home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!psuvax1!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben)
- Subject: ACN Supplement-Usenet Pt4
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.074059.12561@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: UMCC
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 07:40:59 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 599
-
- [ Article crossposted from alt.amateur-comp,news.misc ]
- [ Author was Ronda Hauben ]
- [ Posted on Fri, 18 Dec 92 03:26:19 EST ]
-
-
-
- Amateur Computerist Supplement on Usenet News Part 4 of 4
-
-
-
- Two Books to Help Users:
- "Using UUCP and Usenet"
- and
- "The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog"
-
- The Town Meeting of the World:
- Usenet News, UUCP & Internet
-
- A worldwide computer users network has developed into a series
- of democratic electronic town meetings on different topics that
- are available to users around the world. Known as Usenet News,
- this netnews network has evolved into a set of forums on dif-
- ferent subjects where participants can discuss and debate their
- differing viewpoints in an effort to find solutions to some of
- the very difficult problems in today's world.
-
- Several books give some background of the origin of this
- worldwide netnews network and provide users with advice about how
- to obtain and use software that makes it possible to participate.
- Usenet News is a logical network which is transported via
- physical networks like the Internet and UUCP. Beginning in this
- special issue of the Amateur Computerist we will attempt to
- introduce some of the books that provide users with the
- information and help needed to take part in these technological
- advances.
-
- The book Using UUCP and Usenet News by Grace Tolino and Dale
- Dougherty (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1986, corrected 1991), is
- an introduction to the wonderful world of Usenet News. "Usenet,"
- they tell the reader, stands for "user's network". Originally it
- was "a collection of UNIX systems that runs the netnews
- software." (pg.12) Usenet, which now runs on many other operat-
- ing systems, "is a worldwide network of computers that run the
- netnews software," they explain.(pg.99)
-
- The authors describe the origin of Usenet News. "Usenet News,"
- they write, grew out of UNIX users network (Usenet). (pg.xii)
-
- One of the networking facilities for the UNIX operating system
- is known as UUCP (which stands for Unix-to-Unix CoPy). "UUCP,"
- the authors explain, "is a networking facility for the UNIX
- operating system. It's software consists of files and programs
- for configuring and administering this facility and a number of
- programs that give users access to it."(pg.2)
-
- Many of the news reading programs, though copyrighted, are
- freely available for the personal use of computer users who have
- access to UNIX. And there are also programs that mimic the
- capability of these programs that are available for other types
- of computers such as IBM and Macintosh.
-
- By posting a question or opinion or response to another post
- on Usenet News, the computer user in Dearborn, Michigan, for
- example, becomes connected with computer users in Berlin,
- Germany, or Palo Alto, California, or Oslo, Norway, etc. The set
- of public posts are passed on around the U.S. and around the
- world, via a worldwide network that has developed in the past
- decade.
-
- The authors of Using UUCP and Usenet News explain how Usenet
- News, functions:
-
- "The net (as it is commonly called) is a public forum for the
- exchange of ideas in the form of news articles that are
- broadcast to member sites. Net users can post articles,
- forward mail, send followup articles to previous articles, or
- simply read the news using netnews programs." (pg.12)
-
- At the time Using UUCP and Usenet News was written (there have
- been several updates), the authors, Grace Todino and Dale
- Dougherty, reported that a posting was transmitted all over North
- America within two hours of being posted.
-
- "The net is a noncommercial network," they note. Probably this
- accounts for the amazing growth and development of Usenet News
- within the short period of a decade. Most of the participants are
- often unpaid and they make every effort to help new users and to
- encourage what they feel are constructive developments. "When
- used properly," the writers of Using UUCP and Usenet News
- explain, "the net is a unique way to stay informed and up-to-date
- on categories from UNIX to politics." (pg.13)
-
- There is the benefit of first hand information on a strike in
- Germany or how to teach a course in physics. "When you use
- Usenet," they write, "you don't just receive it; you interact
- with it." Thus Usenet has led to the existence of a world wide
- network of computers and a world wide network of computer users.
-
- The book also describes the UUCP network which formed the
- physical foundation on which Usenet News was developed. "The UUCP
- network currently consists of thousands of UNIX installations
- worldwide, and they can be reached if you know the network
- pathnames to them. Your link to the UNIX network becomes your
- link to the world and the world's link to you." (pg.11)
-
- The book explains how this network functioned, basing itself
- on backbone sites. "You can think of a backbone site as the
- center of a web with local networks growing into and out of it.
