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- Computer underground Digest Wed Sep 2, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 41
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Copy Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, IV
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow-Archivist: Dan Carosone
-
- CONTENTS, #4.41 (Sep 2, 1992)
- File 1--MINDVOX System -- Qs and As
- File 2--Art of Technology Digest Info
- File 3--Re: Internet Guide
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The editors may be
- contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at:
- Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115.
-
- Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
- news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
- LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on Genie in the PF*NPC RT
- libraries; from America Online in the PC Telecom forum under
- "computing newsletters;" on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and by
- anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au
- For bitnet users, back issues may be obtained from the mail server at
- mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us
- European distributor: ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893.
-
- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
- diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted as long as the source
- is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
- be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
- mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
- Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to
- computer culture and communication. Articles are preferred to short
- responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely
- necessary.
-
- DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
- the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
- responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
- violate copyright protections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Sep 92 02:53 EDT
- From: digital@PHANTOM.COM(Patrick K. Kroupa)
- Subject: File 1--MINDVOX System -- Qs and As
-
- (MODERATORS' NOTE: We've been on a system called MINDVOX for the past
- month (cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com), and found it a rather
- interesting place to hang out. Although not officially "on-line" and
- open to the public, there were still a sufficient number of
- interesting posters and posts to keep us going back for more. IRC
- access, multiple on-line chats, disk storage space, usenet feeds, and
- other amenities, combined with the proposed future attractions once it
- goes on line, indicate that MINDVOX may become one of the better
- public access systems around. We played "Question and Answer" with Pat
- Kroupa, who runs it along with his long-time friend Bruce Fancher)).
-
- ++++
-
- CuD: What is your board's philosophy?
-
- Vox: Jeez, you got 100K of space for me to go on? Um, well basically
- the MindVox article is pretty much a summary of the causes and
- inceptions of what drove a group of us to put this together, you can
- pick it up off of various ftp sites under the cud/papers sections, and
- it's on MindVox itself as the editorial at the moment. Basically we
- are about evolving Cyberspace and online-communications to the next
- level beyond what is available, and then repeating that process over
- the years. We are about reality, virtual and non-virtual, making
- available to people information that depicts the facts behind a lot of
- things that the mass media tends to cloud and obscure, the hacker
- underground of course, but we also have a strong focus on drugs, their
- effects and uses, recreational, medicinal, steroids and the reality
- behind how they work and the effects they have on muscle building,
- weight-loss or weight gain, etc... The general idea was one of a
- nexus point within Cyberspace where people from all over the world
- could have access to information and first-hand-knowledge from other
- individuals, that was not possible anywhere else. So far we are
- succeeding in that effort.
-
- CuD: What do users get?
-
- Vox: Well the services they get access to are all the things they expect
- from Unix in a clean easy-to-use interface. This includes the usenet,
- IRC, software, as well as the MindVox Forums, Archives from the dawn
- of Cyberspace, and all types of games and interactive simulations. We
- also have mailboxes for people who might not want to belong to certain
- mailing lists or sites, from their normal address, because of
- big-brother type of system administrators. Member-selectable crypted
- mail is in the pipeline, as well as various features that allow a high
- level of privacy.
-
- CuD: How are the conferences?
-
- Vox: The conferences are going really well, considering that ratio of
- about 5% of the users typically writing 95% of the messages, we're
- closer to 15% or 20%, but then again we're just exiting beta mode, so
- we'll see if it tops out at that ratio or gets better. Our primary
- topical focus is of course Cyberspace, and we have a series of Forums
- devoted to every tangent of that, ranging from technology, networking,
- security, hardware and software, to discussions of ethics surrounding
- hacking and piracy, the social structure of the underground, with most
- of the players in residence, participating and explaining what it was
- really like. We also have areas for Virtual Reality, Ontology, Drugs,
- Health, Philosophy, Social Issues, the Arts, Business, Entertainment,
- basically anything that people would like to take part in, we'll let
- 'em have, but as stated, our principle focus is Cyberspace and its
- history and development.
-
- CuD: Where are we going?
-
- Vox: What we're going to be doing as time passes, is constantly evolving
- the state-of-the-art in online systems. What we're really focusing on
- is developing software objects that can be pulled apart and updated in
- a very efficient and fast manner, since everything that is possible
- with the current state of technology, basically moves forward 33%
- every two years. Hardware is really cheap these days, but its still
- running junk that was written in the early 80's and ported from
- mainframes, or some MSDOS-based nightmare that is so ridiculous in
- this day of workstations, that its not even funny. Most online
- services are just user-hostile. Right now our VOICES software is
- getting to a state that we're almost satisfied with, prior to getting
- front-ends for the PC/Mac and Amiga going over the winter. Since
- everything is always late, we probably won't have functional
- front-ends until early spring, but hey, they tell me "winter" right
- now, I just don't believe 'em, since they're always 4-8 weeks wrong.
