home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
- Introduction
-
- A question which appears frequently on the USENET is, "I know
- someone's name, and I think they might have an electronic mail address
- somewhere. How can I find it?"
-
- There are many different techniques for doing this. Several of them
- are discussed below. Your best bet is to try the pertinent methods in
- this posting in the order in which they are listed (well, sort of; at
- the very least, please try all the pertinent methods which do not
- involve posting queries to soc.net-people before resorting to that).
-
- I've listed "Direct contact" near the end of this list because, for
- some reason, people seem to be reluctant to call people on the
- telephone or write them a paper-mail letter asking what their E-mail
- address is, as long as there is even a remote chance that it might be
- found without asking. This attitude is somewhat counterproductive,
- since in most cases, it is much easier to get someone's E-mail address
- by asking them than it is by following the other methods outlined
- below. Furthermore, even if you do manage to find an E-mail address
- using one of the on-line methods described below, it is not guaranteed
- that the person at the other end of the line checks that address
- regularly or even that it is the correct address.
-
- Therefore, if you do have a telephone number that isn't too
- expensive to call, or if you have a paper-mail address and aren't in
- too much of a hurry, you can probably save yourself a lot of trouble
- by skipping all of the on-line methods listed below and going directly
- to "Direct contact."
-
-
-
- Avoid public distribution of individuals' addresses
-
- It is considered rude to widely distribute (e.g., in a Usenet
- posting) a person's E-mail address without his prior consent, even if
- the address is publicly available using one of the techniques
- described below or some other technique.
-
- It might seem that having one's E-mail address listed in a publicly
- accessible database is equivalent to distributing it, but this is not
- the case in practice, for three primary reasons:
-
- * Some people may not be aware that their addresses are available for
- others to locate. For example, the majority of Usenet posters are
- unaware of the database of Usenet E-mail addresses mentioned below.
-
- * When some effort is required to locate a person's address (e.g.,
- using the techniques described below), only people who have a
- specific reason to send mail to him will go to the trouble.
- However, if the address is mentioned in a Usenet posting read by
- thousands of people, no effort is required to obtain it, and many
- more people will send him mail. Most people with E-mail addresses
- are not accustomed to receiving E-mail from strangers or large
- amounts of E-mail, and they may not be happy if they do.
-
- * As unwanted E-mail becomes more common, people will start to remove
- their addresses from public databases, which means that it will
- become more difficult to find people's addresses for legitimate
- reasons.
-
- In summary, if you want to advertise someone's E-mail address, get
- his permission before you do it. Besides, if you're going to
- advertise an address, it's a good idea to make sure it works first,
- and writing to it for permission is a good way to do that.
-
-
-
- A note about the Internet Gopher
-
- Many of the on-line methods for finding addresses documented below
- are easily accessible, with a consistent user interface, from the
- Internet Gopher burrow at the University of Minnesota. If you are on
- the Internet, you may want to try using Gopher to do your searching
- before going directly to any of the methods described below. Ask
- someone at your site to find out if Gopher clients are installed
- there. Or, to find out how to use it and/or install it yourself, see
- the comp.infosystems.gopher FAQ posting, a pointer to which is located
- at the end of this message.
-
-
-
- Techniques
-
- *. College Email Addresses
-
- The postings whose subjects start with "FAQ: College Email
- Addresses" in the soc.college newsgroup describe the account and
- E-mail address policies for graduate and undergraduate students at
- many universities and colleges. If you are looking for a
- university/college student, check those postings for the university or
- college in question and follow their instructions for finding out
- more.
-
- If the postings have expired at your site or has not been posted
- recently, you can get a copy of them using the instructions below (in
- the "Useful USENET postings" section).
-
- *. Inter-Network Mail Guide
-
- If you know which network/service your target has an account on
- (e.g. CompuServe, Fidonet), then the "Inter-Network Mail Guide"
- posting in comp.mail.misc *may* be able to provide you with some help,
- although it probably will not be particularly helpful unless you have
- some sort of address to start with (a small number of networks use
- full names as addresses, and the posting mentions when this is the
- case, but it doesn't apply in very many cases).
