Big Dummy's Guide To The Internet by Electronic Frontier Foundation (early reader chapter books .txt) ๐
When you tell your communications software to capture a screen, it opens a file in your computer (usually in the same directory or folder used by the software) and "dumps" an image of whatever happens to be on your screen at the time.
Logging works a bit differently. When you issue a logging command, you tell the software to open a file (again, usually in the same directory or folder as used by the software) and then give it a name. Then, until you turn off the logging command, everything that scrolls on your screen is copied into that file, sort of like recording on videotape. This is useful for capturing long documents that scroll for several pages -- using screen capture, you would have to repeat the same command for each new screen.
Terminal emulation is a way for your computer to mimic, or emulate, the way other computers put information on the screen and accept commands from a keyboard. In general, most systems on the Net
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Big Dummyโs Guide To The Internet
(C)1993, 1994 by the Electronic Frontier Foundation [EFF]
Copyright 1993, 1994 Electronic Frontier Foundation, all rights reserved.
Redistribution, excerpting, republication, copying, archiving, and reposting
are permitted, provided that the work is not sold for profit, that EFF
contact information, copyright notice, and distribution information
remains intact, and that the work is not qualitatively modified (translation,
reformatting, and excerpting expressly permitted however โ feel free to
produce versions of the Guide for use with typesetting, hypertext,
display, etc. applications, but please do not change the text other than to
translate it to another language. Excerpts should be credited and follow
standard fair use doctrine.) Electronic Frontier Foundation, 1001 G St. NW,
Suite 950 E, Washington DC 20001 USA, +1 202 347 5400 (voice) 393 5509 (fax.)
Basic info: [email protected]; General and Guide related queries: [email protected].
Big Dummyโs Guide to the Internet, v.2.2 copyright Electronic Frontier Foundation 1993, 1994 TABLE OF CONTENTSForeword by Mitchell Kapor, co-founder, Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Preface by Adam Gaffin, senior writer, Network World.
Chapter 1: Setting up and jacking in
1.1 Ready, setโฆ 1.2 Go! 1.3 Public-access Internet providers 1.4 If your town doesnโt have direct access 1.5 Net origins 1.6 How it works 1.7 When things go wrong 1.8 FYIChapter 2: E-mail
2.1. The basics 2.2 Elm โ a better way 2.3 Pine โ even better than Elm 2.4 Smileys 2.5 Sending e-mail to other networks 2.6 Seven Unix commands you canโt live withoutChapter 3: Usenet I
3.1 The global watering hole 3.2 Navigating Usenet with nn 3.3 nn commands 3.4 Using rn 3.5 rn commands 3.6 Essential newsgroups 3.7 Speaking up 3.8 Cross-postingChapter 4: Usenet II
4.1 Flame, blather and spew 4.2 Killfiles, the cure for what ails you 4.3 Some Usenet hints 4.4 The Brain-Tumor Boy, the modem tax and the chain letter 4.5 Big Sig 4.6 The First Amendment as local ordinance 4.7 Usenet history 4.8 When things go wrong 4.9 FYIChapter 5: Mailing lists and Bitnet
5.1 Internet mailing lists 5.2 BitnetChapter 6: Telnet
6.1 Mining the Net 6.2 Library catalogs 6.3 Some interesting telnet sites 6.4 Telnet bulletin-board systems 6.5 Putting the finger on someone 6.6 Finding someone on the Net 6.7 When things go wrong 6.8 FYIChapter 7: FTP
7.1 Tons of files 7.2 Your friend archie 7.3 Getting the files 7.4 Odd letters โ decoding file endings 7.5 The keyboard cabal 7.6 Some interesting ftp sites 7.7 ncftp โ now you tell me! 7.8 Project Gutenberg โ electronic books 7.9 When things go wrong 7.10 FYIChapter 8: Gophers, WAISs and the World-Wide Web
8.1 Gophers 8.2 Burrowing deeper 8.3 Gopher commands 8.4 Some interesting gophers 8.5 Wide-Area Information Servers 8.6 The World-Wide Web 8.7 Clients, or how to snare more on the Web 8.8 When things go wrong 8.9 FYIChapter 9: Advanced E-mail
9.1 The fileโs in the mail 9.2 Receiving files 9.3 Sending files to non-Internet sites 9.4 Getting ftp files via e-mail 9.5 The all knowing OracleChapter 10: News of the world
10.1 Clarinet: UPI, Dave Barry and Dilbert 10.2 Reuters 10.3 USA Today 10.4 National Public Radio 10.5 The World Today: From Belarus to Brazil 10.6 E-mailing news organizations 10.7 FYIChapter 11: IRC, MUDs and other things that are more fun than they sound
11.1 Talk 11.2 Internet Relay Chat 11.3 IRC commands 11.4 IRC in times of crisis 11.5 MUDs 11.6 Go, go, go (and chess, too)! 11.7 The other side of the coin 11.8 FYIChapter 12: Education and the Net
12.1 The Net in the Classroom 12.2 Some specific resources for students and teachers 12.3 Usenet and Bitnet in the classroomChapter 13: Business on the Net