- News that is sent to a backbone site is passed on to other
- backbone sites as quickly as possible, so that it gets
- transmitted over a wide area in a short time." (pg.12)
-
- "The articles on the net," write the authors, "are classified
- into `newsgroups,' according to subject matter. You can think of
- a newsgroup," they explain, "as a bulletin board or forum devoted
- to one topic." There are groups on using various programs or
- computers, groups devoted to different programming languages,
- groups discussing politics, or economics or the developments in
- Eastern Europe, etc.
-
- At one time, newsgroups were divided into two different
- categories, "net, consisting of groups to which anyone could
- post," and "mod, consisting of groups in which postings had
- first to be approved by a moderator." (See footnote pg.101) By
- November, 1986, newsgroups were organized into seven major cate-
- gories. These major categories were:
- comp- Groups relating to some aspect of computer science
- (e.g. comp.lang.misc).
- sci- Groups relating to science or technology
- (e.g. sci.physics or sci.math)
- news- Groups relating to netnews or of interest to all Usenet
- News users (e.g. news.misc)
- rec- Groups discussing recreational activities.
- (e.g. rec.backcountry)
- soc- Groups discussing social issues (e.g.soc.culture.usa,
- soc.culture.german)
- talk- Groups discussing controversial issues
- (e.g. talk.politics.theory, talk.politics.misc)
- misc- Groups that are outside the other categories
- (e.g. misc.activism.progressive, misc.jobs)
-
- Other areas are also represented on the net, especially a
- large classification of groups called alt. which are groups that
- can be set up temporarily or more quickly than the standard
- newsgroups in other categories. For example, an alt.rodney.king
- group was set up during the rebellion in Los Angeles in May,
- 1992. Other alternative groups include:
- gnu- Groups devoted to the Free Software Foundation which
- has pioneered a battle for open programming code to
- encourage the exchange of ideas among programmers.
- bionet- Groups involved with the exchange of biological
- information.
-
- Appendix D of the book provides a list of the newsgroups that
- were available in 1990, many of which are still functioning. This
- list gives a sense of the great variety and diverse interests
- represented on Usenet News. About 600 different groups are
- described in this list. (There are now estimated to be about
- 2,500 newsgroups.)
-
- Also, the book tells the user how to acquire and use the
- software necessary to participate in Usenet News. There are
- directions for using some of the programs that are commonly used
- to read Usenet News, such as rn, readnews, or vnews. Procedures
- used for posting on Usenet News are described, using postnews
- and Pnews. The book also describes how to transfer files between
- networked UNIX systems. And it describes how to use the
- electronic mail capabilities of Unix to send mail via the
- networks across the world.
-
- The authors of Using UUCP and Usenet News recognize that it is
- "more than anything...the people who give much of the flavor and
- color to the net." (pg.12) It is the computer users on the Net
- who have, working together, and building on each other's
- contributions and differences, shown that the primary
- achievement of early New England, the New England Town Meeting,
- is now possible and what's more, it's happening, on a much
- broader and diverse basis. The Net now makes possible a Town
- Meeting of the World via computers.
-
- The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog by Ed Krol,
- (O'Reilly & Associates, California, 1992) updates the earlier
- O'Reilly publication about Usenet News and also describes the
- Internet, one of the networks that Usenet News is carried on.
- Krol gives some history of the Internet in Chapter II. He
- explains that the origin of the Internet lies in the ARPAnet set
- up by the U.S. Defense Department 20 years ago as an "exper-
- imental network designed to support ...research." (pg.11) The
- book guides the reader through how to use the Network News
- (called nn) newsreader for Usenet, from setting up an nn
- directory to posting a Usenet article, to sending replies via e-
- mail.
-
- Using directions in this book about how to do a subject or
- author search of Usenet News with netnews, I located an article
- by one of the founders of Usenet News. After sending him e-mail,
- he was particularly helpful in both answering questions and in
- suggesting how to trace out further information.
