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- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Newsgroups: news.newusers.questions,news.software.readers,news.software.nn,comp.mail.misc,comp.mail.pine,comp.mail.elm,comp.unix.questions,alt.internet.services,comp.answers,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Signature, Finger, & Customized Headers FAQ
- Followup-To: news.newusers.questions,news.software.readers,news.software.nn,comp.mail.misc,comp.mail.pine,comp.mail.elm,comp.unix.questions,alt.internet.services
- Date: 26 Apr 1995 13:10:13 GMT
- Organization: Infinite Ink, Seattle, Washington, USA
- Lines: 1422
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
- Expires: 10 Jun 1995 13:04:43 GMT
- Message-ID: <signature_finger_faq_798901483@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Reply-To: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Keywords: FAQ, frequent posting, signature, plan, project, finger, organization, URL, web, www, hypertext, ascii art, tin, rn, trn, strn, nn, pine, mail, news, emacs, mh, gnus, elm, man, chfn, digest
- X-Last-Updated: 1995/04/26
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu news.newusers.questions:60186 news.software.readers:18425 news.software.nn:8353 comp.mail.misc:23156 comp.mail.pine:8017 comp.mail.elm:18555 comp.unix.questions:91010 alt.internet.services:49068 comp.answers:11476 alt.answers:8908 news.answers:42804
-
- Archive-name: signature_finger_faq
- Posting-frequency: approximately monthly
- Last-modified: 25 April 1995
-
- Current hypertext version:
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/signature_finger_faq/faq.html
-
- ___ ___
- L_|_ _|_J
- ( -O> <O- )
- ___//\J ______________________________________________ L/\\___
- //-,\ | | /,-\\
- || / \\___L Signature, Finger, & Customized Headers FAQ J___// \ ||
- _ ''/\/ '---J Copyright (c) 1994-95 Nancy McGough & others L---' \/\'' _
- / \ //\\. |______________________________________________| .//\\ / \
- |_/\'/ || || \'/\_|
- ' ||_ _|| '
- |__) (__|
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- 0.0 Preliminaries
- 0.1 Getting the Latest Version of this FAQ
- 0.1.1 Hypertext
- 0.1.2 Plain Text
- 0.2 Terminology
- 0.3 Notation
- 1.0 Setting up Your Signature
- 1.1 General Unix Instructions
- 1.2 Specific Mailer & Newsreader Instructions
- 1.2.1 Pine
- 1.2.1.1 Pine 3.90 and Later
- 1.2.1.2 Pine 3.89 and Earlier
- 1.2.2 Elm
- 1.2.3 Mail
- 1.2.4 SUN OpenWindows Mailtool
- 1.2.5 Emacs Mail Mode
- 1.2.6 MH and Emacs mh-e
- 1.2.7 NN
- 1.2.8 GNUS
- 1.3 Testing Your Signature
- 1.4 Troubleshooting Your Signature
- 2.0 Finger
- 2.1 How to Finger
- 2.1.1 Unix Finger Command
- 2.1.2 Using a Web Browser to Finger
- 2.1.3 Fingering Yourself
- 2.1.4 Interesting Places to Finger
- 2.2 Changing Your Finger Information
- 2.2.1 Using chfn to change your full name (and more)
- 2.2.2 Creating Your .plan and .project files
- 2.3 Finding Out Who Fingers You
- 2.3.1 Backfinger Script
- 3.0 What to Put in Your Signature and Finger Files
- 3.1 URLs
- 3.2 Ascii Art
- 3.3 Animated Text Strings
- 3.4 Robot Fodder
- 3.5 Newsgroups for Sig Discussion
- 4.0 Customized Headers
- 4.1 Your From Header
- 4.2 Specific Mailer and Newsreader Instructions
- 4.2.1 Tin and the RN Family
- 4.2.2 Pine 3.90 and Later
- 4.2.3 Elm
- 4.2.4 NN
- 5.0 Mailer and Newsreader References
- 6.0 Contributors
- 6.1 Acknowledgements
- 6.2 If You'd Like to Contribute
- 7.0 Copyright Notice
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 0.0 Preliminaries
-
- This article describes these ways you can tell people on the Internet more
- about yourself:
- * Your signature file which can be automatically appended to your
- mail and news messages.
- * Your finger information which is displayed when people finger you.
- * Your customized header lines, such as Organization, From, and
- Reply-To, which are part of your mail and news messages.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Apr 1995 00:00:10 GMT
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 0.1 Getting the Latest Version of this FAQ
-
- If this FAQ is over a couple months old, there may be an updated
- version. Please get the latest hypertext or plain text version from
- one of the places listed below.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Apr 1995 00:00:10 GMT
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 0.1.1 Hypertext
-
- The best way to read this FAQ (and most other FAQs) is to view the
- hypertext version using a Web browser such as Cello, Lynx, Mosaic,
- Netscape, or WinWeb. This will allow you to easily jump:
- * between subjects in the FAQ
- * to any Uniform Resource Locator (URL) in the FAQ
- * to an Internet Request For Comments document (RFC)
- * to some manual pages
-
- This, and all FAQs that are crossposted to news.answers, are available at:
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/top.html
-
- This particular FAQ is at:
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/signature_finger_faq/faq.html
-
- If you don't want to type that long URL, you can go to Infinite Ink's
- Sample Writings Page and jump to it from there:
-
- http://www.jazzie.com/ii/writings.html
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 0.1.2 Plain Text
-
- The plain text version of this FAQ is regularly posted to these
- newsgroups:
- news.newusers.questions comp.mail.misc alt.internet.services
- news.software.readers comp.mail.pine alt.answers
- news.software.nn comp.mail.elm
- news.answers comp.unix.questions
- comp.answers
-
- It's in digest format which means that you may be able to use your
- newsreader to easily move between digest items (e.g., nn uses G% to
- burst a digest and trn uses ^G to jump to the next digest item).