-
- CuD: Who is there?
-
- Vox: Pretty much a cross-section of everybody in Cyberspace, with the
- main focus being on people who are a lot closer to whatever you want
- to term as being "the edge" which tends to define and re-define the
- boundaries of the playing field we're in. We have a lot of
- creative/artistic people, Mondo is online, Bruce Sterling,
- cyberpunk/science fiction writers, movie people, a lot of journalists
- and reporters are on to see what's going on or to communicate with
- each other, we pretty much have EVERYBODY who had a hand in shaping
- the computer underground during the 80's online, most of the ex-Legion
- of Doom, Knights of Shadow, just people from way-back-when who are
- living different lives right now; a lot of the EFF is around,
- government people, a lotta security people from various places are
- checking things out. Elvis was around for a while, but mostly we're
- still negotiating to get Bill the Cat. Oh and hey, you're there too!
-
- CuD: What's IRC (Inter-Relay Chat) like?
-
- Vox: IRC is interesting, if the net is working anarchy, IRC is
- dysfunctional anarchy. It's also probably one of the first genuine
- steps into what will become Cyberspace. It's real-time interaction,
- where I mean you're just typing to one another, but there are
- hundreds, sometimes thousands of people there from all over the world.
- And then when you stop and think that people meet, fall in love, even
- get married through this -- it really is a new medium for
- communications between people. On the other hand there are
- individuals who tend to live their entire lives through it, but...
- it's a really fascinating experience, what it means to you will vary
- greatly upon your personal needs of course, to one person its crap, to
- another an interesting diversion, and to a third, a reasonable
- alternative to perpetual loneliness or suicide.
-
- CuD: How do we access it?
-
- Vox: You can telnet to phantom.com, the IP address for that is:
- 38.145.218.228 or
- you can connect locally by dialing 212-988-5030.
-
- CuD: How much does it cost to get access?
-
- Vox: Pricing is broken down into a couple of categories to suit people's
- needs. What we've found during our beta testing stage is that a lot
- of clients are telnetting into Vox because they want to read the
- forums, download from the Archives and hang out with us; they don't
- really care about reading news or hanging out in IRC or whatever,
- since they can do all that from accounts they have right now.
- Conversely there are local people who are just amazed that they can
- FTP software, and wanna read the newsgroups and use mail, and
- basically don't have the slightest have the slightest idea who we are,
- and even less interest in reading the Forums. In fact the majority of
- local people just want Internet services with an easy-to-use front-end
- so they don't have to deal with Unix. So we changed Memberships to
- reflect what we discovered, and fulfill everyone's desires.
-
- MindVox Membership is $10 a month. Which gives you access to the
- MindVox Forums, the local Chat system, the Archives, Games, Mail, and
- things that fall into these basic categories.
-
- Internet Memberships are also $10 a month, and that's basically
- Usenet, Software, Mail, IRC, and things that fall into the category of
- "Public Unix Access."
-
- Or $15 a month gets you all services, period.
-
- Everybody gets two weeks of free time to check it out and decide if
- its something they want to be part of, before billing gets activated.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 30 Aug 92 18:45:13 EDT
- From: Chris Cappuccio <cappucci@CRS.CL.MSU.EDU>
- Subject: File 2--Art of Technology Digest Info
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The Art of Technology Digest is a new E-'Zine that
- we came across, so we posed some questions to the editor, Chris
- Cappuccio. From what we've seen of it so far, it's worth checking
- out)).
-
- Q: What's ATD About?
-
- A: Things That Happen With Technology, How Technology Is Used,
- Wierd Technology Uses, Some Computer Underground News
-
- Q: How Often Does It Come Out?
-
- A: Usually Every 1 1/2 Weeks or Whenever I Can Get It Out There
-
- Q: Where Can I Get It?
-
- A: For Back Issues, Call Live Wire BBS (313) 464-1470, 1200/2400/HST
- 9600-14400
- You Will Get Access On Your First Call And All Files Are Zipped So The LD
- Charges Are Low... To Be Put On The Mailing List, Do *Exactly* this:
-
- mail mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us
- SUBJECT:
- SUBSCRIBE aotd
-
- Q: How Can I Contribute?