-
- See the instructions below for getting a copy of this posting if it
- isn't available in comp.mail.misc at your site.
-
- *. Usenet-addresses server
-
- If you think that your target may be on the USENET and may have
- posted a message to the USENET at some point in the past, you might be
- able to find his/her address in the USENET address database on the
- machine rtfm.mit.edu.
-
- To query the database, send an E-mail message to
- "mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu" with "send usenet-addresses/name" in the
- body of the message. The "name" should be one or more space-separated
- words for which you want to search; since the search is fuzzy (i.e.,
- all of the words you specify do not have to match), you should list
- all of the words you think might appear in the address, including (for
- example) first and last name, possible username, and possible
- components of the host name (e.g. "mit" for a person who you think is
- at MIT). The case and order of the words you list are ignored.
-
- Note that multiple requests can appear (on separate lines) in mail
- to the mail server, but each request will be answered in a separate
- message.
-
- In many cases, you will get a list of quite a few matching
- addresses, and you will have to go through it looking for ones that
- may be the one you're looking for. However, the mail server will
- return a maximum of only 40 matches.
-
- Note that the usenet-addresses database is accessible via WAIS (in
- fact, the script that does mail server searches is actually just a
- front-end to a WAIS database) on two different hosts: rtfm.mit.edu and
- cedar.cic.net. In both cases, the database is called
- "usenet-addresses" and is on port 210. Note that the version on rtfm
- is slightly more up-to-date with respect to the master address list
- than the version on cedar. If you don't know what WAIS is, then don't
- worry about this paragraph; if you're curious, see the
- "comp.infosystems.wais" newsgroup.
-
- For more details about how to use the database, send the command
- "send usenet-addresses/help".
-
- *. NIC.DDN.MIL 'whois' database
-
- The "whois" database on NIC.DDN.MIL contains the addresses of many
- military personnel. It also used to contain the addresses of some
- administrators of non-military networks and of some "prominent
- net.personalities," but those have now been moved to the "whois"
- database on WHOIS.INTERNIC.NET. If your target is active on the
- Internet, he may be in one of these NICs' databases.
-
- If your system has the "whois" program, you can use that to query a
- NIC database. If not, but you have Internet access, you can telnet to
- nic.ddn.mil (whois.internic.net) and run the command "whois" once you
- are logged in (help is available). Alternatively, you can issue a
- single command to the nic.ddn.mil (whois.internic.net) whois server by
- typing "telnet nic.ddn.mil whois" ("telnet whois.internic.net whois")
- in order to connect to it and then typing the command and hitting
- return; the "help" command will return several screens full of text,
- so if you need help, you should use a utility such as "tee" or
- "script" to capture the help message and save it for future reference.
- If you do not have Internet access, you can send mail to
- "service@nic.ddn.mil" ("whois@whois.internic.net") to query the
- "whois" database; send a message with "help" in the body to find out
- more information.
-
- Note, furthermore, that some sites run local "whois" databases to
- provide information about people inside their organizations. The only
- way to find out if your site runs such a database is to ask someone
- locally about it (see "Get more help locally" below), and the only way
- to find out about such databases at other sites (assuming, of course,
- that those databases are not mentioned in any of the other sources
- listed in this document) is to contact responsible individuals at
- those sites and ask (see "Finding a host name and asking someone there
- for help" below).
-
- *. Other whois databases.
-
- Quite a few other sites also run "whois" databases that can be
- connected to over the Internet using the whois protocol (using either
- the "whois" program or "telnet hostname whois" as described in the
- previous section). Some of those sites are listed here, and others
- are listed in a separate list, described in more detail below.
-
- The Ohio State University runs a "whois" database (on the machine
- "osu.edu") that has all of the faculty, staff, and students listed.
- It responds to "whois" queries in the normal fashion, or you can just
- send mail to firstname.lastname@osu.edu and it will try to deliver
- e-mail if the person has registered an e-mail address. You can also
- telnet to osu.edu and look-up a person. If you are unsure of the
- spelling this is a good way, as it does a soundex type search so exact
- matches are not necessary. No password is necessary.
