                  31 Mar 1997


      o  Level 2: additional remapping of special characters and
         graphic characters, remaps characters over decimal 127
         (i.e.: characters with the most significant bit set).
      o  [optional] a style mechanism (bold, underline...)
      o  [optional] font switching (times, helvetica...)

    Characters below decimal 32 are reserved for special use (e.g.: the
    SOH character is used for message kludges).

    Note: Basically a lot of international message areas contain a certain
    amount of messages with international characters.  These characters
    have the same codes on all systems, they are most likely known to you
    through your printer manual, VT100 foreign symbols, or as IBM
    codepages.  The only reason these codes are not displayed correctly
    is that your message reader can not know which of these character
    sets is used.  Levels 1 and 2 will mark the message with an ID that
    will let your message reader change the environment in such a way that
    the characters are displayed correctly.

    The style mechanism and the font switching are fully transparent and
    backwards compatible.  Style changes are easy to support, even VT100
    and Hercules (on IBM-PCs) displays support underline and boldfaced
    characters.

    Remapping of foreign codes may take one of two forms selected by the
    user:

      1) remap to character set supported by this system
      2) remap to ASCII

    Level 1 remaps 98% on all systems, Level 2 remaps with a "best
    match" algorithm.  It may be that results are not perfect but they
    should be recognizable.  See the Technical Description below for some
    examples.

    Levels 3 & 4:

    Levels 3 and 4 require additional support that is non trivial.
    However, it is not as complicated as it might seem at first. The
    following must be supported:

      o  a character set switching mechanism,
      o  multiple character sets (Roman, Greek, Cyrillic...),
      o  character set remapping (fairly simple),
      o  [optional] transliteration (not simple),

    Transliteration (converting words and symbols to another representa-
    tion or language) is an optional feature that is supported by some
    operating systems (OS/2 and Macintosh as well as some UNIX systems).
    Transliteration is not really part of this proposed standard but is
    mentioned to bring the technical possibility to mind.  If your
    operating system supports it then transliteration is usually just a
    simple function call, if it doesn't then forget it.

    Levels 5 & 6:

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 24                  31 Mar 1997


    Do not exist and are not (presently) proposed.  I was thinking about
    B&W bitmaps for level 5 and color graphics for level 6, however that
    is not suitable for Fido messages until ISDN becomes the standard
    medium of transport.  The physical (not logical) limit of 25000 bps
    on regular telephone systems is just not fast enough to allow the
    cost effective transfer of such large data amounts for a privately
    operating individual.  Even supposing a 10 to 1 compression of
    graphics, would not be nearly enough (color pictures could still
    easily be larger than 2 megabytes).

    Technical Description
    ---------------------

    This description gives a complete specification of levels 0 through 4.
    If you have needs that go beyond the specification of levels 3 and 4
    as they are put forward here then please write the author.

    As mentioned before the proposed method for levels 0 through 2 relies
    on remapping.  Remapping is fairly straight forward on almost all
    hardware plat- forms.  It is easiest on graphically oriented systems
    such as the UNIX X-Windows, Apple machines, Commodore Amiga, Atari ST
    and IBM Presentation Manager or Windows systems.  But even on text
    only displays such as IBM DOS, VT100 and Commodore 64 machines the
    most used characters are fairly easily available.  Helpful in this
    endeavor is that the foreign characters and additional special
    characters are often the same on different hardware platforms, even if
    they do not have the same ordinal value.  Examples are the ISO
    characters such as the English pound symbol and other common symbols
    such as the international quotes ("<<" and ">>") or the Yen symbol.

    The proposed remapper remaps non standard ASCII characters to the
    character set options of the present system.  Remapping may be one
    character to one character, one character to two characters or one
    character to multiple characters.  The latter requires extra
    implementation effort.

    Example:
      The uppercase "A" with the accent grave "`" above it, will remap on
      all systems that support at least the ISO foreign characters or
      similar character sets.  It will remap to the uppercase "A" in
      standard ASCII.  The user could be allowed the option to view an
      approximation of the original by displaying the "A" followed by the
      "`", but this choice is left to the implementor.

    The following two kludges are proposed (<charset_kludge> and <char-
    set_change>).  The kludge syntax is described in BNF below, comments
    are in curly brackets, terminal symbols are in double quotes.

    Case is important.

      <charset_kludge> ::= "^aCHARSET:" <charset_param>
                           | "^aCHRS:" <charset_param>

    FSC-0054 only writes the CHRS kludge, but for backwards
    compatibility with older methods allows CHARSET as a valid kludge.

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 25                  31 Mar 1997


    Note: up to the end of the charset kludge, all characters must be
    standard ASCII.  Keywords are in English.

      <charset_param> ::= <level_1_opt> "1" | <level_2_opt> "2" |
                          <level_3_opt> "3" | <level_4_opt> "4"

      <level_1_opt> ::=   "DUTCH" | "FINNISH" | "FRENCH"
                          | "CANADIAN" | "GERMAN" | "ITALIAN"
                          | "NORWEG"  | "PORTU" | "SPANISH"
                          | "SWEDISH" | "SWISS" | "UK"

    Note: <level_1_opt> represents the 12 different ISO international
    replacement characters.  An 8 character limit applies, more charac-
    ters may be used by the kludge, but only the above must match.


      <level_2_opt> ::=   "LATIN-1"
                          | "ASCII" | "IBMPC" | "MAC" | "VT100"

    <level_2_opt> strings may not exceed 8 characters in length.

    The Amiga and the VT200, etc. use LATIN-1 extended characters. The
    LATIN-1 kludge is the same as in FSC-0051.  The LATIN-1 kludge is used
    for the transport medium in the Network.  The others are primarily for
    local storage.

    Note: the other level 2 options can be useful in translating incoming
    messages as well.  Example: an IBM system hosts Echomail areas that
    concern themselves with Amiga and Macintosh computers, even though the
    messages do not have a kludge the local system could translate them
    using FSC-0054 to make the extended codes of these machines readable
    to his local machine. VT100 is included for local translation of PC
    graphics for non-PC based clients. It should not appear on the
    network.