-
- A: Send Your Contributions And Complaints To: cappucci@crs.cl.msu.edu
-
- Q: What Is The Mailserver at batpad.lgb.ca.us?
-
- A: It's A Different Version Of The Listserv Commonly Found On Bitnet
- (Because It's Time Network) And Uses Slightly Different Commands
-
- Q: Why Does batpad.lgb.ca.us Take Hours To Respond?
-
- A: Give UUCP A Break!
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Aug 1992 15:36:10 PDT
- From: Brian Erwin <brian@ORA.COM>
- Subject: File 3--Re: Internet Guide
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: We are not in the habit of providing free
- advertising for profit-making enterprises, but we feel the following
- "Nutshell" and related products by O'Reilly Associates are relevant
- resources. Whenever we have technical questions, the people we ask
- often refer us to a volume from the Nutshell series as a pointer for
- further information. We asked Brian Erwin of O'Reilly Associates to
- summarize a list of "how-to" books that might be relevant for CuD
- readers, and he came up with the following).
-
- ***New Nutshell Handbooks***
- Power Programming with RPC (New 2/92)
- Guide to Writing DCE Applications (New 6/92)
- UNIX in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference for System V and Solaris 2.0
- (New 6/92)
-
-
- UNIX & C Programming
- ____________________
- Checking C Programs with lint
- Guide to OSF/1: A Technical Synopsis
- lex & yacc
- Managing Projects with make, 2nd Edition
- POSIX Programmer's Guide
- Power Programming with RPC
- Practical C Programming
- Programming Perl
- Programming with curses
- sed & awk
- Understanding and Using COFF
- UNIX for FORTRAN Programmers
- Using C on the UNIX System
-
- UNIX Communications
- ___________________
- The Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks
- Managing UUCP and Usenet
- MH & xmh: E-mail for Users & Programmers
- Using UUCP and Usenet
- The Z-Mail Handbook
-
- UNIX System Administration
- __________________________
- Essential System Administration
- Managing NFS and NIS
- Practical UNIX Security
- System Performance Tuning
- termcap & terminfo
-
- Computer Security
- _________________
- Computer Security Basics
- Practical UNIX Security
-
- UNIX Text Processing
- ____________________
- Learning GNU Emacs
- Learning the vi Editor
- Typesetting Tables on the UNIX System
-
- UNIX Basics
- ___________
- DOS meets UNIX
- Learning the UNIX Operating System
- UNIX in a Nutshell for Berkeley
- UNIX in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference for System V and Solaris 2.0
-
- DCE
- ___
- Guide to Writing DCE Applications
-
-
-
- ***The Pick Series***
- Pick MASTER DICTIONARY: A Reference Guide to User Accounts
- Pick ACCESS: A Guide to the SMA/RETRIEVAL Language
- Pick BASIC: A Reference Guide
- A Guide to the Pick System
-
-
- ==========
-
- The X Window System Series
- Definitive Guides to the X Window System
-
-
- Volume 0, X Protocol Reference Manual, for X11 Release 4 and Release 5
- Edited and with an introduction by Adrian Nye
- 516 pages, ISBN 1-56592-008-2, $34.95
- 3rd Edition, Release 5, February 1992
-
- Describes the X Network Protocol which underlies all software for Version 11
- of the X Window System. Includes protocol clarifications of X11 Release 5, as
- well as the most recent version of the ICCCM and the Logical Font Conventions
- Manual. For use with any release of X.
-
-
- Volume 1, Xlib Programming Manual, Release 4
- By Adrian Nye
- 672 pages, ISBN 0-937175-11-0, $34.95
- 2nd Edition, Release 4, April 1990
-
- Complete programming guide to the X library (Xlib), the lowest level of
- programming interface to X. Updated to cover X11 Release 4.
-
-
- Volume 2, Xlib Reference Manual, for X11 Release 4 and Release 5
- By Adrian Nye
- 1138 pages, ISBN 1-56592-006-6, $34.95 (estimated)
- 3rd Edition, Release 5, June 1992
-
- Complete reference guide to the X library (Xlib), the lowest level of
- programming interface to X. Updated to cover X11 Release 4 and Release 5.
-
-
- Volume 3, X Window System User's Guide, Release 4
- By Valerie Quercia & Tim O'Reilly
- Standard Edition, 752 pages, ISBN 0-937175-14-5, $34.95
- Motif Edition, 734 pages, ISBN 0-937175-61-7, $34.95
- Standard Edition, Release 4, May 1990. Motif Edition January 1991.