-
- RIPE (a cooperative group of several European Internet providers)
- runs a "whois" database, with RIPE information, on "whois.ripe.net";
- it is a European counterpart to "whois.internic.net".
-
- Matt H. Power of MIT <mhpower@athena.mit.edu> has compiled and
- maintains an extensive list of sites that run "whois" servers. The
- file can be retrieved via anonymous ftp from
- /pub/whois/whois-servers.list on sipb.mit.edu [18.70.0.209].
-
- In addition to E-mail addresses for individuals, "whois" servers
- often also contain contact information about domains. For example,
- asking whois.internic.net's server for information about "mit.edu"
- would tell you to look up "mit-dom" in order to get information about
- MIT's domain, and doing that would give you contact information about
- the people responsible for administrating that domain, including the
- handles of those individuals, which you can then look up to get still
- more information about them.
-
- *. Other directory services
-
- There are several other directory services you may be able to use to
- search for your target.
-
- - Many Bitnet sites have name servers that can be queried in one way
- or another. To get a list of them with documentation, send a mail
- message to listserv@bitnic.bitnet (a.k.a listserv@bitnic.educom.edu)
- with the command "send bitnet servers" in the body of the message.
-
- - The IBM Corporate Internet Gateway provides a directory of users
- (which I believe contains only IBM employees, although I'm not
- certain) that is available to anyone who can send E-mail to it. If
- your target works for IBM (or you suspect he/she does), then this
- might be useful to you.
-
- To use it, send mail to "nic@vnet.ibm.com" with the command "whois
- lastname, firstname" in the subject or body of the message. If you
- are unsure of the spelling of the last name, use an asterisk (*) to
- indicate that the last name should be treated as a prefix, rather than
- a complete name. The first name is always treated as a prefix. For
- example, "whois Smith*, R" would return all people with a last name
- starting with "Smith" and a first name starting with "R", while "whois
- Smith, R" would return only those people with exactly the last name
- "Smith" and a first name starting with "R".
-
- Users of the directory are limited to 25 name searches per day.
- Each name that results is counted as a separate name search. For
- example, a single "whois Smith, R" that found Rodger Smith, Robert
- Smith, and Reginald Smith would count as three name searches.
- Multiple requests may be made in a single note provided that the
- number of names found does not exceed the daily limit of 25.
-
- - RPI runs a white pages server for people interested in the field
- of communications. To find out how to use it, send mail to
- comserve@rpitsvm.bitnet (or comserve@vm.its.rpi.edu) with "help" in
- the body of the message.
-
- - BITNIC (the BITNET Network Information Center) runs a name server
- of more general interest. To find out how to use it, send mail to
- netserv@bitnic.bitnet (again, bitnic.educom.edu can also be used) with
- "help" in the body of the message.
-
- - There is an X.500 white pages service run by UNINETT. It is
- accessible by sending mail to the address Directory@UNINETT.NO (send a
- message with "help" in the subject or body to get more information).
- Furthermore, there is software for UNIX available for use as a
- convenient interface to the service. It is available for anonymous
- ftp in ~ftp/directory/directory.tar.Z on the machine nac.no. Finally,
- if the administrator of your site registers your organization with
- UNINETT (instructions about doing so are available with the software
- just mentioned), people from your site can then register in the
- database so that other people can look them up in it.
-
- - PTT Research in the Netherlands runs a server that you can use to
- look up addresses for its employees. If you know someone who may work
- there, you can find out how to use the server by sending a mail
- message to whois@research.ptt.nl with "help" in the body of the
- message. Note that this is not a "complete" whois site; it just
- supports limited mail server queries.
-
- - AT&T runs a mailer on the host "att.com" that can get mail to most
- AT&T employees using their names as addresses. You can send mail to
- "lastname@att.com" or to "firstname.lastname@att.com". If the name is
- ambiguous, you will get a bounce message indicating several possible
- matches, and the appropriate address to use for each.