      <level_3_opt> ::=   "Latin-1" | "Latin-2" | "Latin-3" | "Latin-4"
                          | "Latin-5" | "Arabic" | "Cyrillic" | "Greek"
                          | "Hebrew" | "Katakana

    Includes international character sets that can be displayed using not
    more than 224 (=256-32) characters, this consists of about 25 language
    sets.  The above are the most common.  If you are writing a product
    that requires one of the others please contact the me.

    Latin-1 is included because in level 3 you can switch character sets,
    in other words you can switch languages.  This is often the case in
    foreign languages, especially in technical discussions.  In Japanese
    for instance it would not be unusual to see characters from 4
    different character sets.

      <level_4_opt> ::=  " | "Hanzi" | "Kanji" | "Korean" | "UNICODE"

    Hanzi is also known as Chinese, Kanji as Japanese.  Level 4 Options
    are
    16 bit characters sets.  This does not mean that messages are twice as
    large.  In Japanese for example most words are represented with
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 26                  31 Mar 1997


    Katakana (8-bit) with the occasional Kanji character (16-bit) thrown
    in.

    For your reference, the ISO character sets are defined in the
    standards document ISO 8859.  Further Arabic is 8859-6, Cyrillic is
    8859-5, Greek is 8859-7, Hebrew is 8859-8, Latin-5 is 8859-9, Latin-4
    is 8859-4, Latin-3 is 8859-3, Latin-2 is 8859-2, Latin-1 is 8859-1,
    Katakana is JISX0201.1776-0.  For the level 4 options below Hanzi is
    GB2312.1980-0, Kanji is JISX0208.1983-0, Korean is KSC5601.1987-0.
    Unicode is not yet an international standard, it is included for
    future compatibility.  Your system software will support it if it
    passes ISO committee boards.

    When you implement foreign character sets be sure you conform to the
    standards!  Several vendors have taken it upon themselves to define
    their own standards, partially this was done because no firm standards
    had been set at that date.  Most vendors are correcting their
    character mappings to conform (e.g.: see Microsoft's conversion to
    Latin-1 in Windows away from the IBM-PC character set).  I do not have
    all the documents in machine readable form, if you want to get
    references I suggest you go to your local library.  Don't wait until
    the last minute though as it is likely that your librarian will need
    to order some of the documents.

    Note: <level_3_opt> and <level_4_opt> strings "imply" additional
    changes.  Example the Arabic and Hebrew languages are written from
    right to left.  Some character sets may be the same but character
    ordering is different.  Character widths may vary to a large extent
    (including zero width characters).

      <charset_change>::= "^aCHRC:" <switch>

    Note: use of the charset change kludge REQUIRES the charset kludge at
    the beginning of the message.  Also message readers supporting this
    kludge do not display a new-line if this kludge is encountered.

      <switch> ::=        <level_2_switch> | <level_3_switch>
                          <level_4_switch>

      <level_2_switch>::= "D" {default, see below for explanation}
                          | "F " <font_change> | "S " <style_change>

    The string "^aCHRC:D" is a resetting mechanism that turns on the
    default settings of the message displayer/editor, whatever they may
    be.  This string must be recognized by software that evaluates the
    style and font change switch.

    The It is assumed that the user is seeing some font that has a
    reasonable size suitable for his viewing needs.  Most printed texts
    are displayed in a serif 12 point, proportional font with no added
    style.  Most default settings come close to this representation.  On
    text only displays non-proportional fonts are the norm, however as
    no rule for the ordering of the displayed characters can be made, an
    assumption of a non homogeneous character display can be made.  In
    other words, one should not assume that characters are displayed in
    a fixed way, that's why we are have the <font_descrip> below.
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 27                  31 Mar 1997


      <level_3_switch>::= <level_2_switch> | "L " <level_3_opt>
                          | "C " <set_change>

    The character set change option can't be use in level 2 because of
    unsatisfactory display results on text only display hardware.  If you
    want to change the character set (not just font or style) then you
    must support level 3.

      <level_4_switch>::= <level_2_switch> | <level_3_switch>
                          | "L " <level_4_opt>

      <font_change> ::=   <font_descrip> " " <font_family>

      <font_family> ::=   NULL | {any number of fonts family names,
                          examples: Times, Bookman or Helvetica}

    The font families can be just about any text string, of course if you
    have an esoteric font then it is unlikely that the recipient has it as
    well (especially in echomail).  It is suggested that the author
    recommends that the user use commonly available fonts.  Even if a
    particular font is not available to the reader the font descriptor
    will approximate the display of the original message.

      <font_descrip> ::=  <font_descrip1>
                          | <font_descrip1> <font_descrip1>

      <font_descrip1> ::= "S" {serif} | "N" {sans-serif}
                          | "P" {proportional} | "O" {other}

    Note: font_family can be null, but font_descriptor must be there.

      <style_change> ::=  <style_change> <style_change>
                          | "b" {Bold}      | "i" {Italic}
                          | "u" {Underline} | "C" {All caps}
                          | "U" {double underline}
                          | "n" {Narrow also known as Condensed}
                          | "w" {Wide also known as Extended}
                          | "s" {Subscript} | "S" {Superscript}
                          | "O" {Outline}   | "h" {Shadow}

    Note: you may approximate different styles.  For example if you can
    only do underline then you can approximate double underline with
    underline.  Please do not approximate "All caps"!  All caps shows the
    All uppercase letters as large uppercase letters and all lower case
    letters as small uppercase letters.  If you simply convert all letters
    to uppercase you will misrepresent the intended style.

    Examples:
    ---------

    Double quoted characters are message text.

      1) "^aCHRS: GERMAN 1"
           Means text contains German characters, but still uses 7 bit
           character representation.

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 28                  31 Mar 1997


      2) "^aCHRS: IBMPC 2"
           Means the text contains IBM PC graphic or extended characters.
           This would normally only appear in locally held messages.