-
- Orients the new user to window system concepts and provides detailed tutorials
- for many client programs, including the xterm terminal emulator and window
- managers. Later chapters explain how to customize the X environment. This
- popular manual is available in two editions, one for users of the MIT software,
- one for users of Motif. Revised for X11 Release 4.
-
-
- Volume 4, X Toolkit Intrinsics Programming Manual, Release 4
- By Adrian Nye & Tim O'Reilly
- Standard Edition, 624 pages, 0-937175-56-0, $34.95
- Motif Edition, 666 pages, 0-937175-62-5, $34.95
- 2nd Edition, Release 4, September 1990. Motif Edition January 1991.
-
- A complete guide to programming with Xt Intrinsics, the library of C language
- routines that facilitate the design of user interfaces, with reusable
- components called widgets. Available in two editions. The Standard Edition
- uses Athena widgets in examples; the Motif Edition uses Motif widget examples.
-
-
- Volume 5, X Toolkit Intrinsics Reference Manual, for X11 Release 4 and Release 5
- Edited by David Flanagan
- 916 pages, ISBN 1-56592-007-4, $34.95
- 3rd Edition, Release 5, April 1992
-
- Complete programmer's reference for the X Toolkit, providing pages for each
- of the Xt functions, as well as the widget classes defined by Xt and the
- Athena widgets. This 3rd Edition has been re-edited, reorganized, and expanded
- for X11 Release 5.
-
-
- Volume 6, Motif Programming Manual
- By Dan Heller
- 1032 pages, ISBN: 0-937175-70-6, $39.95
- 1st Edition September 1991
-
- The Motif Programming Manual is a source for complete, accurate, and
- insightful guidance on Motif application programming. There is no other
- book that covers the ground as thoroughly or as well as this one.
- Motif Release 1.1.
-
-
- Volume 7, XView Programming Manual, 3rd Edition
- By Dan Heller, edited by Thomas Van Raalte
- 766 pages, ISBN 0-937175-87-0, $34.95
- 3rd Edition September 1991
-
- XView Reference Manual
- Edited by Thomas Van Raalte
- 266 pages, ISBN 0-937175-88-9, $24.95
- 1st Edition September 1991
-
- Complete programming and reference guides to XView Version 3. XView was
- developed by Sun Microsystems. It is an easy-to-use object-oriented toolkit
- that provides an OPEN LOOK user interface for X applications.
-
-
- The X Window System in a Nutshell
- Edited by Ellie Cutler, Daniel Gilly, & Tim O'Reilly
- 424 pages, ISBN 1-56592-017-1, $24.95
- 2nd Edition April 1992
-
- Indispensable companion to the X Window System Series. Experienced X
- programmers can use this single-volume desktop companion for most common
- questions, keeping the full series of manuals for detailed reference. This
- book has been newly updated to cover R5 but is still useful for R4.
-
-
- Programmer's Supplement for Release 5 of the X Window System, Version 11
- David Flanagan
- 390 pages, ISBN 0-937175-86-2, $29.95
- 1st Edition November 1991
-
- For programmers who are familiar with Release 4 of the X Window System and
- want to know how to use the new features of Release 5. This books is an
- update for owners of Volumes 1, 2, 4, and 5 of the X Window System Series,
- and provides complete tutorial and reference information to all new Xlib
- and Xt toolkit functions.
-
-
- PHIGS Programming Manual: 3D Programming in X
- By Tom Gaskins
- 968 pages, ISBN 0-937175-85-4, $42.95 softcover
- ISBN 0-937175-92-7, $52.95 hardcover
- 1st Edition February 1992
-
- A complete and authoritative guide to PHIGS and PHIGS PLUS programming,
- this book documents the PHIGS and PHIGS PLUS graphics standards
- and provides full guidance regarding the use of PHIGS within the X
- environment.
-
- ==========
-
- The X Resource: A Practical Journal of the X Window System
-
- The X Resource is a quarterly working journal for X programmers. Its goal is
- to provide practical, timely information about the programming, administration,
- and use of the X Window System. Issues include:
- -Over-the-shoulder advice from programmers who share their experience with you
- -Suggestions from the people who wrote your software tools
- -Insight on making better use of public domain tools for software development
- -In-depth tutorial and reference documentation
- -Annual Proceedings of the X Technical Conference held at MIT (O'Reilly &
- Associates is the official publisher of the Proceedings, which form the
- January issue.)
-
- Regular issues of the journal (Spring, Summer, and Fall) include three
- sections: papers, departments, and documentation. The Winter issue is the
- Annual Proceedings of the X Consortium's X Technical Conference at MIT.
