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FidoNews · Vol 13, No 53 · 30 December 1996

     F I D O N E W S --       Volume 13, Number 53          30 December 1996
     +----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
     |  The newsletter of the     |   ISSN 1198-4589 Published by:          |
     |    FidoNet community       |   "FidoNews"                            |
     |          _                 |        1-904-409-7040    [1:1/23]       |
     |         /  \               |                                         |
     |        /|oo \              |                                         |
     |       (_|  /_)             |                                         |
     |        _`@/_ \    _        |                                         |
     |       |     | \   \\       |   Editor:                               |
     |       | (*) |  \   ))      |        Christopher Baker  1:18/14       |
     |       |__U__| /  \//       |                                         |
     |        _//|| _\   /        |                                         |
     |       (_/(_|(____/         |                                         |
     |             (jm)           |     Newspapers should have no friends.  |
     |                            |                    -- JOSEPH PULITZER   |
     +----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
     |               Submission address: FidoNews Editor 1:1/23             |
     +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
     |  MORE addresses:                                                     |
     |                                                                      |
     |    submissions=> cbaker84@digital.net                                |
     +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
     |    For  information,   copyrights,   article   submissions,          |
     |    obtaining copies of FidoNews or the internet gateway FAQ          |
     |    please refer to the end of this file.                             |
     +----------------------------------------------------------------------+


       HAPPY NEW YEAR! AN EXTRA FIDONEWS ISSUE THIS YEAR!


                        Table of Contents
     1. EDITORIAL  ................................................  1
        End of the Volume 13 year  ................................  1
     2. COLUMNS  ..................................................  2
        FIDONET IN EUROPE  ........................................  2
     3. FIDONET BIOGRAPHIES  ......................................  3
        Joe Klemmer, 1:109/370, a .BIO finally!  ..................  3
     4. GETTING TECHNICAL  ........................................  5
        FSC-0004 - Zones & ZoneGates explained  ...................  5
        FSC-0005 - Opus passwording explained  ....................  6
        FSC-0007 - Message Format Specification  .................. 10
     5. COORDINATORS CORNER  ...................................... 17
        Nodelist-statistics as seen from Zone-2 for day 362  ...... 17
     6. WE GET EMAIL  ............................................. 18
        FCC information  .......................................... 18
     7. NET HUMOR  ................................................ 22
        End of the year laugh?  ................................... 22
     8. COMIX IN ASCII  ........................................... 24
        Keep watching the skies!  ................................. 24
     9. ADVERTISE YOUR FREE SERVICE/EVENT  ........................ 27
        Announcing the CRICKET_ECHO  .............................. 27
        Announcing the WRESTLING_CHAT Echo  ....................... 27
     10. NOTICES  ................................................. 28
        Future History  ........................................... 28
     11. FIDONET SOFTWARE LISTING  ................................ 29
     And more!
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 1                   30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                                 EDITORIAL
     =================================================================

     We get an extra Issue this year since we're still in 1996 for this
     last Issue. Is that luck or design? [snicker]

     The complete year is available here as:

            FNEWS13.ZIP

     at about 700K compressed. It also contains the complete Table of
     Contents for 1996 by Issue in chronological order. The complete year
     is also available on the FidoNews webpage at:

            http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fidonews.html

     and will be available at the other archive sources listed in the
     Masthead at the end of every Issue.

     ARTSPEC.DOC has been revised again. The new version has been hatched
     into the FIDONEWS file echo and into the SDS area SOFTDIST as
     ARTSPEC.ZIP. It will be published in full in Issue 1401 next week.

     The only change is the addition of a new filetype for submissions. It
     is called: .INT for FidoNet sources via the Internet.

     A new Section appears in this Issue just before the Masthead. It
     contains Internet addresses for Administrative links and for Zone,
     Region, and Net homepages. It will appear every week with accumulated
     info. Submissions of independent info using the .INT file extension
     will also be written to the new Section. The listed sites are also
     available from the FidoNews webpage [see above address]. To date, only
     Zone 1 sites are known and listed. I invite all other Zones, Regions,
     and Nets to submit their site addresses for listing via Netmail,
     email, or .INT submission.

     This doesn't mean FidoNet is being taken over by the Internet. It's
     just another way to communicate and for many it's much cheaper for
     files and docs. FidoNet IS part of the Internet after all. [grin]

     It's been a good year for FidoNews with your help and submissions. So
     keep them coming! We even have our FIRST .BIO submission this week! I
     hope it starts a trend and encourages the rest of you lurkers to get
     out of that closet. [Thanks, Joe!]

     Starting in Volume 14, Issue 01, the FidoNews PGP public-key will
     begin appearing again barring any injunction from the ZCC. A majority
     of ZCs responding to my direct Netmail have no problem with its
     inclusion in FidoNews. Tom Jennings certainly has no problem with it.

     Happy New Year to all!
     C.B.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 2                   30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                                  COLUMNS
     =================================================================


     Fidonet In Europe
     -----------------
     by Dave Meikle ( NOTE NEW NET ADDRESS : 2:259/24.105)

     Sorry about last week , I was getting my new net address do you
     forgive me ? :-) Nothing happened anyway :-( Newz just in:

     THE (UN)OFFICAL DALKEITH THISTLE F.C. Web PAGE.
     http://members.aol.com/rebeljambo/thistle

     Thats all folks.

     Dave

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 3                   30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                            FIDONET BIOGRAPHIES
     =================================================================


     Joe Klemmer
     1:109/370

             I was born on November 12th, 1962 in Bremerhaven of what was
     then known as West Germany.  My father was a teacher for the DoD
     Depend Schools over there.  I grew up bouncing back and forth between
     the U.S., mostly PA and DE, and Germany until 1976.  That summer we
     moved to Kaiserslautern where I attended the American High School
     there.  I was one of three people who went all four years at the
     school, such is the life of the Overseas Brat<tm>.  After graduating
     HS in 1980 I "attempted" collage but, well, let's just say I wasn't
     cut out for a prolonged academic career. <g>

             My first "real" job was as a U.S. Government Civilian (GS)
     computer operator on an old IBM 4331 mainframe.  This is where I got
     my initial exposure to what is now referred to at the "Cyberworld".  I
     spent the next 8 years working at many jobs including a dish washer,
     truck driver, teacher, more computer operator, football coach, rock
     guitarist (paying job doing clubs), still more computer operator and
     other things I can't remember.

             In July of 1988 we moved to the Washington DC area where I got
     a job as. . . No, it wasn't a computer operator.  It was a 7-11 clerk!
     That lasted about a month till I COULD find a job as a computer
     operator.  :-) This was with also a GS job and it was here that I
     first met my future wife, Joy.  After a year and a half of stalking.
     . . uh, "wooing" her, we were married on July 28th, 1990.  During this
     time I fell into a job as a GS computer programmer.  I was still
     working on mainframe systems, this time an IBM 3090 running MVS, and
     my primary work was in COBOL-85.

             Now, after I got married and we got a place of our own, I
     found that I needed a computer to access the system at work.  I got a
     386sx-16 with 40meg HD, 2meg RAM and a 2400bps modem.  Hot stuff in
     late '90, huh?  Anyway, I'd heard about BBS's and such so I figured
     I'd try some out, since I had the modem and all.  Well that got me
     hooked and, OC, it wasn't long before I fired up my own BBS.  It was
     called "My UnKnown BBS" and came up around November of '91.  After a
     little while I started to get interested in message networks so I
     joined (actually I helped create) a QWK net that is now known as the
     World Message Exchange or WME.

             By now I'd met a number of other Sysops, some of whom were in
     Fidonet.  I started to look into Fido and, to make a long story short
     [too late!], in Nov '92 I got a node number of 1:109/370 thanks to
     Dave Aronson and Bruce Feist.  About this time I had also started to
     notice some discomfort in my hands and a slight numbing of the
     fingertips but didn't think it was anything.

             So, now I'm in Fido.  What's one of the first things to do
     when you're in?  Dump over 55,000 dupes onto the backbone in a 3 hour
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 4                   30 Dec 1996


     period.  Needless to say I made many friends at this point, not the
     least of which was the NEC for Net-109.  After finding the problem
     (bad software) and getting it fixed (long story for some other venue)
     I was allowed to carry echos again.  Since I'd been in such a close
     working relationship with the NEC for about a year, I volunteered to
     become a backbone hub now that I had a stable setup.  I was still
     running the BBS and it had become slightly popular but the discomfort
     I'd been feeling in my hands had now become unbearable.  In the spring
     of '94, I was diagnosed with CTS and had to go in for surgery on both
     hands.  At this point I'd been pretty much unable to maintain the BBS
     so I shut it down but kept on as a Fido hub.  The surgery worked and,
     for a brief time, I had regained 99% of the use of my hands.  It was
     the fall of that year that the current NC decided it was time to step
     down so, being the big mouth. . . uh, Active Citizen that I am, I
     stepped in and was elected NC for Net-109.  OC, since I was running
     unopposed this wasn't much of a surprise.