      3) "^aCHRS: LATIN-1 2"
         "^aCHRC:u"
         "Hi Joe,"
         "^aCHRC:D"
           Means the text contains LATIN-1 extended characters (not
           displayed in this example) and that "Hi Joe," is underlined.
           Also the "^aCHRC:" kludges do not result in new lines on
           message readers that support these kludges.
           The "CHRS: LATIN-1 2" is compatible with FSC-0051.

      4) "^aCHRS: ASCII 2"
           Means the text is standard ASCII, but hidden style and/or font
           changes are contained therein.

      5) "^aCHRS: Roman 3"
           Means that a level three editor has created this text.  An
           editor (with the roman character set, that's ours by the way)
           that does not understand level 3 will only be able to read
           this text if the string "^aCHRC:L xxx" (with xxx being
           something other than Roman) is not contained in the text.
           Actually this should not happen as the Roman font is the
           default and the above kludge implies that another language
           character set is used somewhere in the text.

    Summary:
    --------

    Level 0:
      This is the initial default mode for CHARSET software.

      No additional work required.  However an implementor of CHARSET
      should include the following feature: remap non standard ASCII to
      ASCII.  This is Level 2 to ASCII remapping and is trivial to do.

      No kludge is required.  No special handling is required.  The
      messages are just as they always are, with a little less
      non standard ASCII.

    Level 1:
      This is similar to the optional Level 0 remapping but allows the
      use of foreign characters which are found in the ISO character
      sets.  Unfortunately the ISO foreign character sets are not
      complete.  I decided to restrict the Level 1 to this subset to
      assure that compatibility with virtually all hardware is guaranteed.

      The "^aCHRS: cccccccc 1" kludge is required.  One of two things can
      happen:

           (a) the message is entirely in ASCII (no kludge),
               everybody can read it.
           (b) the message contains ISO codes,
                - the user has an older reader and does not have these
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 29                  31 Mar 1997


                codes as his default codes, he gets a few garbage
                characters (this is often the case at present).
                - the user has an older reader and has these codes as his
                default, he sees the message properly displayed (e.g.:
                user has an IBM is reading a Swedish area, as he has the
                Swedish codepage loaded; he will see things properly).
                - the user has an editor that supports the charset
                kludge, he sees the message properly displayed.

    Level 2:
      Remaps characters above decimal 127 up to decimal 255 to the "best
      match" character(s) available on the present system.  On graphic
      based systems the use of a different font (e.g.: an IBM-PC font
      on an Amiga) would give perfect display results.  For keyboard
      entry the remapper is required to convert the local codes to the
      codes required by the intended target.

      Example:  An Amiga user is reading an IBM echomail area.  The IBM
                specific character set is allowed on this echo area.  For
                best results a IBM character set font might be used to
                display messages in the area.  Perhaps the software just
                remaps the IBM characters to the appropriate Amiga
                characters.  When the Amiga user enters text he may (a)
                enter standard ASCII, (b) enter standard ASCII with Level
                1 extensions, (c) enter characters in the IBM extended
                character set.

      The software may optionally support font changing and style
      changes.  Font changes could be easiest to implement on graphically
      oriented systems, text displays could change the color of text.

      The "^aCHRS: xxxxx 2" kludge is required.

    Level 3 & 4:
      The message is probably unreadable unless you have a level 3 (or
      level 4) editor.  They are required for true international software
      however.

    Implementation Sample:
    ----------------------

    An easy and fast way to implement such a remapper is to use a look-
    up table mechanism.  The implementation described here is based on
    an expandable, data driven structure.  The following routines
    describe the READ routines.

    Function Charset_Kludge_Detected (Ptr_To_Text, Level)
    {This function implements the basic level 2 requirement}

      If our character set then
           print (Text)

      If Level = 1 then
           For each character in text
                output( lookup_table [character] )

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 30                  31 Mar 1997


      If Level = 2 then
           If supported character set then
                For each character in text
                     If Kludge then
                          skip it
                          {we are not supporting style and font changes
                          here}
                     If character > 127 then
                          output( lookup_table [character] )

      If level = 3 then
           exit with error
           {we are being lazy here}

    End of Function Charset_Kludge_Detected.

    Function Output (character)
    {this is the core of the implementation.
     It is also usable in slightly modified form as the write subroutine}

      define:
           lookup_table =
                array [0...127 x 2] of type byte
                { = array [127 elements] x [2 elements] }
                {see below for exact definition}

      case lookup_table [character][0] of

           0...1:
                { we have a single character replacement }
                { IMPORTANT: graphic characters must have a
                  single character match }
                print (lookup_table [character][1])

           32...127:
                If lookup_table [character][1] >= 32 then
                     { we have a two character replacement }
                     { Examples: ae, oe, <<, Pt, pi, >=, etc. }
                     print (lookup_table [character][0])
                     print (lookup_table [character][0])
                Else
                     { reserved for implementors use,
                       e.g.: more than two character replacement? }

           1...31:
                { reserved for FSC use }

      end of case

    End of Function Output.

    Lookup Table
    ------------

    The lookup_tables are external (described below) files and have the
    following format:
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 31                  31 Mar 1997


    4 bytes:         identification
    2 bytes:         module version number
    2 byte:          level
    8 bytes:         reserved for future use (should be zero)
    8 bytes:         from charset
    8 bytes:         to charset
    256 bytes:       lookup table

    The identification is usually 0 (= FTSC set), numbers less than 65536
    are reserved for FSC use.  Implementation specific modules should use
    a timestamp (always the same number after it has been generated once)
    to mark them as non-standard modules.

    Module version number starts at zero and works upwards.  The first
    official release is "1".  The early sample implementations have
    version number "0".

    Level is the charset kludge level this module is intended for.

    From charset, is the character set this module translates from.  To
    charset, is the character set this module translates to.  Both are in
    C format (no leading length byte and filled up with zeros).

    The lookup table is a 127 element table with two bytes per element.
    The following rules apply:

      first byte = 0 or
      first byte = 1:
           second byte = 0: no output
           second byte > 0: second byte is output
      first byte < 32: reserved for FSC use
      first byte > 31:
           second byte > 31: output first & second byte
           second byte < 32: implementation specific switch useable by
                             programmer

    If the first byte is 1 in the lookup table, that is a marker to
    tell you that this character does not translate to the destination
    character set.  A "?" should be in the second byte.  Characters that
    are approximated with another character do NOT have a 1 as the first
    byte, they have a 0 in the first byte, or a printable character if it
    is a two character approximation.

