From: BITS AND BYTES ONLINE EDITION Subject: Bits and Bytes Online v2 #6 Date: Mon, 29 Aug 1994 19:37:12 -0400 (EDT) "There are two kinds of cryptography in this world: cryptography that will stop your kid sister from reading your files, and cryptography that will stop major governments from reading your files." -- Bruce Schneier ====================================================================== BBB III TTT SSS BBB Y Y TTT EEE SSS ONLINE EDITION: B B I T S B B Y Y T E S =THE ELECTRONIC BBB I T SSS AND BBB YYY T EEE SSS =NEWSLETTER FOR B B I T S B B Y T E S =INFORMATION BBB III T SSS BBB Y T EEE SSS =HUNTER-GATHERERS ====================================================================== Volume 2, Number 6 (August 29, 1994) ====================================================================== : CONTENTS BY WEIGHT = PARITY BITS : The Electronic Campfire; Concrete; = : The Economy of Ideas; = ================: = ACCESS : Woodstock Online; The Scout Report; CPU; = : The Senate Health Bill; Interactive TV List; = : Apple Computer Tech Support; E-Zine List = ================: = ONLINE NEWS : Microsoft Online; International Accounting Network = : First Commercial Mosaic Browser = ================: = ON THE NEWSSTAND: PC Computing - Special Internet Issue; = : Internet World ; WIRED = ================: = KULTCHER KORNER : Punk Monks; Tupperware Online; Pizzanet = ====================================================================== Our opening quote is from the Preface to Applied Cryptography, = which will be reviewed in an upcoming B&B = ====================================================================== THE ECONOMY OF IDEAS (Thomas Jefferson) "If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of everyone, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his tapir at mine, receives light without darkening mine. That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density at any point, and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property." ===== [This heads up quote heads up a piece entitled "The Economy of Ideas: A framework for rethinking patents and copyrights in the digital age." The author is John Perry Barlow, co-founder and executive chair of the Electronic Freedom Foundation. The article appeared in WIRED magazine (2.03 March 94, p. 85). True to the concepts the article espouses, the full text of the article (and lots of other good stuff) is available from WIRED's info-rama mail server. For instructions, send a help message to: info-rama@wired.com] ====================================================================== <<>> DIGITAL WOODSTOCK Dig this, man! The groovy folks at the WELL (Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link), one of the premier online communities, are hosting a WWW hookup to over 300 pages made by concertgoers at Woodstock '94 using a special program called the Woodstock Immortalizer. Heavy. Grok people's Tales from this new gathering of the tribes, groove to the mellow sounds and dig the trippy pictures from Woodstock '94. Feel the colors. BE the music. You get my drift. Just be careful not to blow your mind -- what would your capitalist pig boss say? The site curator sez: "THIS IS A BIG SITE!!! Lots to see and do!" So truck on down to: URL: http://www.well.com/woodstock/ and flash back to those golden moments when time stood still and -- I forget what happened then... ====================================================================== CONCRETE (Lewis Shiner) [obscenity alert- local sites edit as needed] "... You know what I hate? The whining. The world is going to shit according to him. Every day it's something else. He's watching this baseball game, right? The manager shoves an umpire, the ump throws him out, the crowd booes, maybe throws a few bottles. To my dad it's the end of the fucking world. It's anarchy, man, the crowd is like pissing on the American flag because they don't respect the umpire's authority. I mean, who cares? It's just a stupid fucking game. Sure things are shitty. They could drop the Big One any second and we could all fry. You ever been to Pasadena? You can't even breathe the air there, with all those refineries, I mean it's *brown*, you know? But you got to go right on living. You can't sit around and cry because they cut down some trees and pave everything. You don't cry about it, man, you skate on it." ===== (SOURCE: A fictional 13 year old skateboarding runaway in Lewis Shiner's novel "Slam" Bantam, 1991. 