             Not long after that my hands had started to bother me again.
     Luckily as NC I didn't need them for much typing.

     <RANT>
     A good NC should be virtually invisible to the net he's in.  If an NC
     is sending lots of "admin" messages he's not doing his job right.
     </RANT>

             The problem with my hands turned out to be something
     different.  It's called Myofacial Pain Syndrome and is a musculature
     disorder that has made my left hand/arm nearly useless and greatly
     reduced the use of my right.  Because of this, by the beginning of
     1996 I'd been thinking about stepping down as NC.  This decision was
     reinforced when, to our great surprise, Joy became pregnant with our
     first child.  In September, I stepped down as NC.

             During this time my "real" job has moved into the world of the
     Web.  I built and maintain a site for the Army Publications & Printing
     Command and am learning a LOT about perl and java on the fly.
     Additionally, we had the best Christmas present ever this year; our
     son was born at 1:12 a.m. on Dec 16th.  Between him and the web stuff,
     I don't think I'll ever get to run a BBS again but. . .

             I _AM_ still running a major Backbone hub, though, and will
     continue in Fidonet for as long as I have a system and a phone line.

     ---

     The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new
     discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny . . ."
                                                -- Isaac Asimov

      -30-

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 5                   30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                             GETTING TECHNICAL
     =================================================================


     [This is part of our continuing series of FidoNet Technical Proposals.
      This Issue contains three FSCs since they were small. They have been
      reformatted to 70 columns where required.] Ed.


     FSC-0004

     Date: Mon  9 Feb 87 21:46
     From: Randy Bush on 105/6, PSG Portland of VanPort Area, Portland OR
     To: Wynn Wagner on 124/108, The POLE: Opu of Dallas Metrop, Dallas TX
     Subj: Re: Zones

     The FSC has been working with existing implementations based on a year
     or two old paper by Kilgore Trout describing Zones and Points, zone
     gates, and nodes supporting points.  [ The paper was published in
     FidoNews last year, but unfortunately was mostly to do with exploiting
     FidoNet financially, but had pretty good technical requirements buried
     underneath. ]

     The FSC's goal is to send to some place for which one does not have
     the nodelist.  The underlying problem we are addressing is nodelist
     growth.  We envision over 10^5 nodes in a few years.  Our approach may
     be a bit more disjoint than you were considering.

     We have private nodelists already, and many of us use them (including
     remapping to private nodelists using Points and/or addressees' names).
     This has been in use for long enough that we almost understand half
     the uses to which folk seem to put it.  But the important part of
     Zones is not the nomenclature, rather the mapping of addresses.

     What the FSC was seeking with Zones (and is implemented and being
     tested) is a method of getting mail to Bialystok (sp) without having a
     Polish phone book.  In the following example, please imagine possible
     sugar such as using POLAND for 42 etc.

     When I, 1:105/6 address a message to Krzystzof in Bialystok,
     42:451/666, it addresses the message header to <irrelevant> and
     creates a ^a line something like

       ^aINTL 42:451/666 1:105/6

     The ^aINTL line is noticed by a smart router at either my node, or my
     outbound host's node.  To date the only ways to create the ^aINTL line
     are SEAdog's Mail program and some private utilities.

     Either in a batch run on the smart node (currently implemented by the
     program ZoneGate) or in a truely smart mailer program (not yet known)
     the smart router changes the destination net/node of the message
     containing the ^aINTL to the outbound gateway to (or toward) zone 42
     by a simple algorithm shown below.  Thus, the message will travel
     within zone 1 (this zone) as if its final destination was the net/node
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 6                   30 Dec 1996


     of the outbound gate.  This allows Opera and Fidos 11w to carry it on
     its meanderings within any particular zone.

     When it arrives at the destination outbound zone gate, the smart
     router there notices it, and

       o may strip the seenbys (we had thought of it but not yet
         implemented it) except for that of the zonegate
       o hands the message to the corresponding inbound zone gate by an
         unspecified means (intl zone gates tend to be other than FidoNet)

     The recipient inbound zone gate looks at the message's ^aINTL line
     and, using the same algorithm as all the other smart routers that have
     seen the message,

       (* I hope you were waiting for the algorithm *)
       IF msg.aINTL.toZone = myzone THEN
          msg.address := msg.aINTL.toNetNode
       ELSE
          msg.address := outboundZoneGate [ msg.aINTL.toZone ]

     And thus the message travels onward, with its header address net/node
     representing it's intra-zone routing within the current zone and the
     ^aINTL line showing smart routers the true final destination.

     Observe that smart routers and zone gates only need know the local
     addresses of the outbound zone gates from their own zone's nodelist,
     and nothing about the nodelists of other zones.  One imagines the
     truely international FidoNet having more than 10^5 nodes, with Opera
     and Fidos and other pre-Zone clones will carrying the international
     traffic on its way within a zone in complete innocence.

     The return address for the message is also stored in the ^aINTL line,
     so a 'smart' recipient node can reply.

     Rather than trading private nodelists, the only information that needs
     to be given to smart routers is the addresses of zone gates out of the
     current zone.  And, of course anybody can set up Zones, zone gates,
     and all those nice egalitarian sentiments, all they need is a simple
     mapping utility and a way of telling folk that they're a zone gate and
     to what.

     There are some who consider a Unix gate merely a zone gate.  Usenet
     certainly is another zone.

      -30-



     -----------------------------------------------------------------


     FSC-0005

                    The Opus Computer-Based Conversation System

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 7                   30 Dec 1996


              (c) Copyright 1987, Wynn Wagner III, All Rights Reserved


                                       OPUS-CBCS

                                Matrix Password Methods


     MATRIX PASSWORDS USED BY OPUS
     -----------------------------


              Opus uses two kinds of passwords for matrix sessions:

                       SESSION LEVEL     access code is roughly the same
                                         sort of thing as a user's
                                         password.  It is passed from one
                                         system to another during the
                                         session negotiation sequence (aka
                                         YooHoo) and is in effect for the
                                         entire matrix session.

                       TRANSACTION LEVEL passwords are valid only for WaZOO
                                         "ZedZap" style file requests.
                                         They are a way to protect
                                         requestable material on a file-by-
                                         file basis.


     MATRIX PASSWORDS USED BY OTHER<tm> SYSTEMS
     ------------------------------------------

              It is possible that Opus will be sensitive to passwords
              produced by other netmail software.  Because other password
              methods have not been documented or their behavior publicly
              explained, the compatibility between Opus and non-WaZOO
              systems isn't assured.

              Apparently the behavior of some other methods involves
              protection against unauthorized "pickup" of material that is
              on hold.  You can make a case that Opus does this as well.
              Opus uses a true session-level protection scheme.
              Unauthorized pickup is avoided in that the remote system will
              find itself without a carrier.

              Within a couple of days of the scheduled release of Opus
              1.00, we discovered a change in the implementation of some
              "bark" style file request programs.  The change was made to
              the method of exchange the name of the file being requested
              and apparently offers some kind of transaction-level
              password.  There was no attempt to include this change in
              Opus 1.00.


     PASSWORDS
     ---------
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 8                   30 Dec 1996


              A password consists of 4 to 6 characters or numbers and is
              case insensitive.  The password cannot contain white space,
              control codes, or punctuation (except an underscore).

              Valid characters for passwords are

                       "a".."z", "A".."Z", "0".."9", "_"


     SETTING UP A SESSION LEVEL PROTECTION SYSTEM
     --------------------------------------------

              UPFRONT
              -------

              Both sides of a password protected session use the same
              access code.  My system's password on your system is your
              password on my system.


              OPUSNODE
              --------

              The OPUSnode program (by Wes Cowley) has facilities for
              dealing with Opus-compatible passwords beginning with version
              1.4.4.


              STORING PASSWORDS
              -----------------

              This is fairly technical information about the storage of
              matrix passwords.

              There are plans to change the structure of the node list file
              (NODELIST.SYS), and the new structure has room for a 6-
              character password.  That's in the future.  For the present,
              we have to have some place to store the password.

              This kludge is about as temporary as they come.  The correct
              way to handle passwords is to have a structure that can
              handle them.  The current node list structure has no such
              field.  It does, however, have an extra-ordinarily amount of
              space to hold the CITY.

              The CITY in the NodeList.Sys file is 40 characters.  If you
              want to put a session level password in the node list file,
              you can do so.

                       NORMAL CITY:     ccccccccccccccccccnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn

                       PASSWORDED CITY: ccccccccccccccccccn!ppppppnnnnnnn

                                         c = city information
                                         n = null (ascii zero)
                                         ! = exclamation point (or "=")
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 9                   30 Dec 1996


                                         p = password information

              In other words, to put a password into the node list CITY
              record, follow the city with a null and an exclamation point
              and a null-terminated password.

              An equals sign can appear instead of an exclamation point.
              This has a special meaning to ECHO GUARD (see below).


              METHOD
              ------

              The session level password is used during the YooHoo
              negotiation.  If there is a problem, Opus will drop carrier
              on the caller and make a "*" type log entry.

