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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: dennis_sherman@unc.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: rec.org.sca / Rialto Frequently Asked Questions - part01/04
- Supersedes: <sca-faq/part01_763901298@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 16 Apr 1994 13:07:33 GMT
- Organization: none
- Lines: 170
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 30 May 1994 13:05:48 GMT
- Message-ID: <sca-faq/part01_766501548@rtfm.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Summary: FAQs with Answers for the Rialto - rec.org.sca and mailing
- list sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu. The Society for Creative Anachronism is
- an organization that studies the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and
- recreates those parts we find most interesting.
- X-Last-Updated: 1994/03/18
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.org.sca:40423 rec.answers:4927 news.answers:18142
-
- Archive-name: sca-faq/part01
- Last-modified: 02/03/1994
-
- rec.org.sca and sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu FAQ
- or
- Questions Frequently Asked on the Rialto
- ----------------------------------------
-
- Certain topics come up again and again on the Rialto. They are good
- questions, but each time they recur much net bandwidth and reader time is
- spent on repetitive responses and corrections to incorrect or incomplete
- answers.
-
- This article, which is posted in several parts on a regular basis,
- attempts to cover these common topics definitively and succinctly, so
- that discussion doesn't get bogged down in the repetition. The complete
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list is available via FTP from
- rtfm.mit.edu in directory /pub/usenet/rec.org.sca. Those without
- FTP access should send e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "send
- usenet/news.answers/finding-sources" in the body to find out how to do
- FTP by e-mail.
-
- For more complete introductions to the SCA, see the recurring postings
- "Come on in -- the water's fine" (by Hal Ravn [whheydt@pacbell.com] ) and
- "Life in the Current Middle Ages." (by Arval Benicour
- [mittle@watson.ibm.com] ).
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Table of Contents (Items changed since last posting marked with *)
-
- Part 01:
- Section 1: The Rialto.
- 1.1 What is the Rialto? What's it for?
- 1.2 Why is it called the Rialto?
- 1.3 How do I post to the Rialto?
- 1.4 What is the SCA Digest? How do I get on/off it?
- 1.5 Where can I get back issues of the Digest?
- 1.6 Why do I see the answers before the questions?
- 1.7 Am I allowed to publish Rialto postings in our newsletter?
-
- Part 02:
- Section 2: Other SCA electronic sources.
- 2.1 Are there other SCA mailing lists?
- 2.1.1 What other mailing lists of interest are there?
- 2.2 Are there archives of SCA information?
- 2.3 Does anyone have a contact in...?
- 2.4 What are the Rolls Ethereal?
- 2.5 What's this alt.sca I found?
- 2.6 Where can I get songs and lyrics?
-
- Part 03:
- Section 3: Miscellaneous questions.
- 3.1 What does AS stand for?
- 3.2 Other abbreviations.
- 3.3 Why don't we have a badge for all the Rialto people...?
- 3.4 What is Period?
-
- Section 4: Recurring events.
- 4.1 What is Pennsic? When is Pennsic?
- 4.2 What is Estrella? When is Estrella?
- 4.3 What is Lilies? When is Lilies?
-
- Section 5: Difficult Topics.
- 5.0.5 How do I write the Board of Directors?
- 5.1 Same-Sex Consorts.
- 5.2 Selecting the Crown.
-
- Section 6: How do you join the SCA?
-
- Part 04:
- Guide to Posting Style.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Section 1: The Rialto.
-
- 1.1 What is the Rialto? What's it for?
-
- The Rialto consists of a Usenet newsgroup, (rec.org.sca) which is
- propagated to thousands of machines world-wide, and an electronic mail
- digest (the SCA Digest), which is produced on a badly overworked
- machine at MIT, and mailed directly to hundreds of people, also
- world-wide. We are also connected to Fidonet and other BBS networks.
- The Rialto exists to discuss topics of interest to the Society
- for Creative Anachronism. The SCA is a non-profit, educational
- organization of people that study the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and
- recreate those parts we find most interesting.
-
- 1.2 Why is it called the Rialto?
-
- The Rialto is named for a marketplace in Venice in the vicinity of
- the Rialto bridge. As people gathered there to gossip and exchange
- ideas, so do we gather here.
-
- 1.3 How do I post to the Rialto?
-
- Check with your local system administrator or sysop for
- instructions for your exact machine and software. Generally, you
- either post a message to the newsgroup rec.org.sca, or send mail to
- sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu. See Part 4 of this posting for guidelines to
- posting style.
-
- 1.4 What is the SCA Digest? How do I get on/off it?
-
- The SCA Digest is the electronic mail version of the Rialto. One
- can subscribe and unsubscribe by sending email to
- SCA-Request@mc.lcs.mit.edu, requesting your addition to or deletion
- from the list. Expect this to take up to a week - the people running
- the Digest are volunteers with other work to do. If you read
- rec.org.sca, there is no need for you to subscribe to SCA-Request, as
- messages are gatewayed in both directions.
-
- 1.5 Where can I get back issues of the Digest?
-
- You may ask for back issues of any digests by writing to
- SCA-Request@mc.lcs.mit.edu and specifying the date(s)/number(s) of the
- issue you want mailed to you. That address is serviced by overworked
- humans so expect any request to take up to a week to process. Please
- be reasonable about the number of back issues you request.
- ("Everything up to now" is *not* reasonable :-)
-
- 1.6 Why do I see the answers before the questions?
-
- The short answer is that messages propagate from one system to
- another at varying speeds, and therefore an answer posted on a
- well-connected machine may arrive at a less-well-connected machine
- before the question does. The longer answer requires paying attention
- to the fact that the Rialto is both a Usenet newsgroup and a mailing
- list, and the gateway between them is another place where the ordering
- of messages can be scrambled. There is nothing that can easily (read
- cost-effectively) be done about the scrambling of message order (it
- would require a complete redesign of the Usenet newsgroups, just to
- start with) so please don't ask. This message scrambling, by the way,
- is a good reason to paraphrase or quote just enough of the message you
- are answering to make clear what you are talking about.
-
- 1.7 Am I allowed to publish Rialto postings in our newsletter?
-
- The legalities of copyright ownership in an electronic medium
- are currently murky. In countries that are signatories to the Berne
- Convention (which includes the USA and Canada), text is copyrighted
- from the moment of creation. However, text submitted to newsgroups
- and digests _may_ be different, as it is intended for a wide
- distribution. There is no clear answer in the USA at the present
- time. The polite thing to do, regardless of whether a lawyer would
- tell you it is necessary, is contact the author(s) of the article(s)
- in question, and ask for permission to publish. Abide by their
- wishes. Assuming permission is given, you (or your chronicler)
- probably want to save a hardcopy of the message giving you
- permission.
-
- ---------- End of Part 01 ----------
-
- ========================================================================
- Thanks to all who have contributed to this article.
-
- This article is a work in progress. If you have other topics you'd like to
- see included, send me email with the question(s) and your suggested
- answer(s). If you have comment on the items included, please send me
- (polite) email.
-
- PLEASE DO NOT COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE RIALTO! ! !
-
- The whole point of this effort is to reduce traffic. I will summarize
- comments sent to me, if it seems necessary.
- --
- Robyyan Torr d'Elandris Kapellenberg, Windmaster's Hill Atlantia
- Dennis R. Sherman Triangle Research Libraries Network
- dennis_sherman@unc.edu Univ. of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
-