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-
- >I have a few basic questions:
- > - who is responsible for internet mail addresses?
- > - how can a customer get one?
- > - who maintains the hosts for this great store and
- > forward system?
- > - is there any other information you can provide me?
- >
- >One of the things that is interesting to several of my
- >customers is the ability to send large files (1-10meg) to
- >anyone on the internet at a relatively inexpensive rates.
- >Currently SprintMail is cost prohibitively expensive for file
- >transfer of this size.
-
- This can be a sequel to my Questions Frequently Asked
-
- The responsibility for internet mail address is split. All Internet addresses
- (i.e., the actual Internet IP address and the Domain Name System names consistin
- g
- of much of the portion to the right of the (at) sign) are technically obtained
- from the Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA). This responsibility has
- been largely delegated. The IP numbers are obtained from a Network Information
- Center in Chantilly VA with the address <NIC.DDN.MIL> The DNS names at the top
- levels are delegated to various authorities depending on the domain (i.e.,
- for the .US domain. The whole scheme is distributed, so that whoever
- gets an address, then has the ability to further parcel out sub-addresses.
- Everyone in these chains must also maintain a reference server, so you can
- automatically find out what has been assigned to whom.
-
- When you get down to the host computer level, then it's the responsibility
- of the host administrator to maintain the mail accounts on that machine.
- It all works and has grown so fast - there are now 1.2 million host
- computers, 8000 networks, and about 10 million users around the world in
- 117 different countries - because of the explosion in PCs, workstations,
- LANs, the utility of the standards, and the incentive in effect inter-
- organization, interpersonal communication.
-
- One of the great customer features of SprintLink is that Sprint handles
- all this for the customer.
-
- This is NOT a store and forward system - as the term is normally used -
- except for certain applications such as gatewaying mail to peripheral
- interconnected networks using other protocols. For this reason, the
- network services are highly reliable, i.e., you actually know that the
- mailgram has been provided to the foreign host. This makes it intrinsically
- faster and more reliable than say X.400
-
- Each of the 1.2 million hosts are maintained by a lot of people around
- the world! And since at the present growth rate of 14 percent per MONTH,
- that number will equal the human population in 2001, there is a lot
- of education to do! Admittedly, however, this heterogeneity in administration
- remains a liability - but it is also an opportunity for nimble providers
- like Sprint who can help it's customers maximize their reliability.
-
- Get a copy of Ed Kroll's The Whole Internet from O'Reilly publishers,
- or Tracy Parker's Internet Companion from Prentice Hall to start.
- At a more detailed level, there is a new Internet Engineering Handbook
- that Prentice Hall just published, along with Marshall Rose's The
- Internet Message. The Internet Society (of which I'm V.P.) publishes
- an quarterly news magazine. I can also place you on a mailing list.
- And we're about to start an on-line network information center here
- at Sprint International.
- -------------------------
- >Alan ... It was a toss in the dard granted. The reason the questions came up
- >was because of the fact that we are selling SprintLink. I had an interesting
- >conversation with one of my customers. He stated that one of the founding
- >fathers of TCP/IP wanted/wants to see it as the "world standard" replacingx.400
- .
- >I doubt that would ever happen but ... I would like to understand this
- >technology and how it works.
- >
-
- We're dealing a little with apples and oranges here. TCP/IP unfortunately
- is often used two ways: 1) to refer specifically to two protocols (i.e.,
- TCP and IP) used for open systens internetworking and 2) a whole suite of
- standards that includes messaging, network management, file transfer,
- knowledge discovery, gateways, news, video, voice, and on and on. These
- ARE world standards - all produced under the aegis of the Internet Society's
- standards making body, the Internet Architecture Board and Internet
- Engineering Task Force. Sprint is sponsoring their next meeting at
- Washington DC next week.
-
- As a matter of plain fact, these standards have long "replaced" the CCITT's
- standards. They preceded them in time and are about 2 orders of magnitude
- more ubiquitous. That doesn't mean that things like X.400 are going to
- go away. They will be there in the market, and Sprint and others will be
- addressing that market and providing useful gateways. On the other hand,
- it will remain a minor market compared to the Internet protocols - not so
- much because of their head start, but because the standards body involved
- is so much more dynamic, innovative, and thorough in producing optimal,
- implementable standards. I urge people to use the "business card test"
- around the world - look at what people put on their cards, and you get
- an idea where things are going. By the way, the next verion of Microsoft
- Windows will have TCP/IP built in as the "network glue." It's going to
- drive the market ballistic. And on the messaging front, the implementation
- of the new MIME multimedia and PEM privacy standards, among others, will
- further the exponential use of Internet based messaging.
-
- -----------------------------
- Some minor clarifications:
-
- >Access to any single network gives you access to the entire Internet.
-
- Access can give you access to portions, depending on the service
- involved, the nature of the use, and your authorization. Many of the
- networks are those of large corporations, government agencies, or other
- institutions that carefully control access.
-
- >A user/host can become connected to the Internet by applying for
- >and recieving an Internet approved address from the National Science
- >Foundation.
-
- The NSF only controls access to its backbone and some of the other
- attached users. This is also an access issue and has nothing to do
- with addressing.
-
- >Hosts (and specfically mail systems) are maintained by the individual
- >users. Typically on the Internet, users will configure a UNIX workstation
- >as an Internet host, and run their mail system on the workstation.
- >The Internet is simply used for transporting mail. There are no
- >mail services (like SprintMail) on the Internet.
-
- A host can be anything from a PC, a LAN server, a workstation, a
- minicomputer, a mainframe, a supercomputer. Any operating system can
- be used, as long as the appropriate internet protocols are used -
- which can be not only TCP/IP, but decnet, sna, IS-IS, etc - although
- TCP/IP is by far the most popular. Mail constitutes a minor fraction
- of Internet use. The most used services are File Transfer, Network
- Administration, News distribution. And lastly, of course there are
- mail services like SprintMail on the Internet - of a variety of
- different flavors.
-
- >In response to your file transfer question, users are most likely not
- >using mail to send files. Instead they are using a TCP/IP based
- >File Transfer Protocol (FTP). The term Internet users use is
- >FTPing files from one host to another. Because most Internet access
- >provider have a flat rate (all you can drink) service structure,
- >the Internet can be a cost effective way to send large files.
-
- In fact mail is heavily used for moving files, if nothing else
- because it is so ubiquitous. Relatively fewer users have ftp capabilities,
- although FTP is easier and more convenient for moving large files.
- It is also possible to use Sun's NFS protocols or X-Windows over the
- network as highly convenient ways of accessing and moving files.
-