              As a confidence factor, successful passwords will be logged
              with a tracer ("#") style entry.


     SETTING UP A TRANSACTION LEVEL PROTECTION SYSTEM
     ------------------------------------------------

              Transaction level passwords only work with WaZOO "ZedZap"
              style file requests.


              ORIGINATING SYSTEM
              ------------------

              The REQUESTING system puts the required transaction level
              access code into its REQ file.

                       EXAMPLE:  NEATFILE.ARC !mypass_x


              SYSTEM WITH REQUESTED FILES
              ---------------------------

              The REQUESTED system has passwords in its `OkFile.'

                       EXAMPLE:  c:\files\neat*.arc !mypass_x

                       NOTE:     Password protected files will not be
                                 available to non-WaZOO file requesters.
                                 There is no known method for having an
                                 access code in the "BARK" style file
                                 request, so Opus just pretends it doesn't
                                 have the file available if such a request
                                 comes in.


     ECHOGUARD
     ---------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 10                  30 Dec 1996


                       IMPORTANT: As with the rest of Opus, there is no
                                  guarantee that anything will work as
                                  documented.  Because EchoGuard is a
                                  security feature, this fact needs to
                                  be stressed...

                                         THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT
                                         ECHOGUARD WILL OFFER YOU ANY
                                         KIND OF PROTECTION.


              EchoGuard is a method to trap many attempts "unauthorized"
              echomail attempts.  There is an undocumented control file
              switch for this:

                       ECHO Guard

              If this switch is set, Opus will mark many unauthorized
              messages so they won't be scanned and sent to other systems.
              EchoGuard does NOT prevent the message(s) in an unauthorized
              bundle from being tossed.

              Opus assumes bundles from password-protected systems have
              already passed the access code test.  If it finds a "="
              instead of a "!" in the NodeList.Sys file where the password
              would go, it treats the packet as though it were approved.
              In other words, you can use EchoGuard even though you
              exchange echomail with some non-WaZOO systems.  For the WaZOO
              systems, use a "!" and password in NodeList.Sys.

              For the non WaZOO systems, use a "=" character.  The equals
              sign tells the ECHO GUARD routine that the system in question
              is not capable of handling session level passwords.

              Unauthorized messages sent to echomail areas will be flagged
              as "Sent" and "Orphan" to keep other scan programs from
              sending them to anybody else.


                                           ###

      -30-


     -----------------------------------------------------------------


     Document: FSC-0007
     Version:  002
     Date:     17-Apr-90

                    FidoNet(r) RFC822-Style Message Format
         (Informal Proposed Message Format Specification - Draft, revised)
                          Robert Heller @ 1:321/153.0
                               April 17, 1990

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 11                  30 Dec 1996


     Status of this document:

          This FSC suggests a proposed protocol for the FidoNet(r)
          community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
          improvements.  Distribution of this document is unlimited.

          Fido and FidoNet are registered marks of Tom Jennings and Fido
          Software.

     1. Purpose.
     ===========

     The purpose of this document is to outline my ideas concerning FidoNet
     (r) message format, both as stored on disk as message files handled by
     BBS (or other "conferencing" programs) and as these messages exist
     packed into "bundles" or "packets" as transmitted from machine to
     machine.  I think using a uniform format for normal message storage
     will make things easier, at least in terms of "standardized" message
     bundling and transmiting software is concerned.  If done right it also
     makes things easier for BBS and conferencing software writers too.

     This specification is only a first draft proposal.  Just something to
     put on the table for discussion. Feel free to comment on it. I am open
     to suggestions.

     2. Preliminary Definitions.
     ===========================

     I will be using BNF notation to describe the format of data fields.
     This is a fairly standard notation and should be familar to anyone who
     has taken a compiler design course.  To make things a little briefer,
     I will be using some pre-defined psuedo-terminal symbols.  These
     symbols are defined as:

        o The symbol ALPHA referes to any ASCII alphabetic character,
          including the uppercase letters ('A' thru 'Z', 41H thru
          5AH), the lowercase letters ('a' thru 'z', 61H thru 7AH) and
          these characters: '#' (23H), '$' (24H), '&' (26H), '*'
          (2AH), '+' (2BH), '-' (2DH), '=' (3DH), '^' (5EH), and '_'
          (5FH).

        o The symbol DIGIT refers to any of the ASCII characters '0'
          thru '9' (30H thru 39H).

     |  o The symbol NEWLINE refers to the single ASCII character LF (0AH),
     |    when the message is in transit, and refers to the local O/S's
     |    newline convention for text files (i.e. LF under UNIX, CRLF under
     |    MS-DOS and CP/M, CR under OS-9, etc.), or whatever is convient
     |    for the BBS software.

        o The symbol WHITESPACE refers to one or more ASCII space
          (20H) or tab (09H) characters.

        o The symbol OPTWHITESPACE referes to zero or more ASCII space
          (20H) or tab (09H) characters.

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 12                  30 Dec 1996


        o The symbol TEXT referes to zero or more printable ASCII
          characters not including a NEWLINE sequence.

        o The symbol NULL referes to the null string (no characters at
          all).

     Oh, one other thing:  message files contain only printable ASCII
     characters and NEWLINE sequences (packed messages will have non-
     printable bytes).  Also, I'll number the definations.  I am also only
     using six BNF operator characters: a vertical bar (|) for alteration,
     braces ({}) for comments, single quotes (') for character and string
     literals and parens (()) for expression grouping.


     3. Definations 1: Stored Message.
     =================================

     Changed or added definations are indicated by an '*' after the def
     number.

     The goal symbol is "<message>".

        { A message consists of a header followed followed by a
          NEWLINE followed by a message body. }
     <message>::=<header> NEWLINE <message-body>             {Def 1.1}
        { A message body is just unbounded text. }
     <message-body>::=NULL | (TEXT NEWLINE <message-body>)   {Def 1.2}
        { A header is more complicated:  There are a series of
          header line types. }
     <header>::= NULL | (<header-line> NEWLINE <header>)     {Def 1.3} *
        { This syntax defines the posiblity of a null header -
          this needs to be checked for by sematic routines,
          since it makes no sense. } <header-
     line>::=<to>|<from>|<date>|<attributes>|
                     <cost>|<subject>|<via>|<origin>| <area>|<seen-
                     by>|<path>|<message-id>|
                     <processed-by>|<other-header-line>      {Def 1.4} *
        { Now for the header line formats themselves.
          Some notes:  certain header lines are required (<to>,
          <from>, and <date>), and some can only occur once (<to>,
          <from>, <date>, and <subject>). Except for these
          restrictions, most header lines can either be omited or can
          occur more than once. }
     <to>::='To: ' <address>                                 {Def 1.5}
     <from>::='From: ' <address>                             {Def 1.6}
     <address>::=<user> OPTWHITESPACE '@' OPTWHITESPACE
                 <nodeid>                                    {Def 1.7}
     <user>::= ALPHA <user1>                                 {Def 1.8}
     <user1>::= (ALPHA | DIGIT | WHITESPACE | NULL) <user1>  {Def 1.9}
             { Note: this is the full blown FidoNet node address -
               includes optional zone and point numbers.
               It does not include the "domain". I am not sure
               about this - I think more discussion on the whole
               idea of "domains" and "zones" is needed.  My feeling
               is we should look into a symbolic addressing system,
               simular to what the InterNet uses. }
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 13                  30 Dec 1996


