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- From: "Hungarian-FAQ keeper" <magyar@world.std.com>
- Reply-to: "Zoli Fekete, keeper of hungarian-faq" <fekete@bc.edu>
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.magyar,soc.culture.europe,soc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Hungarian electronic resources FAQ
- (Version: 1.50, Last-modified: 1996/07/04)
- Followup-To: soc.culture.magyar
- Summary: This posting contains information on the use of email,
- other Internet tools and Usenet for persons with interest in
- Hungary, its people and/or language. Autoposted biweekly.
- X-Spam: <http://www.geocities.com/Paris/1048/Spam-Policy.html>
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-
- URL: <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/>
- Archive-name: hungarian/faq
- Soc-culture-magyar-archive-name: faq
- Last-modified: 1996/07/04
- Version: 1.50
- Posting-Frequency: every fifteen days
-
- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
-
- Hungarian electronic resources FAQ
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- 1. News and discussion groups in English
- 1.1 News from the Open Media Research Institute
- 1.2 News from Central Europe Today
- 1.3 The Hungary Report
- 1.4 Hungary Online List (HOL)
- 1.5 MOZAIK
- 1.6 On USENET
- 1.7 'Hungary', the LISTSERV list
- 1.8 Hungary@glue.umd.edu, the Hungarian-American list
-
- 2. News and discussion groups in Hungarian
- 2.1 HIX (many groups and services)
- 2.2 BLA Sajtoszemle [press review]
- 2.3 "Nemzet" Magyar Internet Vilaglap [Hungarian Internet World Bulletin]
- 2.4 Other discussion groups
-
- 3. Interactive services
- 3.1 What's available on the World Wide Web
- 3.2 Gopher and other interactive services
- 3.3 ARENA
-
- 4. The Net in Hungary
- 4.1 BITNET/HUEARN
- 4.2 HUNGARNET
- 4.3 FidoNet
- 4.4 Finding out somebody's email address
-
- 5. Odds and ends
- 5.1 Traveling with a computer in Hungary
- 5.2 Conventions for coding Hungarian accents
- 5.3 Information sources about the rest of Central and Eastern Europe
- 5.4 Hungarian radio and television broadcasts available worldwide
-
- 6. Contributors to this FAQ
-
- 7. How to read this FAQ - what's in there < ~!@#$%^&* >
-
- - - ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I know this is very long, perhaps too long for human consumption ;-).
- One of the tasks for further editing is to make it more concise,
- perhaps drop some parts altogether (I'd like to hear any suggestions).
- You can search for the section titles listed above and skip what you
- don't want, and many Unix newsreaders would jump ahead to the next one
- with Ctrl-G (the format now follows the digest specification)!
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1. NEWS AND DISCUSSION GROUPS IN ENGLISH
-
- Note: commercial networks -- such as CompuServe or AOL -- may have
- their own in-house forums relating to Eastern and Central Europe. Be
- aware that those are only open to the subscribers of the particular
- service, unlike the discussion groups accessible by anyone via the
- Internet and Usenet! This file -- the hungarian-faq -- is mostly
- concerned with resources freely available netwide.
- See also the sections under 2. below which list services that carry
- occasional English material, some regularly, besides their primarily
- Hungarian language content.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.1 News from the Open Media Research Institute
-
- The Open Media Research Institute Daily Digest is available via
- electronic mail, at no charge. The Digest covers all of the former
- Soviet Union, East-Central and Southeastern Europe and is delivered in
- two parts, each roughly 15 kByte in size, Monday through Friday (except
- Czech holidays).
-
- You can subscribe by sending <mailto:LISTSERV@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU>.
- In the body of the message, type
- "SUBSCRIBE OMRI-L Yourfirstname Yourlastname" (leave out the quotation
- marks and be sure to substitute your own name where shown).
-
- You can get reposts of just the items related to Hungary by
- subscribing to Mozaik. See section 1.5.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.2 News from Central Europe Today
-
- Central Europe Today On-Line is a free daily news service covering the
- important events and business news in the region. To subscribe, send
- the word SUBSCRIBE <mailto:cet-online-request@eunet.cz>. For more
- detailed information, send a blank email message
- <mailto:cet-info@eunet.cz>.
-
- Again, these exceed Hungary in scope, but you can get excerpts
- pertaining to Hungary in Mozaik (see 1.4).
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.3 The Hungary Report
-
- The Hungary Report is a free weekly English-language online update of
- news and analysis direct from Budapest each Sunday. The Report consists
- of briefs, one feature story and an expert political opinion column.
- The briefs cover the most important and interesting developments in
- Hungary each week, while the feature stories address variously
- politics, business, economics, arts and leisure. The weekly political
- column, Parliament Watch, is written by Tibor Vidos, director of the
- Budapest office of GJW, a British political lobbying and consulting
- firm. To subscribe, send
- <mailto:hungary-report-Request@hungary.yak.net> containing (in the body
- of the message, not in the headers) the single word "subscribe" (no
- quotes). Or send the word "info" to the same address for further
- information.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.4 Hungary Online List (HOL)
-
- This discussion list is a "kind of Internet supplement" to the column
- of the same title in Budapest Business Journal; to subscribe, send the
- word "subscribe" <mailto:HOL-request@hungary.yak.net> (you'll get help
- from its Majordomo server, if needed).
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.5 MOZAIK
-
- This is actually one of the services of HIX, meaning there's a slight
- bit of Hungarian mixed in (the posts themselves are mostly in English,
- but the server speaks Hunglish ;-)). MOZAIK brings you original content
- (e.g. the schedule of DUNA TV, exchange rates), and digested reposts
- of those news items (originating from OMRI, CET and other sources)
- that bear directly on Hungary. You can subscribe by
- sending a blank email message to <mailto:subs.mozaik@hix.com> and
- unsubscribe by sending one to <mailto:unsubs.mozaik@hix.com>. See
- section 3 about searching the HIX archives.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.6 On USENET
-
- The Hungarian newsgroup in the worldwide hierarchy is
- <news:soc.culture.magyar>. It's mostly in English, sometimes
- bilingual, and occasionally Hungarian only. The group is archived by
- HIX (see its section for 'SCM') and is also readable under
- <http://www.hix.com/usenet/>. A similar archive is to be found at
- <http://mineral.umd.edu/usenet/> (see 1.8 below). For www/e-mail
- gateways see <http://www.siliconvalley.com/nemzetiforum.html> or the
- archives mentioned above.
-
- Since May 1995 Hungary has its own netnews hierachy, with the following
- groups created so far (hun.lists.* are email gateways):
- <news:hun.test>
- <news:hun.news>
- <news:hun.piac>
- <news:hun.comp>
- <news:hun.general>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.forum>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.hunet>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.moka>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.otthonka>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.szalon>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.tipp>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.vita>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.otthon>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.guru>
- <news:hun.lists.hix.kornyesz>
- <news:hun.lists.katalist>
-
- If you can connect to a remote news server (typically by setting the
- NNTPSERVER variable under Unix), then you can get hun.* directly from
- news.sztaki.hu or news.iif.hu (the former has been more stable
- lately). Fetching articles is much faster from a local source - ask
- you system administrator if they can get a feed! In the USA the first
- provider offering the hierarchy seems to be AltNet,
- <mailto:info@alt.net> to find out about that. There is a gopher
- interface to news: <gopher://mars.iif.hu:70/11/News> (the full URL to
- go straight to the hun.* groups is:
- <gopher://mars.iif.hu:70/1exec%3A-g%20hun%3A/bin/gonnrp>).
- For accessing groups in the international hierarchy from abroad via
- gopher the gateway in the Netherlands may be better:
- <gopher://g4nn.cca.vu.nl:4320/1g4nn%20group/soc.culture.magyar>. The
- hun.* groups are also archived by HIX (see its section for 'HUNGROUPS')
- and they are also readable under <http://www.hix.com/usenet/> as well
- as <http://mineral.umd.edu/usenet/>.
- HIX provides a universal posting gateway to the soc.culture.magyar and
- hun.* newsgroups. Use the addresses:
- <mailto:group-name-with-dashes@www.hix.com>, for example
- <mailto:soc-culture-magyar@www.hix.com>. A similar gatewaying service
- is also available for soc.culture.magyar via
- <mailto:majordomo@glue.umd.edu> (see 1.8 below), as well as via
- <mailto:nemzetiforum@magyar.siliconvalley.com> (see also 2.3).
