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- BITNET
-
- BITNET (Because It's Time NETwork) is a cooperative network serving over
- 2,000 hosts worldwide. There are four main parts: BITNET (USA, Mexico),
- NetNorth (Canada), EARN (Europe, Africa) including ILAN (Israel), Asianet
- (east Asia). For electronic mail and other practical purposes it can be
- considered one network.
-
- BITNET mail addresses are of the form userid@node. The "nodes", as hosts
- are known in BITNET, have short names of 8 characters or less. There is
- usually only one path between any two nodes, and mail is passed along
- through various intermediate nodes until it reaches the destination. The
- links in the USA are leased phone lines at 9600 baud. Because of limited
- capacity, very long messages may be held at one of the intermediate points
- until overnight hours or weekends, and extremely long messages (over 300k)
- may be refused.
-
- Columbia University hosts are directly connected to two major networks,
- BITNET and the Internet. You can send and receive electronic mail easily
- by either network. Some other sites may be only on BITNET or only on the
- Internet (or neither), so you may or may not have a choice of routes.
-
- The nodename for cunixa, cunixb, cunixd, cunixe and cunixf is "cunixc".
- Thus, for user jb51 on cunixf, the BITNET address is jb51@cunixc.
-
- To send mail via BITNET, we recommend you add ".bitnet" to the address.
- For example, to reach the user abcdef@cunyvm, use "abcdef@cunyvm.bitnet".
- ".bitnet" is not really part of the address, but rather an instruction
- to the mail system about how to send the message.
-
- For more information about BITNET, see the files in the directory
- /usr/local/doc/bitnet, particularly:
- bitnet.userhelp An introduction to BITNET.
- listserv.lists A list of "listserv" discussion groups
- nodes.info1 and 2 BITNET nodes arranged by node (1) and site (2)
-
- You may want to read the first two with emacs.
-
- The nodes files are most useful with the grep command, as in
- $ grep "Fordham" /usr/local/doc/bitnet/nodes.info1
- which will list the nodes at Fordham University (for example).
-
- See also "help internet" and "help addressing".
-