     <nodeid>::= ((<digits> ':') | NULL) {zone}
                 <digits> '/' <digits>   {basic net/node}
                 (('.' <digits>) | NULL) {point}             {Def 1.10}
     <digits>::= DIGIT | (DIGIT <digits>)                    {Def 1.11}
     <date>::='Date: ' <date-string>                         {Def 1.12}
             { Here it is: my idea for a *standard* date string }
       { day-of-week month date, year hour:minute AM/PM time-zone }
       { Although not specified, hours and minutes are zero padded to
         two digits.  The date and year are not padded at all.}
     <date-string>::= <day> ' ' <month> ' ' <digits> ', '
                      <digits> ' ' <digits> ':' <digits>
                      <am-pm> ((' ' <time-zone> | NULL)      {Def 1.13}
     <day>::= 'Mon" | 'Tue' | 'Wed' | 'Thu' | 'Fri' |
              'Sat' | 'Sun'                                  {Def 1.14}
     <month>::= 'Jan' | 'Feb' | 'Mar' | 'Apr' | 'May' |
                'Jun' | 'Jul' | 'Aug' | 'Sep' | 'Oct' |
                'Nov' | 'Dec'                                {Def 1.15}
             { If the AM/PM indicator is missing (null), the hours
               field is assumed to in 24-hour format (i.e. 00 to 23) }
     <am-pm>::= 'AM' | 'PM' | NULL                           {Def 1.16}
             { This field is optional.  It makes sense given that
               FidoNet <tm> is international. }
     <time-zone>::= ALPHA | (ALPHA <time-zone>)              {Def 1.17}
     <subject>::=('Subject: ' | 'Subject (Private): ') TEXT  {Def 1.18}
     <cost>::='Cost: ' <money-sign> <digits>
              (('.' <digits>) | NULL)                        {Def 1.19}
             { This is tricky, given the internationalness
               of FidoNet(r).  I guess it isn't critical. }
     <money-sign>::= '$' | '#' | NULL                        {Def 1.20}
     <via>::= 'Via: ' <nodeid> ', ' <date-string> <program>  {Def 1.21}
     <program>::= NULL | (' ' TEXT)                          {Def 1.22}
     <processed-by>::= 'Processed-by: ' TEXT                 {Def 1.22.1} *
             { This replaces the 'tear' line. }
     <origin>::= 'Origin: ' TEXT '(' <nodeid> ')'            {Def 1.23} *
     <area>::= 'Area: ' <areaname>                           {Def 1.24}
             { I'm leaving the question of all caps for the
               area name open:  other than ease of comparision,
               is it neccessary to be all caps? }
     <areaname>::= ALPHA | (ALPHA <areaname>)                {Def 1.25}
     <seen-by>::= 'Seen-By: ' <node-list>                    {Def 1.26} *
     <node-list>::= <nodelist-nodeid> |
                       (<nodelist-nodeid> <node-list>)       {Def 1.27} *
     <nodelist-nodeid> ::= ((<digits> ':') | NULL)
                       ((<digits> '/') | NULL)
                       (<digits> | NULL)
                       (('.' <digits>) | NULL)               {Def 1.28} *
             { This is also open-ended.  Should there be a
               standard format for this?
               The syntax here is somewhat ambigious - it
               allows for certain bogus forms.  It needs sematic
               routines to handle these forms (raise an error
               or whatever).  Writing the grammer to avoid these
               problems would add complexity not needed at this
               level. }
     <path>::= 'Path: ' <node-list>                          {Def 1.28.1} *
     <message-id>::= 'Message-id: ' <nodeid> ' ' <serialnum> {Def 1.29} *
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 14                  30 Dec 1996


             { This is the syntax proposed by Jim Nutt }
     <serialnum>::= {8 hex digits}                           {Def 1.29.1} *
             { I've left out a proper grammer rule or token
               for a hexidecimal number. }
     <attributes>::= 'Attributes: ' <attrlist>               {Def 1.30}
     <attrlist>::=<attribute> | (<attribute> ', ' <attrlist>){Def 1.31}
             { This is probably not complete, but...}
     <attribute>::='Kill Sent' | 'File Attached' | 'File Request' |
                   'Sent' | 'Crash' | 'Audit'                {Def 1.32}
             { Maybe we should forget about an 'Attributes: '
               header tag and instead have a collection of
               additional header tags to handle each posible
               attibute - i.e. 'File-Attached: <filename>',
               'File-Request: <filename> <update-info>',
               'Sent: <date-sent>', etc. header lines. }
     <other-header-line>::=<tagname> ': ' (TEXT | NULL)      {Def 1.33}
             { This is the expandsion hook. }
     <tagname>::= ALPHA <tagname1>                           {Def 1.34}
     <tagname1>::=NULL | ((ALPHA | WHITESPACE | DIGIT |
                  <pun> <tagname1>)                          {Def 1.35}
             { This is also open-ended.  Restriction: colon (:)
               cannot be allowed! }
     <pun>::='(' | ')' | '.' | ',' | ';'                     {Def 1.36}

     4. Packed Message Format.
     =========================

     A packed message is simply a regular message with some binary
     header (i.e. an "envelope") info and a NUL (00H) byte after the
     message text:

            Offset
           dec hex
                   .-----------------------------------------------.
             0   0 |    0     |     3      |    0      |    0      |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
             2   2 | origZone (low order)  | origZone (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
             4   4 | origNet  (low order)  | origNet  (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
             6   8 | origNode (low order)  | origNode (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
             8   8 | origPoint (low order) | origPoint (high order)|
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            10   A | destZone (low order)  | destZone (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            12   C | destNet  (low order)  | destNet  (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            14   E | destNode (low order)  | destNode (high order) |
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            16  10 | destPoint (low order) | destPoint (high order)|
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            18  12 | Attribute (low order) | Attribute (high order)|
                   +-----------------------+-----------------------+
            20  14 |      message text (includes ASCII header)     |
                   ~                    unbounded                  ~
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 15                  30 Dec 1996


                   |                 null terminated               |
                   `-----------------------------------------------'

     Some notes:  I've included both the Zone and Point addresses in the
     packed message headers.  This does not really affect things like
     routing and point mapping.  The packets themselves have addressing
     info in their headers (as described in FSC001).  The addressing in the
     packet header - this addressing is used by the transmitting programs.
     The internal addressing info is processed by re-packing programs -
     that is programs which peel routed messages (messages that are "just
     passing through") and re-packet them for later re-transmitsion to
     another node during a future mail event.  Messages destined for the
     current node (one whose address exactly matches all four destination
     address words), get extracted from the packet and stored in the
     message base.  Note that only the ASCII message text is stored.  The
     binary header is discarded at this point.

     5. Conclusions.
     ===============

     It is my idea that FidoNet(r) is going to sooner or later going need
     some of the extendablity provided by this sort of message format. If
     fact it allready needs some of these fields, and has been "faking it"
     for some time now: things like EchoMail ("Area: ", "Origin: ", "Seen-
     By: ", and "Path: " header lines), points and zones (extra addressing
     hacks), uucp gatewaying (more extra addressing hacks), routing ("Via:
     " header lines).  Going to a RFC822-style message format also helps to
     increase the varity of BBS and conferencing software - this will help
     improve the "state of the art" in this regard.  Also, using a RFC822-
     style message format allows indefinite extensablity - as new ideas
     regarding messages and conferencing develope, the message format can
     be easily extended to handle these new ideas with ease.

     6. Contact Info.
     ================

     Comments, suggestions, gripes, etc. can be sent to me at any of
     these addresses:

             ARPANet:        Heller@CS.UMass.Edu
             BITNET:         Heller@UMass.BitNet
             Genie:          RHELLER
             BIX:            lockshill.bbs
             CompuServe:     71450,3432
             FidoNet         Robert Heller @ 1:321/153.0
             USMail:         HC82 Box 29 LH1, Locks Hill Road, Wendell, MA
                             01379
             Voice Phone:    Home: 617-544-6933, Work: 413-545-0528
             Data Phone:     617-544-8337 at 300, 1200, or 2400 BAUD
                             24hours, except during FidoNet(r) mail
                             periods.

     7. More Information.
     ====================

     I have written a set of EchoMail processing using a message format
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 16                  30 Dec 1996


     described in this document.  The code is in C and is freely available
     for evalation.  If you would like a copy, let me know and I will get a
     copy to you.  I developed the code under OS-9/68000, but the code
     should easily port to other platforms.

      -30-


     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 17                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                            COORDINATORS CORNER
     =================================================================


     Nodelist-statistics as seen from Zone-2 for day 362
     By Ward Dossche, 2:292/854
        ZC/2

      +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
      |Zone|Nl-334|Nodelist-341|Nodelist-348|Nodelist-355|Nodelist-362|%%|
      +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
      |  1 | 10931|10931     0 |10737  -194 |10564  -173 |10452  -112 |36|
      |  2 | 16240|16185   -55 |16150   -35 |16127   -23 |16104   -23 |55|
      |  3 |   886|  882    -4 |  882     0 |  878    -4 |  876    -2 | 3|
      |  4 |   584|  578    -6 |  572    -6 |  413  -159 |  556   143 | 2|
      |  5 |    94|   94     0 |   94     0 |   93    -1 |   93     0 | 0|
      |  6 |  1008| 1006    -2 | 1003    -3 | 1003     0 | 1075    72 | 4|
      +----+------+------------+------------+------------+------------+--+
           | 29743|29676   -67 |29438  -238 |29078  -360 |29156    78 |
           +------+------------+------------+------------+------------+

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 18                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                               WE GET EMAIL
     =================================================================


     --- Following message extracted from FIDONEWS @ 1:18/14 ---
         By Christopher Baker on Thu Dec 26 15:37:56 1996

     From: Mike Bilow
     To: Christopher Baker
     Date: 26 Dec 96  02:15:12
     Subj: FCC fines LDSI/LDS for "slamming"

     * Forwarded (from: NESYSOP) by Mike Bilow using BilowMail0.2.
     * Originally from Mike Bilow (1:323/107) to All.
     * Original dated: Dec 26 '96, 02:10

     This is an official FCC news release which may be of importance to
     some Fidonet sysops if they have had dealings with the companies
     concerned.