-
- - Tim Pozar has set up a WAIS server that contains the FidoNet email
- addresses of Sysops of FidoNet BBSs. You can access it by connecting
- to the "nodelist" WAIS database on port 210 of kumr.lns.com; use the
- name(s) for which you wish to search as your search keywords. See
- above for more information about WAIS.
-
- - PSI runs a X.500 directory server, accessible by sending mail to
- "whitepages@wp.psi.com".
-
- - In Australia, there are a number of methods you can use to find
- someone connected to AARNet.
-
- (a) There is an X.500 white pages service, accessible via a public
- access account on wp.adelaide.edu.au. To use it, log in as "fred" and
- select a user agent to run ("de" is probably the easiest). You can
- also send queries by mail to whitepages@wp.adelaide.edu.au (sending
- the query "help" will return instructions).
-
- (b) There is a netfind access point (see below) on Archie.AU.
-
- (c) A number of sites provide information via finger and whois.
-
- - Information about hosts in the "ca" Internet domain (i.e., hosts
- in Canada) Is accessible via anonymous ftp to ftp.CDNnet.CA, or by
- mail to archive-server@relay.CDNnet.CA. You can get site domain names
- and host names, as well as the names and addresses of contact people
- for individual sites. For more information, retrieve the file
- /ca-domain/Introduction via anonymous ftp, or send a mail message to
- the mail server with "send ca-domain Introduction" in it. The
- information in this archive is also available via Gopher to
- nstn.ns.ca.
-
- *. Finding a host name and asking someone there for help
-
- If you know the organization, company, or whatever at which your
- target's account is likely to be located, then you might be able to
- get your hands on the host name of a machine at that location. Once
- you've done that, you can usually write to someone responsible for
- E-mail support at the site and ask for help finding the address you
- are seeking.
-
- There are three main sources from which you can get host names. The
- first is the NIC "whois" database, which contains site and
- organization information as well as information about individuals.
- For more information about using it, see above. Organization entries
- in the NIC database will usually list an administrative, technical
- and/or zone contact person, with his/her address, to whom you can
- write. You can also write to "postmaster" at almost any Internet
- host to get in touch with someone responsible for E-mail.
-
- The second is a network directory published by the University of
- Texas. Although it hasn't been updated in a few years, it still
- provides a useful list of many site names. It is available for
- anonymous ftp from several different locations, including
- /net.directory/1988.netbook on emx.utexas.edu. It is BIG, so you
- might not have room to store it locally, unless you ask someone in
- charge to set up some space for it. You should NOT transfer it to
- /tmp every time you need it, or something like that; that's a horrible
- waste of network bandwidth. Contact people are usually listed in the
- site entries in the net directory, but you might want to try
- "postmaster" first. This directory is superseded by the book "The
- user's directory of computer networks," whose bibliography information
- is provided in the "References" section below. Of course, you have to
- pay for the book, and you can't grep dead trees, but it's probably
- more up-to-date than the University of Texas directory.
-
- The third is the UUCP maps in the comp.mail.maps newsgroup. See the
- posting "UUCP map for README" in that directory for more information.
- You can grep in the news spool or use your news reader's search
- facilities to search for a particular string (e.g. an organization
- name) in the comp.mail.maps postings. Each UUCP map entry lists the
- contact person for the entry. You can also search the UUCP maps by
- connecting to the "uumap" WAIS database on port 210 of wais.cic.net.
- For more information about WAIS, see above.
-
- You can also search UUCP maps using the University of California at
- Berkeley's Netinfo service (which also supports other services, such
- as looking up IP addresses for hosts on the Internet). You connect to
- it at port 117 of netinfo.berkeley.edu, e.g. on some systems, "telnet
- netinfo.berkeley.edu 117". The "ufind", "ufile", "uhost" and "upath"
- commands are used to look up information in the UUCP maps. For more
- information about Netinfo, connect to it and type "?".
