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- Hiya.Alot has been asked about EasyNet...some folks thought it was a new system
- that could be used to access outdials,much like SprintNet's PC Pursuit service.
- However,yours truly went thru the trouble of actually getting an account on
- EasyNet (a Telebase System),and here is a buffered account of what I found.
-
- EasyNet is in fact,a database network,on which you can scan a variety of text
- files updated at a variety of intervals,from daily to weekly to whenever.
- I have no idea what others have done on this system,but for those who are
- interested,it can be accessed via SprintNet(Telenet) at 21549;CompuNet at
- HostName:Telebase;and via TymNet at Terminal ID: 'A' and Login:EasyNet.
-
- A Buffered Account of a typical database scan follows:
-
- Please enter the database name as you know it.
- (Use B to back up.)
-
- -> netweaver
- Searching.........................................
- This database is not currently being updated by its producers and is not
- searchable through this service at this time.
-
- PRESS TO SELECT * Main Menu *
-
- 1 EasyNet-I System helps select the database
- 2 EasyNet-II You name the database
- 3 SmartSCAN Scan a group of databases
- 4 Instructions, Database directory
- 5 NEW! This Month: FREE Marketing Scan; Database Updates
- H for Help, C for Commands
-
- Total charges thus far: $0.25
- -> 2
-
- Please enter the database name as you know it.
- (Use B to back up.)
- -> netline
- Searching.......................................
-
- ** SUBJECT TERMS SEARCH GUIDE **
-
-
- NOTE: This is a general search tutorial for NewsNet databases. The examples
- given below may not fit the database you have selected; however, the search
- guidelines are valid for each NewsNet database.
-
- ENTRY METHOD: Enter subject terms; omit punctuation and words like the, of,
- for, on, at, in, to, upon, etc. The minimum length of each subject term is 2
- characters; the maximum length is 20 characters.
- greenhouse gases
- fiber optic cable
-
- TRUNCATION: Use the WILD LETTER slash (/) to search variable word endings, or
- to truncate words longer than 20 characters. The minimum length of each
- truncated subject term is 3 characters, not counting the WILD LETTER slash.
-
- USE: superconduct/
- TO GET: superconductors, superconductive, superconductivity, etc.
-
- COMBINED TERMS: Use AND to search BOTH of two terms; use OR to search EITHER
- of two terms.
- Harvard AND animal patent
- oil shale OR oil sand/
-
- Guidelines.to back up) oil shale OR oil sand/INE/). Type H for Search
- Guidelines.
- (or type B to back up)
- -> easynet/
-
- Is:
- EASYNET/
- Correct ? (Yes/No) -> y
-
- We have no reason to believe that errors exist in the data or services
- furnished. If there are any such errors the parties hereto have no liability
- for any consequential, incidental or punitive damages. No warranty, either
- expressed or implied, including but not limited to those of merchantability or
- fitness for a particular purpose are made. Any liability is limited to the
- amount paid by the customer to Telebase.
-
- System is now searching the newsletter you selected, copyrighted 1990 and
- available through NewsNet, Inc.
-
- Accessing Network...........Completed.
- Accessing Database Host.....Completed.
- Logging on..................Completed.
- Selecting Database..........Completed.
- Submitting Search...........Completed.
-
- Nothing was retrieved. No charge for this search.
-
- If you wish, you may type
- SOS for online human assistance
- with your search.
-
- PRESS TO SELECT * Main Menu *
-
- 1 EasyNet-I System helps select the database
- 2 EasyNet-II You name the database
- 3 SmartSCAN Scan a group of databases
- 4 Instructions, Database directory
- 5 NEW! This Month: FREE Marketing Scan; Database Updates
- H for Help, C for Commands
-
- Total charges thus far: $0.50
- -> 2
-
- Please enter the database name as you know it.
- (Use B to back up.)
-
- -> netline
- Searching........................................
-
- Guidelines.to back up)..........................INE/). Type H for Search
- Guidelines.