     -- Mike

     xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

     NEWSReport No. CC 96-21    COMMON CARRIER ACTION     December 17, 1996

                     COMMON CARRIER BUREAU FINDS TWO COMPANIES
                   APPARENTLY LIABLE FOR FORFEITURE FOR SLAMMING

          Today the Common Carrier Bureau issued two Notices of Apparent
      Liability ("NALs") for alleged violations of the Commission's
     "slamming" rules.  The Bureau's action was directed at two companies,
     Long Distance Services, Inc.  (LDSI) and a separate entity with the
     same name located in Michigan, Long Distance Services, Inc., (LDS,
     Inc.).  The Bureau found each company liable for forfeiture penalties
     for violating Commission rules and orders concerning changes to
     consumers' long distance carriers.

          Under Commission rules, changes in a consumers long distance
     service by another long distance carrier must be confirmed by a
     document known as a Letter of Agency ("LOA"), which is signed by the
     customer to authorize the change.  The Bureau noted that if carriers
     rely on LOA's to change a consumer's long distance service that the
     carrier must ensure that the authorization has been validated by the
     consumer.

          The Bureau's action against LDSI today generated from consumers
     who alleged that they did not authorize changing their long distance
     service to LDSI.  Based on an investigation by the Enforcement
     Division, the Bureau found no similarities between the signature on
     the LOA authorizing the changes and the signature on the consumer
     complaint submitted to the Commission.  The Bureau assessed a
     forfeiture of $80,000 for the violations.

          In the case involving LDS, Inc., the Bureau received two
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 19                  30 Dec 1996


     complainants from consumers who alleged that they did not authorize a
     change in service to LDS, Inc.  The Bureau found in the first case
     that the LOA authorizing the change in long distance service used by
     LDS, Inc. did not bear a valid signature or address.  A second
     consumer admitted to entering a raffle by completing an entry form to
     win a prize, but claimed that he did not sign an LOA to authorize a
     change in his long distance service.  The Bureau found that the LOA in
     question violated Commission rules regarding proper LOA form and
     content.  The Bureau issued an NAL for $40,000 for the unauthorized
     conversion and $40,000 for the violation of proper LOA form and
     content, for a total of $80,000.

          In both actions announced today, the Common Carrier Bureau found
     that each carrier in question apparently violated the Commission's
     "slamming" rules by substituting itself as the long distance carrier
     for a consumer without that consumer's authorization.  The practice of
     changing a consumer's long distance carrier without authorization is
     commonly known as "slamming."  Last year, the Commission implemented
     new rules to better protect consumers from the practice of "slamming".
     The Common Carrier Bureau's Enforcement Division investigates consumer
     complaints and takes action against responsible carriers.

          Actions by the Chief, Common Carrier Bureau, December 17, 1996,
     by Notices of Apparent Liability (DA 96-2101, DA 96-2102).


       -FCC-

     News media contact:  Jodie Buenning (202)418-1500
     Common Carrier Bureau contact:  Kathie Kneff at (202) 632-7553 or
     Kaylene Shannon at (202) 418-0960.

     xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

     ---
      Origin: N1BEE BBS +1 401 944 8498 V.34/V.FC/HST16.8 (1:323/107)

     --- Following message extracted from FIDONEWS @ 1:18/14 ---
         By Christopher Baker on Thu Dec 26 15:38:12 1996

     From: Mike Bilow
     To: Christopher Baker
     Date: 26 Dec 96  03:23:06
     Subj: ISPs to be charged IEXC access fees?

     * Forwarded (from: NESYSOP) by Mike Bilow using BilowMail0.2.
     * Originally from Mike Bilow (1:323/107) to All.
     * Original dated: Dec 26 '96, 03:22

     Mike Bilow wrote in a message to Mike Bilow:

      MB> See:

      MB> Linkname: CNNfn - FCC dials up reform of local-access fees -
      MB> Dec. 24, 1996
      MB> URL: http://cnnfn.com/hotstories/companies/wires/9612/24/fcc_wg/
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 20                  30 Dec 1996


      MB> According to a minor comment at the end of the story, the
      MB> FCC is now asking for public comment on whether ISPs should
      MB> be treated like long distance companies for purposes of
      MB> local access fee charges.

     The FCC has posted a news release on this subject at


     http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/nrcc6088.txt

     and the full text in both ASCII and WordPerfect 5.1 for Windows
     formats at

        http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Notices/fcc96488.txt
        http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Notices/fcc96488.wp

     The FCC seems quite cautious, if not outright terrified, realizing
     that messing with the Internet too much could kill it.  In fact, the
     FCC very much seems to understand the real problem:

             288.  We tentatively conclude that information service
                   providers should not be required to pay interstate
                   access charges as currently constituted.  As we have
                   explained throughout this Notice, the existing access
                   charge system includes non-cost-based rates and
                   inefficient rate structures.  We see no reason to extend
                   this regime to an additional class of users, especially
                   given the potentially detrimental effects on the growth
                   of the still-evolving information services industry.
                   Although our original decision in 1983 to treat ESPs as
                   end users rather than carriers was explained as a
                   temporary exemption, we tentatively conclude that the
                   current pricing structure should not be changed so long
                   as the existing access charge system remains in place.
                   The mere fact that providers of information services use
                   incumbent LEC networks to receive calls from their
                   customers does not mean that such providers should be
                   subject to an interstate regulatory system designed for
                   circuit-switched interexchange voice telephony. We seek
                   comment on this tentative conclusion.

     Comments in response to the inquiry are due February 21, 1997 and
     reply comments are due March 24, 1997.  The FCC will accept informal
     filings by Internet e-mail; see http://www.fcc.gov/isp.html for
     instructions.  Internet e-mail filings must contain the proper caption
     code in the subject line, in this case "CC Docket No. 96-263."

     The full official caption for the Notice of Inquiry is "Usage of the
     Public Switched Network by Information Service and Internet Access
     Providers, Common Carrier Bureau Docket No. 96-263."

     -- Mike

     ---
      Origin: N1BEE BBS +1 401 944 8498 V.34/V.FC/HST16.8 (1:323/107)

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 21                  30 Dec 1996


      -30-

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 22                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                                 NET HUMOR
     =================================================================


     From: "Mike Riddle" <mriddle@monarch.papillion.ne.us>
     To: "Baker, Christopher" <cbaker84@digital.net (Christopher Baker)
     Date: Sat, 28 Dec 96 09:48:04 -0600
     Reply-To: "Mike Riddle" <mriddle@monarch.papillion.ne.us>
     Subject: Fwd: An end of the year laugh

     ==================BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE==================

     >From: rsd381 <RSD381@SGI.NET>
     >To: solosez@abanet.org
     >Subject: An end of the year laugh

     I saw this while surfing. Even though this is not law related we all
     are entitled to a laugh once in a while.

     Ten Things That Would Be Different if Microsoft Started Building Cars.

     1:      A particular model year of car wouldn't be available until
             after that year instead of before it.

     2:      Every time they repainted the lines on the road, you'd have to
             buy a new car.

     3:      Occasionally, your car would just die for no reason, and you'd
             have to restart it.  For some strange reason, you'd just
             accept this.

     4:      You could only have one person in the car at a time, unless
             you bought a Car 95 or Car NT.  But then you'd have to buy
             more seats.

     5:      Sun Motorsystems would make a car that was powered by the sun,
             was twice as reliable, and five times as fast - but it would
             only run on 5 percent of the roads.

     6:      The oil, engine, gas, and alternator warning lights would be
             replaced by a single "General Car Fault" warning light.

     7:      People would get excited about "new" features in Microsoft
             cars, forgetting completely that they had been available in
             other cars for years.

     8:      We'd all have to switch to Microsoft gas.

     9:      The U.S. government would be getting subsidies from an
             automaker, instead of giving them.

     10:     New seats would force everyone to have the same size butt.


     Robert Daniels
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 23                  30 Dec 1996


     rsd381@sgi.net

     ===================END FORWARDED MESSAGE===================

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 24                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                              COMIX IN ASCII
     =================================================================


     From: kay.shapero@salata.com (Kay Shapero)
     Date: 17 Dec 96 21:54:14 -0800
     Subject: ASCII art
     Organization: An Internet Gateway
     To: cbaker84@digital.net

     You were asking about ascii art for FidoNews... :->

     The following is the record of a little zap war conducted between
     yours truly and Keith Glass. I don't know who originally drew the
     Klingon Cruiser; the Shadow BattleCrab is Keith's, the rest mine.

     I led off with:

                                         _
                                       _|_|_
                                     ^/ . ..\^
                                 ___[=========]___
                      ___-==++""" .  /. . .  \ .  """++==-___
                __-+"" __\   .. . .  | ..  . |  . .  .   /__ ""+-__
               /\__+-""   `-----=====\_ <O> _/=====-----'   ""-+__/\
             _/_/                      ""=""                      \_\_
            /_/                                                     \_\
           //                            |                            \\
          /")                          \ | /                          ("\
          \o\                           \*/                           /o/
           \_)                       --**O**--                       (_/
                                        /*\
                                       / | \
                                         |


                                       Ahem...