-
- There are Hungarian local newsgroups available through
- <telnet://ludens.elte.hu>, login with username GUEST (no password), and
- enter NEWS to start the newsreader (you can use the VMS online help to
- learn about it). The guest account is set up for accessing
- <news:elte.diaklap> (students' journal at Eotvos U.), but other
- newsgroups are available as well. (But please be considerate to the
- strained network resources of Hungarian sites - from abroad for
- non-local news use other providers.) For ELTE-specific questions
- contact <mailto:hiik@ludens.elte.hu>. This server is also accessible
- via remote NNTP like the two mentioned above, but is often much slower
- than those.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.7 'Hungary', the LISTSERV list
-
- HUNGARY@GWUVM is a discussion group providing rapid communication
- among those with interests in Hungarian issues. Subscribe by
- <mailto:listserv@gwuvm.gwu.edu> using no subject and a message
- consisting only of SUBSCRIBE HUNGARY Yourfirstname Lastname. Once you
- have subscribed, any messages which you want to send to the group
- should be sent to the group address, <mailto:hungary@gwuvm.gwu.edu>.
- (This pattern of two addresses is standard: you turn your mail off and
- on at the "listserv" address, and you send mail to the listname
- address. For example, to unsubscribe, send the server the message
- SIGNOFF HUNGARY. You can temporarily turn off you mail by sending
- listserv the message SET HUNGARY NOMAIL. SET HUNGARY MAIL turns mail
- back on.) By default the listserv sends out messages as they arrive,
- maybe several ones on busier days. If you prefer daily digest format,
- you can issue the command SET HUNGARY DIGESTS (again by sending it to
- the LISTSERV address); alternatively you can subscribe to HUNGARY via
- HIX as mentioned in 2.1, and receive the same format as the other lists
- by HIX. LISTSERV has many useful features, most notably database search
- on the list archives - to learn more about it, send commands like SEND
- HELP, SEND HELP DATABASE.
-
- Note that the form of addressing LISTSERV lists such as Hungary may
- depend a great deal on your local network configuration and mailer
- software. For BITNET mailers you need GWUVM only; the local gatewaying
- to BITNET may be BITNET% for VAXMail installations and
- LISTSERV@GWUVM.BITNET at other places. Ask your local network
- administrator first if you're experiencing problems.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 1.8 Hungary@Glue.umd.edu, the Hungarian-American list
-
- The Hungarian-American List is an unmoderated discussion forum to
- promote communications between people with interest in modern Hungarian
- culture and Hungarian cultural heritage. The list brings you, among
- other things, news items originating from OMRI, CET, the Hungarian
- media and several other sources, that might be of interest for
- Hungarians and Americans. The WWW Home Page of the Hungarian-American
- list is <http://mineral.umd.edu/hungary/>. Subscribe by
- <mailto:majordomo@glue.umd.edu>, using no subject and a message
- consisting only of SUBSCRIBE HUNGARY. The Hungarian Usenet group -
- soc.culture.magyar is available for Hungarian-American List subscribers
- via email. You can subscribe to this news-to-mail-to-news service by
- <mailto:majordomo@glue.umd.edu>, using no Subject, in the body of the
- letter write SUBSCRIBE SOC-CULTURE-MAGYAR. The WWW address of the
- interactive soc.culture.magyar archive is
- <http://mineral.umd.edu/soc.culture.magyar/>.
-
- (Notice that this Maryland-based list is distinct from the older
- LISTSERV list mentioned in 1.7 that has a broader focus - mentioning
- 'the HUNGARY list' ususally refers to that latter one! Note also that
- the Majordomo server syntax is different from LISTSERV for many of
- their commands - see the help document sent by the server.)
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 2. NEWS AND DISCUSSION GROUPS IN HUNGARIAN
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 2.1 HIX
-
- HIX, or Hollosi Information eXchange, is a non-profit formation run
- and supported by several individuals and organizations. HIX was started
- in 1989/90 and now it reaches more than 10,000 readers in about 45 countries
- around the World.
-
- Its services, mostly in Hungarian, are abundant and change frequently, so
- it is best to obtain an up-to-date help file by sending an email message to
- <mailto:help@hix.com> (a recent copy of that also seems to be in
- <http://www.hix.com/hix/hixcore/senddoc/MAIN/HELP.ALL> - but please
- notice that there are superseded copies scattered in other parts in
- the archive on the one hand, and many of the other files in this same
- directory are outdated on the other hand; most notably, DO NOT TOUCH
- that ancient version of hungarian-faq found there!). Here's a list of
- what it currently offers in email digest format:
-
- HIR -- 'Hirmondo', current newspaper survey edited in Budapest
- NARANCS -- The Internet edition of the 'Magyar Narancs' weekly
- TIPP -- politics-free questions, tips etc.
- SZALON -- moderated political discussion forum
- FORUM -- unmoderated political discussion forum
- GURU -- computer-related questions
- RANDI -- moderated personals; anonymous submissions possible
- VITA -- moderated non-political discussion forum
- OTTHON -- issues around the home
- MOKA -- jokes, humor (Hungarian and other)
- MOZAIK -- semi-regular bits of news and other info, mostly in
- English, crossposts from the OMRI list, VoA gopher, CET
- and other sources
- HUNGARY -- daily digest of the Hungary LISTSERV list (see 1.7)
- SCM -- gatewayed email digest of the Usenet newsgroup
- soc.culture.magyar
-
- The following is not available for email subscription from
- Hungary, but are accessible via the SENDDOC interface (or the
- 'finger new@hix.mit.com' service for the latest issues):
- HUNGROUPS - gatewayed email digest of the hun.* regional newsgroups
-
- Note that KEP (transcripts from the videotext news from Hungarian
- Television's Kepujsag) has been suspended indefinitely - despite what
- HIX' own HELP says.
-
- To subscribe (unsubscribe) to a particular email-journal, send email
- to subs.NAME@hix.com (unsubs.NAME@hix.com) where NAME is one of the
- above.
-
- The postings for the HIX discussion lists are sent out daily in
- digested form. You can send your own submission to NAME@hix.com,
- whatever NAME is (provided it's actually a discussion list).
-
- The volume for some of these lists is becoming rather high, e.g. TIPP
- often digests dozens of messages in hundreds of lines daily! You ought
- to try targeting your audience properly in order to find those who'd
- help with your questions; also keep in mind that readers often answer
- to the list rather than the individual even when personal reply is
- requested, so if you ask something it's a good idea to subscribe also
- (even though technically it's not required) instead of just addressing
- a list as a non-subscriber. A reminder to those who reply to a post:
- always remember that list messages get sent to several thousand readers,
- so consider personal email if the subject is not of general interest!
- If you answer through a list it's courteous to send a personal copy
- (Cc: with most mailers) as well - this may reach the addressee
- considerably earlier than the post distributed through the list.
- Notice the (undocumented) feature of the HIX mail-server: it only
- accepts submissions if its address is found in the 'To:' header field!
- It would quietly ignore incoming email Cc-d to it, so do not put the
- <name>@hix.com in the 'Cc:' (you can do so with other addressees).
-
- The HIX server can also send out archived files, see the SENDDOC
- function in its description. In case you have any problems or questions
- on the HIX services, please read through the automatic help response
- first. If you need human intervention you can reach
- <mailto:supervisor@hix.com> - but keep in mind that list managers have
- to do plenty other than answering things already laid out in the Fine
- Manual.
-
- You can also view the output of HIX interactively. See section 3.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 2.2 BLA Sajtoszemle
-
- Daily selection of articles from leading Hungarian newspapers by
- the Lajos Batthyany Foundation, published by the Hungary.Network.
-
- To subscribe (unsubscribe), send email to <mailto:subs.bla@hungary.com>
- (<mailto:unsubs.bla@hungary.com>). Also available in 123 accent notations
- from the <mailto:subs.bla1@hungary.com> address.