-
- Once you've got a host name and the person to contact, you need to
- figure out how to get the mail there, if it's on a network you don't
- know how to reach. See the "Inter-Network Mail Guide" posting
- referenced above if you need help with that.
-
- If you do go this route, make sure you provide as much information
- as you can about the person whose address you are seeking; remember
- that the more detailed (and polite!) you are, the more likely it is
- that the person you are contacting will be able to help you.
- Remember, too, that the person you are contacting is probably very
- busy, and responding to requests like yours is probably not one of
- his/her highest priorities, so be patient.
-
- *. Using "finger"
-
- If you've found a potential host name for your target using one of
- the other methods described here, and if you have direct access to the
- Internet, then you may be able to use the "finger" program/protocol to
- look up your target at a remote site. Many sites support finger
- servers that will do first-name, last-name and/or user-name searches
- through their user space. For example, the machine "mit.edu" supports
- a directory of all staff and students at MIT; that directory can be
- searched using finger by last name or by user name, and other
- parameters can be used to restrict the search as well.
-
- To finger someone at another site, you generally type "finger
- name@host". If this doesn't work for you, you should check with
- someone locally to find more more information about if it's possible
- to finger from your site, and if so, how to do it.
-
- *. Netfind
-
- Netfind is a "white pages" service that allows you to query one
- service and have it search several other address databases of various
- sorts for addresses matching your query. It is a program for SunOS
- workstations and requires your computer to be directly connected to
- the Internet. The source code is available by anonymous FTP from
- ftp.cs.colorado.edu, in pub/cs/distribs/netfind.
-
- People without a Sun on which to run Netfind on can telnet to any of
- the following Netfind servers and log in as "netfind" (with no
- password):
-
- archie.au AARNet, Melbourne, Australia
- bruno.cs.colorado.edu University of Colorado, Boulder
- dino.conicit.ve Nat. Council for Techn. & Scien.
- Research Venezuela
- ds.internic.net InterNIC Directory and DB Services,
- S. Plainfield, NJ
- lincoln.technet.sg Technet Unit, Singapore
- macs.ee.mcgill.ca McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- malloco.ing.puc.cl Catholic University of Chile, Santiago
- monolith.cc.ic.ac.uk Imperial College, London, England
- mudhoney.micro.umn.edu University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
- netfind.oc.com OpenConnect Systems, Dallas, Texas
- netfind.vslib.cz Liberec University of Technology,
- Czech Republic
- nic.nm.kr Korea Network Information Center, Taejon, Korea
- nic.uakom.sk Academy of Sciences, Banska Bystrica, Slovakia
- redmont.cis.uab.edu University of Alabama at Birmingham
-
- There is a mailing list where new releases of netfind will be
- announced; you can subscribe by sending mail to
- netfind-users-request@cs.colorado.edu.
-
- Netfind was developed by Mike Schwartz <schwartz@cs.colorado.edu>
- and Panos Tsirigotis <panos@cs.colorado.edu>.
-
- *. Knowbot Information Service
-
- The "Knowbot Information Service" (KIS) is another white pages
- service.
-
- Two hosts running KIS servers are info.cnri.reston.va.us and
- regulus.cs.bucknell.edu. Either can be reached on the Internet via
- telnet at port 185 (e.g. "telnet info.cnri.reston.va.us 185"), or via
- electronic mail (kis@cnri.reston.va.us or
- netaddress@regulus.cs.bucknell.edu). For more information about
- Knowbot, use the "man" command after connecting via telnet or in the
- body of your E-mail message. In addition, info.cnri.reston.va.us' KIS
- server can be reached using the Internet "whois" protocol described
- above.
-
- *. Searching LISTSERV mailing lists
-
- Many sites around the network are running the VM/CMS LISTSERV
- package for managing mailing lists. If you have some reason to
- believe that a particular user may be a member of a mailing list on a
- LISTSERV site, you can ask that LISTSERV to send you a membership list
- and search it for your target.