13.1 Setting up shop 13.2 FYIChapter 14: Conclusion โ The end?
Appendix A: Lingo
Appendix B: Electronic Frontier Foundation Information
Foreword
By Mitchell Kapor,
Co-founder, Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Welcome to the World of the Internet
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is proud to have sponsored
the production of the Big Dummyโs Guide to the Internet. EFF is a
nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C., dedicated to ensuring
that everyone has access to the newly emerging communications technologies
vital to active participation in the events of our world. As more and more
information is available online, new doors open up for those who have
access to that information. Unfortunately, unless access is broadly
encouraged, individuals can be disenfranchised and doors can close, as
well. The Big Dummyโs Guide to the Internet was written to help open some
doors to the vast amounts of information available on the worldโs largest
network, the Internet.
The spark for the Big Dummyโs Guide to the Internet was ignited in
a few informal conversations that included myself and Steve Cisler of Apple
Computer, Inc., in June of 1991. With the support of Apple Computer, EFF
engaged Adam Gaffin to write the book and actually took on the project in
September of 1991.
The idea was to write a guide to the Internet for people who had
little or no experience with network communications. We intended to post
this guide to the Net in ASCII and HyperCard formats and to give it away on
disk, as well as have a print edition available. We have more than
realized our goal. Individuals from as geographically far away as Germany,
Italy, Canada, South Africa, Japan, Scotland, Norway, and Antarctica have
all sent electronic mail to say that they downloaded the Big Dummyโs Guide
to the Internet. The guide is now available in a wide array of formats,
including ACSCII text, HyperCard, World Wide Web, PostScript and
AmigaGuide. And the guide will be published in a printed format by MIT
Press in June of 1994.
EFF would like to thank author Adam Gaffin for doing a terrific job
of explaining the Net in such a nonthreatening way. Weโd also like to
thank the folks at Apple, especially Steve Cisler of the Apple Library, for
their support of our efforts to bring this guide to you.
We invite you to join with EFF in our fight to ensure that equal
access to the networks and free speech are protected in newly emerging
technologies. We are a membership organization, and through donations like
yours, we can continue to sponsor important projects to make communications
easier. Information about the Electronic Frontier Foundation and some of
the work that we do can be found at the end of this book.
We hope that the Big Dummyโs Guide to the Internet helps you learn
about whole new worlds, where new friends and experiences are sure to be
yours. Enjoy!
Mitch Kapor
Chairman of the Board
Electronic Frontier Foundation
For comments, questions, or requests regarding EFF or the Big Dummyโs Guide
to the Internet, send a note to [email protected].
Preface
By Adam Gaffin,
Senior Writer, Network World, Framingham, Mass.
Welcome to the Internet! Youโre about to start a journey through aunique land without frontiers, a place that is everywhere at once โ even
though it exists physically only as a series of electrical impulses.
Youโll be joining a growing community of millions of people around the
world who use this global resource on a daily basis.
With this book, you will be able to use the Internet to: = Stay in touch with friends, relatives and colleagues around the world, at a fraction of the cost of phone calls or even air mail. = Discuss everything from archaeology to zoology with people in several different languages. = Tap into thousands of information databases and libraries worldwide. = Retrieve any of thousands of documents, journals, books and computer programs. = Stay up to date with wire-service news and sports and with official weather reports. = Play live,
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