-
- It is also readable on the WWW under <http://www.hungary.com/bla/sajto/>.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 2.3 Nemzet Magyar Internet Vilaglap [Hungarian Internet World Bulletin]
-
- [This section is as provided by <mailto:joseph_toth@magyar.siliconvalley.com>]
-
- (1) (E-mail news bulletins)
- "Nemzet" Magyar Internet Vilaglap
- E-mail news digest, Mon-Fri, 25-55k. Comprises East-European
- regional news (by OMRI, in English), excerpts from Hungarian
- press (in Hungarian), and reports on newsworthy items (press,
- events, etc., mostly in Hungarian and occasionally in English)
-
- Subscription/Unsubscription:
- subs.nemzet@magyar.siliconvalley.com
- unsubs.nemzet@magyar.siliconvalley.com
- www: http://www.siliconvalley.com/nemzet.html
-
- Publisher and Editor in Chief: joseph_toth@magyar.siliconvalley.com
-
- (2) (usenet e-mail digest)
- "Nemzetiforum"
- Digest of "Soc.Culture.Magyar" by means of e-mail bulletin, filtering
- out all lists and postings beyond size 8k.
-
- Subscription/Unsubscription:
- nemzetiforum.subs@magyar.siliconvalley.com
- nemzetiforum.unsubs@magyar.siliconvalley.com
- www: http://www.siliconvalley.com/nemzetiforum.html
-
- Publisher and Editor in Chief: joseph_toth@magyar.siliconvalley.com
-
- (3) (www/e-mail gateway)
- E-mail message is acknowledged and posted to "Soc.Culture.Magyar",
- with your address and your subject-definition.
- Simply send contributions to nemzetiforum@magyar.siliconvalley.com
-
- Gateway maintained under direction of:
- joseph_toth@magyar.siliconvalley.com
-
- (5) Hungarian Papers on WWW (liberal to conservative)
-
- (a) 168 ORA
- http://www.atm.com.pl/COM/xlori/168/ora.html
-
- (b) KELET-MAGYARORSZAG
- http://www.bgytf.hu/public/keletm/
-
- (c) UJVIDEKI NAPLO
- http://www.mediarange.com/media/huncor/organ/naplo/naplo.htm
-
- (d) DEMOKRATA
- http://www.siliconvalley.com/demokrata/
-
- (e) NEMZET
- http://www.siliconvalley.com/nemzet.html
-
- (f) MAGYAR ELET
-
- http://www.mediarange.com/media/huncor/organ/magyarel/hunlife.htm
-
- (g) 24. ORA
- http://www.infobahnos.com/~jtoth/
-
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 2.4 Other discussion groups in Hungarian
-
- A number of email lists are available from servers located in Hungary,
- for directory see <gopher://HUEARN.sztaki.hu>. There are many college
- publications available online as well, check out the links from the HU
- homepage (see below).
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3. INTERACTIVE SERVICES
-
- If you are using Hungarian interactive services from abroad (or vice
- versa): please note that interactive Internet connections like WWW
- may be very slow, even timing out during peak hours - try times of
- lower network load when the response time is usually reasonable.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.1 What's available on the World Wide Web
-
- See the separate document "Hungarian WWW information FAQ",
- available at <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/web> as well
- as in the Usenet archives.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.2 Gopher and other interactive services
-
- HIX has a server in the USA: <gopher://www.hix.com>. Its services
- form just a subset of what it offers as a WWW site. RaDir is sometimes
- useful for finding email-addresses, old or new friends on the Net. See
- also Section 4.4.
-
- HIX has a gopher in Hungary as well:
- <gopher://hix.elte.hu/11/HIX/HIX>, and another mirror at
- <gopher://gopher.bke.hu:71/11/hix> (notice that this latter uses a
- non-standard Gopher port number). Check also <gopher://gopher.elte.hu>
- and <gopher://gopher.sztaki.hu>. Note that gopher is essentially
- text-based (thus less satisfying than the Web) but often faster
- (therefore less frustrating).
-
- CET's gopher is called <gopher://gopher.eunet.cz>.
-
- HIX documents from the archives of www.hix.com are available via the
- (Unix) 'finger' protocol. Try 'finger info@www.hix.com' to see how it
- works. This may be the easiest and fastest access from some sites.
-
- There is an electronic library at
- <gopher://gopher.bke.hu:71/11/elibhu/> (notice the non-standard port)
- that has much Hungarian text material, including some classical
- poetry.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.3 ARENA
-
- An interactive chat service of HIX, run by the Hungary.Network.
- Similar to IRC, but it does NOT require any client software. Simply
- <telnet:hix.hungary.com> and you are there.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 4. THE NET IN HUNGARY
-
- Overview: historically, ELLA was the first home-grown X.25
- email-system in Hungary. It survives till this very day. EARN was next,
- with its BITNET-like infrastructure (4.1). Full Internet connectivity
- is provided by HUNGARNET (see 4.2), which really comprises all
- academic, research and public non-profit sites.
-
- Here's a partial list of its domain names:
-
- bme.hu Technical University of Budapest
- sztaki.hu Computer and Automation Research Institute, Budapest
- elte.hu Roland Eotvos University of Sciences, Budapest
- bke.hu Budapest University of Economic Sciences
- sote.hu Semmelweis University of Medical Sciences, Budapest
- abc.hu Agricultural Biotechnology Center, Godollo
- gau.hu Godollo Agricultural University, Godollo
- klte.hu Kossuth Lajos University of Sciences, Debrecen
- jpte.hu Janus Pannonius University of Sciences, Pecs
- u-szeged.hu Members of the Szeged University Association
- bgytf.hu Gyorgy Bessenyei Teachers Training College
- uni-miskolc.hu University of Miskolc
- kfki.hu Central research Inst. of Physics, Budapest
- vein.hu University of Veszprem, Veszprem
- bdtf.hu Berzsenyi College, Szombathely
- szif.hu Szechenyi Istvan College, Gyor
- blki.hu Balaton Limnological Res. Inst. of Hung. Acad. Sci.
-
- A schematic map of its topology ('HBONE'):
-
- EBONE EMPB EMPB EBONE
-
- ^ ^ ^ ^
- | | | |
- | | Microwave center ======= IIF Center ------- Miskolci Egyetem
- | | Budapest / Budapest Miskolc
- | | // || \\ / // |
- | | // || MTA-KFKI / // L--------------- BGYTF
- | | // MBK Budapest // | Nyiregyhaza
- | | // Godollo // |
- | BME MTA-SzTAKI// L--------------- KLTE
- | Budapest ########## Budapest | Debrecen
- | *** |
- | *** L--------------- GAMF
- L------BKE | Kecskemet
- Budapest |
- # \ L---------- Veszpremi Egyetem
- # \ | Veszprem
- ELTE \ |
- Budapest JATE L--------------- JPTE
- Szeged Pecs
-
- LEGEND
-
- *** 100 Mbps FDDI
- # 10 Mbps optical cable (Ethernet)
- = 2 Mbps microwave
- | 64 kbps leased line (that's 0.064 Mbps)
-
- Source: HUNGARNET/NIIF (URL <http://www.iif.hu/hungarnet.html>)
-
- FidoNet is described in section 4.3, and commercial
- networks/email/Internet Providers demand a separate document
- ('commercial.FAQ'), also see <http://www.sztaki.hu/providers/>.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 4.1 BITNET/HUEARN
-
- What follows is a listing of all EARN nodes in Hungary, with contact
- info. This information is also available on the following gopher:
- <gopher://cc1.kuleuven.ac.be/11/nodeearn/hungary.helpnode>.