- (The conference proceedings are published exclusively in The X Resource.) All
- four issues are approximately 220 pages in length, with no advertising. The
- journal is practical rather than academic: its primary aim is to help
- programmers learn and program better.
-
- Subscribers to The X Resource have the option of subscribing to the journal
- plus supplements. For programmers who want to review proposed X Consortium
- standards and participate in setting those standards, supplements to The X
- Resource will include:
- -Public Review Specifications for proposed X Consortium standards
- -Introductory explanations of the issues involved
-
- We're selling individual copies of The X Resource like books; you can buy
- copies through O'Reilly & Associates or at bookstores. You can also subscribe
- to The X Resource through O'Reilly & Associates. For information about
- subscriptions contact Cathy Record at:
- The X Resource
- O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
- 103A Morris St.
- Sebastopol, CA 95472
- USA/Canada: (800) 998-9938
- Overseas or Local: 707-829-0515
- Fax: 707-829-0104
-
-
-
- The X Resource Issue 0, October 1991
- Adrian Nye, Editor
- 253 pages, ISBN 0-937175-79-X, $22.50
-
- Articles for Issue 0 include: default colormap manipulation,
- prescient agents, engineering insights from an interactive imaging
- application, C++ with Motif, xterm tips and tricks, Xcms, UIMS systems,
- internationalization, editres and more.
-
-
- The X Resource Issue 1, January 1992
- Adrian Nye, Editor
- 240 pages, ISBN 0-937175-96-X, $22.50
-
- Issue 1, January 1992, is the Annual Proceedings of the X Technical
- Conference at MIT.
-
-
- The X Resource Issue 2, April 1992
- Adrian Nye, Editor
- 190 pages, ISBN 0-937175-97-8, $22.50
-
- Articles for Issue 2 include: object-oriented implementation of
- a drag-and-drop protocol, basic extension writing, imake, porting from motif
- to Open Look, documentation on the Widget Creation Language.
-
-
- The X Resource Issue 3, July 1992
- Adrian Nye, Editor
- 220 pages, ISBN:0-937175-98-6, $22.50
-
- The X Resource includes in-depth articles and documentation not available
- elsewhere. Articles for Issue 3 include: multi-user application software
- using Xt, using the new font capabilities of HP-donated font server
- enhancements, improving X application performance, the nonrectangular window
- shape extension, GUI Testing, Server instrumentation and tracing, Font Server
- Administration, RichText widget, and more.
-
- ==========
-
- Nutshell Handbooks
- Concise, hands-on guides to selected UNIX topics
-
-
- Using C on the UNIX System
- By Dave Curry
- 250 pages, ISBN 0-937175-23-4, $24.95
- 1st Edition January 1989
-
- This is the book for intermediate to experienced C programmers who want
- to become UNIX system programmers. It explains system calls and special
- library routines available on the UNIX system.
-
-
- Understanding and Using COFF
- By Gintaras R. Gircys
- 196 pages, ISBN 0-937175-31-5, $21.95
- 1st Edition November 1988
-
- COFF--Common Object File Format--is the formal definition for the structure
- of machine code files in the UNIX System V environment. All machine-code
- files are COFF files. This handbook explains COFF data structure and its
- manipulation.
-
-
- Computer Security Basics
- By Deborah Russell & G.T. Gangemi Sr.
- 464 pages, ISBN 0-937175-71-4, $29.95.
- 1st Edition July 1991
-
- Provides a readable introduction to computer security concepts:
- passwords, access controls, cryptography, network security,
- biometrics, TEMPEST, and more. Describes government and industry
- standards for security, including the "Orange Book" standard for
- secure systems. Includes an extensive glossary of computer
- security terms and sources for more information.
-
-
- Programming with curses
- By John Strang
- 76 pages, ISBN 0-937175-02-1, $12.95
- 1st Edition 1986
-
- Curses is a UNIX library of functions for controlling a terminal's
- display screen from a C program. This handbook helps you make use of
- the curses library.
-
-
- Guide to Writing DCE Applications
- By John Shirley
- 282 pages, ISBN 1-56592-004-X, $29.95
-
- A hands-on programming guide to OSF's Distributed Computing Environment
- (DCE) for first-time DCE application programmers. This book is designed
- to help new DCE users make the transition from conventional, nondistributed
- applications programming to distributed DCE programming. Covers RPC, name
- service, security services, threads, and other major aspects of DCE, and also
- includes practical programming examples.
