[net.announce.newusers] Answers to Frequently Asked Questions

postann@cbosgd.UUCP (06/04/84)

Original-From: Jerry Schwarz <jerry@eagle.UUCP>

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on
usenet.  They frequently are submitted by new users, and
result in many followups, sometimes swamping groups for
weeks. The purpose of this note is to head off these
annoying events by answering some questions and warning
about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include
revisions in future versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".
     MULTICS is a large operating system that was being
     developed shortly before UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word.

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which
     is an acronym for "fouled up beyond all recovery",
     which is supposed to be a military term.  (Various
     forms of this exist.  Fouled usually being replaced by
     a stronger word.) "Fu", and "Bar" have the same
     derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net.

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but
     in fact your best bet is usually to phone somebody at
     "foo" to find out. If you don't know anybody at "foo"
     you can always try calling and asking for the "comp
     center".

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean.

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be
     related to the phrase "run command". It is used for
     any file that contains startup information for a
     command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles", an
     alternative netnews interface that many people prefer.
     If you want to find out more you can contact
     uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also the source of
     "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It
     means that something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called
     "rot13".  Each letter is replaced by the letter 13
     farther along in the alphabet.  (Cycling around at the
     end.) If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell
     script using "tr".

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere.

     I suspect that these items are people looking for
     Freshman room mates that they haven't seen in ten
     years.  If you have some idea where the person is you
     are usually better off calling the organization.  For
     example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even
     if he works at a different location.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high
     school.  They are almost always based on either
     division by 0 or taking the square root of a negative
     number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their
     right, have chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies
     the file. This sometimes fails because a peculiarity
     of some shells is that they strip off the highorder
     bit of characters in command lines.  Next you can try
     an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally you can mess around with
     i-node numbers and find.

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX
     handles protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of
     protection in setuid programs.  When this is brought
     up suggestions for changes range from implementing a
     fully capability list arrangement to new kernel calls
     for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control
     accesses.  Sooner or later you can expect this to be
     improved.  For now you just have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate
     topic for net.women, more heat than light is generated
     when it is brought up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion
     has been created, all abortion related discussion should
     take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS and MOTSS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, and member of the same sex
     respectively.

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed.

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.
     It was realized at the time the group began that the
     name would quickly become out of date.  The intent was
     to create a bit of instant nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with
     net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.
     net.space is for discussions.

Jerry Schwarz mh3bc1!jss

postann@cbosgd.UUCP (08/07/84)

Original-From: Jerry Schwarz <jerry@eagle.UUCP>

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on
usenet.  They frequently are submitted by new users, and
result in many followups, sometimes swamping groups for
weeks. The purpose of this note is to head off these
annoying events by answering some questions and warning
about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include
revisions in future versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".
     MULTICS is a large operating system that was being
     developed shortly before UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word.

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which
     is an acronym for "fouled up beyond all recovery",
     which is supposed to be a military term.  (Various
     forms of this exist.  Fouled usually being replaced by
     a stronger word.) "Fu", and "Bar" have the same
     derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net.

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but
     in fact your best bet is usually to phone somebody at
     "foo" to find out. If you don't know anybody at "foo"
     you can always try calling and asking for the "comp
     center".  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map, where a map
     of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean.

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be
     related to the phrase "run command". It is used for
     any file that contains startup information for a
     command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles", an
     alternative netnews interface that many people prefer.
     If you want to find out more you can contact
     uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also the source of
     "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It
     means that something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called
     "rot13".  Each letter is replaced by the letter 13
     farther along in the alphabet.  (Cycling around at the
     end.) If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell
     script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere.

     I suspect that these items are people looking for
     Freshman room mates that they haven't seen in ten
     years.  If you have some idea where the person is you
     are usually better off calling the organization.  For
     example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even
     if he works at a different location.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high
     school.  They are almost always based on either
     division by 0 or taking the square root of a negative
     number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their
     right, have chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies
     the file. This sometimes fails because a peculiarity
     of some shells is that they strip off the highorder
     bit of characters in command lines.  Next you can try
     an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally you can mess around with
     i-node numbers and find.

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX
     handles protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of
     protection in setuid programs.  When this is brought
     up suggestions for changes range from implementing a
     fully capability list arrangement to new kernel calls
     for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control
     accesses.  Sooner or later you can expect this to be
     improved.  For now you just have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate
     topic for net.women, more heat than light is generated
     when it is brought up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion
     has been created, all abortion related discussion should
     take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS and MOTSS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, and member of the same sex
     respectively.

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed.