-
- HUBIIF11 IIF Department Budapest, Hungary
- IIF;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Internet address : hubiif11.sztaki.hu
- User Info: Sandor Aranyi;IB001ARA@HUEARN;+36 1 1497984
- Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUBIIF61 IIF Department Budapest, Hungary
- IIF;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Internet address : mars.iif.hu
- User Info: Istvan Polakovics;polakovi@mars.iif.hu;+36 1 1665644
- Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUBME11 Technical University of Budapest
- Technical University;of Budapest;Muegyetem rkp 9. R. ep;H-1111
- Budapest, Hungary
- Internet address : atlantis.bme.hu
- User Info: Sandor Kovacs;postmast@HUBME11;+36 1 4632422
- Fax : +36 1 1665711
-
- HUBME51 Technical University of Budapest
- Technical University;Muegytem Rakpart 9;H-1111 Budapest
- Internet address : bmeik.eik.bme.hu
- User Info: Laszlo Fekete;FEKETE@HUBME51;+36 1 1812172
- Phone : +36 1 1812172 ; Fax : +36 1 1166711
-
- HUBPSZ12 Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor
- Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Internet address : hubpsz12.sztaki.hu ;
- User Info: Sandor Aranyi;IB001ARA@HUEARN;+36 1 1497984
- Phone : +36 1 1497984 ; Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUBPSZ61 Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor
- Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Net Operator: Sandor Aranyi;IB001ARA@HUEARN;+36 1 1497986
-
- HUBPSZ62 Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of
- Sciences;Lagymanyosi ut 11;1111 Budapest
- Net Operator: Sandor Aranyi;IB001ARA@HUEARN;+36 1 1497986
- Phone : +36 1 2698283 ; Fax : +36 1 2698288
-
- HUEARN Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor
- Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Internet address : huearn.sztaki.hu ;
- User Info: Miklos Pasztor;EARN@HUEARN;+36 1 2698286
- Phone : +36 1 2698283 ; Fax : +36 1 2698288
-
- HUECO University of Economic Sciences Budapest, Hungary
- University of Economic Sci;Computer Center;Kinizsi u 1-7;1092 Budapest
- Internet address : ursus.bke.hu ;
- User Info: Robert Vari;KSZK002@HUECO;+36 1 1175224
- Phone : +36 1 1181317 ; Fax : +36 1 1175224
-
- HUELLA Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor
- Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Node admin: Gizella Raba;h1006pos@huella;+36 1 1497986
- Phone : +36 1 1497984 ; Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUGBOX Computer and Automation Institute Budapest, Hungary
- Computer and Automation Inst;Hungarian Academy of Sciences;Victor
- Hugo 18-22;1132 Budapest
- Internet address : hugbox.sztaki.hu ;
- User Info: Miklos Pasztor;PASZTOR@HUGBOX;+36 1 1497532
- Phone : +36 1 1497532 ; Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUGIRK51 University of Agriculture Sciences
- University of Agriculture;Pater Karoly ut 1;H-2103 Godollo
- Internet address : vax.gau.hu ;
- User Info: Zoltan Toth;PYMPO@HUGIRK51;+36 28 30200 -1015
- Phone : +36 28 30200 -1015 ; Fax : +36 28 20804
-
- HUKLTEDR Kossuth Lajos University Debrecen, Hungary
- Internet address : dragon.klte.hu ;
- User Info: Robert Nemkin;buci@dragon.klte.hu
-
- HUKLTE51 Kossuth Lajos University, Debrecen
- Kossuth Lajos University;Egyetem Ter 1; PF. 58;H-4010 Debrecen
- Internet address : huni7.cic.klte.hu ;
- User Info: Zoltan Gal;ZGAL@HUKLTE51;+36 52 18800
- Phone : +36 52 18800 ; Fax : +36 52 16783
-
- HUSOTE51 University of Medical Science Budapest, Hungary
- University of Medical Science;SOTE;Ulloi u. 26.;1085 Budapest
- Internet address : janus.sote.hu ;
- User Info: Gabor Magyar;maggab@husote51;+36 1 1141705
- Phone : +36 1 1141705 ; Fax : +36 1 1297866
-
- HUSZEG11 Jozsef Attila University, Szeged, Hungary
- Jozsef Attila University;Computer Centre;Arpad ter 2.;H-6720
- Szeged;Hungary
- User Info: Ferenc Scherer;J20I0SF@HUSZEG11;+36 62 321022
- Miklos Csuri;J20I0CM@HUSZEG11;+36
- Phone : +36 62 321022 ; Fax : +36 62 322227
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 4.2 HUNGARIAN ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH NETWORK (HUNGARNET)
-
- This information is also available on
- <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/hungarnet.html>.
-
- Organisational Structure:
- HUNGARNET is an association and also the computer network of Hungarian
- institutes of higher education, research and development, libraries and
- other public collections. HUNGARNET funding comes from the R&D
- Information Infrastructure Program (IIF) sponsored by the Hungarian
- Academy of Science, the National Committee of Technological
- Development, the Ministry for Culture and Education and the National
- Science Foundation. About 500 organizations have access to HUNGARNET
- services. HUNGARNET as an association represents Hungary in
- international networking organizations (e.g. TERENA).
-
- Generic Services:
- HUNGARNET provides access to the Internet and several other national
- network services over leased lines and the public packet switched data
- network. Lot of different services (e.g. gopher, ftp, WWW, data bases)
- provided by member organizations are available on the net. Centrally
- supported and coordinated services are:
- - email (internet SMPT, EARN BSMTP, OSI X.400, UUCP, XXX ELLA)
- - email gateways between the different email systems above
- - distribution services (LISTSERV, news)
- - information services (ftp, gopher, WWW servers, data bases)
- - directory services (X.500)
- - individual accounts and login
-
- External Connectivity:
- HUNGARNET is subscriber to EBONE and EMPB/EuropaNET as well. There are
- two 64 kbps leased lines to EBONE (Vienna EBS). These two lines should
- be upgraded to a single 256 kbps line in the near future. HUNGARNET
- uses two 64 kbps interfaces on the EMPB/EuropaNET node in Budapest as
- well. These two interfaces should also be upgraded to a single 256 kbps
- interface very soon.
-
- Internal Connectivity:
- Internal connectivity of HUNGARNET is based partly on the public X.25
- service of the Hungarian PTT and partly on the community's private IP
- backbone network (HBONE). The kernel of the HBONE infrastructure is in
- Budapest, where several important organizations are connected in
- different ways (64-256 kbps leased lines, 1-2 Mbps microwave links, 10
- Mbps optical Ethernet, 100 Mbps FDDI). Several cities (regional
- centers) in the country are also connected to the network via 64 kbps
- leased lines (Miskolc, Nyiregyhaza, Debrecen, Kecskemet, Szeged, Pecs,
- Veszprem) and 2 Mbps microwave (Godollo). Now there are about 50
- organizations directly connected to the backbone and about 50 others
- using IP over X.25. The number of the registered, connected hosts is
- about ten thousand. There is an ongoing development, new regional
- centers (Kaposvar, Keszthely, Szombathely, Sopron, Gyor) and several
- organizations in Budapest will be connected subsequently. Many users
- do not have IP connectivity yet but are connected to the public X.25
- network. There are several services (e.g. individual login, mail,
- gopher, news) that are open for traditional XXX/X.25 access.
-
- Contact Persons:
- Miklos NAGY <mailto:h11nag@ella.hu> - head of the HUNGARNET/IIF
- coordination office
- Laszlo CSABA <mailto:h26csa@ella.hu> - HUNGARNET/IIF technical director
- Balazs MARTOS <mailto:martos@sztaki.hu> - HBONE project manager
- Nandor HORVATH <mailto:horvath@sztaki.hu> - Local Internet Registry,
- .hu top level domain contact
- IP address and domain administration: <mailto:hostmaster@sztaki.hu>
- Network management: <mailto:net-admin@sztaki.hu>
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 4.3 FidoNet
-
- FidoNet connects through sztaki.hu, as indicated above.
-
- There are three FidoNet nodes: Budapest NET (2:371/0); West Hungary
- Net (2:372/0); and Tisza NET (2:370/0). If you want to write on the
- FidoNet, chances are you already know how. *PLEASE* find out what you
- are about to do instead of experimenting with the Hungarian net - don't
- add to the problems for the folks in Hungary having to deal with the
- underdeveloped phone system and outrageous international tolls ;-<. For
- further information I post a Fido-sheet separately from this FAQ, where
- there are also telephone numbers and further addresses, but again: try
- to verify that you are mailing to a valid address (the BBS situation
- may have changed since the copy you are reading got updated - look for
- current FIDO listing on the net, or better yet contact the person you
- want to reach by other means first)!. If you can send Internet email
- and have the FidoNet address, you can write to it by transforming it to
- appropriate .FIDONET.ORG format.
-
- Fidonet mail works with Hungarian BBS's but you have to know whom to
- reach. I will attempt to maintain a separate Fido posting to Usenet;
- please try to make sure you email to a valid address and in particular
- avoid using outdated sources on Hungarian BBS's (otherwise your
- misdirected trial will burden the Hungarian network coordinator!).