-
-
- DOS meets UNIX
- By Dale Dougherty & Tim O'Reilly
- 148 pages, ISBN 0-937175-21-8, $15.00
- 1st Edition April 1988
-
- Describes the solutions available for integrating DOS and UNIX. It
- also briefly introduces UNIX for DOS users.
-
-
- Learning GNU Emacs
- By Deb Cameron & Bill Rosenblatt
- 442 pages, ISBN 0-937175-84-6, $27.95
- 1st Edition October 1991
-
- This book is an introduction to the GNU Emacs editor, one of the most
- widely used and powerful editors available under UNIX. It provides a
- solid introduction to basic editing, a look at several important
- "editing modes" (special Emacs features for editing specific types of
- documents), and a brief introduction to customization and Emacs LISP
- programming. The book is aimed at new Emacs users, whether or not
- they are programmers.
-
-
- !%@:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks
- By Donnalyn Frey & Rick Adams
- 438 pages, ISBN 0-937175-15-3, $27.95
- 2nd Edition May 1990
-
- Answers the problem of addressing mail to people you've never met, on
- networks you've never heard of. Includes a general introduction to
- e-mail, followed by detailed reference sections for over 130 networks.
-
-
- Essential System Administration
- By AEleen Frisch
- 466 pages, ISBN 0-937175-80-3, $29.95
- 1st Edition October 1991
-
- Provides a compact, manageable introduction to the tasks faced by everyone
- responsible for a UNIX system. This guide is for those who use a stand-alone
- UNIX system, those who routinely provide administrative support for a larger
- shared system, or those who want an understanding of basic administrative
- functions. Covers all major versions of UNIX.
-
-
- UNIX for FORTRAN Programmers
- By Mike Loukides
- 264 pages, ISBN 0-937175-51-X, $24.95
- 1st Edition August 1990
-
- This handbook minimizes the UNIX entry barrier by providing the serious
- scientific programmer with an introduction to the UNIX operating system and
- its tools. Assumes some knowledge of FORTRAN, but none of UNIX nor C.
-
-
- Learning the UNIX Operating System
- By Grace Todino & John Strang
- 84 pages, ISBN 0-937175-16-1, $9.00
- 2nd Edition 1987
-
- If you are new to UNIX, this concise introduction will tell you just
- what you need to get started and no more. Why wade through a 600-page
- book when you can begin working productively in a matter of minutes?
-
-
- lex & yacc
- By Tony Mason & Doug Brown
- 238 pages, ISBN 0-937175-49-8, $24.95
- 1st Edition May 1990
-
- Shows programmers how to use two UNIX utilities, lex and yacc,
- to solve problems in program development. Includes explanations
- of the concepts and tutorial examples, as well as detailed technical
- information for advanced users.
-
-
- Checking C Programs with lint
- By Ian F. Darwin
- 84 pages, ISBN 0-937175-30-7, $12.95
- 1st Edition October 1988
-
- The lint program is one of the best tools for finding portability
- problems and certain types of coding errors in C programs. This
- handbook introduces you to lint, guides you through running it on your
- programs, and helps you interpret lint's output.
-
-
- Managing Projects with make
- By Steve Talbott and Andrew Oram
- 152 pages, ISBN 0-937175-90-0, $17.95
- 2nd Edition October 1991
-
- Make is one of UNIX's greatest contributions to software development,
- and this book is the clearest description of make ever written. This
- revised second edition includes guidelines on meeting the needs of
- large projects.
-
-
- Managing UUCP and Usenet
- By Tim O'Reilly & Grace Todino
- 368 pages, ISBN 0-937175-93-5, $27.95
- 10th Edition January 1992
-
- For all its widespread use, UUCP is one of the most difficult UNIX
- utilities to master. This book is for system administrators who want to
- install and manage UUCP and Usenet software. "Don't even TRY to install UUCP
- without it!" --Usenet message 456@nitrex.UUCP
-
-
- MH & xmh: E-mail for Users & Programmers
- By Jerry Peek
- 598 pages, ISBN 0-937175-63-3, $29.95
- 1st Edition January 1991
-
- Customizing your e-mail environment to save time and make communicating
- more enjoyable. MH & xmh: E-Mail for Users & Programmers explains how to
- use, customize, and program with the MH electronic mail commands, available
- on virtually any UNIX system. The handbook also covers xmh, an X Window
- System client that runs MH programs.