-
- To do this, send mail to listserv@host (if "host" is a BITNET host,
- try using listserv@host.bitnet; if that doesn't work, you'll have to
- ask someone at your site how to send mail tol BITNET hosts). In the
- body of your message, include the command "review list-name", where
- "list-name" is the name of the mailing list you wish to search.
-
- If you don't know what LISTSERV is and dont' know of any LISTSERV
- sites or mailing lists, then this technique probably isn't worth
- bothering with.
-
- *. Direct contact
-
- If you have a paper mail address or telephone number for your
- target, call them or write to them and ask for an E-mail address.
-
- In that case, you might encounter the somewhat common situation
- where your target knows he has an E-mail address, but he doesn't know
- what it is. If this happens to you, then give him your E-mail address
- and ask him to send you mail (and if he can't figure out how, tell him
- to get someone at his site to help). The odds are that when you get
- his message, it'll contain a valid return address in it.
-
- *. Get more help locally
-
- Often, the postmaster at your site (or whomever is responsible at
- your site for answering mail-related questions) has a large amount of
- knowledge that will help him to help you find the answer to your
- question. If you have been unable to find the answer for yourself,
- check with people locally and see if one of them can help you out.
-
- *. The last resort -- soc.net-people
-
- If all the methods above have failed, you can consider posting a
- message to soc.net-people asking for help locating your target.
- Before doing so, however, you should read the "Tips on using
- soc.net-people" posting in that newsgroup. If it has expired, you can
- get a copy using the instructions below (note that the name in the
- instructions below may change when a new version with a new date is
- posted, so you may need to ask for an index of the soc.net-people
- archive to find out the name of the most recent version).
-
- Note that this is listed as THE last resort, to be tried even later
- than using a telephone number or paper mail address. Any posting to
- the USENET uses the resources of the sites on the USENET and of the
- networks that carry it; certainly, the total cost of transporting a
- USENET message is more than the cost of a stamp or a short phone call.
- Since the benefit gained is to you and not to the USENET as a
- whole, you should avoid posting if you possibly can.
-
-
-
- References
-
- If you want to learn more about computer networks and how they
- interact with each other, these books and articles might be
- interesting and useful to you:
-
- !%@:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks
- by Donnalyn Frey and Rick Adams
- ISBN 1-56592-031-7
- (published by O'Reilly, E-mail nuts@ora.com)
- (current edition published in August 1993; $24.95 cover
- price)
-
- The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems Worldwide, by
- John S. Quarterman, Digital Press, Bedford, MA, 1990. $50.
- Digital order number EY-C176E-DP-SS, Digital Press ISBN
- 155558-033-5, Prentice-Hall ISBN 0-13-565607-9.
-
- ``Strategies for Finding People on Networks,'' by John S. Quarterman,
- Matrix News, Vol. 1, No. 6, pg. 3, Matrix Information and
- Directory Services, Austin, Texas, September 1991.
-
- The user's directory of computer networks, ed. Tracy L. LaQuey,
- Digital Press, Bedford, MA, 1990. Digital order number
- EY-C200E-DP, ISBN 1-55558-047-5.
-
- Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide, by Brendan Kehoe,
- Prentice Hall, July 1992. ISBN 0-13-010778-6. (This is the
- second edition. The first edition is available for free
- on-line. To find out how to get it, send mail to
- archive-server@cs.widener.edu with "send zen hints" in the
- body of the message.)
-
-
-
- Useful USENET Postings
-
- Subject: Gopher (comp.infosystems.gopher) Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Newsgroups: comp.infosystems.gopher,news.answers
-
- Subject: FAQ: College Email Addresses 1/3 [Monthly posting]
- Subject: FAQ: College Email Addresses 2/3 [Monthly posting]
- Subject: FAQ: College Email Addresses 3/3 [Monthly posting]
- Newsgroups: soc.college,soc.net-people,news.answers
-
- Subject: Updated Inter-Network Mail Guide
- Newsgroups: comp.mail.misc,alt.bbs.lists,alt.internet.services,comp.misc,comp.answers,alt.answers,news.answers
-
- Subject: Tips on using soc.net-people [l.m. 13/09/92]
- Newsgroups: soc.net-people
-
- [Same as above -- check the archives for a newer version if
- this one isn't available.]