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 4.4 Finding out somebody's email-address in Hungary
-
- The bigger academic domains have on-line directories (CSO phonebooks):
-
- Technical University, Budapest
- gopher://goliat.eik.bme.hu/11/engl/tel-adat/hazi-tele
-
- Budapest University of Economic Sciences*
- gopher://URSUS.BKE.HU:71/11/kozgaz/telefon
- (*under construction)
-
- Semmelweis University of Medical Sciences, Budapest
- <gopher://xenia.sote.hu:105/2>
-
- Central Research Inst. of Physics, Budapest
- <gopher://sunserv.kfki.hu:105/2>
-
- Members of the Szeged University Association
- <gopher://sol.cc.u-szeged.hu:105/2>
-
- Janus Pannonius University of Sciences, Pecs
- <gopher://ipiux.jpte.hu:1051/2>
- <http://ipisun.jpte.hu/cgi-bin/ph.pl>
-
- University of Veszprem
- <gopher://miat0.vein.hu:105/2>
-
- ELLA also has an on-line directory: <telnet://hugbox.sztaki.hu:203>
- (i.e. address a special port). Note that the opening screen uses
- special characters for the accented letters but the data records have
- combinations of vowel plus ',: or " instead (i.e. searching for
- hollo'si would retrieve a record, but hollosi won't)!
-
- If the person has registered him/herself with the RaDir database of
- HIX, you might try the following (note, however, that most parts of
- RaDir are badly out of date):
-
- - by <gopher://www.hix.com/11/HIX/radir> (a link to the same is
- offered by <http://www.hix.com/hix/> on the World Wide Web); from
- inside Hungary use <gopher://hix.elte.hu/11/HIX/HIX/radir>, or
- <http://hal9000.elte.hu/hix/radir.html> (this last one is a true HTML
- search form)). Under RaDir, you'll find the entire database
- cross-indexed by search keys.
-
- - by 'finger +whois:"SEARCHWORD"@www.hix.com' you can look up records
- containing "SEARCHWORD" string in the database
-
- - by email: send a blank message <mailto:radir@hix.com>. You'll
- receive, in several chunks, the entire database of users, their
- electronic and snail-mail addresses, etc. You'll need a decent editor
- to search what you're looking for.
-
- If you have some idea what institution to check at, you may find an
- online directory service -- many are available, and could be reached
- through the Hungarian gophers (or WWW sites) mentioned in section 3.
- Try contacting the (electronic) postmaster, usually
- postmaster@site.domain.name, or using 'finger' to inquire about users.
-
- As a last resort, send in your query to a discussion group. Readers of
- <news:soc.culture.magyar>, <mailto:HUNGARY@gwuvm.gwu.edu> discussion
- list (section 1.7), or some HIX-list (<mailto:tipp@hix.com> in
- particular, see 2.1) may be able to help. Be aware, though, that most
- participants are located abroad - especially in the case of the Usenet
- group!
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5. ODDS AND ENDS
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.1 Traveling with a computer in Hungary
-
- The electricity is 220 V, 50 Hz. The frequency, in fact, fluctuates a
- lot, but it doesn't cause any problem when operating computer devices.
- (Don't trust too much your plug-in clock radios though.) If you are
- from any country running on 110 V or around, due to complications in
- voltage conversion, a battery driven laptop or notebook is your best
- bet. However, if you decide to take your desktop system, printer, etc.,
- you have a good chance that the device can also be operated on 220 V.
- Check it first before you go through unnecessary trouble. If not, you
- have to apply 220 V to 110 V AC converters (you might need more than
- one; check the power ratings of your devices & converters). WARNING!
- Your converters should be designed for *electronic/motorized devices*.
- Refuse any converter for *heating appliances* even if its power rating
- is much higher! These converters are not real transformers, and can
- cause major damages to your electronic devices.
-
- Also make sure you are able to connect to the Hungarian grounded power
- outlet, because that's what's recommended for your appliances.
- Therefore you should try to find grounded plug adapters and/or voltage
- converters. Connecting to ungrounded outlets causes possibly no harm,
- but for your own & your devices' safety grounded connections should be
- preferred.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2 Conventions & standards for coding Hungarian accents
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.0 Introduction & section overview
-
- During the evolution of teletypes and computers, two character tables
- survived, acquiring major importance in later computer systems. One is
- EBCDIC, primarily used in ancient IBM mainframes. The other one, ASCII,
- can be considered today's ubiquitous standard in computing worldwide.
- The rest of this section, therefore, pays attention to ASCII code, very
- unfairly ignoring EBCDIC, since none of the accent conversion programs
- support neither this code table nor the CMS environment.
-
- Since the language of computing has been English from the beginning,
- the original ASCII table was limited to the characters used in English:
- letters of the Latin alphabet, a few punctuation marks and some other
- special symbols. Since the number of all these characters, plus the
- unprintable "control" characters (located in the first 32 positions of
- the ASCII table, responsible for different control functions) doesn't
- exceed 128, the real 'brilliant' idea of representing the ASCII table
- in 7 bits spread like wild fire all over the computer world. No wonder,
- that most of the Internet mailers and Usenet hubs are also set up to
- forward documents in 7-bit ASCII only. (Read the rest of the section
- carefully to learn how to overcome these problems.) As computing and
- word processing started to rise up in the rest of the world, there was
- an increasing demand to represent these national characters as well. (A
- good example is Hungarian. The extra consonants [nonexistent in
- English] are formed by merely juxtaposing 2 (or 3 in case of dzs)
- regular Latin characters; so there is no problem here. However, the
- special vowels of the language are denoted by applying different
- accents on the Latin 'base-vowel', introducing new characters, the so
- called accented vowels.) It's an obvious idea to place these national
- characters and other fancy symbols utilizing codes 128 to 255, still
- remaining within the byte limit. Different character sets have been
- created by defining purpose- or language-specific characters for the
- upper half of the table, while keeping the 7-bit ASCII codes unchanged.
- (Note: Some character sets also re-use codes between 0 and 31, the
- domain of ASCII control characters, keeping some, or none of them.
- Using these codes, however, is pretty difficult, device- and
- implementation-dependent, etc. Therefore it wouldn't be wise to put
- accented characters here, but fortunately none of the sets listed below
- did it actually.) Hopefully Unicode will ultimately stop this
- confusion, but until then there's a long long way to go.
-
- At this point let's clarify the terminology:
-
- .. ASCII (also 7-bit or plain ASCII) data:
- Usually text (but not necessarily, see 5.2.5.1.), containing only 7-bit
- ASCII characters, including the control ones.
- .. 8-bit (extended) ASCII data:
- Text containing the uniform 7-bit ASCII characters, plus special
- characters (with code greater than 127) according to one of the 8-bit
- character sets.
- .. Binary data:
- Non-text data (executables, pictures, etc.) containing any 8-bit value.
-
- The different kludges accepted by Internet users to denote accented
- vowels in 7-bit ASCII are described in 5.2.1. The most important
- extended ASCII character sets are introduced in 5.2.2. 5.2.3 shows the
- accented character representations used by high-level formatting
- languages. The correct ways of transferring files among word processor
- [on the Net] are detailed in 5.2.4. If the data to be transferred is
- not 7-bit ASCII, 5.2.5 tells you what to do. Last, but not least, 5.2.6
- introduces the programs in the HIX archives (and mentions some others)
- that address the problem of conversion between the various types of
- accent representation.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.1 House rules for plain (7-bit) ASCII
-
- If you are limited to the use of 7-bit ASCII, you have essentially the
- following choices to deal with the accented characters:
-
- 5.2.1.0 No accent marks at all
-
- Simple and sure-fire. In fact, the most common 'solution'.
-
- 5.2.1.1 The '~" coding (also called "marking notation" or "Babai-code")
- [Sometimes nicknamed as _repu~lo"_.]