-
-
- The plain text version is also available through...
-
- A Link on Infinite Ink's Sample Writings Page:
- http://www.jazzie.com/ii/writings.html
-
- Anonymous FTP:
- ftp://ftp.halcyon.com/pub/ii/internet/signature_finger_faq.txt
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/signature_finger_faq
-
- Email:
- Send mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu containing the following:
- send usenet/news.answers/signature_finger_faq
-
- UUCP:
- uunet!/archive/usenet/news.answers/signature_finger_faq
-
- Hard Copy:
- A printed version of this FAQ is in Chapter 17 of the book
- "Internet Secrets" by John R. Levine and Carol Baroudi; published
- 1995 by IDG Books; ISBN 1-56884-452-2.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Apr 1995 00:00:20 GMT
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 0.2 Terminology
-
- Term Meaning
- ==== =======
- browser Web browser
- FQDN or fqdn Fully qualified domain name
- mailer or MUA Mail user agent such as pine or elm
- MTA Mail transport agent such as sendmail or smail
- pico PIne COmposer - a user friendly editor
- pico FileName Use pico to edit file named `FileName'
- pico -w FileName Use pico with autowrap turned off to edit `FileName'
- mail reader Mailer, newsreader, or Web browser that can read
- mail folders
- regular expression Text that can include "wild cards" (such as . to
- match any single character); used for searching
- URL Uniform Resource Locator - address used by Web browsers
- ^X Press the Ctrl key and then, while holding down the
- Ctrl key, press the X key. Note that often the
- the lower case letter works, .e.g, you can use
- either ^x and ^X
- ~ or $HOME Your home directory. You can always get to your
- home directory by typing: cd
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 0.3 Notation
-
- Notation What you type
- ======== =============
- TextName replace with appropriate text
- <text> replace with appropriate text without the angle brackets
- `text' text without the smart single quotes
- ``text'' text without the smart double quotes
- "text" "text" including the double quotes
- 'text' 'text' including the single quotes
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 1.0 Setting up Your Signature
-
- Q: How can I have a signature automatically appended to my news
- articles and mail messages?
-
- A: The answer depends on your newsreader and mailer but the
- procedure below works for many Unix newsreaders and mailers.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 1.1 General Unix Instructions
-
- Type... In order to...
- ======= ==============
- cd Change to your home directory (i.e., $HOME or ~)
-
- pico .signature Use the pico editor to create a .signature file.
- (Replace "pico" with another editor if you like.)
-
- <your signature> Note that most systems require your sig to be <= 4
- lines. And it's good netiquette to make it as
- short as possible.
-
- <save and exit> In Pico use ^x to exit and answer y when asked
- if you want to save your changes.
-
- chmod 644 .signature Make .signature readable by all.
-
- chmod a+x . Make home directory searchable by all.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 1.2 Specific Mailer & Newsreader Instructions
-
- For some newsreaders and mailers the above is all you need to do to
- set up your signature. For example the default behaviour of pine(1),
- tin(1), and the rn family - rn(1), trn(1), strn(1), & Pnews(1) - is
- to automatically append ~/.signature, if it exists. To check that
- it's working, follow the instruction in "1.3 Testing Your Signature."
-
- If you use Elm, Mail, SUN OpenWindows Mailtool, Emacs Mail Mode, MH,
- NN, or GNUS you need to follow the additional instructions described
- below. If you use Pine, you can change it's default signature
- behaviour by following the instructions below.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.1 Pine
- Followup-To: comp.mail.pine
-
- Pine automatically appends ~/.signature (if it exists) to your messages.
- Many people like to set the signature-at-bottom variable which will put
- your signature below both your message and the message you are replying
- to (if you've included it). Note that if you are forwarding a message
- your signature will be put below the message that you write but above
- the forwarded message.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... ..... 1.2.1.1 Pine 3.90 and Later
- Followup-To: comp.mail.pine
-
- Pine automatically appends ~/.signature (if it exists) to your messages.
- To change Pine's signature features:
-
- 1. From the Main Menu type S for Setup
- 2. Type C for Configuration
- 3. To change the value of the signature-at-bottom feature:
- a) Spacebar and arrow down to the signature-at-bottom variable
- b) Type X to set/unset this variable.
- 4. To change the name of your signature file:
- a) Arrow down to the signature-file line
- b) Type C for Change Value
- c) Type the path and name of the file you want to use for your
- signature. Note that ~ can be used for your $HOME directory.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... ..... 1.2.1.2 Pine 3.89 and Earlier
- Followup-To: comp.mail.pine
-
- Pine automatically appends ~/.signature (if it exists) to your messages.
- To change Pine's signature features in Pine 3.89 (and earlier versions) you
- need to edit your ~/.pinerc file directly.
-
- Type... In order to...
- ======= ==============
- cd Change to your home directory (i.e., $HOME or ~)
- pico .pinerc Use the pico editor to edit your .pinerc file.
- ^w Search for . . .
- feature-list . . . ``feature-list''
-
-
- Edit your .pinerc so that it contains this line:
-
- feature-list=signature-at-bottom
-
- If you want more than one feature in your feature-list then they need to
- be comma separated like this:
-
- feature-list=old-growth,
- signature-at-bottom
-
-
- If you want to use a file other than ~/.signature for your signature
- edit the following line:
-
- signature-file=
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.2 Elm
- Followup-To: comp.mail.elm
-
- In addition to the basic signature instructions in 1.1 above, users of Elm
- need to edit their ~/.elm/elmrc file so that it contains the following:
-
- signature = ~/.signature
- sigdashes = ON
-
- Remember to delete any # characters before any variables you want
- to set. The defaults are indicated in comment lines starting with ###.