-
- Also, the book has sections on electronic mail and Net
- utilities available on the Internet like ftp, archie, gopher and
- wais. It guides the reader through how to use Unix programs like
- talk and chat. It also contains a section called "The Whole
- Internet Catalog" which describes some of the resources available
- on the Internet and how to access them. The Whole Internet User's
- Guide & Catalog is a welcome addition to the scarce literature
- for users about the treasures being made available by the
- telecommunications revolution.
-
- The disappointment of Krol's book is that it encourages
- commercialization and privatization of the Internet. For example,
- Krol writes "...commercial use of the Internet will become
- especially good for small business.... Most people in the net-
- working community think that privatization is a good idea."
- (pg.17) But such changes are contrary to the 20 year development
- and history of the networks. The terms `commercialization' and
- `privatization' as applied to the Internet are relatively recent
- and were coined two years ago at a workshop in 1990 at Harvard
- University, according to Eric M. Aupperle. (See "Internet and
- NSFNET Evolution," Internet Society News, Summer, 1992, vol 1, no
- 3, pg.3) Previous to that proposed change in direction, the
- research and education mandate of the National Science
- Foundation's Acceptable Use Policy restricted commercial and
- private interests using the net to research and education
- purposes. At the same time, academic and educational institutions
- were encouraged to utilize the network. The goal was set of
- broadening public use and accessibility of the Internet by
- making it available to all school children in the U.S. but this
- has not yet been achieved. Nor has any serious legislation or
- plan been put forward to implement this goal. The current
- promotion of private and commercial purposes or ownership of the
- Internet or parts of it is in conflict with this goal of
- increased public accessibility. It also threatens to impede the
- continued development of this technological breakthrough.
-
- The technological and other educational functions of the
- Internet, which have served to support computer users and
- developers by providing a community of people to help solve
- problems, are threatened by any detour from the research and
- education orientation which has nourished network development. It
- is not that "most of the people in the networking community think
- that privatization is a good idea," as Krol writes. (pg.17)
- Rather there is much concern and opposition, particularly among
- academic and noncommercial network users, to efforts by certain
- commercial users to try to appropriate the benefits of much
- publicly funded research and development for the narrow private
- profit making interests of a few commercial users. The issue of
- how best to support the continued development and evolution of
- networking technology and connectivity is a serious question that
- needs to be broadly discussed and debated. The Internet and its
- prototypes like the ARPANET have been developed by U.S.
- government agencies via a large expenditure of public funds and
- resources. Also, these advances have benefitted from a great
- deal of volunteer labor of computer users of these networks.
-
- The contributions of time, information, discussion, and
- involvement of computer users around the world, as well as the
- programs developed and made available by computer programmers to
- make the net a reality, demonstrate the important capability of
- the UNIX world that most home computer users have not yet become
- acquainted with. Currently, there is pressure on the U.S.
- Congress to privatize the networks that Usenet News is built on.
- (See for example "Congressional Hearings on Internet Held March
- 12," The Boardwatch, May, 1992, pg.53-4)
-
- The history of the evolution of the ARPANET and then the
- Internet shows that these technological breakthroughs were only
- possible because commercial traffic and participation were
- actively restricted and private profit making interests were not
- permitted to impede technological development. The future
- direction of the Internet is a serious concern which needs to be
- examined and discussed in the light of its historical evolution.
- Krol's comments on this issue lack this historical perspective
- and fail to provide the needed all sided discussion of the
- controversy over the future direction of the Internet. There is a
- need for the public to know how the network developed and for the
- future course to build on the lessons of this history so that
- this technological advance can continue to evolve and so that it
- will be used to benefit the public and the computer users who
- made such an important breakthrough possible.
-
- Krol's support and encouragement of commercialization and
- privatization is a detracting aspect, but in general, Krol's
- book is helpful because together with Using UUCP and Usenet, it
- is helping to spread the use of Usenet News, UUCP and the
- Internet.
-
- Just as the development and spread of industry and commerce
- played a pivotal role in the development of more democratic
- political institutions in the 1700s, communication and the broad
- ranging public discussions which are daily occurring on Usenet
- News are the basis to introduce order and good government into
- our modern world in the 1990s. And just as Adam Smith in the The
- Wealth of Nations (Modern Library edition, pg.385) realized that
- very few people understood the new political institutions
- developing in his day, similarly, today, very few people
- recognize the important political legacy of modern
- telecommunications technology, especially of computer networks,
- i.e. of Usenet News and of the Internet.