-
- Here's a sample:
-
- O~t hu"to"ha'zbo'l ke'rtu~nk szi'nhu'st
- a'rvi'ztu"ro" tu~ko~rfu'ro'ge'p
- O~t sze'p szu"zla'ny o"ru~lt i'ro't nyu'z
-
- or, in the alternative ':" _repu:lo"_ format:
-
- O:t hu"to"ha'zbo'l ke'rtu:nk szi'nhu'st
- a'rvi'ztu"ro" tu:ko:rfu'ro'ge'p
- O:t sze'p szu"zla'ny o"ru:lt i'ro't nyu'z
-
- Quite readable, though a bit tricky to disambiguate mechanically:
- remember, the " or : or ' may also serve as punctuation marks. (This
- problem can be handled using Maxent's escaping capabilities, see
- 5.2.6.6.)
-
- Warning! Don't get confused: in TeX (see 5.2.3.1) " denotes umlaut!
-
- 5.2.1.2 The 123 coding (also "numerical notation" or "Pro1sze1ky-code")
-
- Here's the same text:
-
- O2t hu3to3ha1zbo1l ke1rtu2nk szi1nhu1st
- a1rvi1ztu3ro3 tu2ko2rfu1ro1ge1p
- O2t sze1p szu3zla1ny o3ru2lt i1ro1t nyu1z
-
- The only one that's both short and unambiguous, though it takes some
- getting used to. 1 stands for the stroke, 2 for the short umlaut, 3 for
- the 'Hungarian' or long umlaut (double acute). Very easily converted to
- other formats. (Also can be ambiguous, though with much smaller
- probability. E.g. U2, CO2, u21591@uicvm.uic.edu, etc.)
-
- 5.2.1.3 Telegraphic style. For example,
-
- Oet huetoehaazbool keertuenk sziinhuust
- aarviiztueroe tuekoerfuuroogeep
- Oet szeep szuezlaany oeruelt iiroot nyuuz
-
- Avoid it like the plague because
-
- 1. It's ambiguous. (Think of Goethe, Oetker, Eoersi, Csooori, poeen.)
- 2. Coding of o" & u" (o3 & u3) is not consistent:
- u3 = ue (fallback to u2), uue, uee, ueue
- 3. Absolutely not a pleasure to read.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.2 Fancy 8-bit character sets (extended ASCII)
-
- The following rollcall lists the most important character sets
- supported by the majority of hardware and software, including the
- accent conversion programs. The available Hungarian accented characters
- are detailed for each set.
-
- Notes:
-
- Henceforth when referring to an accented character, the numerical
- (Pro1sze1ki) notation will be used to maintain clarity.
-
-
- 5.2.2.1 PC-codepages
-
- (*) PC-437: Hardware
-
- The basic hardware character set of PC-compatible systems. Since it
- was supposed to contain many symbols (line drawing characters, some
- Greek letters, etc.), and be general, it's pretty poor in terms of
- accented characters. Missing Hungarian vowels: o3, u3 [substitute them
- with o^ & u^], A1 [substitute it with A-circle], I1, O1, O3, U1, U3.
-
- (*) CWI recommendation for Hungarian accents:
-
- A standard initiative to replace the many house rules of character code
- assignment for accents unavailable in PC-437. Codes are assigned as
- follows:
-
- o3->147 [o^], u3->150 [u^], A1->143, I1->141 [i`] or 140 [I^],
- O1->149 [o`], O3->167, U1->151 [u`], U3->153 [y~]
-
- (*) PC-850: Multilingual
-
- Contains all the accented vowels but ?3. Substitute them with ?^.
- Note: ? means o, u, O or U.
-
- (*) PC-852: Latin 2
-
- Contains all the accented vowels. Try to use this if available.
-
- (*) PC-860: Portuguese
- (*) PC-863: Canadian-French
- (*) PC-865: Nordic
-
- These sets miss various Hungarian accents, esp. in upper case. Using
- them for a Hungarian text makes absolutely no sense.
-
- 5.2.2.2 ISO character sets
-
- These character sets are specified by ISO standards. As far as ALL
- (not only Hungarian) accented vowels concerned, ISO 8859/1, 2 & 9 is
- equivalent to Windows Latin 1, 2 & 5 respectively.
-
- (*) ISO 8859/1:
- (*) ISO 8859/3:
-
- Contain all the accented vowels but ?3. Substitute them with ?^.
-
- (*) ISO 8859/2:
-
- Contains all the accented vowels. Try to use this if available.
-
- Fonts for iso-8859-2 (and some other) character sets can be found at
- <ftp://ftp.tarki.hu/pub/font/> for various operation systems, and at
- <ftp://almos.vein.hu/ssa/kbd_es_font/> (mirrored at
- <ftp://ftp.vma.bme.hu/pub/ssa/kbd_es_font/> and
- <ftp://ftp.tarki.hu/pub/ssa/kbd_es_font/>) mostly for Unix. There is
- material for Hungarianizing the Linux (and possibly other Unix variant)
- operation system at <ftp://ftp.tarki.hu/pub/magyar/linux/>.
-
- 5.2.2.3 Others
-
- The following character sets are supported by various laser printers.
- Roman-8 bears special importance as being the default character set of
- many printers.
-
- (*) Ventura International & Roman-8:
- (*) MC Text:
-
- Contain all the accented vowels but ?3. Substitute them with ?^.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.3 Text formatting languages
-
- The text formatting languages listed below, beyond their powerful text
- formatting capabilities, also include the specification of [almost] all
- the accented characters. These languages give an alternative way of
- dealing with accents in 7-bit ASCII, especially if the software that
- can display, print or convert these representations is available.
- [Unlike notations in 5.2.1, the "raw" files of these languages are not
- intended to be read by ordinary users.]
-
- 5.2.3.1 [La]TeX.
-
- Invented by D. E. Knuth, TeX (pronounce as [tech]; 'X' denotes the
- Greek letter 'chi'), and the macro collection based on it, LaTeX, are
- today's most popular text formatting languages for document creation
- and DTP.
-
- To continue with the same example,
-
- \"{O}t h\H{u}t\H{o}h\'{a}zb\'{o}l k\'{e}rt\"{u}nk sz\'{\i}nh\'{u}st
-
- \'{a}rv\'{\i}zt\H{u}r\H{o} t\"{u}k\"{o}rf\'{u}r\'{o}g\'{e}p
-
- \"{O}t sz\'{e}p sz\H{u}zl\'{a}ny \H{o}r\"{u}lt \'{i}r\'{o}t ny\'{u}z
-
- This is meant to be printed with TeX or previewed as a dvi file.
- Wholly unambiguous, can be automatically converted to/from several
- other formats (see 5.2.6). Also check the babel system for LaTeX with
- the Hungarian specific option, available from FTP sites kth.se or
- goya.dit.upm.es.
-
- 5.2.3.2 HTML (HyperText Markup Language)
-
- Unfortunately, the HTML-2 standard still does not contain notation for
- Hungarumlaut (long umlaut, double acute). We use tilde or circumflex
- instead. The preferred notation is o with tilde õ and u with
- circumflex û. In the example above,
-
- Öt hûtõházból kértünk
- színhúst
-
- árvíztûrõ
- tükörfúrógép
-
- Öt szép szûzlány õrült
- írót nyúz
-
- 5.2.3.3 RTF (Rich Text Format)
-
- This standard is widespread among Microsoft word processors. For
- non-ASCII characters it uses the following coding:
-
- \'XX
-
- where XX is the code of the given ISO 8859/2 (or PC-852 for Word for
- DOS) character in hexadecimal.
-
- 5.2.3.4 Adobe PostScript
-
- It is a universal standard for describing any kind of graphics,
- including fonts, but it is aimed at producing the final (typically
- printed) copy of documents and not at word-processing per se. For a
- starter document see <http://www.adobe.com/PS/PS-QA.html> or
- <ftp://wilma.cs.brown.edu/pub/comp.lang.postscript/FAQ.txt> or
- <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/comp.answers/postscript/faq/part1-4>.
- If one has the right accented fonts sets then, in theory, the output is
- transferable between different machines - but often we run into hurdles
- in practice.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.4 Microcomputer products: The word processors
-
- Different word processors on different microcomputers use several
- proprietary internal control sequences to handle accented characters,
- as much as other symbols, and other text formatting commands. If you
- want to transfer a document like this, you have to convert this [very
- probably] binary file (8-bit ASCII with all kinds of binary crap) to
- text (7-bit ASCII), see 5.2.5.1, unless your mailer can handle binary
- directly, see 5.2.5.2. Make sure, however, that the recipient of your
- document also possesses the same or equivalent word processor, or a
- word processor supporting the format you used.
