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- Smileys
-
- One problem with written communication is that remarks meant to be
- humorous are often lost. Without the visual body-language clues, some
- messages may be misinterpreted. So a visual shorthand known as "smileys"
- has been developed. There are a hundred or more variations on this theme-
- :-) That's a little smiley face. Look at it sideways. (more Smiley info may
- be found via anonymous ftp at many places, including the following:
- nic.funet.fi /pub/misc/funnies/smiley.txt). FTP is introduced later in the
- text.
-
- What a range of emotions you can show using only keyboard characters.
- Besides the smiley face above, you can have :-( if you're sad, or :-< if
- you're REALLY upset! ;-) is one way of showing a wink. Folks wearing
- glasses might look like this online: %^).
-
- But for the most part, the electronic community is willing to help others.
- Telecommunications helps us overcome what has been called the tyranny
- of distance. We DO have a global village.
-
- Electronic Newsletters and Serials
-
- Subscribing to lists with reckless abandon can clog your mailbox and
- provide a convenient black hole to vacuum up all your spare time. You
- may be more interested in free subscriptions to compiled documents known
- as electronic journals. These journals are automatically delivered to your
- electronic door.
-
- There are a growing number of these. Some of the best for librarians are
- listed below. To subscribe to these journals you must know how to send an
- interactive message to another computer. This information is well-
- documented in the resources listed at the end of this article. Telnet and ftp
- are introduced further along in this article.
-
- ALCTS NETWORK NEWS
- (Association for Library Collections and Technical Services)
- Various ALA news, net news, other items of interest to librarians. Send the
- following message to LISTSERV@UICVM.BITNET
- SUBSCRIBE ALCTS First Name Last Name.
-
- Current Cites
- Bibliography of current journal articles relating to computers, networks,
- information issues, and technology. Distributed on PACS-L, or connect
- remotely via TELNET to MELVYL.UCOP.EDU (192.35.222.222); Enter
- command at the prompt: SHOW CURRENT CITES.
- Further information: David F. W. Robison, drobison@library.berkeley.edu.
-
- EFFector Online
- The online newsletter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. All the hot net
- issues are covered here: privacy, freedom, first amendment rights. Join
- EFF to be added to the mailing list or ftp the files yourself from ftp.eff.org
- (192.88.144.4). They are in the /pub/eff and subsequent directories.
-
- Hot Off the Tree (HOTT)
- (Excerpts and Abstracts of Articles about Information Technology)
- TELNET MELVYL.UCOP.EDU (192.35.222.222); Enter command:
- SHOW HOTT. Further information: Susan Jurist, SJURIST@UCSD.EDU.
-
- Network News
- An irreverent compendium of tidbits, resources, and net factoids that is a
- must for true Internet surfers. To subscribe, send the following message to
- LISTSERV@NDSUVM1.BITNET
- SUBSCRIBE NNEWS First Name Last Name.
- For more information: Dana Noonan at noonan@msus1.msus.edu.
-
- Public-Access Computer Systems News and The Public-Access Computer
- Systems Review
- Sent automatically to PACS-L subscribers. See above. For a list of back
- issue files, send the following message to
- LISTSERV@UHUPVM1.BITNET:
- INDEX PACS-L.
-
- To obtain a comprehensive list of electronic serials on all topics, send the
- following commands to LISTSERV@UOTTAWA.BITNET
- GET EJOURNL1 DIRECTRY
- GET EJOURNL2 DIRECTRY
- For further information, contact Michael Strangelove:
- 441495@ACADVM1.UOTTAWA.CA.
-
- Remote Login to Internet Resources: TELNET
-
- One step beyond electronic mail is the ability to control a remote computer
- using TELNET. This feature lets you virtually teleport anywhere on the
- network and use resources located physically at that host. Further, some
- hosts have gateways to other hosts, which have further gateways to still
- more hosts. How can you be in two places at once? It sounds more
- confusing than it is. What resources are available? Here is a sampling of
- some of the fare awaiting you at several sites:
-
- Cleveland Free-net Freenets
- are the progeny of Tom Grundner, Director,
- Community Telecomputing Laboratory
- Case Western Reserve University
- 303 Wickenden Building
- Cleveland, OH 44106
- 216/368-2733 FAX: 216/368-5436
- Internet: aa001@cleveland.freenet.edu
- BITNET: aa001%cleveland.freenet.edu@cunyvm
- and the folks at National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN)
- Box 1987
- Cleveland, OH 44106
- 216/368-2733 FAX: 216/368-5436
- Internet: aa622@cleveland.freenet.edu.
-
- Free-nets are built around a city metaphor, complete with schools,
- hospitals, libraries, courthouses, and other public services.