    Note that you require two tables for each type of character set
    supported.  One to translate the alien characters to the local format
    and one to translate the local characters to the alien format.

    The advantage of this module system, is that additional "modules" can
    be added easily at a later date.  Example: the implementor of an
    Atari message editor has the following lookup tables: ASCII (requi-
    red), IBMPC, MAC and LATIN-1.  The user wants to take part in a UNIX
    echomail that allows VT100 codes, so he gets himself the required
    tables and binds them into the lookup table file.  The editor will
    now support the additional translations as it knows its capabilities
    by looking up the level and the kludge identifier in the lookup table
    file.  No code changing was needed.
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 32                  31 Mar 1997


    External Mapping Files
    ----------------------

    The lookup tables above are held in external files (READMAPS.DAT and
    WRITMAPS.DAT).  These files have the following format:

    1 byte:         machine architecture identifier
    3 bytes:        filler (should be zero)
    8 bytes:        charset this mapping file is for.
    Lookup tables:  described above

    The machine architecture identifier can have one of three values:
    0 = Sparc & 680x0
    1 = 80x86 & VAX
    2 = PDP-11
    these values reflect the byte ordering of those machines.

    The lookup tables should be ordered in the following way:
            o Sort by level (lowest first)
            o READMAPS.DAT:
               - sort by "from set"
               - each from can have 2 tables, the first is to the
                 local characterset, the second is to ASCII
            o WRITEMAPS.DAT:
               - sort by "to set"
    This allows fast binary tree searches to be done.

    The appropriate sort code (in C) is given below:

    int compare_read(r1, r2)
    CHARREC *r1,
            *r2;
    {
        /* sort by level first */
        if (r1->level < r2->level)
            return(-1);
        if (r1->level > r2->level)
            return(1);
        /* ASCII comes after local set (this is only for the read_maps) */
        if(strncmp(r1->from_set, r2->from_set, 8) == 0)
        {
            if (strcmp(r1->to_set, "ASCII") == 0)
                return (1);
            if (strcmp(r2->to_set, "ASCII") == 0)
                return(-1);
        }
        /* else sort alpha */
        return(strncmp(r1->from_set, r2->from_set, 8));
    }

    int compare_write(r1, r2)
    CHARREC *r1,
            *r2;
    {
        /* sort by level first */
        if (r1->level < r2->level)
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 33                  31 Mar 1997


            return(-1);
        if (r1->level > r2->level)
            return(1);
        /* if from_set is the same sort the to_set */ if(strncmp(r1-
        >from_set, r2->from_set, 8) == 0)
            return (strncmp(r1->to_set, r2->to_set, 8));
        /* else sort alpha */
        return(strncmp(r1->from_set, r2->from_set, 8));
    }

    Together with this document there should be a sample implementation
    containing:

      A complete set of level 1 maps.
      A complete set of level 2 maps (IBM, MAC, VT100 and LATIN-1).
      IBM, Mac and ASCII sample messages containing level 2 kludges, a
      German language level 1 message, a sample message reader and a
      sample message writer.  A module checker and a mapping file creator.

    If you want the latest version (or the sample implementation is not
    included with this document) you can file request at 2:243/100 with
    the magic name CHARSET , 1:1/20 has a copy as well.  The file is also
    distributed via SDS.

     -30-

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 34                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                           COORDINATORS CORNER
    =================================================================


    Nodelist-statistics as seen from Zone-2 for day 087
    By Ward Dossche, 2:292/854
       ZC/2

     +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
     |Zone|Nl-059|Nodelist-066|Nodelist-073|Nodelist-080|Nodelist-087|%%|
     +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
     |  1 |  9405| 9405     0 | 9107  -298 | 9088   -19 | 9088     0 |33|
     |  2 | 16116|16083   -33 |15996   -87 |15956   -40 |15923   -33 |58|
     |  3 |   807|  800    -7 |  800     0 |  800     0 |  800     0 | 3|
     |  4 |   541|  545     4 |  547     2 |  548     1 |  548     0 | 2|
     |  5 |    87|   87     0 |   87     0 |   87     0 |   87     0 | 0|
     |  6 |  1088| 1088     0 | 1088     0 | 1088     0 | 1090     2 | 4|
     +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
          | 28044|28008   -36 |27625  -383 |27567   -58 |27536   -31 |
          +------+------------+------------+------------+------------+

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 35                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                             COMIX IN ASCII
    =================================================================


    Chris,

    I've been

    |~-_
    ||||~-_
    |    | ~-------|
    |::::::_-------|:.
    |:::_-~         ::
    |_-~          __::__
                  | __ |
                  | __ |
                  |____|

    over my stash of original ASCII artwork, trying to decide what piece
    to send you next, but I just haven't been able to make up my mind.  Oh
    well.  Maybe next week.

            -Dave

    (For the monitor-impaired, and the pun-impaired, it's an Erlenmeyer
    flask (ahem) pouring something into a beaker.)

     -30-

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 36                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                    ADVERTISE YOUR FREE SERVICE/EVENT
    =================================================================


    --- Following message extracted from NETMAIL @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Sun Mar 23 19:25:45 1997

    From: Alex Grasic @ 1:2424/109
    To: Sysop @ 1:18/14
    Date: 22 Mar 97  13:09:00
    Subj: Important

            This message is going out to all present and former Nanet
      nodes.  Even though I am not directly associated with Nanet and the
      owners of Nanet, I am offering to hub any system who wishes to
      receive Nanet mail again.  I realize that you may not wish to call
      long distance for mail, but you can telnet to Westonia BBS to
      download your QWK packets.  You can telnet to Westonia Computer
      Systems of Canada at WESTONIA.COM.  I would like to see this network
      resurect itself and get the kind of mail it used to have.  If there
      are any nodes that are not a member of Fidonet that you know of,
      please forward this message to them, if you do not wish to contact
      Westonia directly, just netmail me any relevant info to sign you up.
      I will be glad to relay information to them.  Remember, the network
      can only survive with your support.  Thanks!!

