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-
-
- The User Services Area of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
-
- Joyce K. Reynolds, <jkrey@isi.edu>
- March 1993
-
- When the IETF was first established, it did not immediately create a
- distinct User Services Area. As of 1991, this area has grown to take
- its place with other Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) areas
- as the importance of a user services forum has increased globally.
- This area provides an international forum for people interested in
- all levels of user services, to identify and initiate projects
- designed to improve the quality of the information available to users
- of the Internet.
-
- One continuing goal of the User Services Area is to coordinate the
- development of user information services by clearly and concisely
- providing documentation information and distribution for the Internet
- community. FYI (For Your Information) RFCs (Request for Comments)
- are introductory and overview documents for network users. Their
- purpose is to make available general information, rather than the
- protocol specifications or standards that is typical of other RFCs.
- FYIs are allied to the RFC series of notes, but provides information
- about who does what on the Internet. The FYI RFC series has proved a
- success since its initiation, and its goal is to continue to do so.
- A current list of FYI RFCs are listed at the end of this document.
-
- The actual projects of the User Services Area are handled by the
- creation of Working Groups. There are currently eleven working
- groups in this area.
-
-
- IETF User Services Area Working Groups
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- Internet Anonymous FTP Archives (IAFA). IAFA is chartered to define
- a set of recommended standard procedures for the access and
- administration of anonymous ftp archive sites on the Internet.
-
- Integration of Internet Information Resources (IIIR). IIIR is
- chartered to facilitate interoperability between Internet Information
- Services, and to develop, specify, and align protocols designed to
- integrate the plethora of Internet information services (WAIS,
- archie, Prospero, etc.) into a single "virtually unified information
- service".
-
- Integrated Directory Services (IDS). The IDS Working Group is
- chartered to facilitate the integration and interoperability of
- current and future directory services into a unified directory
-
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- Reynolds [Page 1]
-
- IETF User Services Area March 1993
-
-
- service. This work will unite directory services based on a
- heterogeneous set of directory services protocols (X.500, WHOIS++,
- etc.). In addition to specifying technical requirements for the
- integration, the IDS Group will also contribute to the administrative
- and maintenance issues of directory service offerings by publishing
- guidelines on directory data integrity, maintenance, security, and
- privacy and legal issues for users and administrators of directories.
-
- Internet School Networking (ISN). ISN is chartered to facilitate the
- connection of the United States' K-12 (Kindergarten-12th Grade)
- schools, public and private, to promote school networking in general.
-
- Networked Information Retrieval (NIR). NIR is chartered to increase
- the useful base of information about networked information retrieval
- tools, their developers, interested organizations, and other
- activities that relate to the production, dissemination, and support
- of NIR tools. NIR is a cooperative effort of the IETF, RARE, and
- CNI.
-
- Network Information Services Infrastructure (NISI). NISI is
- exploring the requirements for common, shared Internet-wide network
- information services. The goal is to develop an understanding for
- what is required to implement an information services
- "infrastructure" for the Internet.
-
- Network Training Materials (TRAINMAT). The Network Training
- Materials Working Group is chartered to enable the research community
- to make better use of the networked services. Towards this end, the
- Working Group will work to provide a comprehensive package of "mix
- and match" training materials for the broad academic community which
- will: 1) enable user support staff to train users to use the
- networked services and 2) provide users with self-paced learning
- material. In the first instance, it will not deal with operational
- training. This Working Group is the IETF component of a joint
- RARE/IETF group working on Network Training Materials.
-
- Universal Resource Identifiers (URI). URI is chartered to define a
- set of standards for the encoding of system independent Resource
- Location and Identification information for the use of Internet
- information services.
-
- User Documentation (USERDOC2). UserDoc2 is preparing a revised
- bibliography of on-line and hard copy documents/reference materials/
- training tools addressing general networking information and how to
- use the Internet. (Target audience: those individuals who provide
- services to end users and end users themselves.)
-
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- Reynolds [Page 2]
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- IETF User Services Area March 1993
-
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- User Services (USWG). The User Services Working Group provides a
- regular forum for people interested in all user services to identify
- and initiate projects designed to improve the quality of information
- available to end-users of the Internet.
