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INI File | 1992-02-03 | 3.8 KB | 77 lines |
- [Last changed: 02/02/92]
-
- This is the first edition of a booklet entitled ``Zen and the Art of
- the Internet: A Beginner's Guide to the Internet''. It's roughly 100
- pages in length, and is divided into the following sections:
-
- * Chapter 1--Network Basics
- * Chapter 2--Electronic Mail
- * Chapter 3--Anonymous FTP
- * Chapter 4--Usenet News
- * Chapter 5--Telnet
- * Chapter 6--Tools (finger/ping/etc)
- * Chapter 7--Commercial Uses of the Internet
- * Chapter 8--Things you'll hear about (projects/organizations)
- * Chapter 9--Finding Out More
- * An appendix on reaching other networks
- * An appendix on mail-based file retrieval (FTPmail, archive servers)
- * An appendix on how to create a newsgroup
- * A glossary of 80+ terms
- * A bibliography of over a dozen books and two dozen papers
- and magazines related to the Internet and similar topics.
-
- Why do you want this? Well, for one thing it's free. It's also
- unique--there presently exists no single comprehensive collection of
- the information directly related to being connected to the Internet.
- Most users learn by word of mouth and stumbling upon things. This
- guide should give you a reference to consult if you're curious about
- what can be done with the Internet. It also presents the fundamental
- topics that are all too often assumed and considered trivial by many
- network users. This is your first "virtual quickie."
-
- Now, how to read it. The file zen-1.0.dvi is a DVI (DeVice
- Independent) file created by the TeX typesetting system. Filters
- exist to convert these DVI files into printer-specific files for a variety
- of printers. Also included is the file zen-1.0.PS, a Postscript version.
- This can be printed on a number of printers, most notably the Apple
- LaserWriter series. (We tested it with a Pacific Page cartridge in an
- HP LaserJet III.)
-
- In the tar file zen-1.0.tar.Z (a compressed tar file---ask your local
- system administrator how to extract the files from this), there are a
- number of files suffixed by `.texi'. These are the TeXinfo source to
- the booklet. TeX is a free typesetting system, the source for which
- you can FTP or buy on a tape. TeXinfo is the system written on top of
- TeX by the GNU Project for easy manual creation. To create a DVI file
- of your own (for whatever reason), simply tex the file zen-1.0.texi.
- Right now you can't create the info file needed for reading it in the
- info system or in Emacs' info mode. Contact me if you'd like to find
- out why not, and suggest possible solutions.
-
- I'm sorry, we cannot supply hardcopy versions of this booklet at this
- time. The support staffs of educational institutions are encouraged to
- put multiple copies out for their user communities. Also any companies
- in need of training literature are welcome to use this booklet. (The
- author is keenly interested in hearing from anyone considering such a
- large distribution; if you're going to do such a thing, please let me
- know.)
-
- Being that this is the first edition, a good amount of information was
- been omitted, in trade for being able to release it for general
- critique this Spring. (Otherwise it probably wouldn't be presentable
- again until the summer.) In particular WAIS, IRC, and a few other
- things stand out. They will be added in a more complete version;
- suggestions on what to include are more than welcome. Hopefully the
- thinner chapters (e.g. commercial uses) will grow soon too. (For example,
- I want to include an appendix on what it takes to become connected to the
- Internet, and perhaps one on how to register a domain name--both vital
- issues to people who are contemplating joining the Internet but aren't
- quite sure what's involved or what's "inside the black box.")
-
- If you have any comments or questions, please send them to the address
- guide-bugs@cs.widener.edu. I hope this guide is of use to you!
-
- Brendan Kehoe
- Department of Computer Science
- Widener University
-