-
-
- Managing NFS and NIS
- By Hal Stern
- 436 pages, ISBN 0-937175-75-7, $27.95
- 1st Edition June 1991
-
- Managing NFS and NIS is for system administrators who need to set up or manage
- a network filesystem installation. NFS (Network Filesystem) is probably
- running at any site that has two or more UNIX systems. NIS (Network
- Information System) is a distributed database used to manage a network of
- computers. The only practical book devoted entirely to these subjects, this
- guide is a "must-have" for anyone interested in UNIX networking.
-
-
- Guide to OSF/1: A Technical Synopsis
- The staff of O'Reilly & Associates
- 304 pages, ISBN 0-937175-78-1, $21.95
- 1st Edition June 1991
-
- This technically competent introduction to OSF/1 is based on OSF technical
- seminars. In addition to its description of OSF/1, it includes the differences
- between OSF/1 and System V Release 4 and a look ahead at DCE.
-
-
- Programming Perl
- By Larry Wall & Randal Schwartz
- 482 pages, ISBN 0-937175-64-1, $29.95
- 1st Edition January 1991
-
- Authoritative guide to the hottest new UNIX utility in years,
- co-authored by the creator of that utility. Perl is a language for
- easily manipulating text, files, and processes.
-
-
- POSIX Programmer's Guide
- By Donald Lewine
- 640 pages, ISBN 0-937175-73-0, $34.95
- 1st Edition April 1991
-
- Most UNIX systems today are POSIX-compliant because the Federal government
- requires it for their purchases. However, given the manufacturer's
- documentation, it can be difficult to distinguish system-specific features
- from those features defined by POSIX. The POSIX Programmer's Guide, intended
- as an explanation of the POSIX standard and as a reference for the POSIX.1
- programming library, will help you write more portable programs.
-
-
- Practical C Programming
- By Steve Oualline
- 420 pages, ISBN 0-937175-65-X, $24.95
- 1st Edition July 1991
-
- C programming is more than just getting the syntax right. Style and debugging
- also play a tremendous part in creating programs that run well. Practical C
- Programming teaches you not only the mechanics of programming, but also
- describes how to create programs that are easy to read, maintain and
- debug. There are lots of introductory C books, but this is the Nutshell
- Handbook!
-
-
- Practical UNIX Security
- By Simson Garfinkel & Gene Spafford
- 512 pages, ISBN 0-937175-72-2, $29.95
- 1st Edition June 1991
-
- Tells system administrators how to make their UNIX systems--either System V
- or BSD--as secure as they possibly can be without going to trusted system
- technology. The book describes UNIX concepts and how they enforce security,
- tells how to defend against and handle security breaches, and explains network
- security (including UUCP, NFS, Kerberos, and firewall machines) in detail.
-
-
- UNIX in a Nutshell for Berkeley
- 272 pages, ISBN 0-937175-20-X, $19.50
- 1st Edition December 1986
-
- This UNIX quick-reference goes beyond the list of frequently used
- commands and options found in most quick refs. "I highly recommend the
- UNIX in a Nutshell handbooks as desktop references. [They] are
- complete and concise; they pack more information into fewer pages than
- I've ever seen." --DEC Professional, Sept. 1987
-
-
- UNIX in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference for System V and Solaris 2.0
- 444 pages, ISBN 1-56592-001-5, $9.95
- By Daniel Gilly and the staff of O'Reilly & Associates
- 2nd Edition June 1992
-
- You may have seen UNIX quick reference guides, but you've never seen
- anything like UNIX in a Nutshell. Not a scaled-down quick-reference of
- common commands, UNIX in a Nutshell is a complete reference containing
- all commands and options plus generous descriptions and examples that
- put the commands in context. For all but the thorniest UNIX problems,
- this one reference should be all the documentation you need.
- Covers System V Releases 3 and 4 and Solaris 2.0.
-
-
- Power Programming with RPC
- By John Bloomer
- 494 pages, ISBN 0-937175-77-3, $29.95
- 1st Edition February 1992
-
- RPC, or remote procedure calling, is the ability to distribute
- the execution of functions on remote computers. Written from a
- programmer's perspective, this book shows what you can do with
- RPC and presents a framework for learning it.
-
-
- sed & awk
- By Dale Dougherty
- 414 pages, ISBN 0-937175-59-5, $27.95
- 1st Edition November 1990
-
- For people who create and modify text files, sed and awk are power
- tools for editing. Most of the things that you can do with these
- programs can be done interactively with a text editor. However, using
- sed and awk can save many hours of repetitive work in achieving the
- same result.
-
-
- System Performance Tuning
- By Mike Loukides
- 336 pages, ISBN 0-937175-60-9, $24.95
- 1st Edition November 1990
-
- System Performance Tuning answers the fundamental question: How can I
- get my computer to do more work without buying more hardware? Some
- performance problems do require you to buy a bigger or faster computer,
- but many can be solved simply by making better use of the resources you
- already have.