-
- Available in the indicated USENET newsgroup(s), or via anonymous ftp from
- rtfm.mit.edu (18.70.0.209) in the files:
-
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/gopher-faq
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part1
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part2
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part3
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/inter-network-guide
- /pub/usenet/soc.net-people/Tips_on_using_soc.net-people_[l.m._13_09_92]
-
- Also available from mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu by sending a mail message
- containing any or all of:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/gopher-faq
- send usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/mail/college-email/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/mail/inter-network-guide
- send usenet/soc.net-people/Tips_on_using_soc.net-people_[l.m._13_09_92]
-
- Send a message containing "help" to get general information about the
- mail server.
-
-
-
- Credits
-
- Comments about, suggestions about or corrections to this posting are
- welcomed. If you would like to ask me to change this posting in some
- way, the method I appreciate most is for you to actually make the
- desired modifications to a copy of the posting, and then to send me
- the modified posting, or a context diff between my posted version and
- your modified version (if you do the latter, make sure to include in
- your mail the "Version:" line from my posted version). Submitting
- changes in this way makes dealing with them easier for me and helps to
- avoid misunderstandings about what you are suggesting.
-
- These people provided useful comments, information and/or
- suggestions:
-
- Randall Atkinson <atkinson@itd.nrl.navy.mil>
- Ed Blackman <ebb7683@rigel.tamu.edu>
- B. Blissenbach <brubli@purodha.gun.de>
- Mark Brader <msb@sq.com>
- Bruno Chatras <chatras@simob.cnet-pab.fr>
- Jim Cheetham <jim@oasis.icl.co.uk>
- Huang Chih-Hsien <u7911013@cc.nctu.edu.tw>
- Mark-Jason Dominus <mjd@central.cis.upenn.edu>
- Ralph E. Droms <droms@bucknell.edu>
- Donald E. Eastlake, III <dee@ranger.enet.dec.com>
- Marshall Gene Flax <mgflax@phoenix.Princeton.edu>
- Arthur K. Ho <artho@kgnvmw.vnet.ibm.com>
- Patrick Hoepfner <hoepfner@heasfs.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Dan Hoey <hoey@aic.nrl.navy.mil>
- Kjetil Torgrim Homme <kjetilho@ifi.uio.no>
- Eric Ideler <ideler@prl.philips.nl>
- Ivar Mar Jonsson <ivar@ppc.ubc.ca>
- Dan Kegel <dank@blacks.jpl.nasa.gov>
- Jonathan Kochmer <nwnetman@u.washington.edu>
- Patt Leonard <leonard@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>
- Jerry Martin <nic@osu.edu>
- Skip Montanaro <montnaro@sierra.crd.ge.com>
- Eric de Mund <ead@cs.ucsb.edu>
- Paul D. Nanson <pdn@msnvm1.vnet.ibm.com>
- Jerry Peek <jerry@ora.com>
- Edward P. Piecewicz <edwardp@cs.umb.edu>
- Tim Pozar <pozar@kumr.lns.com>
- Mark Prior <mrp@itd.adelaide.edu.au>
- John S. Quarterman <mids@tic.com>
- Gowri Ramanathan <ramanag@research.cs.orst.edu>
- Ellen Keyne Seebacher <elle@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Rolf E. Sonneveld <ICP@research.ptt.nl>
- Donald.Stoye@Eng.Sun.COM
- Robert Ullmann <ariel@relay.prime.com>
- Edward Vielmetti <emv@msen.com>
- Peter M. Weiss <pmw1@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Bill Wells <netinfo@violet.berkeley.edu>
- Bill Wohler <wohler@sap-ag.de>
- Peter J. Woodrow <woodrow@ijsapl.enet.dec.com>
-
- --
- Jonathan Kamens | OpenVision Technologies, Inc. | jik@security.ov.com
- -----cut here-----
-
-
-
- .
-