-
- NOTE
- ====
- The signature variable sets both the localsignature and
- remotesignature variables. If you want to have a different signature
- for local mail (i.e., addresses that don't contain a ! or @) then you
- can use the localsignature and remotesignature variables instead of
- the signature variable.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jym Dyer <jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.3 Mail
- Followup-To: comp.mail.misc
-
- =o= Regular Unix "Mail" and "mail" don't have an automatic
- signature mechanism. Many people who normally use a more deluxe
- mail utility occasionally find themselves resorting to using one
- of these, in which case all you need to know is this command:
-
- ~r $HOME/.signature
-
- This simply tells Mail to include the text of the your signature
- file.
-
- =o= If you use Mail on a regular basis you may want to use the
- semi-automatic signature feature. When you're done typing your
- message, you append a signature with this command:
-
- ~a
-
- =o= In order for this to work, though, you need to set the
- "sign" mail variable. There are two ways to implement this
- variable. The first is to set it in a $HOME/.mailrc file with
- a command like this:
-
- set sign="Jym Dyer <jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>"
-
- If your signature is more than one line long, you can use the
- C language string syntax, as in these examples:
-
- set sign="Jym Dyer\n<jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>"
-
- -or-
-
- set sign="Jym Dyer\
- \n<jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>"
-
- =o= The disadvantage of doing this in your .mailrc file is
- that you now have to maintain the text of your signature in
- two places. Another approach that avoids this problem is to set
- "sign" as an environment variable in your shell startup script.
- For a Bourne-compatible shell, this is done with this command:
-
- sign="`cat $HOME/.signature`" export sign
-
- For a C-shell, do this:
-
- setenv sign "`cat $HOME/.signature`"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jochen Bern <bern@uni-trier.de>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.4 SUN OpenWindows Mailtool
-
- The mailtool of SUNs OpenWindows lacks numerous Things, including the
- Ability to sign Mails. However, most OW Users stick with mailtool
- because of the Ability to use "Attachments" to send around Files.
-
- A simple Replacement for Signatures is to add a "Template" (click on
- Edit -> Properties, select Category "Template" in the Properties
- Window, and give Name and File as desired). Disadvantage: You have
- to edit in every Signature by Hand, though.
-
- A better Approach is to use a "set sendmail=..." Line in your ~/.mailrc.
- Mails being sent out will be handed over to the Executable named
- there instead of the Mail Delivery Subsystem. You can easily plug
- in a simple Program to sign your Mails there. However, be warned that
- all too simple Siggers aren't aware of the abovementioned Attachments,
- so the Signature will end up in the last Attachment instead of the
- Mail Text. Information about a Sigger that handles mail containing
- attachments correctly can be obtained from Jochen Berg by sending
- email to: mailtool-sig@ti.uni-trier.de
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jym Dyer <jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.5 Emacs Mail Mode
-
- =o= Emacs Mail Mode is usually invoked with the "mail" or
- "mail-other-window" commands (bound, respectively, to the
- "C-x m" and "C-x 4 m" keys by default). It is also invoked
- from various Emacs mail and news packages.
-
- =o= Mail Mode provides a "mail-signature" command to append
- the contents of your signature file to the end of your mail
- message. This command is bound to "C-c C-w" by default,
- so to insert the signature before mailing, simply type
- "C-c "C-w".
-
- =o= If you'd prefer to have your signature automatically
- appended to the end of your mail message, the "mail-signature"
- command can be put into your "mail-setup-hook" variable in
- your $HOME/.emacs file, as in this example:
-
- (setq mail-setup-hook
- (function
- (lambda ()
- (mail-signature) )))
-
- This will put the signature in your mail message buffer.
-
-
- Instructions for Version 19 by Richard Kasperowski and Matt Kaufmann
- ====================================================================
- In emacs 19, I use:
-
- (setq mail-signature t)
-
- There is a problem with my expression with respect posting to USENET
- via GNUS. GNUS automatically appends .signature to the post when it
- There is a problem with my expression with respect posting to USENET
- via GNUS. GNUS automatically appends .signature to the post when it
- is sent out. With (setq mail-signature t), .signature is appended to
- the end of the emacs buffer in which you edit your post. When you
- send-out the post, another .signature is appended to the end. You end
- up with two .signatures on your USENET posts.
-
-
- If you prefer, you can use the following minor modification
- of the version 18 form shown above:
-
- (setq mail-setup-hook
- (function
- (lambda ()
- (mail-signature nil) )))
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jym Dyer <jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.6 MH and Emacs mh-e
- Followup-To: comp.mail.mh
-
- =o= MH doesn't have an automatic signature mechanism, but it
- is so configurable that there are a number of different ways
- to implement one. Check the periodic "MH Frequently Asked
- Questions (FAQ) with Answers" posting for details.
-
- =o= CAVEAT: If you use the environment variable SIGNATURE to
- point to your signature file, MH will use it not as a signature,
- but as your "fullname". Even worse, if your version of MH was
- built with the "UCI" option and you *don't* use the environment
- variable SIGNATURE to point to another file, MH will use the
- $HOME/.signature file for this purpose! To see if your version
- of MH has this behavior, enter this command:
-
- % send -help
-
- And look for the string "[UCI]" in the output.
-
- =o= There's an Emacs interface to MH, called MH-E. It has its
- own signature mechanism, which is invoked with the "mh-insert-
- signature" command (bound to the "C-c C-s" keys by default).
-
- =o= This will insert the file $HOME/.signature file by default.