-
- Liberation Technology
- Equal Access Via Computer Communication
- by Norman Coombs
- (e-mail: NRCGSH@RITVAX.ISC.RIT.EDU)
-
- Western Civilization has had a centuries' long romance with
- technology and has often worshipped it as the "savior of
- mankind". Alternately, anti-utopians, ever since Shelly conjured
- up Frankenstein, have depicted it as the destroyer of humankind
- and human values. Technology is power and, as such, can serve
- many purposes. Whereas an earlier vision of the computer
- predicted an Orwellian "big brother" utilizing a centralized
- computer system to control society, the advent of the personal
- computer has turned this power pyramid on its head. Increasing
- thousands of people have a computer on their desk with as much
- capability at their fingertips as once was housed in an expensive
- and complicated mainframe. Obviously, the decentralization of
- power is no guarantee that the people will make good or wise use
- of it.
-
- Computer telecommunications contain the potential for removing
- barriers to social access for many disadvantaged persons.
- Traditional means of helping such people have usually been
- paternalistic in nature. Today, more and more of the
- disadvantaged are asking for empowerment so they can help
- themselves. They want the freedom to compete with the rest of
- society on a more nearly even playing field.
-
- I am a blind professor, at the Rochester Institute of
- Technology and I use a computer with a speech synthesizer. I
- regularly teach a class of students online with a computer
- conference. Most of these students have no physical handicap.
- Some of them, however, are hearing impaired, and some are totally
- deaf. I have team taught another course at the New School for
- Social Research, some 350 miles away, with a teacher who is
- confined to a wheelchair and who is both blind and partially
- paralyzed. On the computer screen, our handicaps of blindness and
- mobility make no difference.
-
- One of the courses I teach online is in African American
- history. In that class, some of the students are white, some are
- black, others are Asian and still others are Native American.
- Obviously, some of the class members are male and others female.
- All of these differences, like those of handicaps described
- above, become unimportant on the computer screen. It isn't that
- these distinguishing characteristics disappear because
- participants share their identities, their views and feelings
- freely. However, these differences no longer block communication
- and community. In fact, conference members often feel free to
- make such differences one of the topics for discussion. A student
- in my Black History course said that what he liked about
- conducting class discussion on the computer was that it didn't
- matter whether a person was male, female, black, white, red,
- yellow, blind or deaf. He appreciated that his comments were
- accepted for their own worth and not judged by some prior
- stereotype.
-
- The standard myth about the computer is that it is cold,
- depersonalizing and intimidating, the mystical province of a few
- wizards. When I began utilizing the computer to communicate with
- students, I had no idea of its potential to change my life and my
- teaching. First, it began by liberating me, a blind teacher, from
- my dependence on other people. As I now have all my assignments
- submitted through electronic mail including frequent take-home
- exams, I have very little need for human readers. This experience
- prepared me to become a member of a pilot study using computer
- conferencing to replace classroom discussion for students in some
- continuing education courses. Those with a personal computer and
- modem could work from home or the office. This freed them from
- the time and bother of commuting and also let them set their own
- schedule. The computer conference was available online 24 hours
- a day.
-
- We are using the conference system, VAX Notes produced by the
- Digital Equipment Corporation. It does facilitate a genuine group
- discussion without the class having to be in the same place nor
- having to be connected at the same time. I found it easy to send
- frequent short personal notes to individual students, and, in the
- evaluation questionnaire, the students rated my helpfulness and
- availability at 4.8 out of 5 points. I, too, felt I had more
- contact with individual students than is usual in a face-to-face
- classroom. This system had immediate appeal for three groups of
- our students. Off-campus continuing education students were happy
- not to have to commute. Those who had been taking mainly
- television or correspondence courses valued the easy exchange of
- information both between themselves and their teacher and between
- themselves and other students. The third group turned out to be
- regular day students with scheduling problems. This kind of flex
- scheduling is especially valuable for those students whose sched-
- ules are filled by laboratory courses.