     -30-


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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 37                  31 Mar 1997


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

                               Future History

    17 May 1997
       Independence Day, Norway.

     6 Jun 1997
       National Commemoration Day, Sweden.

    11 Jun 1997
       Independence Day, Russia.

     1 Jul 1997
       Canada Day - Happy Birthday Canada.

     9 Jul 1997
       Independence Day, Argentina.

    13 Oct 1997
       Thanksgiving Day, Canada.

     1 Dec 1997
       World AIDS Day.

    10 Dec 1997
       Nobel Day, Sweden.

    12 Jan 1998
       HAL 9000 is one year old today.

    22 May 1998
       Expo '98 World Exposition in Lisbon (Portugal) opens.

     1 Dec 1998
       Fifteenth Anniversary of release of Fido version 1 by
       Tom Jennings.

    31 Dec 1999
       Hogmanay, Scotland. The New Year that can't be missed.

     1 Jan 2000
       The 20th Century, C.E., is still taking place thru 31 Dec.

    15 Sep 2000
       Sydney (Australia) Summer Olympiad opens.

     1 Jan 2001
       This is the actual start of the new millennium, C.E.

    -- If YOU have something which you would like to see in this
       Future History, please send a note to the FidoNews Editor.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 38                  31 Mar 1997


    --- Following message extracted from MEADOW @ 1:18/14 ---
        By Christopher Baker on Tue Mar 25 20:39:28 1997

    From: Trev Roydhouse
    To: All
    Date: 24 Mar 97 01:14
    Subj: FTP by mail

    Thanks to Ronald Bruintjes in the Netherlands, an FTP by mail OpusInfo
    facility is now available for the current Opus 1.73 files which are
    available at http://www.suburbia.com.au/~trev.

    Usage: send mail to [email protected]. In the body of the message
    include the command GET [filename]. Do not include paths nor
    wildcards. If the file is available, it will be sent back to you via
    email in uuencoded form.

    A magic filename is available for OPUSINFO. This will send you the
    Opus 1.79 feature list. When Opus 1.79 is released, OPUS179 will send
    you the Opus 1.79 release files.

    TREV.

     Origin: Sentry -- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (3:711/401.0)

     -30-

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 39                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                        FIDONET SOFTWARE LISTING
    =================================================================


    [This is a repost of last week's version of the Software List. Peter
     is still catching up on real life.] Ed.

    Latest Greatest Software Versions
    by Peter E. Popovich, 1:363/264

    Awk! I didn't realize how far behind I've gotten. Events in my
    personal life have conspired to keep me away from the keyboard
    during my recreational time. Heck, I'm late for a meeting right
    this very second.

    Phased out this week: "Amiga" and "Atari ST/TT" Sections.

    -=- Snip -=-

    Submission form for the Latest Greatest Software Versions column

    OS Platform                             :
    Software package name                   :
    Version                                 :
    Function(s) - BBS, Mailer, Tosser, etc. :
    Freeware / Shareware / Commercial?      :
    Author / Support staff contact name     :
    Author / Support staff contact node     :
    Magic name (at the above-listed node)   :

    Please include a sentence describing what the package does.

    Please send updates and suggestions to: Peter Popovich, 1:363/264

    -=- Snip -=-

    MS-DOS:
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Act-Up         4.6      G D Chris Gunn        1:15/55     ACT-UP
    ALLFIX         4.40     T S Harald Harms      2:281/415   ALLFIX
    Announcer      1.1      O S Peter Karlsson    2:206/221   ANNOUNCE
    BGFAX          1.60     O S B.J. Guillot      1:106/400   BGFAX
    Binkley Docs   2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BDOC_260.ZIP
    BinkleyTerm    2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BDOS_260.ZIP
    BinkleyTerm-XE XR4      M F Thomas Waldmann   2:2474/400  BTXE_DOS
    CFRoute        0.92     O G C. Fernandez Sanz 2:341/70    CFR
    CheckPnt       1.0      O G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     CHECKPNT
    FastEcho       1.45a    T S Tobias Burchhardt 2:2448/400  FASTECHO
    FastEcho/16    1.45a    T S Tobias Burchhardt 2:2448/400  FE16
    FidoBBS (tm)   12u      B S Ray Brown         1:1/117     FILES
    FrontDoor      2.12     M S JoHo              2:201/330   FD
    FrontDoor      2.20c    M C JoHo              2:201/330   FDINFO
    GIGO           07-14-96 G S Jason Fesler      1:1/141     INFO
    GoldED         2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GED
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 40                  31 Mar 1997