- If your signature file has another name (e.g., to avoid its
- being used by an MH build with the "UCI" option), you can set
- the "mh-signature-file-name" variable to refer to a different
- file.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.7 NN
- Followup-To: news.software.nn
-
- In addition to the basic signature instructions in 1.1 above, users of NN
- need to edit their ~/.nn/init file so that it contains the following:
-
- set query-signature off
- set append-signature-mail on
- set append-signature-post off
-
- Note that the reason that you need to `set append-signature-post off' is
- that the news posting software (usually inews) automatically appends
- ~/.signature if it exists. If you `set append-signature-post on' then
- both nn and inews append your sig and you'll send out two identical sigs
- every time.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Mike Northam <mbn@greyskul.intel.com>
- Subject: ... ... 1.2.8 GNUS
- Followup-To: gnu.emacs.gnus
-
- (Does anyone know Mike Northam's current email address?)
-
- In addition to the basic signature instructions in 1.1 above, users of GNUS
- should verify that the value of the variable gnus-signature-file points to the
- right place. If you're in emacs, you can do so by evaluating the following
- expression:
- gnus-signature-file
- ^ put your cursor here and type C-x C-e
-
- You should see "~/.signature" in the echo area. If not, edit your
- $HOME/.emacs file and add the following:
-
- (setq gnus-signature-file "~/.signature"))
-
- Then load your $HOME/.emacs file or merely restart emacs and the variable
- should be set correctly.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 1.3 Testing Your Signature
-
- After you've set everything up, use your mailer to mail a test message
- to yourself, and your newsreader or news poster (such as nnpost or
- Pnews) to post an article to a test newsgroup (use a local newsgroup
- and Distribution set to `local' to save bandwidth). Note that with
- many newsreaders and mailers you will not see your signature while
- you are composing a message - it will be automaticlally appended when
- you send the message. Note also that many systems add a line that
- contains `-- ' to the top of your sig. This is used by programs that
- automatically deal with mail or news to identify the start of the
- signature.
-
- If you have a problem with your sig see the next section 1.4 on
- Troubleshooting.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 1.4 Troubleshooting Your Signature
-
- On many systems your .signature (and .plan, .project, and .forward) needs
- to be world readable and your home directory needs to be world "executable"
- (which means the world can go into that directory). To check these
- settings:
-
- Type... In order to...
- ------- --------------
- cd Go to your home directory.
-
- ls -l .filename Check the permission: it should say -rw-r--r--
- (Replace `.filename' with the appropriate file name.)
-
- ls -ld . Check permission of home dir: it should say drwx?-x?-x
- The ?'s may be r's or hyphens or one of each (i.e.,
- drwx--x--x, drwxr-xr-x, drwxr-x--x, drwx--xr-x are
- each acceptable.)
- If these aren't set correctly repeat the steps given in 1.1 above for
- setting up your .signature.
-
- If you are still having problems read the man pages for your newsreader,
- news poster, or mailer and search for the string ``signature''. There may
- be a variable you need to set in order for the ~/.signature to be appended.
-
- Type... In order to...
- ------- --------------
- man CommandName |less Open man pages for CommandName (elm, pine, nn, tin
- trn, Pnews, etc.) and pipe through less. If your
- system doesn't have less replace it with "more".
-
- /signature Search for first occurrence of "signature".
-
- n Search for next occurrence of "signature".
- Repeat the search until you find the appropriate
- section of the manual.
-
- u Page up half a screen. (This works in less but not in
- more.)
-
- [Space] Page down a screen. (This works in both less and more.)
-
-
- For more information on reading manual pages see the man(1), less(1), and/or
- more(1) man pages.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 2.0 Finger
-
- Finger is an Internet tool that you can use to find out information
- about people all over the Net. As long as a person's Internet host
- is running the finger daemon (fingerd), you will be able to retrieve
- information using the finger command.
-
- This section tells you how to finger others, how to customize your
- finger information, and how you may be able to track who fingers you
- (and why finger tracking is probably not worth doing).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 2.1 How to Finger
-
- This section describes how to finger using the Unix command line commands
- or using a Web browser.
-
- You can use finger to find out a person's full name, the shell they
- use, and sometimes you can find out when the last time he or she was
- logged in.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.1.1 Unix Finger Command
-
- To finger someone
-
- finger UserID@fully.qualified.domain.name
-
- On some systems finger is linked to f so the following also works:
-
- f UserID@fqdn
-
-
- Finger displays different information on different systems. Often it will
- display your full name, your default shell, when your were last logged on,
- and your ~/.plan and ~/.project files.
-
- If you finger someone and the display takes more than one page you can pipe
- the output through less (or more if you don't have less). For example to
- find out about Halcyon, my Internet service provider, type:
-
- finger info@halcyon.com |less
-
-
- Finger can also be used to display information about groups of people.
- For example:
-
- finger john@random.fqdn |less
-
- Ths will display finger information about everyone with ``john'' in
- their name on random.fqdn. You can get a short listing for each person
- by using:
-
- finger -q john@random.fqdn |less
-
-
- For technical details about the finger protocol see RFC1288.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.1.2 Using a Web Browser to Finger
-
- In addition to using the finger or f command you can finger people
- through a Web browser. The following is a form that Doug Stevenson
- <doug+@osu.edu> created:
- http://www-bprc.mps.ohio-state.edu/cgi-bin/finger.pl
-
- You can finger a specific user with a syntax like this:
- http://www-bprc.mps.ohio-state.edu/cgi-bin/finger.pl?doug%2B@osu.edu
-
- With Doug's finger gateway, if the .plan contains some HTML, it will be
- presented as hypertext, e.g:
- Go to <A HREF="http://www.jazzie.com/ii/">Infinite Ink's Home Page</A>.