-
- Although computer conferencing had obvious benefits for me, a
- blind professor, I had failed to grasp its significance for
- disabled students in general. Only when a deaf student joined the
- class did I come to realize its potential. This young deaf woman
- said that this was the first time in her life that she had con-
- versed with one of her teachers without using an interpreter
- intermediary. She further commented that this had been her most
- valuable course in her college experience because she could share
- in the discussions so easily and totally. Computer conferencing,
- because it avoids commuting, can be a benefit to persons with
- mobility impairments. They can go to school while they stay at
- home. The distance involved could be anything from a few miles to
- all the way across the continent or across an ocean. Students
- with motor impairments can also use this system. There are a
- variety of alternate input devices to let motor impaired persons
- use a computer even though they cannot handle a keyboard.
-
- Like others who use computer communications, I discovered that
- it liberates more than the physically disabled. Students became
- free to share more of themselves than in a classroom, and shy
- students found themselves less inhibited. Once students got over
- any initial computer phobia, many shy students found it easier to
- share this way. Where there is no stage then there is no stage
- fright. While some educators prefer to keep the teaching process
- academic and objective, others are convinced that students learn
- more and better when they become emotionally engaged in the
- process. I was surprised and pleased to find my classes sharing
- experiences about their families and themselves. In a discussion
- on welfare, one woman in her twenties confessed to being on
- welfare and described her feelings about it. In a Black History
- course, students described personal experiences as victims of
- racism. White students admitted to having been taught to be
- prejudiced and asked for help and understanding. Black students
- shared that they had prejudices about various shades of color
- within their own community. As a teacher, I often felt that I was
- treading on privileged ground. These were experiences I had never
- had in the 29 previous years of my teaching career. The students,
- themselves, became aware of what they were doing and usually
- began to discuss their interaction as one of the class topics.
- They appreciated that they were sharing in an unusual way and
- thanked me for creating the opportunity for them.
-
- Freedom to speak one's mind is a two-edged sword. Computer
- communications is infamous for people making thoughtless and
- irresponsible attacks on one another, often known as "flaming".
- In my experience, happily, there has been almost none of this.
- First, the teacher has the opportunity to set ground rules and,
- more importantly, an emotional and professional atmosphere.
- Second, a computer conference is different than electronic mail.
- Once a mass mailing has been sent, it is irretrievable. While the
- contents of a computer conference are posted publicly for all its
- members to see, a message can be removed. On very rare occasions
- I have removed a posting before it was read by most of the class.
- Usually, I prefer to leave controversial material on the
- conference and utilize it as a group learning experience. Actu-
- ally, most students seemed intuitively aware of the potential
- for misunderstanding and, before criticizing someone, they
- frequently asked questions to be sure that they understood what
- had be meant by the previous author.
-
- Am I suggesting that computer conferencing and allied
- technologies will become the "savior" of American higher
- education? Not really! It is only one teaching methodology among
- many. Most students would not choose to pursue their entire
- college degree using computer communication. However, it will
- have a growing significance in special situations. First, its
- asynchronous format is a way to solve scheduling conflicts.
- Second, it permits students living in remote locations the
- opportunity to get a quality education from a reputable
- institution. Third, when moderated carefully, it provides a safe
- setting for students to share their feelings on controversial
- topics. This can be helpful in courses related to sensitive
- social issues. The teacher can continue to focus on academic
- content while the class may explore its relevance to their
- personal lives.
-
- Finally, I am personally excited about the ability of computer
- net-working to provide more equal access to education and
- information for many persons with physical disabilities. In the
- fall of 1991, The Rochester Institute of Technology and Gallaudet
- University in Washington will conduct an experiment involving two
- courses: one taught from Rochester and the other from Washington,
- DC. Students from both campuses will be enrolled in both classes.
- While some use will be made of videos and movies, class
- discussions and meetings between a student and a teacher will all
- be done with computer telecommunications using Internet as the
- connecting link. Some students will be hearing impaired, and one
- teacher will be blind. In the future, such systems could include
- learners from anywhere with an Internet access.
-
- Computer communications has other important implications for
- both the print handicapped and those with motor impairments.
- Library catalogs can already be accessed from a personal
- computer and a modem. Soon, growing numbers of reference works
- will be available online also. While the copyright problems are
- complex, it seems inevitable that large amounts of text material
- from periodicals and books will also be accessible on a computer
- network. I still have vivid memories of the first time I
- connected my computer to a library catalog and found my book was
- really there. It was only a year ago that I had my first
- personal, unassisted, access to an encyclopedia. Not only is this
- technology liberating to those of us who have physical impair-
- ments, but in turn, it will help to make us more productive
- members of society.