- (or type B to back up)
-
- -> telenet/
-
- Is:
- TELENET/
- Correct ? (Yes/No) -> y
-
- System is now searching the newsletter you selected, copyrighted 1990 and
- available through NewsNet, Inc.
-
- Accessing Network...........Completed.
- Accessing Database Host.....Completed.
- Logging on..................Completed.
- Selecting Database..........Completed.
- Submitting Search...........Completed.
-
- Retrieving the only full text article
- available on that subject.
-
- Heading # 1 Searched: 08-27-1990 22:23
- ^S/^Q: stop/start; ^T: Paging ON ; ^C/(esc): interrupt (^ = CTRL/CONTROL key)
-
- Headline #1
- Copyright
- NETLINE via NewsNet
- March 1990
-
- LANS REACH OUT AT COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS '90 -- PART I OF II
-
- Caryn Fox and Beth Bacheldor
-
- Although Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN) was a popular
- subject at last month's Communications Networks '90 trade show
- in Washington, D.C., the real show-stealers were LAN-to-WAN and
- LAN-to-LAN integration and interconnection.
-
- Show attendees were overwhelmingly interested in LANs and LAN
- interconnection strategies. Seminar sessions -- even in the early
- morning -- were standing-room-only.
-
- At one session, Mary Modahl, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc.
- (Cambridge, Mass.), predicted that smart wiring hubs will be an
- important growth market in the LAN arena.
-
- Modahl said the hubs -- which provide physical layer network
- management, support multiple media, and provide bridging/routing
- capabilities -- will serve as the central point of LAN
- interconnection.
-
- Although they are available from only a few companies -- such
- as SynOptics Communications Inc. (Mountain View, Calif.),
- Ungermann-Bass Inc. (Santa Clara, Calif.), Cabletron Inc. (East
- Rochester, N.H.), Proteon Inc. (Westborough, Mass.), and Chipcom
- Corp. (Waltham, Mass.) -- smart wiring hubs will attract large
- users because of their low cost and solid migration path to Fiber
- Distributed Data Interface, Modahl said.
-
- Smart hubs save users money by supporting a variety of media,
- including the upcoming 100 Mbps FDDI standard, Modahl noted.
-
- The interconnection theme also came across on the show floor,
- where a number of vendors launched new products and partnerships
- for linking disparate networks.
-
- * US Sprint (Reston, Va.) unveiled the LAN Reach product family,
- which links LANs via Sprint's SprintNet (formerly Telenet)
- nationwide public data network. Sprint said it plans to develop
- an array of LAN connectivity products based on several different
- technologies and standards.
-
- LAN Reach provides X.25 connectivity and supports the Open Systems
- Interconnect (OSI) X.400 protocol for electronic mail, Sprint
- said. The X.400 interface allows LAN users to access the
- SprintMail E-mail messaging service, which is interconnected with
- many other domestic and international e-mail services.
-
- Sprint also signed an agreement to resell Eicon Technology Corp.'s
- (Montreal, Canada) X.25/LAN gateway and bridge products. Sprint
- said it is developing an integrated network management system to
- control the SprintNet-Eicon gateway interconnection.
-
- * Under an agreement with CrossComm Corp. (Marlborough, Mass.),
- General DataComm Industries Inc. (Middlebury, Conn.) will add a
- family of LAN bridges to its current T1 WAN product line.
-
- * BBN Communications Corp. (Cambridge, Mass.), traditionally a WAN
- vendor, said it will offer LAN interconnection products and
- services as part of its "total network offering."
-
- * NCR Comten (St. Paul, Minn.), an IBM-oriented networking vendor,
- announced a new Network Integration Service for users to integrate
- their LANs and WANs.
-
- All in all, the conference showed that the lines between local
- and wide area networking are fading fast. Next on the agenda?
- High-speed LAN/WAN interconnectivity.
-
- Many major vendors touted FDDI-compliant products at the show.
- On the WAN side, Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) -- an
- upcoming industry standard for high-speed fiber optic wide
- area networking -- may be loosely viewed as FDDI's WAN equivalent.
- As WANS and LANs integrate with each other, keep an eye out for
- FDDI-to-SONET products.