-
-
- Marc VanHeyningen <mvanheyn@cs.indiana.edu> has a Web finger gateway that
- you can find out about at:
- http://www.cs.indiana.edu/finger/gateway
-
- To use it you use this syntax:
- http://www.cs.indiana.edu/finger/fully.qualified.domain.name/userid/w
-
- For example, to finger Marc, type:
- http://www.cs.indiana.edu/finger/cs.indiana.edu/mvanheyn/w
-
- With Marc's finger gateway, if an URL in a .plan uses the <URL:...> syntax,
- described in 3.1 below, it will be a link, e.g.: <URL://www.jazzie.com/ii/>
-
-
- You can also use this URL:
- gopher://fully.qualified.domain.name:79/0userid
- ^ Note: 0 precedes the userid
-
- For example you can finger my Internet service provider with this URL:
- gopher://halcyon.com:79/0info
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.1.3 Fingering Yourself
-
- To finger yourself by type the following at your Unix prompt.
-
- finger YourUserID
-
- For a different view of your finger information, and also to see
- who else is currently logged in, type:
-
- finger
-
- To ensure that people from other systems can finger you should ask someone
- who's not on your system to finger you too. It is possible for you to
- simulate fingering yourself from another machine (another.fqdn) by doing
- this:
-
- finger YourUserID@your.fqdn@another.fqdn
-
- In order for this to work another.fqdn must support full finger functionality.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.1.4 Interesting Places to Finger
-
- Scott Yanoff's "Updated Internet Services List" contains a number of
- interesting places to finger. If you access it through the following URL
- all the finger commands are links.
-
- http://www.uwm.edu/Mirror/inet.services.html
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 2.2 Changing Your Finger Information
-
- On most systems you can change the information that people see when
- they finger you.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.2.1 Using chfn to change your full name (and more)
-
- On many Unix systems you can change some of your default information,
- such as your full name, by typing the following at your Unix prompt:
-
- chfn
-
- If chfn is not available try "passwd -f". If neither of these are
- available then you will need to contact your system administrator and
- ask him/her to change your full name, etc.
-
- After you have changed your information check that they are in place
- by fingering yourself. Also to see a different display of your
- information type the following at your Unix prompt:
-
- finger
-
- This displays a one line description of everyone currently logged on
- your system.
-
- For more information see the chfn(1), passwd(1), and finger(1) man pages.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 2.2.2 Creating Your .plan and .project files
-
- Your ~/.project and ~/.plan files, if they exist, are displayed when you
- are fingered. Setting these up is essentially the same as setting
- up a ~/.signature file (described in 1.0 above).
-
- Type... In order to...
- ------- --------------
- cd Change to your home directory.
-
- pico .plan Use the pico editor to create a .plan file.
- (Replace "pico" with another editor if you like.)
-
- chmod 644 .plan Make .plan readable by all.
-
- chmod a+x . Make home directory searchable by all.
-
- If you want a .project file follow the same procedure. Note that only the
- first line of the .project is displayed (so you might as well only make
- it one line!).
-
- If you have problems, see section 1.4 on "Troubleshooting Your
- Signature" to make sure that your permissions are set correctly.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 2.3 Finding Out Who Fingers You
-
- Finger wasn't designed to log finger requests, so finding who fingers
- you is complicated - and sometimes impossible - to setup. For more
- information see:
-
- * The next section of this FAQ on the Backfinger Script.
-
- * Chris Alfeld's fingertrace:
- http://www.math.utah.edu/~calfeld/fingertrace/
-
- * R.L. Samuell's logfinger script, which you can obtain by fingering:
- logfinger@twinbrook.cis.uab.edu
-
- * Unix - Frequently Asked Questions (4/7) [Frequent posting]
- 4.9) How do I keep track of people who are fingering me?
-
- This article is archived in all the usual FAQ archives, including:
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/unix-faq/faq/part4/faq-doc-9.html
-
-
- An easy thing that you can do to see if anyone has fingered you is type the
- following at your Unix prompt:
-
- ls -lu $HOME/.plan
-
- This tells you the last time someone accessed your .plan, but it doesn't
- tell you who it was. I have this in my .login because it's interesting to
- see when the last time someone was checking on me!
-
- [Note that under AFS (Andrew File System, a distributed filesystem),
- ls -lu $HOME/.plan will not work due to the fact that AFS has no
- notion of ``atime'', or ``last accessed time''.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Janet Rosenbaum <jerosenb@fas.harvard.edu>
- Subject: ... ... 2.3.1 Backfinger Script
-
- A script called, among other things, backfinger, planner, and
- finger_logger (flogger or frogger, for short), makes your .plan into
- a named pipe. Think of a named pipe as being a sort of pipe used with
- plumbing that opens on the screen of the person who is fingering you
- - say, Fred - so that when the .plan file (a named pipe) is accessed,
- it looks for a program from which to get something to stick on Fred's
- screen. The script is called when you are fingered. At that moment,
- the script looks to the finger port of your UNIX machine, sees which
- machine Fred is on, and logs that machine's IP number and host name.
- The script then can execute a command to spit out a .plan on Fred's
- screen. You could use a program that generates random poetry, the
- fortune program, or simply "cat plan_file" to make the contents of
- the text file (plan_file) appear on Fred's screen. To make Fred
- think that you are really cool, the script also tells him what
- machine he is fingering you from.
-
- This script tells you only the machine that Fred is fingering you
- from, not his actual user name. Although the identification protocol
- (documented in RFC1413) allows exchange of the user name that
- initiated the finger process over port 113, the current backfinger
- program does not use it. (Anyone who has enough time to add this
- feature certainly may, though!) The other way to find out Fred's name
- is to use systat, which requests a list of current processes on
- Fred's machine over port 11. This option rarely is available, due to
- security concerns.
-
- Following are two caveats:
-
- * This program must be running at all times on your system, even
- when you are logged out. Leaving on a background process like this
- one annoys most system administrators no end, especially on
- high-load systems. Do not run the program unless you are sure that
- you are allowed to run background processes.
