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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!pacbell.com!iggy.GW.Vitalink.COM!widener!nobody
- From: brendan@cs.widener.edu (Brendan Kehoe)
- Newsgroups: misc.books.technical
- Subject: Re: How Does The Net Work?
- Date: 23 Jul 1992 09:34:30 -0400
- Organization: Widener University Computer Science Dept, Chester PA
- Lines: 129
- Message-ID: <14mch6INN9pf@betty.cs.widener.edu>
- References: <10214@scott.ed.ac.uk> <2788@ariel.its.unimelb.EDU.AU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: betty.cs.widener.edu
- Keywords: internet, email
-
- stong@ariel.its.unimelb.EDU.AU wrote:
- >In article <10214@scott.ed.ac.uk> holger@cogsci.ed.ac.uk (Holger Hank) writes:
- >>are there any books around which explain how computer-networks (like
- >>this one) function?
- >
- >_Zen and the Art of the Internet : A Beginner's Guide to the Internet_ 1st ed.
- >
- >Send e-mail to brendan@cs.widener.edu to ask for a copy.
-
- Before I get deluged, below are the instructions for retrieving the
- first edition. Also appended is the announcement of the second
- edition (it's dated, it talks in perspective of the beginning of this
- month). The book began to ship this past Friday.
-
- --
- These instructions are for retrieving the Postscript or TeX DVI
- versions of the first edition of Zen. There are no officially
- released (by me) ASCII versions yet.
-
- If you're on BITNET, you'll want to send mail to bitftp@pucc with the line
- help
- in the body of your message, to get instructions on FTPing it thru mail.
- If you're not on BITNET, but are limited to email, write to
- ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com with a similar body, to receive instructions.
-
- If you don't have access to FTP or don't feel comfortable with bitftp
- and ftpmail, write to info-server@nnsc.nsf.net with the body of your
- message containing
-
- request: nsfnet
- topic: zen-1.0.PS
- topic: zen.readme
-
- and it'll return the selected files.
-
- For FTP, here's whatcha need to do: first, type
-
- ftp ftp.cs.widener.edu
-
- and when it gives you the 'Name:' prompt, type
-
- anonymous
-
- If the name ftp.cs.widener.edu failed, try 147.31.254.132 instead.
- Then, with the Password: prompt, just give it your email address;
- it doesn't really matter what you type here...using your addr is just
- the tradition. Anyway, you'll get in and be left sitting at the
- prompt. Type
-
- cd pub/zen
-
- and do `dir'; you'll see the files listed there. If you want the
- PostScript version, type
-
- get zen-1.0.PS
-
- If you're on a system that only allows one period in a filename, use
-
- get zen-1-0.PS
-
- for example. If you want the .DVI (a TeX dvi file) file, type
-
- binary
- get zen-1.0.dvi
-
- (binary so it doesn't monkey with anything in the file). The .tar.Z
- file has the TeX source to the book, as well as the two other files
- (PS and dvi); to get that, type
-
- binary
- get zen-1.0.tar.Z
-
- instead. Once the file's finished transferring, type
-
- quit
-
- to get out.
- -- cut --
-
- -- cut --
- Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide---your navigator's
- guide to the many twists and turns that come with being comfortable
- with the Internet. Published by Prentice Hall, its Second Edition is
- due to begin shipping in the middle of July (a couple of weeks). It
- has an ISBN of 0-13-010778-6, and it costs $22. There are discounts
- available for large quantity and educational orders.
-
- Zen is primarily written for people that're comfortable with
- computers, but may not have had much (if any) exposure to networks in
- general. No one operating system is targeted; it's purposely
- "Operating System-neutral." Whether you use VM, VMS, Unix, DOS, or
- Billy's Virtual Machine, you should find this information useful.
- Even if you've been using the Net for years, you'll probably find
- something in Zen that you hadn't realized existed before.
-
- Zen discusses how to decypher domain names; use email well; what
- telnet is and what's available using it; Usenet news (including a lot
- on proper netiquette) ; FTP & archie; the various services that're out
- there, in their many forms; and a variety of other topics.
-
- It also features a chapter (my personal favorite) called ``What You'll
- Hear About''. Therein are described the different organizations that
- are concerned with or active on the Net, happenings like the Internet
- Worm and Cliff Stoll's wily hacker, and discussions of other net lore
- as well. I think you'll find Zen to be a good read, and not anything
- like the dry technical manuals that so often proliferate our book
- shelves. The first edition was received incredibly well by the Net in
- the past few months. (Send mail to archive-server@cs.widener.edu with
- the command `send zen hints' in the body of your message to get
- instructions on how to get the first edition. It will continue to be
- distributed, irregardless of what future editions may come out.)
-
- Opened with a foreword by Ed Vielmetti, Vice President of MSEN, the
- second edition offers roughly 30 pages of new information, and has
- been completely "refinished" front to back, with every page rewritten
- or changed in some way. You'll find it to be much cleaner and more
- complete than the first; everything in the first edition has been
- supplemented or improved. It sports a more complete glossary, an
- extensive bibliography, and a number of other reference features.
- I've directly incorporated the suggestions of dozens of folks on the
- net, in the hopes of making it exactly the kind of book you need.
-
- Let Zen be your guide through Cyberspace. Comments on either edition
- are welcome; please send them to guide-bugs@cs.widener.edu.
- -- cut --
- --
- Brendan Kehoe, Sun Network Manager brendan@cs.widener.edu
- Widener University Chester, PA
- At Bennigan's, EVERYONE gets it!
-