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- ALL ABOUT HUBS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- HUB stations are voluntary twenty four hour stations
- that provide solid continuous interconnections between
- areas and users. Typically, a HUB will be equipped
- with several radios, fairly high powered computer(s),
- and a sysop with a heart of gold!
-
- By using one frequency to connect to users and a
- different one to connect to other HUBs, the HUB
- station can provide the essential QRP environment.
- Users with only a few watts can access a local HUB and
- still have access to stations who are well out of
- normal range or even operating in different
- bands.
-
- HUBs provide a mail collection point so that local
- users have no need to monitor the network twenty four
- hours a day. Some HUBs also provide a central
- database of tutorial files, useful public domain
- programs, a Network News service (NNTP), and a source
- of help should it be required.
-
- Another service often provided is Domain Name Server
- (DNS). Every IP user has a "domain" file that
- contains the callsigns and IP addresses of other
- stations on the network. They can be very large files
- and grow larger every day as IP becomes more popular.
- The DNS facility allows users to keep a minimum number
- of stations in their own domain files since any
- unknown addresses can be retrieved from the main file
- by an automatic call to the HUB. This means that the
- users have access to complete and up-to-date domain
- files without actually having to maintain their own.
-
- If during installation, you elect to use a HUB station
- then NOSINST will enable nearly all the facilities
- that hubs can provide. However, since the NNTP
- service is not always available, the NNTP setup line
- in AUTOEXEC.NOS is disabled (commented out with
- a # character at the start of the line). If your
- local hub does have NNTP available, contact the sysop
- for details of how to customise your setup to suit
- local news groups and conditions.