-
- * If you decide that you want to stop running this program, remove
- your .plan file as soon as you kill the process; otherwise, all
- your finger processes will hang.
-
- Given these caveats, the script is distributed only to those who can
- use it, mostly for educational reasons. The Web site is
- http://pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~jrosen/scripts/logger.src.
-
- Note: I am not the author of this program; the version that I
- distribute is virtually identical to the program distributed by Steve
- Franklin. The real author is Tony Rems (rembo@unisoft.com).
- Modifications and revisions were made by Geoff Loker
- (geoff@mdms.moore.com), Karen Bruner (napalm@ugcs.caltech.edu),
- Norman Franke (franke1@llnl.gov), and Steve Franklin
- (franklin@ug.cs.dal.ca).
-
- SEE ALSO
- ========
- Newsgroup: comp.sources.misc
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 3.0 What to Put in Your Signature and Finger Files
-
- It is good netiquette to keep your signature to four lines or fewer.
- And many news posters, such as some versions of inews(1), will not
- post an article that has a signature with more than four lines in
- it. So, put large large pictures, your philosophy of life , etc. in
- your finger files or in your Web pages and point people to those in
- your signature.
-
- For signatures it's a good idea to keep the width less than 75
- characters so that if your signature is included in a followup
- preceded by an attribution character (like `> '), each line will
- still be on one line.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 3.1 URLs
-
- A good strategy is to keep your signature short and include an
- URL for your Web page, e.g.:
-
- http://www.jazzie.com/ii/
-
-
- If you do not have a Web page you might want to put in an URL
- that will finger you, e.g.:
-
- http://www-bprc.mps.ohio-state.edu/cgi-bin/finger.pl?hugh@halcyon.com
-
-
- You can also put URLs in your .plan and then, if someone is fingering
- you through a Web gateway such as the ones described in 2.1 above, these
- will be links.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 3.2 Ascii Art
- __ __ __ __
- / \ / \ / \ / \
- ____________________/ __\/ __\/ __\/ __\_____________________________
- ___________________/ /__/ /__/ /__/ /________________________________
- | / \ / \ / \ / \ \____
- |/ \_/ \_/ \_/ \ o \
- \_____/--<
-
- A good source of art for your signature and finger files is the ascii art
- FAQ which contains (among others) these questions:
- 9] Where can I find ASCII art?
- 22] How do I put an animation in my plan?
- 23] How do I make a sig?
- 24] How do I have my sig automatically added to my posts and email?
-
- The Ascii Art FAQ is at: http://gagme.wwa.com/~boba/faq.html
-
- One particularly good place to find ascii art is:
- http://gagme.wwa.com/~boba/scarecrow.html
-
-
- Lots of cool ideas for things to put in your .signature and .plan
- are at:
-
- ftp://sashimi.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/BestOfTheScarecrowsSigGallery
-
- Remember it's good netiquette to keep you sig to four lines or fewer!
-
-
- SEE ALSO
- ========
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.ascii, alt.ascii-art, alt.binaries.pictures.ascii
- and alt.ascii-art.animation
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Marc Kriguer <kriguer@tcs.com>
- Subject: ... 3.3 Animated Text Strings
-
- Dotplan is a program that performs "animation" effects on text
- strings, so that .plan files (hence the name) look a little more
- fancy (on low-speed dialup lines). Some of the effects make the
- characters appear one at a time; others have the characters
- appear at once and "move" around.
-
- EXAMPLES
- dotplan 3 This is sample text # Display string using style 3
- dotplan # Display usage information
- dotplan s # Display styles in all styles
- dotplan d This is more text # Display string in all styles
- dotplan 1 Hi there... > .plan # Save output in actual .plan file
-
- -- Marc
-
- The files are at:
- ftp://ftp.halcyon.com/pub/ii/internet/dotplan.c
- ftp://ftp.halcyon.com/pub/ii/internet/dotplan.1
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Tim Pierce <twpierce@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Subject: ... 3.4 Robot Fodder
-
- Q: Tim, why do you and others put random, provocative words like
- the following in your sig?
-
- --
- Green Card fodder: Canter, Siegel, green card, Joel Furr, liable,
- fortune, conspiracy, CyberSell, Tennessee Bar.
-
-
- A: The original genesis of this bit of lore was the NSA's
- supposed archiving of Usenet. It's a popular urban legend
- that the NSA scans and archives every message posted to
- Usenet, and in the heyday of this story it was popular to
- add "spook fodder" to your .signature consisting of words
- like "conspiracy, bullion, plutonium, Saudi Arabia,
- president, assassination," and so on. I think that the GNU
- Emacs distribution still comes with the code that would
- insert such words into your posts or .signatures
- automatically.
-
- A couple of years ago there was a nut named Clayton Cramer
- who would periodically bombard soc.motss with pages and
- pages of pseudo-scientific babble about the evils of
- homosexuality. It got so tiring that after a while I
- amended my .signature to read "Clayton-Fodder:
- homosexuality, pedophilia, incest, guns, Second Amendment,
- Libertarian, Reagan," or some such. It got quite a few
- giggles from some of the old hands out there.
-
- A more recent example was the case of "Serdar Argic," a
- program written by a U of Minnesota student to search for
- any article referencing Turkey or Turkish culture, and
- follow up with several pages of invective about Armenian
- genocide. There were some reports that this program was
- faulty and began responding to articles about "Thanksgiving
- Turkey" and the like, but I don't recall ever seeing that
- happen, myself. Nevertheless, people started putting "Argic
- fodder" into their .signatures, like "Turkey, Armenia, SDPA
- crooks, genocide" in order to bait the "Argic-bot" into
- following up.