-
- Whois and Network Information Lookup Service (WNILS). The purpose of
- WNILS is to expand and define the standard for WHOIS services, to
- resolve issues associated with the variations in access, and to
- promote a consistent and predictable service across the network.
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- Reynolds [Page 3]
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- IETF User Services Area March 1993
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-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | WG Chair(s) Mailing List |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | IAFA Peter Deutsch iafa@bunyip.com |
- | Alan Emtage |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | IDS Tim Howes ids@merit.edu |
- | Chris Weider |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | |
- | IIIR Chris Weider iiir@merit.edu |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | ISN John Clement isn-wg@bitnic.educom.edu |
- | Art St. George |
- | Connie Stout |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | NIR George Brett nir@cc.mcgill.ca |
- | Jill Foster |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | NISI April Marine nisi@merit.edu |
- | Pat Smith |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | TRAINMAT Ellen Hoffman us-wg@nnsc.nsf.net |
- | Jill Foster |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | URI Alan Emtage uri@bunyip.com |
- | |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | USERDOC2 Ellen Hoffman userdoc@merit.edu |
- | Lenore Jackson |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | USWG Joyce K. Reynolds us-wg@nnsc.nsf.net |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | WNILS Joan C. Gargano ietf-wnils@ucdavis.edu |
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
-
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- Reynolds [Page 4]
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- IETF User Services Area March 1993
-
-
- Internet Documentation for USERS (not Wizards!)
-
- The FYI RFC Series
-
-
- FYI 18 "Internet Users' Glossary", (Also RFC 1392),
- January 1993.
-
- FYI 17 "The Tao of IETF - A Guide for New Attendees of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force, (Also RFC 1391),
- January 1993.
-
- FYI 16 "Connecting to the Internet: What Connecting
- Institutions Should Anticipate", (Also RFC 1359),
- August 1992.
-
- FYI 15 "Privacy and Accuracy Issues in Network
- Information Center Databases", (Also RFC 1355),
- August 1992.
-
- FYI 14 "Technical Overview of Directory Services Using
- the X.500 Protocol", (Also RFC 1309), March 1992.
-
- FYI 13 "Executive Introduction to Directory Services Using
- the X.500 Protocol", (Also RFC 1308), March 1992.
-
- FYI 12 "Building a Network Information Services Infrastructure",
- (Also RFC 1302), February 1992.
-
- FYI 11 "A Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations",
- (Also RFC 1292), January 1992.
-
- FYI 10 "There's Gold in them thar Networks! or Searching for
- Treasure in all the Wrong Places", (Also RFC 1402),
- January 1993.
-
- FYI 9 "Who's Who in the Internet: Biographies of IAB, IESG
- and IRSG Members", (Also RFC 1336), May 1992.
-
- FYI 8 "Site Security Handbook", (Also RFC 1244), July 1991.
-
- FYI 7 "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly Asked
- "Experienced Internet User" Questions", (Also RFC
- 1207), February 1991.
-
- FYI 6 "FYI on the X Window System", (Also RFC 1198),
- January 1991.
-
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- Reynolds [Page 5]
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- IETF User Services Area March 1993
-
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- FYI 5 "Choosing a Name for Your Computer", (Also RFC 1178),
- August 1990.
-
- FYI 4 "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly
- asked "New Internet User" Questions", (Also RFC 1325),
- May 1992.
-
- FYI 3 "FYI on Where to Start: A Bibliography of Internetworking
- Information", (Also RFC 1175), August 1990.
-
- FYI 2 "FYI on a Network Management Tool Catalog: Tools for
- Monitoring and Debugging TCP/IP Internets and
- Interconnected Devices", (Also RFC 1147), April 1990.
-
- FYI 1 "F.Y.I. on F.Y.I.: Introduction to the F.Y.I.
- Notes", (Also RFC 1150), March 1990.
-
-
-
- Details on obtaining FYI RFCs via FTP or EMAIL may be obtained by
- sending an EMAIL message to "rfc-info@ISI.EDU" with the message body
- "help: ways_to_get_rfcs".
-
- For example:
-
- To: rfc-info@ISI.EDU
- Subject: getting rfcs
-
- help: ways_to_get_rfcs
-
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-