234 pp. $8.50. A good "quick- read" novel. Every time I pick up Slam, I end up re-reading it. I really have to stop picking it up.) ====================================================================== <<>> SENATE HEALTH BILL ONLINE The full text of the Senate Health Bill, S. 2357, now being debated in the Senate, is now available on the UM-St. Louis "The Library" gopher. This extremely large document (app. 2.4 megabytes of ASCII text) has been divided up into TITLE and SUBTITLE parts for easier access. To access this item, point your gopher client at Internet address UMSLVMA.UMSL.EDU (UM-St. Louis CMS users need only type "gopher" at the CMS "Ready; " prompt) and choose the following menu options in the order indicated: The Library Government Information or Health Sciences Library Health Security Act (S. 2357 version 2, Mitchell, Aug. 8, 1994) For those of you using World Wide Web clients (e.g., Unix's LYNX or NCSA's MOSAIC) the URL for this item is: gopher://UMSLVMA.UMSL.EDU:70/11//LIBRARY/GOVDOCS/S2357V2 (SOURCE: Fabio Metitieri's NEWNIRL-L mailing list) ====================================================================== "The recognition that no knowledge can be complete, no metaphor entire, is itself humanizing. It counteracts fanaticism. It grants even to adversaries the possibility of partial truth, and to oneself the possibility of error. -- Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave ====================================================================== CORPORATE NEWS BRIEF ==> HOW I.S. ORGANIZATIONS CAN TRIM COSTS. A study reported in PC Week (June 20) identifies ways that six organizations trimmed their total information systems costs by 20% to 80%. Key factors included: reducing end-user support staff by using and/or customizing shrink-wrapped software; outsourcing maintenance of old applications, freeing in-house staff to concentrate on new technologies; and securing commitment from top-down line- management. ====================================================================== <<> CPU: WORKING IN THE COMPUTER INDUSTRY If you work in the computer industry, you may be interested in subscribing to CPU, an electronic publication dedicated to sharing information among workers in the computer industry. CPU is a project of the "Working in the Computer Industry" working group of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR). Every issue contains useful information about the computer industry: first hand accounts of life in the trenches, industry trends, a calendar of conventions, word of the latest layoffs, and pointers to useful resources for computer professionals. Online subscriptions to CPU are available at no cost by emailing: listserv@cpsr.org with a blank subject and a single line in the body of the message: SUBSCRIBE CPSR-CPU CPU back issues can be found via anonymous FTP at either cpsr.org in /cpsr/work or etext.archive.umich.edu in /pub/CPSR/work. ====================================================================== THE ONLINE WORLD ==> MICROSOFT'S MARVEL. Look for Microsoft to announce their online service, codenamed Marvel, sometime in October. When Chicago (the codename for Windows 4) ships sometime in 1995, it will have out-of-the-box PPP (Point to Point Protocol) for accesing the Internet, as well as an improved TCP/IP stack for easier configuration of IP (Internet Protocol) addresses. The Marvel software will no doubt also come bundled with the system. At first, Marvel will allow access to a WWW server with information about MS products and tech support, and upgrades and bug fixes (this last could come in handy with Microsoft's habit of shipping buggy version 1.0's). An automatic subscribe feature in Chicago will provide push-button acccess to commercial online services. Ultimately, MS wants to offer their own online service, and is said to be negotiating with content providers. You can be sure the other major services are a little nervous about the 800 pound gorilla of the PC world honing in on their territory. Say what you will about MS, eventually they get it right and have turned out some fine products. (SOURCE: INFOWORLD 8/22/94, p. 5) ==> AIRMOSAIC. Spry Inc. will begin shipping AirMosaic, the first of several announced commercial implementations of the popular Mosaic WWW browser. Their version, for Window's users, will offer an improved user interface and indexing tools. Additionally, the program can be put into a Kiosk mode for the public viewing of information. Future versions will offer tools for the construction of multimedia documents. (SOURCE: INFOWORLD 8/22/94, p. 6) ==> ANET - THE INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTING NETWORK. The "ANet" seeks to to provide a networked, electronic forum for the exchange of information and the discussion of issues in the broad accounting and auditing discipline and a repository