     Keith countered with:

                                             /
                                            /
                                          /    _-
                                         /    /
                                        #        /  _-
                                      ####/  _____/
                                     #########
                                   ##########--___
                                 ##########
                               ##########  @
                             /   ######|   @
                            /   /  |      |@
                           /   /   |      |@
                         /    /    |       |
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 25                  30 Dec 1996


                                           @
                                           @
                                        \# @ #/
     >                                    \@/ _
     >                                   _|_|_
     >                                 ^/ . ..\^
     >                             ___[=========]___
     >                  ___-==++""" .  /. . .  \ .  """++==-___
     >            __-+"" __\   .. . .  | ..  . |  . .  .   /__ ""+-__
     >           /\__+-""   `-----=====\_ <O> _/=====-----'   ""-+__/\
     >         _/_/                      ""=""                      \_\_
     >        /_/                         /@\                         \_\
     >       //                          /#@#\                          \\
     >      /")                         /##@##\                         ("\
     >      \o\                            @                           /o/
     >       \_)                           @                          (_/


     And I responded with....

     \                                                       /
       \                                                    /
         \                                                /    _-
         _\               PSSST!!!!!                     /    /
        \  \                                            #        /  _-
     \   \--|        /.................................####/  _____/
       \____/  /.....................................#########
         ! !=============================================##########--__
        _( )_      \........................##########     |
       /     \          \......................      ##########
       !     !                               /   ######|
       !  R  !                           /      /  |
       !     !                            /    /     |
       !  A  !                          /       /      |
       !     !
       !  I  !
       !     !
       !  D  !
       !     !
       \-----/


     When last seen, things had degenerated into words, and a hail of
     custard pies as contributed by yours truly:
                 __           __          __         __
            ---  ! \     ---  ! \    ---  ! \   ---  ! \
            ---  !  !    ---  !  !   ---  !  !  ---  !  !
            ---  !_/     ---  !_/    ---  !_/   ---  !_/

                          SPLATSPLATSPLATSPLAT!!

                  __          __          __           __
                 / !  ---    / !  ---    / !  ---     / !  ---
                !  !  ---   !  !  ---   !  !  ---    !  !  ---
                 \_!  ---    \_!  ---    \_!  ---     \_!  ---

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 26                  30 Dec 1996


                          !!TALPSTALPSTALPSTALPS

     If anything else of interest emerges from the front I'll let you
     know...  :->

      -30-

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 27                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                     ADVERTISE YOUR FREE SERVICE/EVENT
     =================================================================


     Emanuel Edwards
     1:348/963
     emanuel@pangea.ca

     Hello all Cricket Lovers:

     This ad is to inform you that there is a cricket echo now on fidonet.
     The echo tag is called CRICKET_ECHO.  The cricket_echo describe all
     aspects on how the game is played, the latest scores and upcoming
     tours and events in the cricket world.  Please request the
     cricket_echo onto your bbs.  Thanks Emanuel Moderator.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------


     Emanuel Edwards
     1:348/963
     emanuel@pangea.ca

     Hello all Wrestling Fans:

     This ad is to inform you that there is a new wrestling echo on the
     fidonet backbone. The echo tag is called WRESTLING_CHAT.  This echo
     is a free speech wrestling echo.  It gives all the latest rumours
     of what's going on in the wrestling world, upcoming matches and
     events in the wrestling world.  Please request the WRESTLING_CHAT
     onto your bbs.  Thanks Emanuel Moderator.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 28                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                                  NOTICES
     =================================================================

                                Future History

     26 Jan 1997
        Australia Day, Australia.

      6 Feb 1997
        Waitangi Day, New Zealand.

     16 Feb 1997
        Eleventh Anniversary of invention of Echomail by Jeff Rush.

     29 Feb 1997
        Nothing will happen on this day.

     25 May 1997
        Independence Day, Argentina

     11 Jun 1997
        Independence Day, Russia

      1 Dec 1998
        Fifteenth Anniversary of release of Fido version 1 by
        Tom Jennings.

     31 Dec 1999
        Hogmanay, Scotland. The New Year that can't be missed.

     15 Sep 2000
        Sydney (Australia) Summer Olympiad opens.

     -- If YOU have something which you would like to see in this
        Future History, please send a note to the FidoNews Editor.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 29                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                         FIDONET SOFTWARE LISTING
     =================================================================


     [This is a repeat of last week's Software List.] Ed.

     Latest Greatest Software Versions
     by Peter E. Popovich, 1:363/264

     -Still- in the process of catching up. Ugh.

     Phased out this week: ProBoard 1.20, QuickBBS 2.75,
                           PCBoard 14.5a, and Phoenix 1.07.

     Phase-out highlights:
       This week: SimplexBBS 1.05 and SLBBS 2.15C
             Deadline for info: 03 Jan 1997.
       Last week: RBBS 17.3b and RemoteAccess 1.11
             Deadline for info: 27 Dec 1996.

     -=- Snip -=-

     Submission form for the Latest Greatest Software Versions column

     OS Platform                             :
     Software package name                   :
     Version                                 :
     Function(s) - BBS, Mailer, Tosser, etc. :
     Freeware / Shareware / Commercial?      :
     Author / Support staff contact name     :
     Author / Support staff contact node     :
     Magic name (at the above-listed node)   :

     Please include a sentence describing what the package does.

     Please send updates and suggestions to: Peter Popovich, 1:363/264

     -=- Snip -=-

     MS-DOS:
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     Act-Up         4.6        G D Chris Gunn        1:15/55     ACT-UP
     ALLFIX         4.33       T S Harald Harms      2:281/415   ALLFIX
     Announcer      1.1        O S Peter Karlsson    2:206/221   ANNOUNCE
     BGFAX          1.60       O S B.J. Guillot      1:106/400   BGFAX
     CheckPnt       0.5 beta   O F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     CHECKPNT
     FidoBBS (tm)   12u        B S Ray Brown         1:1/117     FILES
     FrontDoor      2.12       M S JoHo              2:201/330   FD
     FrontDoor      2.20c      M C JoHo              2:201/330   FDINFO
     GIGO           07-14-96   G S Jason Fesler      1:1/141     INFO
     Imail          1.75       T S Michael McCabe    1:297/11    IMAIL
     ImCrypt        1.04       O F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     IMCRYPT
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 30                  30 Dec 1996


     InfoMail       1.11       O F Damian Walker     2:2502/666  INFOMAIL
     InfoMail/386   1.20       O F Damian Walker     2:2502/666  INFO386
     InterEcho      1.19       T C Peter Stewart     1:369/35    IEDEMO
     InterMail      2.29k      M C Peter Stewart     1:369/35    IMDEMO
     InterPCB       1.52       O S Peter Stewart     1:369/35    INTERPCB
     IPNet          1.11       O S Michele Stewart   1:369/21    IPNET
     Jelly-Bean     1.01       T S Rowan Crowe       3:635/727   JELLY
     Jelly-Bean/386 1.01       T S Rowan Crowe       3:635/727   JELLY386
     MakePl         1.8        N F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     MAKEPL
     Marena         1.1 beta   O F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     MARENA
     Maximus        3.01       B P Tech              1:249/106   MAX
     McMail         1.0g5      M S Michael McCabe    1:1/148     MCMAIL
     MDNDP          1.18       N S Bill Doyle        1:388/7     MDNDP
     MsgEd          4.00       O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
     Opus CBCS      1.73a      B P Christopher Baker 1:374/14    OPUS
     O/T-Track      2.63a      O S Peter Hampf       2:241/1090  OT
     PcMerge        2.7        N F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     PCMERGE
     PlatinumXpress 1.1        M C Gary Petersen     1:290/111   PX11TD.ZIP
     RAR            2.00       C S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    RAR
     RemoteAccess   2.50       B S Mark Lewis        1:3634/12   RA
     Silver Xpress
       Door         5.4        O S Gary Petersen     1:290/111   FILES
       Reader       4.3        O S Gary Petersen     1:290/111   SXR43.ZIP
     Squish         1.11       T P Tech              1:249/106   SQUISH
     StealTag UK    1.c...     O F Fred Schenk       2:284/412   STEAL_UK
     StealTag NL    1.c...     O F Fred Schenk       2:284/412   STEAL_NL
     T-Mail         2.599I     M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAIL
     Terminate      4.00       O S Bo Bendtsen       2:254/261   TERMINATE
     Tobruk         0.33       T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK
     TriBBS         10.0       B S Patrick Driscoll  1:372/19    TRIBBS
     TriDog         10.0       M S Patrick Driscoll  1:372/19    TRIDOG
     TriToss        10.0       T S Patrick Driscoll  1:372/19    TRITOSS
     WWIV           4.24a      B S Craig Dooley      1:376/126   WWIV
     WWIVTOSS       1.30       T S Craig Dooley      1:376/126   WWIVTOSS
     xMail          2.00       T S Thorsten Franke   2:2448/53   XMAIL
     XRobot         3.01       O S JoHo              2:201/330   XRDOS