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.
     It was realized at the time the group began that the
     name would quickly become out of date.  The intent was
     to create a bit of instant nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with
     net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.
     net.space is for discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking
     how widely distributed you want your article.  The set of
     possible replies is different, depending on where you are,
     but at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")
     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate -
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

Jerry Schwarz mh3bc1!jss

postann@cbosgd.UUCP (10/01/84)

Original-From: Jerry Schwarz <jerry@eagle.UUCP>

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on
usenet.  They frequently are submitted by new users, and
result in many followups, sometimes swamping groups for
weeks. The purpose of this note is to head off these
annoying events by answering some questions and warning
about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include
revisions in future versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".
     MULTICS is a large operating system that was being
     developed shortly before UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word.

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which
     is an acronym for "fouled up beyond all recovery",
     which is supposed to be a military term.  (Various
     forms of this exist.  Fouled usually being replaced by
     a stronger word.) "Fu", and "Bar" have the same
     derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net.

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but
     in fact your best bet is usually to phone somebody at
     "foo" to find out. If you don't know anybody at "foo"
     you can always try calling and asking for the "comp
     center".  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map, where a map
     of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean.

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be
     related to the phrase "run command". It is used for
     any file that contains startup information for a
     command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles", an
     alternative netnews interface that many people prefer.
     If you want to find out more you can contact
     uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also the source of
     "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It
     means that something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called
     "rot13".  Each letter is replaced by the letter 13
     farther along in the alphabet.  (Cycling around at the
     end.)  Most systems have a built in command to decrypt
     such articles; readnews has the "D" command, notes has
     "%".  If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell
     script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere.

     I suspect that these items are people looking for
     Freshman room mates that they haven't seen in ten
     years.  If you have some idea where the person is you
     are usually better off calling the organization.  For
     example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even
     if he works at a different location.  If you must try
     the net, use newsgroup net.net-people.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high
     school.  They are almost always based on either
     division by 0 or taking the square root of a negative
     number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their
     right, have chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies
     the file. This sometimes fails because a peculiarity
     of some shells is that they strip off the highorder
     bit of characters in command lines.  Next you can try
     an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally you can mess around with
     i-node numbers and find.

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX
     handles protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of
     protection in setuid programs.  When this is brought
     up suggestions for changes range from implementing a
     fully capability list arrangement to new kernel calls
     for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control
     accesses.  Sooner or later you can expect this to be
     improved.  For now you just have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate
     topic for net.women, more heat than light is generated
     when it is brought up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion
     has been created, all abortion related discussion should
     take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS and MOTSS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, and member of the same sex
     respectively.

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed.

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.
     It was realized at the time the group began that the
     name would quickly become out of date.  The intent was
     to create a bit of instant nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with
     net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.
     net.space is for discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking
     how widely distributed you want your article.  The set of
     possible replies is different, depending on where you are,
     but at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")
     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate -
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

Jerry Schwarz mh3bc1!jss

usenet@gatech.UUCP (11/01/84)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map,
     where a map of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the
     alphabet (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built
     in command to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command,
     notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell script using
     "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.
-- 
Super User

usenet@gatech.UUCP (12/01/84)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 11/13/84 spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map,
     where a map of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the
     alphabet (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built
     in command to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command,
     notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell script using
     "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.
-- 
Gene "8 months and counting" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.UUCP (01/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 5 December 1984 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map,
     where a map of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the
     alphabet (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built
     in command to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command,
     notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell script using
     "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "7 months and counting" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.UUCP (02/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 5 December 1984 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroup net.news.map,
     where a map of Usenet is posted monthly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the
     alphabet (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built
     in command to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command,
     notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have a program to encrypt
     and decrypt these, you can quickly create a shell script using
     "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "6 months and counting" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.UUCP (03/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 4 February 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroups mod.map.news
     and mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are
     posted regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "5 months and counting" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.CSNET (04/02/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 4 February 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroups mod.map.news
     and mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are
     posted regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.

usenet@gatech.CSNET (05/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 4 February 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroups mod.map.news
     and mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are
     posted regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "3 months and holding" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.CSNET (06/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 13 May 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroups mod.map.news
     and mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are
     posted regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

     This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
     something is being said in jest.  It is probably derived from
     "tongue-in-cheek".

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "3 months and holding" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.CSNET (07/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 6 June 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see newsgroups mod.map.news
     and mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are
     posted regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.
-- 
Gene "3 months and holding" Spafford
The Clouds Project, School of ICS, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332
CSNet:	Spaf @ GATech		ARPA:	Spaf%GATech.CSNet @ CSNet-Relay.ARPA
uucp:	...!{akgua,allegra,hplabs,ihnp4,linus,seismo,ulysses}!gatech!spaf

usenet@gatech.CSNET (08/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 14 July 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore no longer needed, but they linger on.

usenet@gatech.CSNET (09/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 20 August 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map.uucp where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%".  If your system doesn't have
     a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create a
     shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.

usenet@gatech.CSNET (10/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 14 September 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%" or "R".  If your system doesn't
     have a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create
     a shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.

usenet@gatech.CSNET (11/01/85)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 7 October 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%" or "R".  If your system doesn't
     have a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create
     a shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.

