Email 101 by John Goodwin (e book free reading txt) đź“•
*Appendix C. Technical Details of an Internet Connection
Appendix D. Just Enough UNIX
Appendix E. The Ten Best Things To Get If You Only Have E-Mail
<Chapter 1> The Past and Future of Internetworking
There is an old fashioned way to connect with other computers and shareinformation and there is a modern way. It is helpful to compare the twomethods briefly in order to make contact with methods you may alreadyknow and to show off the advantages of using the Internet.
The old fashioned (ca. 1980) method of making contact with othercomputers is through a bulletin board service (BBS). Bulletin boardservices grew up in the late 70s as a method for sharing software,talking, playing games, etc. with a personal computer. They range insize from small special interest Bulletin Boards with a local followingto giant national boards like CompuServe, GEnie, and The Source. Youaccess a bulletin board with a modem and communication software bydialing a telephone nu
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This file should be called email025.txt Version 0.2.5 (alpha release) 17 July 1993
This rough version is missing 8 out of 28 chapters and 1 out of 5 appendices.
Copyright (c) 1993 by John E. Goodwin. All Rights Reserved.
You may make and distribute verbatim copies of these course notes for non-commercial purposes using any means, provided this copyright notice is preserved on all copies.
For information on taking the internetworking course, contact
John Goodwin ([email protected]) P.O. Box 6022 St. Charles, IL 60174, U.S.A.
1
<title> E-MAIL 101
If you like those little machines that give you 24 hour access to your bank account, you’ll love the Internet. I suppose there are still people who, given a choice, will go to a drive-through teller just so they can deal with a “live person” instead of a machine. But even those people will admit that it is nice to have the option of doing things for yourself, on your own schedule, anywhere. Do you remember what it was like before automatic tellers? Banks closed at 3 p.m. on weekdays. Each Saturday you had to guess how much money you would need for the following week. If you were wrong you had to cash a check at a food store (and maybe buy something you didn’t want). And if you were out of town? Well, there were always credit cards.
We don’t do that anymore. I think many people go to the automatic teller because they like the privacy of handling their own business without having to explain it all to someone else. And we like the illusion of having access to our “own” account anytime we want. There are disadvantages to using an automatic teller card too—you may have to pay a fee each month or even for each transaction—and you have to remember to deduct those fees from your account balance or you will bounce checks. But I’ll bet you feel pretty competent using an automatic teller and don’t lose much sleep worrying over the fees.
This course is designed to give you that same sense of freedom and competence with the Internet that you have with an automatic teller machine or the telephone. With a home computer, a modem, and communications software, you can connect to other computers over the phone line to exchange electronic mail (E-mail), trade files, or search for information. Many of those computers are connected to the worldwide network called the Internet. Some few of them will—for a fee—let you connect to the Internet. From there you can dial any of 900,000 or more computers, send E-mail to any of 25 million people, and access hundreds of free, informative services.
In short, you are on the verge of a new method of communicating with people and machines called “internetworking.” Internetworking lets you:
o Avoid playing phone tag;
o Sign up to receive special
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