for a range of information in the discipline. It includes a variety of electronic mail discussion groups and an online database of information. A gopher (URL: gopher://anet.scu.edu.au/11/anet) provides a variety of services. For more information email: ANetAdm@scu.edu.au or: rdebrece@scu.edu.au ====================================================================== THE ELECTRONIC CAMPFIRE (Pamela McCorduck) [Laurie] Anderson has said that technology today is the campfire around which we tell our stories. She reconsiders this idea. "Of course, there's the attraction to light and to this kind of power, which is both warm and destructive. We're especially drawn to the power. Many of the images of technology are about making us more powerful, extending what we can do. Unfortunately, 95 percent of this is hype, because I think we're powerful without it." She thinks the information superhighway is being oversold, and brings out a book she's reading: Digital Woes (Why We Should Not Depend on Software) by Lauren Ruth Weiner. She ticks off the examples that worry her: unmanned supertankers to carry oil to Japan, software bugs that overdose radiation therapy and kill cancer patients, even the car that will parallel park itself, thanks to sensors, and wedge you into the available space with an inch or two to spare. "But suppose you go to the movies," Anderson continues, "come back, find yourself between these two supercars, and you don't have the software -- you're in big trouble. The information highway is being used mostly for tracking people down in terms of debt and credit, not for tapping into the Library of Congress, not really." (SOURCE: "America's Multi- Mediatrix", WIRED 2.03, March 1994, p. 136) ====================================================================== KULTCHER KORNER ==> EX-MONKS CLAIM ROYALTIES FOR CD CHANT. Two ex-Benedictine monks in Spain claim they are entitled to $5 million in royalties because 10 years ago they scored Chant, "The Best of Gregorian Chants" that is top of the music charts (these crazy kids!). An attorney for the distributor says, "This is part of a larger worldwide frontal attack on the public domain. My personal opinion also is that claiming to arrange this 1,000-year old chanted music is not realistic." (SOURCE: Atlanta Journal-Constitution 7/3/94, p. D6, E/P) ==> TUPP-NET. The barbarians are at the Internet gate. Oh, never mind. They're here. Somebody bring them some tea sandwiches. Please tell me this one is a cruel joke. This came via the Fringeware mailing list. IRC by the way, stands for Internet Relay Chat -- it kind of CBs in cyberspace, except (for now) you type instead of talk. I have edited the following down so as not to blow anyone's mind. ===================================== From: tuppnet@netcom.com (Virginia R Bedow) Welcome to TuppNet! TuppNet is an innovative new way to purchase Tupperware through the Internet. There are three easy ways to purchase Tupperware through TuppNet: 1. Email. 2. Public IRC parties. Every Wednesday at 6PM PDT TuppNet will hold a public Tupperware party on UnderNet IRC. We will answer any questions you may have. We will also be showing the latest Tupperware products. You can follow along in the catalog (GIF and text versions). 3. Private IRC parties. These are just like public IRC parties, except you can host them and earn hostess gifts just like you would at a regular Tupperware party. You set up a time and invite your internet friends to join you. For more info email: tuppnet@netcom.com or ftp: ftp.netcom.com:pub/tuppnet ==> PIZZANET. In a totally related story, the Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (SCO) and Pizza Hut, Inc. recently launched "PizzaNet," a pilot program that enables computer users, for the first time in history (fanfare please) to electronically order pizza delivery from their local Pizza Hut restaurant via the worldwide Internet. PizzaNet is a pilot program and will only be up and running in the Santa Cruz area, but the company will be watching the results carefully to determine the feasibility of expanding the program to other cities in the U.S. and around the world. The custom PizzaNet application software was developed by SCO's Professional Services organization, and incorporates advanced NCSA Mosaic software. All money changes hand at the point of delivery, so you will still have to tip the delivery person. Santa Cruz Internet users can access PizzaNet by entering pointing their Web brwsers to http://www.pizzahut.com. ====================================================================== <<>> THE INTERNIC SCOUT REPORT The Scout Report is a weekly publication offered by InterNIC