    GoldED Docs    2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEM
    GoldNODE       2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEN
    Imail          1.75     T S Michael McCabe    1:1/121     IMAIL
    ImCrypt        1.04     O G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     IMCRYPT
    InfoMail       1.11     O F Damian Walker     2:2502/666  INFOMAIL
    InfoMail/386   1.20     O F Damian Walker     2:2502/666  INFO386
    InterEcho      1.19     T C Peter Stewart     1:369/35    IEDEMO
    InterMail      2.29k    M C Peter Stewart     1:369/35    IMDEMO
    InterPCB       1.52     O S Peter Stewart     1:369/35    INTERPCB
    IPNet          1.11     O S Michele Stewart   1:369/21    IPNET
    JD's CBV       1.4      O S John Dailey       1:363/277   CBV
    Jelly-Bean     1.01     T S Rowan Crowe       3:635/727   JELLY
    Jelly-Bean/386 1.01     T S Rowan Crowe       3:635/727   JELLY386
    JMail-Hudson   2.81     T S Jason Steck       1:285/424   JMAIL-H
    JMail-Goldbase 2.81     T S Jason Steck       1:285/424   JMAIL-G
    MakePl         1.9      N G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     MAKEPL
    Marena         1.1 beta O G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     MARENA
    Maximus        3.01     B P Tech              1:249/106   MAX
    McMail         1.0      M S Michael McCabe    1:1/148     MCMAIL
    MDNDP          1.18     N S Bill Doyle        1:388/7     MDNDP
    Msged          4.10     O G Andrew Clarke     3:635/728   MSGED41D.ZIP
    Msged/386      4.10     O G Andrew Clarke     3:635/728   MSGED41X.ZIP
    Opus CBCS      1.73a    B P Christopher Baker 1:374/14    OPUS
    O/T-Track      2.63a    O S Peter Hampf       2:241/1090  OT
    PcMerge        2.7      N G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     PCMERGE
    PlatinumXpress 1.3      M C Gary Petersen     1:290/111   PX13TD.ZIP
    QuickBBS       2.81     B S Ben Schollnick    1:2613/477  QUICKBBS
    RAR            2.00     C S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    RAR
    RemoteAccess   2.50     B S Mark Lewis        1:3634/12   RA
    Silver Xpress
      Door         5.4      O S Gary Petersen     1:290/111   FILES
      Reader       4.4      O S Gary Petersen     1:290/111   SXR44.ZIP
    Spitfire       3.51     B S Mike Weaver       1:3670/3    SPITFIRE
    Squish         1.11     T P Tech              1:249/106   SQUISH
    StealTag UK    1.c...   O F Fred Schenk       2:284/412   STEAL_UK
    StealTag NL    1.c...   O F Fred Schenk       2:284/412   STEAL_NL
    T-Mail         2.599I   M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAIL
    Terminate      4.00     O S Bo Bendtsen       2:254/261   TERMINATE
    Tobruk         0.33     T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK
    TriBBS         11.0     B S Gary Price        1:3607/26   TRIBBS
    TriDog         11.0     T F Gary Price        1:3607/26   TRIDOG
    TriToss        11.0     T S Gary Price        1:3607/26   TRITOSS
    WaterGate      0.92     G S Robert Szarka     1:320/42    WTRGATE
    WWIV           4.24a    B S Craig Dooley      1:376/126   WWIV
    WWIVTOSS       1.36     T S Craig Dooley      1:376/126   WWIVTOSS
    xMail          2.00     T S Thorsten Franke   2:2448/53   XMAIL
    XRobot         3.01     O S JoHo              2:201/330   XRDOS

    OS/2:
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ALLFIX/2       1.10     T S Harald Harms      2:281/415   AFIXOS2
    BGFAX          1.60     O S B.J. Guillot      1:106/400   BGFAX
    Binkley Docs   2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BDOC_260.ZIP
    BinkleyTerm    2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BOS2_260.ZIP
    BinkleyTerm-XE XR4      M F Thomas Waldmann   2:2474/400  BTXE_OS2
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 41                  31 Mar 1997


    CFRoute        0.92     O G C. Fernandez Sanz 2:341/70    CFR
    FastEcho       1.45a    T S Tobias Burchhardt 2:2448/400  FE2
    FleetStreet    1.19     O S Michael Hohner    2:2490/2520 FLEET
    GIGO           07-14-96 G S Jason Fesler      1:1/141     INFO
    GoldED         2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEO
    GoldED Docs    2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEM
    GoldNODE       2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEN
    ImCrypt        1.04     O G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     IMCRYPT
    Maximus        3.01     B P Tech              1:249/106   MAXP
    Msged/2        4.10     O G Andrew Clarke     3:635/728   MSGED41O.ZIP
    PcMerge        2.3      N G Michiel vd Vlist  2:500/9     PCMERGE
    RAR            2.00     C S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    RAR2
    Squish         1.11     T P Tech              1:249/106   SQUISHP
    T-Mail         2.599I   M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAIL2
    Tobruk         0.33     T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK
    XRobot         3.01     O S JoHo              2:201/330   XROS2

    Windows (16-bit apps):
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    BeeMail        1.0      M C Andrius Cepaitis  2:470/1     BEEMAIL
    FrontDoor APX  1.10     P S Mats Wallin       2:201/329   FDAPXW

    Windows (32-bit apps):
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    BeeMail        1.0      M C Andrius Cepaitis  2:470/1     BEEMAIL
    Binkley Docs   2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BDOC_260.ZIP
    BinkleyTerm    2.60     M F Bob Juge          1:1/102     BW32_260.ZIP
    CFRoute        0.92     O G C. Fernandez Sanz 2:341/70    CFR
    GoldED         2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEO
    GoldED Docs    2.50     O S Len Morgan        1:203/730   GEM
    Maximus        3.01     B P Tech              1:249/106   MAXN
    Msged/NT       4.10     O G Andrew Clarke     3:635/728   MSGED41W.ZIP
    PlatinumXpress 2.00     M C Gary Petersen     1:290/111   PXW-INFO
    T-Mail         2.599I   M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAILNT
    WinFOSSIL/95   1.12 r4  F S Bryan Woodruff    1:343/294   WNFOSSIL.ZIP
    WinFOSSIL/NT   1.0 beta F S Bryan Woodruff    1:343/294   NTFOSSIL.ZIP

    Unix:
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ifmail         2.9      M G Eugene Crosser    2:293/2219  IFMAIL
    ifmail-tx      ...tx7.9 M G Pablo Saratxaga   2:293/2219  IFMAILTX
    Msged          4.00     O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
    Tobruk         0.33     T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK

    Amiga:
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    CrashMail      1.23     T X Fredrik Bennison  2:205/324   CRASHMAIL
    CrashTick      1.1      O F Fredrik Bennison  2:205/324   CRASHTICK
    DLG Pro BBOS   1.15     B C Holly Sullivan    1:202/720   DLGDEMO
    GMS            1.1.85   M S Mirko Viviani     2:331/213   GMS
    Msged          4.00     O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
    Tobruk         0.33     T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 42                  31 Mar 1997


    Atari:
    Program Name   Version  F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    BinkleyTerm/ST 3.18pl1  M F Bill Scull        1:363/112   BINKLEY

    Function: B-BBS, P-Point, M-Mailer, N-Nodelist, G-Gateway, T-Tosser,
              C-Compression, F-Fossil, O-Other. Note: Multifunction will
              be listed by the first match.