-
- LAN STANDARDS COME OF AGE
-
- FDDI
-
- After much debate the Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI) is
- finally close to completion. According to Floyd Ross, chairman of
- the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Station
- Management (SMT) working group, the SMT document of the emerging
- standard should be ready for approval within a few months.
-
- Ross predicted that by April, the SMT committee will have a
- document that will essentially be the SMT standard. "There are
- only details to work out" in the next few months, he said.
- However, because of the red tape still ahead, Ross said the
- standard will not be officially completed until early 1991.
-
- The SMT document of the 100 megabit per second, FDDI LAN
- specification has been a major stumbling block in completing the
- standard. Of the four documents -- Physical (PHY), Physical Media
- Dependent (PMD), Media Access Control (MAC), and SMT -- the SMT
- had been the center of hot debate at ANSI (see NETLINE, November
- '89, p. 2).
-
- According to Ross, the station manager is the focal point of
- network interoperability. "The station manager acts as the
- interface between management entities, monitors station activity,
- monitors station configuration and capabilities, and reconfigures
- the stations if there is a failure on the network," he explained.
-
- The debate was between vendors who wanted to define high-level
- management specifications (mostly high-end vendors) and those
- who wanted to keep the management capabilities basic (mostly
- low-end vendors). The argument from the low-end vendors was that
- including the high-level functionality specifications would stall
- the standard's passage.
-
- The final decision was to include the higher-level capabilities.
- The low-end vendors "realized it would be quicker to put [the
- higher-level procedures] in than to try and keep them out," Ross
- said.
-
- So, what does all this mean to the user? Right now, not much.
- The passage of the FDDI standard, in fact, may bring on a classic
- case of post-hype letdown. The approval will not create an
- "instant market" for products, because the fiber medium still
- faces several important implementation stumbling blocks.
-
- Over time, a more stable standard may help the FDDI market. This
- year, users will see FDDI offerings from vendors that are not
- "FDDI shops," such as Digital Equipment Corp. (Maynard, Mass.) and
- Unisys Corp. (Blue Bell, Pa.). This support from large vendors
- will further open the FDDI market and give users a broader vendor
- choice.
-
- Although stable standards may spur some companies to begin
- offering FDDI solutions, these companies will probably be more
- influenced by DEC and Unisys than by ANSI. In a sense, then, the
- FDDI boom will coincide with -- not result from -- the passage of
- the standard.
-
- With the standards in place, FDDI must now face two critical
- obstacles to its implementation: price and interoperability.
-
- Price is, perhaps, the more important issue, as users must first
- be able to afford the FDDI network before dealing with
- interoperability problems. And the only thing that will drive
- FDDI prices down is demand.
-
- A "Catch-22," you say? Yes, but not forever. As networking
- advances, there will be more customers who "must have" FDDI. And,
- as more of these users move toward an FDDI backbone, vendors will
- price their products more competitively. However, such price wars
- may be several years in coming.
-
- nteroperability may not be as far away. As networking moves
- toward multivendor interoperability and interconnectivity, vendors
- are moving toward interoperability. In addition, industry groups
- such as the SMT Development Forum will set up testing laboratories
- where vendors can test their wares along with those of their
- competitors.
-
- The approval of the FDDI standard will affect neither price nor
- interoperability. So, bottom line: Don't expect fireworks when
- the standard is passed. All the standard really means is that you
- won't have to change floppies any more to implement the latest
- version of the SMT document. However, keep an eye on your primary
- vendors -- chances are they're planning to pull FDDI rabbits out
- of their hats in the very near future.
-
- PRESS TO SELECT
-
- 1 Review results again
- 5 Start a new search
- 6 Leave System
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- System Access: $1.25
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- Logoff 0670657 27Aug90 22:25 EST
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- This has been File #2 of Modernz 1....by Neuromancer._Modernz Boards are:
- Tessier-Ashpool:(908)830-8835 & (908)269-9560
- The Sages Hut: (908)269-7042
- Look for more as soon as we find a new topic....
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