Information Services to the US. research and education community and others via email, gopher, and World Wide Web. Included are selected new and newly-discovered online resources, network news, and bits of net culture. A wide range of topics are included in the Report with an emphasis on resources thought to be of interest to the InterNIC's primary audience, the research and education community. Each resource has been verified for substantial content and accessibility within a day of the release of the Report. The Report is released every weekend. SCOUT REPORT ACCESS METHODS: (EMAIL) Send mail to: majordomo@is.internic.net in the body of the message, type: subscribe scout-report To unsubscribe to the list, repeat this procedure substituting the word "unsubscribe" for subscribe. (WWW) To access the hypertext version of the Report, point your WWW client to: http://www.internic.net/infoguide.html (GOPHER) Gopher users can tunnel to: is.internic.net select: Information Services/Scout Report. =========== + INTERACTIVE TELEVISION DISCUSSION LIST. I-TV is an Internet distribution list for the discussion of Two-way Interactive TV and its use in education and community development. The list is also used to disseminate information and text files related to these topics. I-TV is not moderated. Uploading of press releases is encouraged. To subscribe to I-TV, please send the following command in the body of your e-mail latter to: LISTSERV@KNOWLEDGEWORK.COM on the Internet: SUB I-TV yourfirstname yourlastname (SOURCE: Net-Happenings) /\ + APPLE COMPUTER WORLDWIDE TECH SUPPORT / \ gopher: ftp.support.apple.com / /\ \ / / \ \ +CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY c/o NTS Marketting, 1616 Main / / /\ \ \ Street, Lynchburg, VA 24504-24504. 800/854-9043. / / / \ \ \ Must reading for all you political types. / / / \ \ \ < < > > +CHOICE IN DYING BBS. The nations first right-to- \ \ \ __ / / / die BBS is now online at 212/727-8219. 24 hour a \ \ __ / / day access to information on right-to-die issues and \ \__/ / end-of-life planning \ __ / \__/ +ACCESS TO E-ZINES. John Labovitz maintains an annotated \/ list of e-zines, or electronic counterculture magazines. FTP: from /pub/Zines on etext.archive.umich.edu GOPHER: etext.archive.umich.edu WWW: http://www.ora.com:8080/johnl/e-zine-list/ +GO FLY A KITE. Everything you wanted to know about kites can be found at the Oxford Brookes University, (UK) Gopher. Kite reviews, kite festivals, kite tails, technical notes, access to USENET kite groups and MORE! Point your gopher to: URL: gopher://131.227.111.02:70/11\GOPHER\KITES (SOURCE: gopher-jewels mailing list) ====================================================================== AS SEEN ON THE NET: "We are Microsoft. Resistance is futile. We will assimilate you." (You have to be a Star Trek fan to get this one folks.) ====================================================================== ON THE NEWSSTAND ==> PC COMPUTING. (September 1994) Special Issue: Complete Guide to the I-Way. Subtitled "A Practical User's Guide", there is a lot of useful info here, presented in an easy-to-read format. Aside from the obligatory overview of the Internet, favorite Internet books and online destinations, there are reviews of all the major one size fits all Internet connectivity packages (Internet Chameleon, Spry's Air Series, Pipeline -- as well as free and shareware equivalents) and a comparison of ease of use in performing various tasks (emailing, downloading files, accessing the Internet and finding information) on the big three online services (America Online, Compuserve and Prodigy). Also some business BBS info. Lots of screen shots and various sidebars explaining basic terms and detailing how various technologies work. Nicely done. *NEWS FLASH!* The Net-Happenings list reports that newsstand copies of PC Computing will have a 24.75" x 37.25" fold-out ROAD MAP TO THE INTERNET! (Who said the information highway cliche was dead? Not me.) Mike Pagel reports that the map is perfect for those who are in the "toddler stages" of internet exploration. I haven't seen it (yet) but the map highlights business resources, as well a few recreational and just plain useful sites. Bill Drew, reference Librarian at SUNY College of Agriculture and Technology reports that subscribers to PC Computing, who do not receive the map in their copies, may obtain one by calling 800/365-2770 and verifying their subscription info. ==> INTERNET WORLD. (September 1994) I have to admit -- when Internet World first came out I was not all that impressed with it. Geared a little too much for beginners, not enough meat in the thing. But little by little, it