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- Date: 930628
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- File: e-mail
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- Getting to Basics with GE-Mail!
- -------------------------------
-
- The purpose of this file is to teach you a few basics about using GEmail, and
- how you can do some things with it that you may not have thought possible.
-
- First, the best way to read and send mail is through the use of the mail
- command mode (choice #9 on the Mail menu, page 200). Command mode is not hard
- to learn, and you do not need to know every command. In fact, only a few
- commands are all you really need to know; the rest you can pick up later, if
- you want to. These commands are: DIS, LIS, REP, ACCEPT, ENTER, and EXIT.
-
- When you first enter command mode, all you see is a 'Command?' prompt. Here,
- only mail commands will work. You cannot move to another page, nor use such
- commands as TIME, U, NOT, etc. To do any of those, you must first exit mail,
- with the EXIT command. EXIT takes you back to the menus.
-
- The DIS (for display) command displays all the waiting mail in your box. If you
- have no waiting letters, it will say 'no letters found'. What you see with the
- DIS command is a one line summary of each letter. This summary includes the
- Queue number, the actual letter number, the subject line, and the name of the
- person who sent the letter.
-
- By using DIS, you create a Queue. This is important, because the Queue allows
- you to read letters individually, and also to reply to them individually. To
- read a particular letter, you type in LIS and the Queue number. For example,
- LIS 1 will show you the contents of the first letter in the Queue. Then, after
- you've read it, you can reply to that same letter with REP 1.
-
- You can do the same with all the letters waiting in your mailbox, reading and
- replying to them one at a time. If you want to re-read a letter, you can type
- in LIS 1 (or whatever the Queue number is) again, as many times as you like. Of
- course, this only works for the current Queue; once you leave mail, the Queue
- list is gone, and all read letters will be put in your 'old mail' box. Bet you
- didn't know about that one.
-
- The 'old mail' box is a holding area for letters that have already been read by
- you. These letters remain in the box for five days, then the system purges them
- automatically (there is no way to keep a letter for more than five days after
- its been read).
-
- To see all those old letters, type DIS I at the command prompt. This time, you
- will get a Queue list of every letter sent to you in your box. If you have
- unread mail, those letters will show up, too. You can then read any letter with
- the LIS Queue# command, as well as reply to any letter with the REP Queue#
- command.
-
- One thing you'll notice with DIS I is that your box contains a copy of any
- letters you've sent in the last five days. The system automatically generates a
- copy of any letter you send, and places that in the 'old mail' box. So, you
- don't really need to send a CC to yourself, you have one already.
-
- If you want to upload a letter prepared offline, use the ACCEPT command at the
- command prompt. This allows you to send text at full speed (whatever your baud
- rate is), and no characters will be lost. Use your break key to signify the end
- of the transmission, then *S to send the letter. Note that you cannot use the
- ACCEPT command with REP.
-
- [Within the GE-nie mail Editor, tho, you can signify an *UP command to send a
- prepared text file nonstop as a REPly. See the Editing commands and Uploading
- Messages/Mails for more information about this.]
-
- To create a new letter manually, use the ENTER command. This is line-prompt
- mode, and you must wait for the line prompt to appear for each line, or some
- characters you type in may be lost. Use *S (on a separate line by itself) to
- send the letter. In line prompt mode, you can use *H (on a separate line) to
- see what commands are available to you for editing the letter.
-
- With these few commands, using GEmail becomes much easier. Here is a quick
- reference summary:
-
- DIS - DISplays summary of any waiting (unread) letters in a Queue list.
- DIS I - DISplays a summary of ALL letters in a Queue list.
- DIS Queue# - Displays the status of the message and when it was listed by
- which recipients.
- LIS - By itself, scrolls out continuously all your unread letters
- LIS Queue# - Lists the contents of the specified letter in the Queue list.
- LIS I - Scrolls out the contents of ALL letters, read or not.
- REP Queue# - Generates a reply to the specified letter in the Queue list.
- ENTER - Manual text entry mode for a new letter.
- ACCEPT - Upload mode for a new letter; terminate with your break key.
- EXIT - Exit mail command mode and return to the menus.
-
- Once you've learned your way around with these commands, you can try typing in
- HELP at the command prompt, for a list of other commands that are available. Be
- sure to have your buffer open!
-
- The GEnie manual is a good resource for MAIL commands, too. Extensive
- searching for mail FROM specific mail addresses, TO specific addresses and even
- by the subject line is available.
-
-
- QUICKIES!
- --------
-
- GEnie mail now allows you to send binary files privately to another member on
- GEnie. This is very handy for beta testing software, exchanging cooperative
- programming efforts, developers information and even business data.
- Instructions for these XMODEM mails are at the Page 200 menu.
-
- I think you'll find that GEnie Mail can offer you simplicity or power, and by
- learning just a few key commands, you can do almost anything you need to at
- command mode and never even pay attention to the other 20 miscelleneous
- commands!
-
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