     OS/2:
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     BGFAX          1.60       O S B.J. Guillot      1:106/400   BGFAX
     FleetStreet    1.18       O S Michael Hohner    2:2490/2520 FLEET
     GIGO           07-14-96   G S Jason Fesler      1:1/141     INFO
     ImCrypt        1.04       O F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     IMCRYPT
     Maximus        3.01       B P Tech              1:249/106   MAXP
     MsgEd          4.00       O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
     PcMerge        2.3        N F Michiel van der Vlist
                                                     2:500/9     PCMERGE
     RAR            2.00       C S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    RAR2
     Squish         1.11       T P Tech              1:249/106   SQUISHP
     T-Mail         2.599I     M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAIL2
     Tobruk         0.33       T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 31                  30 Dec 1996


     XRobot         3.01       O S JoHo              2:201/330   XROS2

     Windows (16-bit apps):
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     BeeMail        1.0        M C Andrius Cepaitis  2:470/1     BEEMAIL

     Windows (32-bit apps):
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     BeeMail        1.0        M C Andrius Cepaitis  2:470/1     BEEMAIL
     Maximus        3.01       B P Tech              1:249/106   MAXN
     PlatinumXpress 2.00       M C Gary Petersen     1:290/111   PXW-INFO
     T-Mail         2.599I     M S Ron Dwight        2:220/22    TMAILNT

     Unix:
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     ifmail         2.8g       M G Eugene Crosser    2:293/2219  IFMAIL
     ifmail-tx      2.8g-tx7.8 M G Pablo Saratxaga   2:293/2219  IFMAILTX
     MsgEd          4.00       O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
     Tobruk         0.33       T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK

     Amiga:
     Program Name   Version    F C Contact Name      Node        Magic Name
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
     CrashMail      1.23       T X Fredrik Bennison  2:205/324   CRASHMAIL
     CrashTick      1.1        O F Fredrik Bennison  2:205/324   CRASHTICK
     MsgEd          4.00       O G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   MSGED
     Tobruk         0.33       T G Paul Edwards      3:711/934   TOBRUK

     Function: B-BBS, M-Mailer, N-Nodelist, G-Gateway, T-Tosser,
               C-Compression, O-Other. Note: Multifunction will be listed
               by the first match.

     Cost: P-Free for personal use, F-Freeware, S-Shareware, C-Commercial,
           X-Crippleware, D-Demoware, G-Free w/ Source


     Old info from: 01/27/92
     ---------------------------------------------------------------------

                             MS-DOS Systems
                             --------------

     BBS Software            Other Utilities         Other Utilities
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     RBBS           17.3b    2DAPoint        1.50*   Netsex         2.00b
     RemoteAccess    1.11*   4Dog/4DMatrix   1.18    OFFLINE         1.35
     SimplexBBS      1.05    ARCAsim         2.31    Oliver          1.0a
     SLBBS          2.15C*   ARCmail         3.00*   OSIRIS CBIS     3.02
     Socrates        1.11    Areafix         1.20    PKInsert        7.10
     SuperBBS        1.12*   ConfMail        4.00    PolyXarc        2.1a
     SuperComm       0.99    Crossnet         1.5    QM             1.00a
     TAG             2.5g    DOMAIN          1.42    QSort           4.04
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 32                  30 Dec 1996


     TBBS             2.1    DEMM            1.06    RAD Plus        2.11
     TComm/TCommNet   3.4    DGMM            1.06    Raid            1.00
     Telegard         2.7*   DOMAIN          1.42    RBBSMail        18.0
     TPBoard          6.1    EEngine         0.32    ScanToss        1.28
     WildCat!        3.02*   EMM             2.11*   ScMail          1.00
     XBBS            1.77    EZPoint          2.1    ScEdit          1.12
                             FGroup          1.00    Sirius          1.0x
     Network Mailers         FidoPCB         1.0s@   SLMail         2.15C
     Name         Version    FNPGate         2.70    StarLink        1.01
     --------------------    GateWorks      3.06e    TagMail         2.41
     BinkleyTerm     2.50    GMail           2.05    TCOMMail         2.2
     D'Bridge        1.30    GMD             3.10    Telemail         1.5*
     Dreamer         1.06    GMM             1.21    TGroup          1.13
     Dutchie        2.90c    GoldEd         2.31p    TIRES           3.11
     Milqtoast       1.00    GROUP           2.23    TMail           1.21
     PreNM           1.48    GUS             1.40    TosScan         1.00
     SEAdog          4.60    Harvey's Robot  4.10    UFGATE          1.03
     SEAmail         1.01    HeadEdit        1.18    VPurge         4.09e
     TIMS       1.0(mod8)    HLIST           1.09    WEdit            2.0@
                             ISIS            5.12@   WildMail        2.00
     Compression             Lola           1.01d    WMail            2.2
     Utilities               Mosaic         1.00b    WNode            2.1
     Name         Version    MailBase       4.11a@   XRS             4.99
     --------------------    MSG              4.5*   XST             2.3e
     ARC             7.12    MsgLnk          1.0c    YUPPIE!         2.00
     ARJ             2.20    MsgMstr        2.03a    ZmailH          1.25
     LHA             2.13    MsgNum         4.16d    ZSX             2.40
     PAK             2.51    MSGTOSS          1.3
     PKPak           3.61
     PKZip           1.10

     NodeList Utilities
     Name         Version
     --------------------
     EditNL          4.00
     FDND            1.10
     MakeNL          2.31
     Parselst        1.33
     Prune           1.40
     SysNL           3.14
     XlatList        2.90
     XlaxNode/Diff   2.53


                             OS/2 Systems
                             ------------

     BBS Software            Other Utilities(A-M     Other Utilities(N-Z)
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     Kitten          1.01    ARC             7.12    oMMM            1.52
     SimplexBBS   1.04.02+   ARC2            6.01    Omail            3.1
                             ConfMail        4.00    Parselst        1.33
                             EchoStat         6.0    PKZip           1.02
     Network Mailers         EZPoint          2.1    PMSnoop         1.30
     Name         Version    FGroup          1.00    PolyXOS2        2.1a
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 33                  30 Dec 1996


     --------------------    GROUP           2.23    QSort            2.1
     BinkleyTerm     2.50    LH2             2.11    Raid             1.0
     BinkleyTerm(S)  2.50    MSG              4.2    Remapper         1.2
     BinkleyTerm/2-MT        MsgLink         1.0c    Tick             2.0
                  1.40.02    MsgNum         4.16d    VPurge         4.09e
     SEAmail         1.01


                             Xenix/Unix 386
                             --------------

     BBS Software            Network Mailers         Other Utilities
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
                                                     ARC             5.21
                                                     C-LHARC         1.00
      |Contact:  Willy Paine 1:343/15,|              MSGLINK         1.01
      |or Eddy van Loo 2:285/406      |              oMMM            1.42
                                                     Omail           1.00
                                                     ParseLst        1.32
                                                     Unzip           3.10
                                                     VPurge          4.08
                                                     Zoo             2.01


                             Macintosh
                             ---------

     BBS Software            Network Mailers         Other Software
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     FBBS            0.91    Copernicus       1.0    ArcMac           1.3
     Hermes         1.6.1    Tabby            2.2    AreaFix          1.6
     Mansion         7.15                            Compact Pro     1.30
     Precision Sys. 0.95b                            EventMeister     1.0
     Red Ryder Host   2.1                            Export          3.21
     Telefinder Host                                 Import           3.2
                  2.12T10                            LHARC           0.41
                                                     MacArd          0.04
                                                     Mantissa        3.21
     Point System                                    Mehitable        2.0
     Software                                        OriginatorII     2.0
     Name         Version                            PreStamp         3.2
     --------------------                            StuffIt Classic  1.6
     Copernicus      1.00                            SunDial          3.2
     CounterPoint    1.09                            TExport         1.92
     MacWoof          1.1                            TimeStamp        1.6
                                                     TImport         1.92
                                                     Tset             1.3
                                                     TSort            1.0
                                                     UNZIP          1.02c
                                                     Zenith           1.5
                                                     Zip Extract     0.10


                             Amiga
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 34                  30 Dec 1996


                             -----

     BBS Software            Network Mailers         Other Software
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     4D-BBS          1.65    BinkleyTerm     1.00    Areafix         1.48
     DLG Pro.       0.96b    TrapDoor        1.80    AReceipt         1.5
     Falcon CBCS     1.00    WelMat          0.44    ChameleonEdit   0.11
     Starnet         1.0q@                           ConfMail        1.12
     TransAmiga      1.07                            ElectricHerald  1.66
     XenoLink         1.0    Compression             FFRS             1.0@
                             Utilities               FileMgr         2.08
                             Name         Version    Fozzle           1.0@
     NodeList Utilities      --------------------    Login           0.18
     Name         Version    AmigArc         0.23    MessageFilter   1.52
     --------------------    booz            1.01    Message View    1.12
     ParseLst        1.66    LHARC           1.30    oMMM            1.50
     Skyparse        2.30    LhA             1.10    PolyXAmy        2.02
     TrapList        1.40    LZ              1.92    RMB             1.30
                             PkAX            1.00    Roof           46.15
                             UnZip            4.1    RoboWriter      1.02
                             Zippy (Unzip)   1.25    Rsh            4.07a
                             Zoo             2.01    Tick            0.75
                                                     TrapToss        1.20
     |Contact: Maximilian Hantsch 2:310/6|           Yuck!           2.02