began to improve. This latest issue is quite good -- and I'm not just saying this because IW is published by MecklerMedia, parent corporation of MecklerWeb, where the WWW- flavored version of Bits and Bytes Online Edition will debut (see next issue for details). There are regular columns covering legal issues, tips for beginner's, technical stuff and more. This issue features articles on Encyclopedia Brittanica's foray onto the Internet; NASA online; an interview with longtime certified net- guru Vinton Cerf; sports on the Internet; and of course business oportunities on the net. They've spiffed up the graphics too, and kids, it looks mahvelous. Meckler rules! Now send me some review copies! $4.95 ==> WIRED. (September 1994). Will I ever shut up about WIRED magazine? Probably not, not as long as they keep coming out with such interesting material. This issues cover boy is Penn Gillette (the talking half of Penn and Teller), but don't let that scare you. In addition to the Teller interview (he's quite the computer nerd), there are articles on Universal Sevice, insect-sized robots, high-tech war games, why newspapers (online or otherwise) suck, as well a plethora of news and reviews. At newsstands and libraries everywhere! $4.95 ====================================================================== She: My friends and I are teaching dolphins to communicate through email. He: I like to blow stuff up. (SOURCE: Nicole Hollander, Newsweek, 5/16/94, p. 50) ====================================================================== ### ADMINISTRIVIA ### HEY SYSOPS! If you are archiving B&B on your BBS, please drop me a note. I'd like to mention your BBS in B&B. LETTERS. We welcome submissions and commentary. All mail sent to the editor or to B&B will be treated as a "letter to the editor" and considered printable, unless you tell me otherwise. Thanks to everyone who's taken the time to write in. Sorry if I don't always write back. (E/P) This symbol on some of the news items indicates that the source for this article was the EDUPAGE newsletter. EDUPAGE is a bi-weekly summary of recent news items on information technology, and is a highly recommended "one-stop" source of news. To subscribe, send e-mail to: listproc@educom.edu containing the message: SUB EDUPAGE firstname lastname. <<>> BITS AND BYTES ONLINE EDITION BY LISTSERVER: Subscribe to B&B by sending email to listserv@acad1.dana.edu text: SUBSCRIBE bits-n-bytes To unsubscribe send a message to listserv@acad1.dana.edu text: UNSUBSCRIBE bits-n-bytes Retrieve back issues by sending email to listserv@acad1.dana.edu text: send in the body of your mail message, no subject. Example: send bitsv1n1.txt Issues 1-9: The file name is in the form: bitsv1n1.txt Issues 10- : The file name is in the form: bits1n10.txt (Remember to disable or delete your signature, as this will generate an error message) (I'm not sure if all the back issues are available yet. Watch this space) ONLINE ACCESS. B&B is available for downloading on America Online in their telecom files area, and in Compuserve's telecom forum library, and on various fine BBS systems all across this wunnerful wunnerful world of ours. BBSs like the MICRO BBS in Denver, CO (303) 752-2943, and UpTown Station (a node of BDPANet) at 402/551-4216. INTERNET ANONYMOUS FTP SITES: ftp.dana.edu in /periodic directory (DOS Users go here) ftp.eff.org in pub/Publications/CuD/BNB/bnb????.gz (where ???? is volume & number, e.g. bnb0116.gz) (UNIX users go here) INTERNET GOPHER ACCESS. gopher.law.cornell.edu in the Discussions and Listserv archives/Teknoids directory gopher.dana.edu in the Electronic Journals directory ====================================================================== = BITS AND BYTES ONLINE, an electronic newsletter for information- = = based lifeforms, is printed using 100% recycled electrons, and is = = intended for distribution IN THAT MEDIUM. Please contact the = = editor for reprint permission. = ====================================================================== = Jay Machado = (Copyright 1994 Jay Machado) *unaltered* = = 1529 Dogwood Drive = ELECTRONIC distribution of this file for = = Cherry Hill, NJ 08003 = non-profit purposes is encouraged. = ========================== The editor is solely responsible for = = jaymachado@delphi.com = the editorial content or lack thereof. = ========================== Contents are sold by weight, and may = = ph (eve) 609/795-0998 = settle during shipment. = ====================================================================== =============== End of Bits and Bytes Online V2, #6 ================= ======================================================================