-
- Academy One recently held an online global simulation of a series of major
- space achievements. 16 schools (from five states and four nations)
- participated. Here are several of the descriptions of their projects:
-
- "VALKEALA HIGH SCHOOL VALKEALA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
- Valkeala, Finland (sa124@cleveland.freenet.edu)
- Acting as Space Shuttle Discovery taking the Hubble Telescope into space.
- These Finnish students will be in communication with students in Estonia,
- relaying their reports."
-
- "DR. HOWARD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Champaign, IL
- (cwilliam@mars.ncsa.uiuc.edu, cdouglas@ncsa.uiuc.edu)
- Dr. Howard School (25 students in 3rd/4th grade) will be simulating the
- Challenger 2 launch. They are being assisted by the National Center for
- Supercomputing Applications."
-
- "ST. JULIE BILLIART SCHOOL Hamilton, OH
- (ba542@cleveland.freenet.edu)
- Simulating a NASA Tracking Station in Florida. They will be posting
- hourly weather reports about the conditions in Florida around Cape
- Kennedy. This information is vital to the recovery of the Friendship 7
- capsule and crew. Students have taken an interest in Space Junk and will be
- posting additional reports on the various probes which were used to test the
- surface of the moon and how all of that junk is now becoming a hazard to
- current and future space exploration."
-
- Another Free-net resource is Project Hermes. This service provides copies
- of Supreme Court opinions in electronic form to as wide an audience as
- possible, almost as soon as they are announced.
-
- The Court's opinions can be sent directly to you or you may download the
- files directly from any NPTN community computer system.
-
- The Free-nets also provide weather, news, and gateways to other resources.
- To access the Cleveland Free-Net (where all this is being held) simply
- telnet to: freenet-in-a.cwru.edu 129.22.8.82
- or 129.22.8.75
- or 129.22.8.76
- or 129.22.8.44 and select "visitor" at the login menu.
-
- MELVYL
- The University of California
- MELVYL
- Catalog Division of Library Automation
- University of California
- Office of the President
- 300 Lakeside Drive, 8th floor,
- Oakland, California 94612-3550
- 415/987-0555 (MELVYL Catalog Helpline)
- E-mail: lynch@postgres.berkeley.edu
-
- The MELVYL catalog is the union catalog of monographs and serials
- (periodicals) held by the nine University of California campuses and
- affiliated libraries. It represents nearly 11 million holdings at UC, the
- California State Library, and the Center for Research Libraries.
-
- The MELVYL catalog also provides access to MEDLINE and Current
- Contents as well as a gateway to many other systems. Access to some
- databases is restricted under a license agreement to the University of
- California faculty, staff, and students. Telnet MELVYL.UCOP.EDU
- (192.35.222.222)
-
- CARL
- Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries
- 777 Grant
- Suite 306
- Denver CO 80203-3580
- 303/861-5319
- E-mail: help@carl.org
-
- CARL offers access to the following groups of databases: Academic and
- public library online catalogs, current article indexes such as UnCover and
- Magazine Index, databases such as the Academic American Encyclopedia
- and Internet Resource Guide, and a gateway to other library systems.
- Access to some items is limited. Telnet pac.carl.org or telnet 192.54.81.128
-
- MICROMUSE
- This is how Barry Kort (aka 'Moulton'), Visiting Scientist at Educational
- Technology Research, BBN Labs, Cambridge, MA describes MicroMuse at
- M.I.T.
-
- "MUDs (Multi-User Dimensions) or MUSEs (Multi-User Simulation
- Environments) are virtual realities which offer a rich environment for
- synergy, community, collaboration, and exploratory discovery."
-
- "Players connect to the host computer, adopt a character and personality of
- their choosing, and enter into the synthetic world, consisting of a web of
- connected rooms and movable props."
-
- "Everything (rooms, movable objects, connecting passageways, and
- players) has a description (typically a few lines of text) which are displayed
- when a player looks at it."
-
- "Actions such as picking up or dropping an object, and exiting to an
- adjacent room also generate a short message appropriate to the action."
-
- "At MIT's AI Lab, MicroMuse features explorations, adventures, and
- puzzles with redeeming social, cultural, and educational content. The
- MicroMuse Science Center offers an Exploratorium and Mathematica
- Exhibit complete with interactive exhibits drawn from experience with
- Science Museums around the country. The Mission to Mars includes an
- elaborate tour of the red planet with accurate descriptions rivaling those
- found in National Geographic."
-
- "Elsewhere on MicroMuse, one can find an outstanding adventure based on
- the children's classic Narnia; a recreation of the Wizard of Oz adventure
- built by a gifted 8-year old; a challenging Logic Quest; and a living model
- of the science fiction genre 'The DragonRiders of Pern' by author Anne
- McCaffrey."
-
- If you would like to explore MicroMuse, you may connect as follows from
- your local host computer:
- telnet michael.ai.mit.edu [18.43.0.177]
- login: guest [no password required]
- tt [TinyTalk client program]
- connect guest [Connect to MicroMuse]
-