    Cost: P-Free for personal use, F-Freeware, S-Shareware, C-Commercial,
          X-Crippleware, D-Demoware, G-Free w/ Source

    Old info from: 01/27/92
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------

      MS-DOS Systems        Other Utilities         Other Utilities
      --------------        Name         Version    Name         Version
                            --------------------    --------------------
    Network Mailers         2DAPoint        1.50*   Netsex         2.00b
    Name         Version    4Dog/4DMatrix   1.18    OFFLINE         1.35
    --------------------    ARCAsim         2.31    Oliver          1.0a
    D'Bridge        1.30    ARCmail         3.00*   OSIRIS CBIS     3.02
    Dreamer         1.06    Areafix         1.20    PKInsert        7.10
    Dutchie        2.90c    ConfMail        4.00    PolyXarc        2.1a
    Milqtoast       1.00    Crossnet         1.5    QM             1.00a
    PreNM           1.48    DOMAIN          1.42    QSort           4.04
    SEAdog          4.60    DEMM            1.06    RAD Plus        2.11
    SEAmail         1.01    DGMM            1.06    Raid            1.00
    TIMS       1.0(mod8)    DOMAIN          1.42    RBBSMail        18.0
                            EEngine         0.32    ScanToss        1.28
    Compression             EMM             2.11*   ScMail          1.00
    Utilities               EZPoint          2.1    ScEdit          1.12
    Name         Version    FGroup          1.00    Sirius          1.0x
    --------------------    FidoPCB         1.0s@   SLMail         2.15C
    ARC             7.12    FNPGate         2.70    StarLink        1.01
    ARJ             2.20    GateWorks      3.06e    TagMail         2.41
    LHA             2.13    GMail           2.05    TCOMMail         2.2
    PAK             2.51    GMD             3.10    Telemail         1.5*
    PKPak           3.61    GMM             1.21    TGroup          1.13
    PKZip           1.10    GROUP           2.23    TIRES           3.11
                            GUS             1.40    TMail           1.21
    NodeList Utilities      Harvey's Robot  4.10    TosScan         1.00
    Name         Version    HeadEdit        1.18    UFGATE          1.03
    --------------------    HLIST           1.09    VPurge         4.09e
    EditNL          4.00    ISIS            5.12@   WEdit            2.0@
    FDND            1.10    Lola           1.01d    WildMail        2.00
    MakeNL          2.31    Mosaic         1.00b    WMail            2.2
    Parselst        1.33    MailBase       4.11a@   WNode            2.1
    Prune           1.40    MSG              4.5*   XRS             4.99
    SysNL           3.14    MsgLnk          1.0c    XST             2.3e
    XlatList        2.90    MsgMstr        2.03a    YUPPIE!         2.00
    XlaxNode/Diff   2.53    MsgNum         4.16d    ZmailH          1.25
                            MSGTOSS          1.3    ZSX             2.40

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 43                  31 Mar 1997


    BBS Software            Macintosh               Other Software
    Name         Version    ---------               Name         Version
    --------------------                            --------------------
    FBBS            0.91    Network Mailers         MacArd          0.04
    Hermes         1.6.1    Name         Version    Mantissa        3.21
    Mansion         7.15    --------------------    Mehitable        2.0
    Precision Sys. 0.95b    Copernicus       1.0    OriginatorII     2.0
    Red Ryder Host   2.1    Tabby            2.2    PreStamp         3.2
    Telefinder Host                                 StuffIt Classic  1.6
                 2.12T10    Other Software          SunDial          3.2
                            Name         Version    TExport         1.92
                            --------------------    TimeStamp        1.6
    Point System            ArcMac           1.3    TImport         1.92
    Software                AreaFix          1.6    Tset             1.3
    Name         Version    Compact Pro     1.30    TSort            1.0
    --------------------    EventMeister     1.0    UNZIP          1.02c
    Copernicus      1.00    Export          3.21    Zenith           1.5
    CounterPoint    1.09    Import           3.2    Zip Extract     0.10
    MacWoof          1.1    LHARC           0.41

    --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --
    Key to old info:
          + - Netmail Capable (Doesn't Require Additional Mailer Software)
          * - Recently Updated Version
          @ - New Addition
    --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --

    Please send updates and suggestions to: Peter Popovich, 1:363/264

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 44                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                           FIDONEWS PUBLIC-KEY
    =================================================================


    [this must be copied out to a file starting at column 1 or
     it won't process under PGP as a valid public-key]


    -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
    Version: 2.6.2
    Comment: Clear-signing is Electronic Digital Authenticity!

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    File-request FNEWSKEY from 1:1/23 [1:18/14] or download it from the
    Rights On! BBS at 1-904-409-7040 anytime except 0100-0130 ET and Zone
    1 ZMH at 1200-9600+ HST/V32B. The FidoNews key is also available on
    the FidoNews homepage listed in the Masthead information.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 45                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                           FIDONET BY INTERNET
    =================================================================

    This is a list of all FidoNet-related sites reported to the Editor as
    of this appearance.

    ============

    FidoNet:

      Homepage     http://www.fidonet.org
      FidoNews     http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fidonews.html
      HTML FNews   http://www.geocities.com/Athens/6894/
      WWW sources  http://www.scms.rgu.ac.uk/students/cs_yr94/lk/fido.html
      FTSC page    http://www2.blaze.net.au/ftsc.html
      Echomail     http://www.portal.ca/~awalker/index.html
      WebRing      http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fnetring.html

    ============

    Zone 1:       http://www.z1.fidonet.org

      Region 10:  http://www.psnw.com/~net205/region10.html

      Region 11:  http://oeonline.com/~garyg/region11/

      Region 14:  http://www.netins.net/showcase/fidonet/

      Region 15:  http://www.smrtsys.com/region15/

      Region 16:  http://www.tiac.net/users/satins/region16.htm

      Region 17:  http://www.portal.ca/~awalker/region17.htm

      Region 18:  http://www.citicom.com/fido.html

      Region 19:  http://ccove.n-link.com/ [not answering]