-
- It might happen that you want to use your document in another word
- processing system, or a plain text editor. Today's word processors
- offer conversion to a few formats, and also pure text with different
- character sets (5.2.2). The resulting file, if necessary, can be
- converted further to 7-bit ASCII as shown in 5.2.6. (The output is
- already 7-bit ASCII in Microsoft's RTF, see 5.2.3.3.)
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.5 Switching binary to ASCII and vice versa
-
- 5.2.5.1 Uuencode & uudecode
-
- The easiest and most popular way of conversion between binary and
- ASCII is the use of the twin sisters uuencode and uudecode. These
- programs were created originally for Unix ('uu' stands for Unix to
- Unix), but today they are implemented under most platforms.
-
- Uuencode makes an ASCII file out of a binary one, forming 61 character
- long lines to avoid problems excessively long lines can cause in the
- different mailer agents. This conversion increases the size of the file
- by 40%. Warning! Understand the really goofy usage of uuencode. The
- parameters specify the local & remote BINARY filenames respectively.
- The encoded ASCII result is sent to the standard output, it has to be
- redirected into a file explicitly. (E.g. uuencode myface.gif myface.gif
- > myface.uue )
-
- Uudecode converts the encoded ASCII file back to binary. It is smart:
- using the "begin" and "end" tags placed in the encoded file, uudecode
- is able to retrieve the encoded information automatically discarding
- everything before and after the tags (headers, signatures, other junk),
- even if it's inserted in the middle of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Its
- usage is also simple: only the input filename has to be specified; the
- original filename is restored from the "begin" tag. (E.g. uudecode
- yourface.mal )
-
- 5.2.5.2 MIME support
-
- Many modern mailers support the MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
- Extensions) standard being able to transfer different file formats
- beyond plain text. In this case the ASCII/binary conversion is the
- mailer's internal affair. Some mailers make explicit calls to uuencode
- and uudecode, some others (e.g. PINE) have different built in
- conversion algorithms, trying to choose the most appropriate one for
- the given binary file. (One type of MIME encoding substitutes an
- unprintable character by its code in hexadecimal, preceded by an =
- sign. That's why you often see them splattered around.) In either case,
- however, the user is not responsible for the conversion, the mailer
- takes care of it automatically.
-
- 5.2.5.3 Binhex
-
- BinHex files are 7-bit ASCII text files, typically used for encoding
- Macintosh binaries. Conversion is done by various applications, see eg.
- <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/comp.answers/macintosh/general-faq>.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.2.6 Translating between various accent formats
-
- From the HIX archives (see section 3) the following programs are
- available. The regular location is
- <http://www.hix.com/hix/hixcore/senddoc/info/programs/>, though
- you should also check <http://www.hix.com/hix/hixcore/senddoc/new/>
- for updates. At the time of this writing the SENDDOC archive is
- extremely ill-organized and outdated in many parts, including,
- unfortunately, the 'new' directory.
-
- Warning! From abroad always access the HIX archives via
- <http://www.hix.com/hix/hixcore/senddoc/>,
- <gopher://www.hix.com/11/HIX/senddoc>,
- <mailto:senddoc@www.hix.com>, or 'finger senddoc@www.hix.com'
- (the latter only works for text, and you may have to redirect it to a
- pager or file). The mirror at <gopher://hix.elte.hu> is updated only at
- certain periods of time, also there is a limited bandwidth on the lines
- connecting Hungary to the world (see section 4).
-
- 5.2.6.1 ekezettelenites
-
- Gabor Toth's UNIX shell script for deleting unwanted accents from mail
- files.
-
- 5.2.6.2 etex
-
- Gabor Toth's shareware C source code for converting the marking or
- numerical accent notation to TeX-format. It also claims to be capable
- of hyphenation. Supports the UNIX platform.
-
- 5.2.6.3 hion
-
- Peter Verhas's C source code. It's an improved version of etex, as it
- reduces the probability of incorrect hyphenation with some built-in
- exception library. Hion is able to do the conversion between the
- numerical (or, redefining each accent mark, also the marking) accent
- notation & TeX-format, and remove accents if the input is an accent
- notation. Read his documentation. Supported platforms: VMS, MS-DOS,
- UNIX. Available from <ftp://ftp.tarki.hu/pub/magyar/TeX/hion.tar.gz>
- or <ftp://ftp.digital.bme.hu/hion/>.
-
- 5.2.6.4 drtc.c
-
- Peter Verhas's freeware C source for conversion between text and RTF
- (Rich Text Format), character sets ISO 8852/2 (Latin 2), PC-852 (Latin
- 2) and CWI. The program attempts to find out the inbound format
- automatically, RTF or text as well as used character set. The outbound
- format is the same as the inbound format, the program changes only the
- character set. In other words, the program does not convert from RTF ot
- text or from text to RTF. Supported platforms: VMS, MS-DOS, & UNIX and
- other platforms supporting ANSI C.
-
- 5.2.6.5 hun.c
-
- Gabor Ligeti's freeware C source code for accent removal and
- conversion between the marking & numerical accent notation, TeX-format
- and PC-852 (Latin 2) codepage. Warning! Conversion capabilities are not
- orthogonal, type hun /? for the supported conversions. No platform
- limitations are indicated.
-
- 5.2.6.6 MAXENT.UUE_V6.0a
-
- Peter Csaszar's freeware C source code compressed with pkzip & encoded
- with uuencode (see 5.2.5.1). Warning! As of 6/12/95, the HIX gopher's
- /HIX/SENDDOC/info/programs directory still contains 'maxent.c', the
- very old version V1.4 of Maxent. Don't touch this file, go for version
- V6.0a, currently in <http://www.hix.com/hix/hixcore/senddoc/new/MAXENT.Z>.
-
- Maxent provides 100% orthogonality in conversion between any of the
- accent notations listed in 5.2.1 but telegraphic style, and any of the
- character sets listed in 5.2.2, allowing multiple notations in the
- input file. The domain of conversion includes 6 vowels and 6 accent
- types, applying therefore a house rule extension of the marking and
- numerical accent notations. (Hoping that this extension becomes widely
- accepted, no longer remaining a house rule.) Language accent profiles
- other than the default Hungarian can be selected. Further accent
- services include accent notation escaping & de-escaping (see 5.2.1.1),
- and flexible substitution of the o3 etc. characters.
-
- Beyond some little services, the rest of the major features provide
- comprehensive retabulation strategies, full newline conversion
- capabilities and script file execution (ideal for maintaining mail
- folders after download).
-
- The help given by the program can be saved into a file by typing
- maxent -h0 > maxent.hlp . Print this file for fancy bedtime reading.
-
- Maxent supports only the MS-DOS environment, and should be compiled by
- a Borland C compiler. This is the sacrifice for the extensive services
- provided.
-
- 5.2.6.7 ekezet.dot
-
- Via anonymous <ftp://bme-tel.ttt.bme.hu/pub/income/ekezetes/>, you can
- find Kornel Umann's WinWord template capable of many kinds of
- conversion. Also find other goodies in the directory above.
-
- 5.2.6.8 hixiso
-
- Olivier Clary's Unix scripts for converting accented text appearing
- on HIX are at <ftp://almos.vein.hu/ssa/kbd_es_font/hixiso.tar.gz>.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.3 Information sources pertaining to the rest of Central Europe
-
- This section is by no means to be comprehensive. For a big but dated
- (1992) list see
- <gopher://poniecki.berkeley.edu/00/archives/polish.archives/Network/EE-MotherList>.
-
- Both OMRI and CET cover the general region in their news. See Section
- 1.1 and 1.2, respectively.
-
- To complement the HUNGARY list (see Section 1.7), at the same listserv
- at Buffalo there exist the Middle European discussion list MIDEUR-L as
- well as POLAND-L and SLOVAK-L. Send the usual command to
- <mailto:LISTSERV@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU> (or simply LISTSERV@UBVM on
- BITNET):
-
- SUBSCRIBE listname-L Yourfirstname Yourlastname.