-
-
- Typesetting Tables on the UNIX System
- By Henry McGilton & Mary McNabb
- 280 pages, ISBN 0-9626289-0-5, $24.95
-
- For those UNIX users who depend on troff, the definitive guide to tbl.
- If you're a novice UNIX user, this book is the best way to learn tbl.
- If you're an expert, the book will pay for itself the first time you want
- to show off.
-
-
- termcap & terminfo
- By John Strang, Linda Mui, & Tim O'Reilly
- 270 pages, ISBN 0-937175-22-6, $21.95
- 3rd Edition April 1988
-
- For UNIX system administrators and programmers. This handbook provides
- information on writing and debugging terminal descriptions, as well as
- terminal initialization, for the two UNIX terminal databases.
-
-
- Using UUCP and Usenet
- By Grace Todino & Dale Dougherty
- 210 pages, ISBN 0-937175-10-2, $21.95
- 1st Edition February 1986
-
- Shows users how to communicate with both UNIX and non-UNIX systems
- using UUCP and cu or tip, and how to read news and post articles.
- This handbook assumes that UUCP is already running at your site.
-
-
- Learning the vi Editor
- By Linda Lamb
- 192 pages, ISBN 0-937175-67-6, $21.95
- 5th Edition October 1990
-
- Complete guide to text editing with vi, the editor available on nearly
- every UNIX system. Early chapters cover the basics; later chapters explain
- more advanced editing tools, such as ex commands and global search and
- replacement.
-
-
- The Z-Mail Handbook: 3 Interfaces for E-mail
- By Hanna Nelson
- 462 pages, ISBN 0-937175-76-5, $29.95
- 1st Edition October 1991
-
- Z-Mail is a superset of the widely-used public-domain program, Mush.
- Z-Mail runs on UNIX terminals or on graphic workstations running the
- X Window System, and even supports multimedia attachments (so you can
- mail anything that you can store on disk). This is the complete guide
- to this powerful mail program. Also covers Mush.
-
- ==========
-
- The Pick Series
-
- If you've ever wanted more out of Pick documentation--understanding a
- passage at first reading; speedily looking up an option; finding
- complete coverage of a topic; having a guide you can give to a first-
- time user--the Pick Series is for you. It's complete, accessible,
- authoritative, and it even looks good.
-
- The Pick Series is a complete Pick documentation set, based on a
- mainstream implementation of the Pick operating system (R83) with notes
- on SMA standards and other implementations.
-
-
-
- Pick ACCESS: A Guide to the SMA/RETRIEVAL Language
- By Walter Gallant
- 368 pages, ISBN 0-937175-41-2, $29.95
- 1st Edition November 1989
-
- Pick ACCESS introduces ACCESS concepts, documents all commands, features,
- and functions, and includes a thorough description of correlatives and
- conversions.
-
-
- Pick BASIC: A Reference Guide
- By Linda Mui
- 338 pages, ISBN 0-937175-42-0, $39.95
- 1st Edition March 1990
-
- Pick BASIC is complete documentation for applications programmers. The large
- reference section covers all Pick BASIC functions and statements.
-
-
- Pick MASTER DICTIONARY: A Reference Guide to User Accounts
- By Walter Gallant
- 576 pages, ISBN 0-937175-44-7, $39.95
- 1st Edition March 1990
-
- A complete command reference guide for all TCL and Editor commands available
- in user accounts. Pick MASTER DICTIONARY includes more information than any
- other reference volume currently available. Commands and options for major
- Pick implementations such as ADDS Mentor, Ultimate, General Automation, PICK
- Systems R83, and REALITY are included.
-
-
- A Guide to the Pick System
- By Dale Dougherty
- 330 pages, ISBN 0-937175-43-9, $34.95
- 1st Edition January 1990
-
- This book is designed for the applications programmer or other experienced
- user who wants to know how Pick structures database files and how to set up
- databases.
-
- ===============
-
- US and Canada: To order these books contact O'Reilly & Associates at
- 103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA, 95472 or call 1-800-998-9938.
- To send a FAX: +1 707-829-0104.
- Email questions to nuts@ora.com or uunet!ora!nuts.
-
- --
- Brian Erwin, brian@ora.com
- Public Relations, O'Reilly & Associates
- 103A Morris Street, Sebastopol CA 95472
- 707-829-0515, Fax 707-829-0104
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #4.41
- ************************************
-