-
- Not all handicapped persons rush to join the computer world.
- Many have become dependent on human support systems. Some of the
- hearing impaired students in my classes were very slow to become
- involved. Sometimes, independence is frightening, and handi-
- capped students may need special assistance to get started. One
- such student complained that such a computer course would be
- good for someone who had more self discipline than he had.
- Another problem is cost. While the personal computer has de-
- centralized power and is seen as a democratizing force in
- society, it works mainly for the middle class. Unless there is a
- deliberate policy to the contrary, such technology will leave the
- under class further behind.
-
- Visually impaired computer users, at present, have one growing
- worry. They fear that graphic interfaces and touch screens may
- take away all that the computer has promised to them. Recently
- passed federal legislation has tried to guarantee that future
- computer hardware and software be accessible to all the
- physically disabled. However, there is no real mechanism to
- enforce this. Besides, voluntary awareness and cooperation by
- computer providers is a far better approach to the problem.
- Educom has established EASI to work within the academic community
- for software access, and it is having an important impact on
- voluntary compliance. Others believe that adaptive software and
- hardware can be produced which can adequately interpret graphic
- interfaces for the visually impaired.
-
- Physical disabilities serve as an isolating factor in life.
- They also create a tremendous sense of powerlessness. Computer
- communications, however, serves to bring the world into one's
- home and puts amazing power at one's fingertips. Not only can
- this empowerment liberate the handicapped to compete in society
- more equally, but the sense of power changes how one feels about
- oneself.
-
- (Reprinted with permission from EDU Magazine, Digital Equipment
- Corporation)
-
- In Memorial
-
- The Editors and Staff of the Amateur Computerist want to
- express our condolences to one of our Founding and Current
- Editors, Bill Rohler and to his family on the death of his
- father, Roy Rohler. Roy Rohler attended the Ford Trade School
- and worked at Ford Motor Company for 42 years, following in the
- footsteps of his father, and Bill's grandfather, Roman Rohler,
- who also worked at Ford. Bill is thus a third generation Ford
- worker.
- Though we are saddened by the loss, we are grateful for the
- contributions made by Roy Rohler both to his family and to the
- production that has built the U.S.
-
- The Editors and Staff of the Amateur Computerist also want to
- express our condolences to another Founding and Current Editor,
- Norman O. Thompson and to his family, on the death of his father,
- Ernest Thompson. Ernest Thompson was born in South Carolina, and
- worked at many different jobs. In 1926 he came to Detroit. In
- 1943 he hired in at Rockwell International and worked there for
- 25 years, retiring in 1968. The obituary read at his funeral
- explained that he was "self-educated and knew all about life".
- Ernest was a UAW member, acting as shop steward for a while dur-
- ing the early days of the union. Thus Norman is a second
- generation UAW member. Ernest was one of the generation of
- workers known as tough cookies who were hardened by their years
- of work in pre union days. This generation was responsible for
- the many gains made by the unsung pioneers who built the UAW.
- We are saddened by the loss, but grateful for the strength and
- integrity Ernest Thompson passed on to his family and friends.
-
-
- ELECTRONIC EDITION AVAILABLE
-
- Starting with vol 4, no 2-3,
- the Amateur Computerist has
- become available in electronic
- mail form. To obtain a copy,
- send e-mail to:
- au329@cleveland.freenet.edu
- or: ae547@yfn.ysu.edu
- Also, the Amateur Computerist
- is now available via anonymous
- FTP at: wuarchive.wustl.edu
- It is stored in the directory:
- /doc/misc/acn
-
- EDITORIAL STAFF
- Ronda Hauben
- William Rohler
- Norman O. Thompson
-
- Michael Hauben
- Jay Hauben
-
- The Amateur Computerist invites contribution of articles, programs
- etc. Send submissions to: R.Hauben P.O. Box 4344, Dearborn,Mi.
- 48126 or au329@cleveland.freenet.edu. Articles can be submitted
- on paper or disk in ASCII format, (IBM or Commodore.), by
- e-mail or by posting on alt.amateur-comp newsgroup on Usenet
- News. One year surface mail subscription (4 issues) costs
- $5.00(US). Add $2.50 for foreign postage. Permission is granted
- to reprint any article herein, not individually copyrighted,
- provided credit is given.
-
-