    ============

    Zone 2:       http://www.z2.fidonet.org

    ZEC2:         http://fidoftp.paralex.co.uk/zec.htm [not answering]
    Zone 2 Elist: http://www.fidonet.ch/z2_elist/z2_elist.htm

      Region 24:  http://www.swb.de/personal/flop/gatebau.html (in German)

      Region 25:
                  http://members.aol.com/Net254/

      Region 27:  http://telematique.org/fidofr.shtml (in French)

      Region 29:  http://www.rtfm.be/fidonet/  (in French)

      Region 30:  http://www.fidonet.ch  (in Swiss)
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 46                  31 Mar 1997


      Region 34:  http://www.pobox.com/cnb/r34.htm  (in Spanish)
          REC34:  http://pobox.com/~chr

      Region 36:  http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/7207/

      Region 48:  http://www.fidonet.org.pl

    ============

    Zone 3:       http://www.z3.fidonet.org

    ============

    Zone 4:       (not yet listed)

    ============

    Zone 5:       (not yet listed)

    ============

    Zone 6:       http://www.z6.fidonet.org

    ============

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

    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 47                  31 Mar 1997


    =================================================================
                          FIDONEWS INFORMATION
    =================================================================

    ------- FIDONEWS MASTHEAD AND CONTACT INFORMATION -------

    Editor: Christopher Baker

    Editors Emeritii: Tom Jennings, Thom Henderson, Dale Lovell,
                      Vince Perriello, Tim Pozar, Sylvia Maxwell,
                      Donald Tees

    "FidoNews Editor"
        FidoNet  1:1/23
        BBS  1-904-409-7040,  300/1200/2400/14400/V.32bis/HST(ds)

     more addresses:
        Christopher Baker -- 1:18/14, [email protected]
                                      [email protected]
                                      [email protected]

    (Postal Service mailing address)
        FidoNews Editor
        P.O. Box 471
        Edgewater, FL 32132-0471
        U.S.A.


    voice:  1-904-409-3040 [1400-2100 ET only, please]
                           [1800-0100 UTC/GMT]

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

    FidoNews is published weekly by and for the members of the FIDONET
    INTERNATIONAL AMATEUR ELECTRONIC MAIL system.  It is a compilation
    of individual articles contributed by their authors or their
    authorized agents.  The contribution of articles to this compilation
    does not diminish the rights of the authors.  OPINIONS EXPRESSED in
    these articles ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHORS and not necessarily those of
    FidoNews.

    Authors retain copyright on individual works; otherwise FidoNews is
    Copyright 1997 Christopher Baker.  All rights reserved.  Duplication
    and/or distribution permitted for noncommercial purposes only.  For
    use in other circumstances, please contact the original authors, or
    the Editor.

                           =*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=

    OBTAINING COPIES: The most recent issue of FidoNews in electronic
    form may be obtained from the FidoNews Editor via manual download or
    file-request, or from various sites in the FidoNet and Internet.
    PRINTED COPIES may be obtained by sending SASE to the above postal
    address.  File-request FIDONEWS for the current Issue.  File-request
    FNEWS for the current month in one archive.  Or file-request specific
    back Issue filenames in distribution format [FNEWSEnn.ZIP] for a
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 48                  31 Mar 1997


    particular Issue.  Monthly Volumes are available as FNWSmmmy.ZIP
    where mmm = three letter month [JAN - DEC] and y = last digit of the
    current year [7], i.e., FNWSFEB7.ZIP for all the Issues from Feb 97.

    Annual volumes are available as FNEWSn.ZIP where n = the Volume number
    1 - 14 for 1984 - 1997, respectively. Annual Volume archives range in
    size from 48K to 1.4M.


    INTERNET USERS: FidoNews is available via:

                         http://www.fidonet.org/fidonews.htm
                         ftp://ftp.fidonet.org/pub/fidonet/fidonews/
                         ftp://ftp.aminet.org/pub/aminet/comm/fido/

                                     *=*=*

    You may obtain an email subscription to FidoNews by sending email to:

                         [email protected]

    with a Subject line of: subscribe fnews-edist

    and no message in the message body. To remove your name from the email
    distribution use a Subject line of: unsubscribe fnews-edist with no
    message to the same address above.

                                     *=*=*

    You can read the current FidoNews Issue in HTML format at:

                         http://www.geocities.com/Athens/6894/

    STAR SOURCE for ALL Past Issues via FTP and file-request -
    Available for FReq from 1:396/1 or by anonymous FTP from:

                         ftp://ftp.sstar.com/fidonet/fnews/

    Each yearly archive also contains a listing of the Table-of-Contents
    for that year's issues.  The total set is currently about 11 Megs.

                                =*=*=*=

    The current week's FidoNews and the FidoNews public-key are now also
    available almost immediately after publication on the Editor's new
    homepage on the World Wide Web at:

                 http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fidonews.html

    There are also links there to jim barchuk's HTML FidoNews source and
    to John Souvestre's FTP site for the archives. There is also an email
    link for sending in an article as message text. Drop on over.

                           =*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=

    A PGP generated public-key is available for the FidoNews Editor from
    FIDONEWS 14-13               Page 49                  31 Mar 1997


    1:1/23 [1:18/14] by file-request for FNEWSKEY or by download from
    Rights On! BBS at 1-904-409-7040 as FIDONEWS.ASC in File Area 18.  It
    is also posted twice a month into the PKEY_DROP Echo available on the
    Zone 1 Echomail Backbone.

                               *=*=*=*=*

    SUBMISSIONS: You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
    FidoNews. Article submission requirements are contained in the file
    ARTSPEC.DOC, available from the FidoNews Editor, or file-requestable
    from 1:1/23 [1:18/14] as file "ARTSPEC.DOC".  ALL Zone Coordinators
    also have copies of ARTSPEC.DOC. Please read it.

    "Fido", "FidoNet" and the dog-with-diskette are U.S. registered
    trademarks of Tom Jennings, P.O. Box 410923, San Francisco, CA 94141,
    and are used with permission.

            "Disagreement is actually necessary,
             or we'd all have to get in fights
             or something to amuse ourselves
             and create the requisite chaos."
                               -Tom Jennings

     -30-

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