-
- The latest rumor is that Canter and Siegel are archiving
- every post which refers to them, in the hopes of finding
- grounds for a libel suit. Hence, my .signature (which only
- goes to newsgroups in the news.* hierarchy). It's a
- ridiculous idea, but this is one of those bits of folklore
- which I really enjoy perpetuating.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 3.5 Newsgroups for Sig Discussion
-
- In addition to the ascii art newsgroups listed in 3.2 above, people
- discuss signatures in these newsgroups.
-
- Newsgroup Description Newsgroup Name
- ===================== ==============
- The War Lord of the West Preservation alt.fan.warlord
- Fan Club
- Like alt.fan.warlord, only different alt.stupid.signature.flame.flame.flame
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 4.0 Customized Headers
-
- Another way that you can tell people about yourself, or your company, is
- to customize the headers that are sent in your mail and news messages.
- Mail headers are specified in RFC822 and news headers are specified in
- RFC1036. The headers that you are most likely to want to customize
- are the From, Reply-To, and Organization headers.
-
- READING MESSAGES
- ================
- Most mailers and newsreaders do not display all the headers when you
- are reading a message you've received. Often typing `h' or ^h (for
- header) will display all the headers of a message. You can often set
- up your mailer or newsreader to always automatically display whatever
- headers you specify.
-
-
- COMPOSING MESSAGES
- ==================
- The sections below give instructions for automatically having
- customized headers included in your messages. Some composers will
- automatically display your customized headers while you are
- composing, and others won't.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 4.1 Your From Header
- Followup-To: news.newusers.questions
-
- Your From header is the main thing that people use to find out who you
- are. You can use either of the following formats for your From
- header:
-
- From: Full Name <userid@fully.qualified.domain.name>
- From: userid@fully.qualified.domain.name (Full Name)
-
- For example, I can use either of these:
-
- From: Nancy McGough <nancym@ii.com>
- From: nancym@ii.com (Nancy McGough)
-
- The first format is preferred.
-
- Your userid is usually your login name and can not easily be changed.
- Your fully qualified domain name (FQDN) is the domain name used by your
- Internet provider. If you have a choice of FQDNs to use, I recommend
- using the shortest one. For example, at one of my providers I can use
- either nancym@coho.halcyon.com or nancym@halcyon.com. I like the second
- one because it is shorter and easier for people to type and remember.
-
- Your full name is usually in the file /etc/passwd and is the name that
- people see when they finger you. On many systems you can change your
- full name using the chfn command, which was described in section 2.2.1
- above.
-
- Some newsreaders and mailers allow you to customize your From line
- using commands specific to that tool. If you do this be aware of a
- these important points:
-
- * Customizing your From header will not hide your identity since the
- transport agent will append a header, such as the Sender header,
- that includes your real identity.
-
- * In some newsreaders you will not be able to cancel an article that
- you posted using a customized From header.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 4.2 Specific Mailer and Newsreader Instructions
- Followup-To: news.newusers.questions
-
- Below are instructions for customizing your headers in different
- mailers and newsreaders. If you have a choice between a couple
- methods, it's usually a good strategy to use a method that works for
- many different tools. For example, setting an environment variable.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 4.2.1 Tin and the RN Family
- Followup-To: news.software.readers
-
- In tin and the rn family of tools (Pnews, rn, trn, strn) you can use
- environment variables to customize your headers. These newsreaders
- use the FROM, REPLYTO, and ORGANIZATION environment variables, if
- they are set, to determine the From, Reply-To, and Organization headers.
-
- The way you set an environment variable depends on which shell you
- are using. For example, in the csh or tcsh you can set the
- ORGANIZATION variable by putting the following line in you ~/.login:
-
- setenv ORGANIZATION "Your Organization Name"
-
- After you edit your ~/.login you can establish the setting by either logging
- out and loggin back in or by typing the following at your Unix prompt:
-
- source ~/.login
-
- To check that the variable is set type:
-
- printenv
-
- After you have set your environment variables, post a test message to
- a local test newsgroup with `local' distribution to check that the
- headers are correct.
-
- SEE ALSO
- ========
- Manual Pages: tin(1), Pnews(1), rn(1), trn(1), strn(1)
- Newsgroup: news.software.readers
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 4.2.2 Pine 3.90 and Later
- Followup-To: comp.mail.pine
-
- In Pine 3.90, and later versions, you customize your headers using
- the customized-hdrs variable. Here are instructions for setting your
- Organization header.
-
- 1. From the Main Menu type S for Setup
- 2. Type C for Configuration
- 3. To change the value of the customized-hdrs variable:
- a) Space bar and arrow down to the customized-hdrs variable.
- b) Type A for Add Value
- c) At the prompt type:
-
- Organization: Your Organization Name
-
- If you have set the ORGANIZATION environment variable
- (which is described in 4.2.1 above) you can type:
-
- Organization: $ORGANIZATION
-
-
- While reading a message that you've received you can view all the
- headers of the message by typing H. If H does not work you need to
- go to your configuration menu and set the enable-full-header-cmd
- variable.
-
- While composing a message you can view all the headers by placing the cursor
- in the header region and typing ^R (view rich headers).
-
- NOTE: The customized-hdrs variable is not available in Pine 3.89 and below.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 4.2.3 Elm
- Followup-To: comp.mail.elm
-
- Use your editor to create a file named ~/.elm/elmheaders that
- contains any headers you'd like in your outgoing mail messages. For
- example, my ~/.elm/elmheaders file contains the following (but
- without the leading space!):
-
- From: Nancy McGough <nancym@ii.com>
- Organization: Infinite Ink, Seattle, WA, USA
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... ... 4.2.4 NN
- Followup-To: news.software.nn
-
- NN uses its news-header and mail-header variables to set headers for
- news and mail messages you send. For example, to set your
- Organization header, put the following lines in your ~/.nn/init file:
-
- set news-header Organization: Your Organization Name
- set mail-header Organization: Your Organization Name
-
-
- While reading messages with NN you can view the Organization line
- by adding O (the letter "oh") to your header-lines variable setting.