-
- On Usenet there is soc.culture.romanian, soc.culture.czecho-slovak,
- soc.culture.polish, and the gatewayed bit.listserv.mideur-l and
- bit.listserv.slovak-l; bit.listserv.hungary has been established, but
- many sites do not have it. The surest way to receive everything is via
- email. If you prefer using Usenet newsreaders you find HIX's HUNGARY
- digests posted to soc.culture.magyar (which group does not seem to
- suffer the poor propagation affecting some of the bit.listserv
- groups). Please notice that while the listserv groups are
- bi-directionally gatewayed, i.e. posts to them get propagated back to
- the original mailing list, the posts coming from HIX to
- soc.culture.magyar are mere copies of the mailing list messages - do
- not reply to the newgroups since your answer won't reach the email
- readers (who constitute a likely large majority).
-
- Speaking of limitations of distribution be aware that some commercial
- Internet connection providers (most blatantly American Online)
- established their own groups with topics overlapping existing Usenet
- hierarchy. The utility of these local groups is seriously limited since
- they are, unlike the open real Usenet newsgroups such as those
- mentioned above, unavailable to anyone but their own subscribers (i.e.
- a small domestic fraction of all the Internet/Usenet users worldwide).
- Please do not post to non-local groups saying how nice would be to use
- these specialized forums - we can not. Use the newsgroup
- soc.culture.magyar or the mailing lists!
-
- The Central European Regional Research Organization (CERRO) can be
- joined at <mailto:LISTSERV@AEARN.ACO.NET> with the command
- SUBSCRIBE CERRO-L Firstname Lastname. This is a scholarly group that
- deposits papers and the like in an electronic archive in Vienna. The
- archive is accessible with anonymous <ftp://wu-wien.ac.at>, or with
- <gopher://gopher.wu-wien.ac.at>.
-
- The Eastern Europe Business Network (e-europe@pucc.princeton.edu) is
- primarily remarkable for its size (1700+ subscribers). Messages tend to
- be brief bursts of announcements, questions and, unsurprisingly, calls
- for or queries about business. The list is administered by Yale's Civic
- Education Project (Chris Owen, <mailto:cep@minerva.cis.yale.edu>). To
- subscribe, send a message to the address
- <mailto:listserv@pucc.princeton.edu> that has
-
- subscribe e-europe YourFirstName YourLastName
- in its body.
-
- The repository for Voice of America material, accessible with
- <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>, also contains some information and news
- items relevant to the region.
-
- Check the NATO archive for goodies: <gopher://gopher.nato.int>.
-
- The Slovakia Document Store will answer all your questions about
- Slovakia: on the World Wide Web, <http://www.eunet.sk>, via
- <gopher://gopher.eunet.sk>, via <ftp://ftp.eunet.sk/slovakia/>, via
- gophermail: send a message with Subject: HELP
- <mailto:gophermail@slovakia.eu.net>.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 5.4 Hungarian radio and television broadcasts available
-
- See the separate document "Hungarian broadcast information FAQ",
- available at <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/broadcast> as well
- as in the Usenet archives.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 6. CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS FAQ
-
- (the order is alphabetical by last name)
-
- Beke Tibor <mailto:tbeke@mit.edu> general layout, 2.1, 5.3
- Bruner, Rick <mailto:bruner@ind.eunet.hu> 1.3
- Csaszar Peter <mailto:pcsaszar@eecs.uic.edu> 5.1, 5.2
- Fabian Peter <mailto:fabian@icgeb.trieste.it> 3.1, 4.1, 4.4
- Fekete Zoli <mailto:fekete@bc.edu> much of the rest
- Hewes, Cameron <mailto:hewes@traveller.cz> 1.2
- Hollo Kriszta <mailto:hollo@sztaki.hu> 4.2
- Saghi-Szabo Gotthard <mailto:gotthard@quartz.ciw.edu>, section 1.8
- Toth, Joseph <mailto:joseph_toth@magyar.siliconvalley.com>, section 2.3
- Umann Kornel <mailto:umann@hit.bme.hu> 5.2
- Varnum, Ken <mailto:webmaster@omri.cz> 1.1
-
- If you have a question or remark regarding some specific section, you
- may want to contact its author. The FAQ as such continues to be
- maintained by Zoli Fekete <mailto:fekete@bc.edu>. The keeper hereby
- expresses the many thanks we all owe to every contributor - and above
- all to Tibor Beke who brought about this cooperative effort, and took
- upon consolidating the whole (with Peter Csaszar who took over the
- next-to-last editing). Still, any errors (with the exception of the
- independently maintained section 2.3) are the responsibility of Zoli -
- who'd like to hear all corrections, recommendations or just comments
- readers may have!
- Acknowledgement is also due here to Jozsef Hollosi and Arpad Palotas,
- for providing webspace to this FAQ on the HIX server and helping to
- improve its homepage, respectively.
-
- - - ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 7. How to read this FAQ - what's in there < ~!@#$%^&* >
-
- One of these days ;-) there will be a guide here about how to handle
- all the strange things that you may see embedded in this text; but in
- the meantime, if you don't know yet what URLs are and are not reading a
- copy thru a WWW browser that may show a selectable link: just do the
- sensible thing and use email to access 'mailto:' addresses, ftp for
- 'ftp:' and telnet for 'telnet:'...
-
- Updated versions of this document will be in
- <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/posted>
- or <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/hungarian-faq>. Notice
- that the canonical Usenet archive <ftp://rtfm.mit.edu> is often
- overloaded - if you can't get connected try one of the mirror sites (of
- which a list by countries can be found in
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet/news.answers/news-answers/introduction>
- that is also available thru the RTFM mail-server shown below) - eg.
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet/news.answers/hungarian-faq> in
- the USA! You can also retrieve it via <mailto:mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu>
- with the command "send usenet/news.answers/hungarian-faq" in the body
- of the message, or via 'finger hungarian-faq@www.hix.com'.
- A brief extract of hungarian-faq, concentrating on the email services,
- is also available now
- <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/hungarian-faq-pointer> or
- 'finger hungarian-faq-pointer@www.hix.com'.
- A separate document on network service providers in Hungary
- prepared independently by John Horvath <mailto:jhorv@mars.iif.hu> is
- available via email from its author or via
- <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/comm-providers>.
-
- This hungarian-faq is expected to be updated at least every couple of
- months, due to the rapid changes occuring on the net. If you are
- reading a copy whose 'Last-modified:' date shown on top is older than
- that then many parts may be out of date - in this case get the recent
- one from the sources listed above, and/or try to convince the
- administrator of the site keeping the old copy to freshen it. Please
- notice that retrieving from the Usenet archives is likely a lot faster
- than asking me personally (and most everything I can answer is already
- in here)! If you do write me <mailto:fekete@bc.edu>, then give a
- descriptive 'Subject:' line - keep in mind that much of my incoming
- email deemed unworthy by me is deleted unread in order to keep up with
- the high volume I am receiving (most of it from various mailing
- lists). The best way to ensure catching my attention - and to allow
- automatized pre-processing - is to start it with 'ZFIX:' (the name my
- mail-handler answers to is Zophisticated Free Information eXchange, in
- case you were wondering :-)).
-
- This work as a collection is copyright (1990-96) Zoli Fekete, and
- parts are copyright of their respective authors. Please do not
- redistribute substantial portions without contacting the maintainer.
- Since February 14, 1996 this document is authenticated
- by my secure public-key encrypted electronic signature
- (see <http://www.ifi.uio.no/pgp> for details),
- the public key for which is shown in the WWW link
- <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/pgp-key.asc>
- and is also attached to the end of the text available via
- 'finger magyar@world.std.com'!
- Unauthorized publishing in off-line media - such as printed, CD-ROM or
- magnetic databases - is explicitly prohibited!
-
- URL: <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/>
- Archive-name: hungarian/faq
- Soc-culture-magyar-archive-name: faq
- Last-modified: 1996/07/04
- Version: 1.50
- Posting-Frequency: every fifteen days
-
- - - --
- Zoli fekete@bc.edu, keeper of <http://www.hix.com/hungarian-faq/>
- <'finger hungarian-faq-pointer@www.hix.com'>
-
- SELLERS BEWARE: I will never buy anything from companies associated
- with inappropriate online advertising (unsolicited commercial email,
- excessive multiposting etc), and discourage others from doing so too!
-
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