                             Atari ST/TT
                             -----------

     BBS Software            Network Mailers         Other Utilities
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     FIDOdoor/ST    2.5.1    BinkleyTerm   2.40n9    ApplyList       1.00@
     FiFo            2.1v    The Box         1.95*   Burep            1.1
     LED ST          1.00                            ComScan         1.04
     QuickBBS/ST     1.06*                           ConfMail        4.10
                             NodeList  Utilities     Echoscan        1.10
                             Name         Version    FDrenum        2.5.2
     Compression             --------------------    FastPack        1.20
     Utilities               ParseList       1.30    Import          1.14
     Name         Version    EchoFix         1.20    oMMM            1.40
     --------------------    sTICK/Hatch     5.50    Pack            1.00
     ARC             6.02                            Trenum          0.10
     LHARC          2.01i
     PackConvert
     STZip            1.1*
     UnJARST         2.00
     WhatArc         2.02


                             Tandy Color Computer 3 (OS-9 Level II)
                             --------------------------------------

     BBS Software            Compression Utility     Other Utilities
     Name         Version    Name         Version    Name         Version
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 35                  30 Dec 1996


     --------------------    --------------------    --------------------
     RiBBS           2.02+   Ar               1.3    Ascan            1.2
                             DeArc           5.12    AutoFRL          2.0
                             OS9Arc           1.0    Bundle           2.2
                             UnZip           3.10    CKARC            1.1
                             UnLZH            3.0    EchoCheck       1.01
                                                     FReq            2.5a
                                                     LookNode        2.00
                                                     ParseLST
                                                     PReq             2.2
                                                     RList           1.03
                                                     RTick           2.00
                                                     UnBundle         1.4
                                                     UnSeen           1.1

     --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --
     Key to old info:
           + - Netmail Capable (Doesn't Require Additional Mailer Software)
           * - Recently Updated Version
           @ - New Addition
     --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --  --

     Please send updates and suggestions to: Peter Popovich, 1:363/264

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 36                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                            FIDONEWS PUBLIC-KEY
     =================================================================


     [this must be copied out to a file starting at column 1 or
      it won't process under PGP as a valid public-key]


     -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
     Version: 2.6.2
     Comment: Clear-signing is Electronic Digital Authenticity!

     -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----


     Pending a formal decision about including 'encrypted' material inside
     FidoNews from the Zone Coordinator Council, the guts of the FidoNews
     public-key have been removed from this listing.

     File-request FNEWSKEY from 1:1/23 [1:18/14] or download it from the
     Rights On! BBS at 1-904-409-7040 anytime except 0100-0130 ET and Zone
     1 ZMH at 1200-9600+ HST/V32B.

     This section will contain only this disclaimer and instructions until
     a ZCC decision is forwarded to the Editor.

     Sorry for any inconvenience.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 37                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                            FIDONET BY INTERNET
     =================================================================

     This is a list of all FidoNet-related sites reported to the Editor as
     of this appearance.

     ============

     FidoNet:

       Homepage     http://www.fidonet.org
       FidoNews     http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fidonews.html
       HTML FNews   http://www.geocities.com/athens/6894/
       WWW sources  http://scms.rgu.ac.uk/students/cs_yr94/lk/fido.html
       FTSC page    http://www.blaze.net.au/ftsc.html
       Echomail     http://www.portal.ca/~awalker/index.html

     ============

     Zone 1:

       Region 10:
                    http://www.psnw.com/~net205/region10.html

       Region 15:
                    http://www.smrtsys.com/region15/

       Region 17:
                    http://www.portal.com/~awalker/region17.htm

       Region 18:
                    http://www.citicom.com/fido.html

       Region 19:
                    http://ccove.n-link.com/

     ============

     Zone 2:

     ============

     Zone 3:

     ============

     Zone 4:

     ============

     Zone 5:

     ============

     Zone 6:
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 38                  30 Dec 1996


     ============

     -----------------------------------------------------------------

     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 39                  30 Dec 1996


     =================================================================
                           FIDONEWS INFORMATION
     =================================================================

     ------- FIDONEWS MASTHEAD AND CONTACT INFORMATION -------

     Editor: Christopher Baker

     Editors Emeritii: Thom Henderson, Dale Lovell,
                       Vince Perriello, Tim Pozar,
                       Tom Jennings, Sylvia Maxwell,
                       Donald Tees

     "FidoNews Editor"
         FidoNet  1:1/23
         BBS  1-904-409-7040,  300/1200/2400/14400/V.32bis/HST(ds)

      more addresses:
         Christopher Baker -- 1:18/14, cbaker84@digital.net
                                       cbaker84@aol.com
                                       cbaker84@msn.com
                                       cbak.rights@opus.global.org

     (Postal Service mailing address)
         FidoNews Editor
         P.O. Box 471
         Edgewater, FL 32132-0471
         U.S.A.


     voice:  1-904-409-3040 [1400-2100 ET only, please]
                            [1800-0100 UTC/GMT]

     ------------------------------------------------------

     FidoNews is published weekly by and for the members of the FIDONET
     INTERNATIONAL AMATEUR ELECTRONIC MAIL system.  It is a compilation
     of individual articles contributed by their authors or their
     authorized agents.  The contribution of articles to this compilation
     does not diminish the rights of the authors.  OPINIONS EXPRESSED in
     these articles ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHORS and not necessarily those of
     FidoNews.

     Authors retain copyright on individual works; otherwise FidoNews is
     Copyright 1996 Christopher Baker.  All rights reserved.  Duplication
     and/or distribution permitted for noncommercial purposes only.  For
     use in other circumstances, please contact the original authors, or
     the Editor.

                            =*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=

     OBTAINING COPIES: The most recent issue of FidoNews in electronic
     form may be obtained from the FidoNews Editor via manual download or
     file-request, or from various sites in the FidoNet and Internet.
     PRINTED COPIES may be obtained by sending SASE to the above postal
     address.  File-request FIDONEWS for the current Issue.  File-request
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 40                  30 Dec 1996


     FNEWS for the current month in one archive.  Or file-request specific
     back Issue filenames in distribution format [FNEWSDnn.LZH] for a
     particular Issue.  Monthly Volumes are available as FNWSmmmy.ZIP
     where mmm = three letter month [JAN - DEC] and y = last digit of the
     current year [6], i.e., FNWSMAY6.ZIP for all the Issues from May 96.

     Annual volumes are available as FNEWSn.ZIP where n = the Volume number
     1 - 12 for 1984 - 1995, respectively. Annual Volume archives range in
     size from 48K to 1.2M.


     INTERNET USERS: FidoNews is available via:

                          http://www.fidonet.org/fidonews.htm
                          ftp://ftp.fidonet.org/pub/fidonet/fidonews/
                          ftp://ftp.aminet.org/pub/aminet/comm/fido/

     You can read the current FidoNews Issue in HTML format at:

                          http://www.geocities.com/athens/6894/

     STAR SOURCE for ALL Past Issues via FTP and file-request -
     Available for FReq from 1:396/1 or by anonymous FTP from:

                          ftp://ftp.sstar.com/fidonet/fnews/

     Each yearly archive also contains a listing of the Table-of-Contents
     for that year's issues.  The total set is currently about 11 Megs.

                                 =*=*=*=

     The current week's FidoNews and the FidoNews public-key are now also
     available almost immediately after publication on the Editor's new
     homepage on the World Wide Web at:

                  http://ddi.digital.net/~cbaker84/fidonews.html

     There are also links there to jim barchuk's HTML FidoNews source and
     to John Souvestre's FTP site for the archives. There is also an email
     link for sending in an article as message text. Drop on over.

                            =*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=

     A PGP generated public-key is available for the FidoNews Editor from
     1:1/23 [1:18/14] by file-request for FNEWSKEY or by download from
     Rights On! BBS at 1-904-409-7040 as FIDONEWS.ASC in File Area 18.  It
     is also posted twice a month into the PKEY_DROP Echo available on the
     Zone 1 Echomail Backbone.

                                *=*=*=*=*

     SUBMISSIONS: You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
     FidoNews. Article submission requirements are contained in the file
     ARTSPEC.DOC, available from the FidoNews Editor, or file-requestable
     from 1:1/23 [1:18/14] as file "ARTSPEC.DOC".  ALL Zone Coordinators
     also have copies of ARTSPEC.DOC. Please read it.
     FIDONEWS 13-53               Page 41                  30 Dec 1996


     "Fido", "FidoNet" and the dog-with-diskette are U.S. registered
     trademarks of Tom Jennings, P.O. Box 410923, San Francisco, CA 94141,
     and are used with permission.

             "Disagreement is actually necessary,
              or we'd all have to get in fights
              or something to amuse ourselves
              and create the requisite chaos."
                                -Tom Jennings

      -30-


     -----------------------------------------------------------------



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