Almost all e-mail programs have similar, universal functions. The problem is that all of the e-mail programs use completely different commands to access these functions (example: to reply to the author of a current message using the "elm" or "pine" e-mail programs, you type the letter "r"; to do the same function in the VM Mailbook program you have to hit the PF5 key).
I'm not going to be able to discuss all of these functions, but what sort of functions do most e-mail programs have in common? Well, most mail programs have
With all of the different e-mail programs out there, and all of the different commands required to run each program, how are you ever going to find out what commands are right for YOUR e-mail program? Easy! Ask your local e-mail service provider! This may shock you, but almost every mail provider provides some sort of instruction sheet or file that will teach you how to use the e-mail program that your provider is running. All you have to do is ask!
I want to take a moment to show you how to actually read an Internet address. I have to admit that when I first started learning how to use e-mail, I was intimidated by the length of all of the Internet addresses. However, once I learned to read the addresses BACKWARDS -- from right to left -- Internet addresses ceased to be a thing of mystery.
The mail server address (the UA1VM.UA.EDU part of the above example) is actually called the "domain" name, and it is based on something called an IP (or Internet Protocol) address.
Each server connected to the Internet has a numerical IP address. The IP address is four sets of numbers connected with periods (for example, the IP address for the mail server that I am using at the University of Alabama is 130.160.4.100).
Fortunately, the powers that be realized that people remember NAMES better than numbers, and they created the domain name system. The domain name system associates the numerical IP address with an easier to remember "name" (for example, thanks to the domain name system, the IP address 130.160.4.100 becomes a much easier to remember UA1VM.UA.EDU).
You may run into IP addresses from time to time when you are FTPing or telnetting (we'll talk about both of these tools in several lessons later on). Just remember than an IP address (the four sets of numbers connected with periods) is simply another way to write a domain name, and you will do fine. Both IP addresses and domain names should work equally well.
Anyway, back to the "p-crispy-one" example. Remember that my domain name is UA1VM.UA.EDU? Well, as I said earlier, the best way to read an Internet address -- and, for that matter, a domain name -- is from right to left. Domain names are broken down as follows:
EDU Educational sites in the U.S.
COM Commercial sites in the U.S.
GOV U.S. Government sites
NET Network administrative organizations
MIL U.S. Military sites
ORG U.S. Organizations that don't fit into other categories
SU Soviet Union (yes, there is still a Soviet Union ...
at least on the Internet)
FR France
CA Canada
... (other counties have their own country code)
Since my domain name has an EDU
at the end of it, we now know that
UA1VM.UA.EDU is the domain name for some educational site in the
United States. But where?
The rest of the UA1VM.UA.EDU domain name lists the "subdomains" that tell you where my mail server is actually located. UA is the University of Alabama, and UA1VM is the name of my mail server's machine.
So, PCRISPE1@UA1VM.UA.EDU is the Internet address for someone named "p-crispy-one" (stop laughing!!) at some U.S. educational site. Further investigation shows that the site is at the University of Alabama, and that the machine "p-crispy-one" is using is called UA1VM.
So we know that w.v.braun@hq.msfc.nasa.gov is the address of some person named w.v.braun whose mail server is at the Headquarters of the Marshall Space Flight Center, and that the Marshall Space Flight Center is part of NASA, which itself is part of the U.S. government.
What can you tell from the Internet address ike@saceur.pentagon.army.mil? A lot, especially if you are a history buff, and if you know that "saceur" is the military abbreviation for Supreme Allied Commander-Europe.
The best rule of thumb I can give you about Internet addresses is this: if the address is not of the form described above and does not end with one of the standard top-level domain abbreviations or country codes, the address is not an Internet address. You may still be able to send mail to non-Internet addresses through a gateway, though.
Also, please remember that you must send your GET commands in the body of a new e-mail letter to LISTSERV@UA1VM.UA.EDU.
UNIX USERS: VAX/VMS USERS:
filename filetype filename filetype
UNIX 1 VMS 1
UNIX 2 VMS 2
UNIX 3 VMS 3
VM USERS:
filename filetype
VM 1
VM 2
VM 3
You will have to use three GET commands (one for each file), but
you can put all three GET commands in one letter. For example,
if I wanted to get all three of the VM files, the body of
my letter would look like this:
GET VM 1 F=MAIL
GET VM 2 F=MAIL
GET VM 3 F=MAIL
Please remember to send your GET commands -- or *any*
other LISTSERV commands -- in the *body* of an e-mail letter sent
to LISTSERV@UA1VM.UA.EDU.
(\__/) .~ ~. )) /O O `./ .' PATRICK DOUGLAS CRISPEN {O__, \ { PCRISPE1@UA1VM.UA.EDU / . . ) \ THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA |-| '-' \ } )) .( _( )_.' Roadmap: Copyright 1994 Patrick Crispen. '---.~_ _ _& All rights reserved. The views expressed in this letter do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Alabama - Tuscaloosa.
Go back to the Syllabus
MAP05: LISTSERVs
MAP03:
Levels of Internet Connectivity