- I like the following setting:
-
- set header-lines AFOnWK*Y
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 17 Apr 1995 00:05:00 GMT
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 5.0 Mailer and Newsreader References
-
- PINE
- ====
- Web Pages: http://www.cac.washington.edu/pine/
- FAQ: http://www.cac.washington.edu/pine/faq/
- ftp://ftp.cac.washington.edu/pine/docs/faq
- Man Pages: pine(1), pico(1)
- Newsgroup: comp.mail.pine (linked to Pine mailing list)
- Mailing List: pine-info@cac.washington.edu (linked to Pine newsgroup)
- Subscribe to the pine-info mailing list by sending mail to:
- majordomo@cac.washington.edu
- With...
- subscribe pine-info
- in the body of the message.
-
- ELM
- ===
- Web Pages: http://www.myxa.com/elm.html
- http://www.inf.fu-berlin.de/~guckes/elm/
- FAQs: http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/elm/top.html
- Man Pages: elm(1)
- Newsgroup: comp.mail.elm
-
- Emacs Mail Mode
- ===============
- Newsgroups: gnus.emacs.help and comp.emacs
- FAQ:
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part5/faq.html
- MH
- ==
- FAQ: http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/mh-faq/top.html
- Man Pages: mh(1)
- Newsgroup: comp.mail.mh
-
- MAIL
- ====
- Man Pages: mail(1)
- Newsgroup: comp.mail.misc
-
- NN
- ==
- Web Pages: http://www.best.com/~ii/internet/nn/
- FAQs: http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/nn-faq/top.html
- Man Pages: nn(1)
- Newsgroup: news.software.nn
-
-
- MISC NEWSREADERS
- ================
- Manual Pages: tin(1), Pnews(1), rn(1), trn(1), strn(1)
- Newsgroup: news.newusers.questions, news.software.readers
-
- (Please send me pointers to other mailer and newsreader references
- and let me know what newsreaders can read mail folders.)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 6.0 Contributors
-
- This FAQ, like many others, is a collaborative effort. I learned a
- lot of the information in newsgroups, especially:
- comp.unix.*
- comp.mail.*
- news.software.*
- news.newusers.questions
-
- Also, lots of people have mailed me information and I've tried to
- acknowledge them below.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 6.1 Acknowledgements
-
- Thanks to these people who sent suggestions and digest items:
- Jochen Bern <bern@uni-trier.de>
- Jym Dyer <jym@remarque.berkeley.edu>
- Marc Kriguer <kriguer@tcs.com>
- Mike Northam <mbn@greyskul.intel.com>
- Tim Pierce <twpierce@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Janet Rosenbaum <jerosenb@fas.harvard.edu>
-
- Thanks to these people who sent suggestions:
- Jeff Blaine <jblaine@ciesin.org>
- Stephen Cristol <mphbj639@unix.cc.emory.edu>
- Roman Czyborra <czyborra@cs.tu-berlin.de>
- Terry Gray <gray@cac.washington.edu>
- Sven Guckes <guckes@inf.fu-berlin.de>
- Jon Hamilton <hamilton@cs.iastate.edu>
- Rich Kasperowski <richk@icad.com>
- Hugh McGough <hugh@halcyon.com>
- Mary McGough <mary@hitl.washington.edu>
- David L Miller <dlm@cac.washington.edu>
- Skip Montanaro <skip@automatrix.com>
- David W. Tamkin <dattier@mcs.com>
- Syd Weinstein <syd@dsinc.myxa.com>
-
-
- Thanks to these people who've created ascii art, programs, and/or documents
- that are pointed to in this article. (This list is not complete right now.)
- Chris Alfeld <calfeld@math.utah.edu> or <calfeld@east.east-slc.edu>
- Bob Allison <boba@wwwa.com>
- Jorn Barger <jorn@genesis.mcs.com>
- Jean-Frangois Mezei
- Piero Serini <piero@strider.inet.it>
- Doug Stevenson <doug+@osu.edu>
- Marc VanHeyningen <mvanheyn@cs.indiana.edu>
- Bill Wohler <wohler@newt.com>
- Scott A. Yanoff <yanoff@alpha2.csd.uwm.edu>
-
-
- Special thanks to:
- Thomas A. Fine <fine@cis.ohio-state.edu> for setting up and
- maintaining the hypertext archive of FAQs. Congratulations
- to him for winning O'Reilly and Associates' "The Best of the
- Net" award!
-
- Please let me know if I've left you, or anyone else, out of this list.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: ... 6.2 If You'd Like to Contribute
-
- If you have any corrections, suggestions, or new digest items to
- contribute to this FAQ please send them to faq-editor@ii.com. If your
- reader understands the following URL, you can use it to send me mail:
-
- mailto:faq-editor@ii.com.
-
- I'd especially like to learn about:
- * Cool signatures that have less than or equal to four lines.
- * Finger clients for Windows or Mac.
- * Mike Northam's current email address.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ Editor <faq-editor@ii.com>
- Subject: 7.0 Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (c) 1994, 1995 by Nancy McGough, except sections 1.2.4,
- 1.2.5, 1.2.6, 1.2.8, 2.3.1, 3.3, 3.4 which are Copyright (c) 1994,
- 1995 by the authors named in the sections.
-
- No portion of this work may be sold or put to commercial use without
- express written consent of the authors. This restriction covers
- publication in any form, or distribution by any method, which permits
- this work to be visually perceived, either directly or with the aid
- of any machine or device. Permission is granted to republish or
- redistribute this article in its entirety for noncommercial use if
- this copyright notice is not removed or altered.
-
- End of Signature, Finger, & Customized Headers FAQ
- **************************************************
-
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-