19.  What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?

     Try the white and yellow pages  of your phone directory, first; a
     sales representative will surely know, and if you're a potential
     customer they will be who you're looking for.  Phone books for
     other cities are usually available in libraries of any size.
     Whoever buys or recommends things for your company will probably
     have some buyer's guides or national company directories. Call or
     visit the reference desk of your library; they have several
     company and organization directories and many will answer
     questions like this over the phone.  Remember if you only know the
     city where the company is, you can telephone to find out their
     full address or a dealer.  The network is NOT a free resource,
     although it may look like that to some people.  It is far better
     to spend a few minutes of your own time researching an answer
     rather than broadcast your laziness and/or ineptitude to the net.

usenet@gatech.CSNET (01/01/86)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 6 November 1985 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What does "- (nf)" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notefiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that many people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick.  This interface is also
     the source of "Orphaned Response" items.

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%" or "R".  If your system doesn't
     have a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create
     a shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't.  The authors of these games, as is their right, have
     chosen not to make the sources available.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.

     HOWEVER, new sites just installing the news from 4.2 BSD tapes
     are likely installing a version of news with the bug; the 4.2
     distribution had a buggy version of news.  If you know anyone
     running an unmodified news from the 4.2 BSD tape, have them 
     obtain a more up-to-date version from someone else on the net.

19.  What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?

     Try the white and yellow pages of your phone directory, first; a
     sales representative will surely know, and if you're a potential
     customer they will be who you're looking for.  Phone books for
     other cities are usually available in libraries of any size.
     Whoever buys or recommends things for your company will probably
     have some buyer's guides or national company directories. Call or
     visit the reference desk of your library; they have several
     company and organization directories and many will answer
     questions like this over the phone.  Remember if you only know the
     city where the company is, you can telephone to find out their
     full address or a dealer.  The network is NOT a free resource,
     although it may look like that to some people.  It is far better
     to spend a few minutes of your own time researching an answer
     rather than broadcast your laziness and/or ineptitude to the net.

usenet@gatech.UUCP (02/01/86)

Original-from: jerry@eagle.UUCP (Jerry Schwarz)
[Most recent change: 24 January 1986 by spaf]

		Frequently Submitted Items

This document discusses some items that occur repeatedly on Usenet.
They frequently are submitted by new users, and result in many
followups, sometimes swamping groups for weeks. The purpose of this
note is to head off these annoying events by answering some questions
and warning about the inevitable consequence of asking others.  If you
don't like my answers let me know and I may include revisions in future
versions of this note.

 1.  What does UNIX stand for?

     It is not an acronym, but is a pun on "MULTICS".  MULTICS is a
     large operating system that was being developed shortly before
     UNIX was created.

 2.  What is the derivation of "foo" as a filler word?

     The favorite story is that it comes from "fubar" which is an
     acronym for "fouled up beyond all recognition", which is supposed
     to be a military term.  (Various forms of this exist, "fouled"
     usually being replaced by a stronger word.) "Foo" and "Bar" have
     the same derivation.

 3.  Is a machine at "foo" on the net?

     These questions belong in net.news.config if anywhere, but in fact
     your best bet is usually to phone somebody at "foo" to find out.
     If you don't know anybody at "foo" you can always try calling and
     asking for the "comp center."  Also, see the newsgroup
     mod.map where maps of Usenet and the uucp network are posted
     regularly.

 4.  What does "rc" at the end of files like .newsrc mean?

     I'm not sure of the exact history.  It seems to be related to the
     phrase "run command". It is used for any file that contains
     startup information for a command.  One belief is that the "rc"
     stands for "ReConfiguration" which is what the file does.

 5.  What do "- (nf)" and "Orphaned Response" in an item's title mean?

     It means that the item was created by "notesfiles," an alternative
     netnews interface that some people prefer.  If you want to find
     out more you can contact uiucdcs!essick. The "(nf)" indicates that
     the article was gatewayed into the regular news system by an old
     version of news software; newer versions create header lines
     showing the "notes" information rather than putting the "(nf)"
     flag in the subject line.

     This interface is also the source of "Orphaned Response" items.
     The actual meaning of Orphaned Response has to do with the fact
     that the "notesfiles" system groups messages by subject and only
     stores one copy of the subject.  Because of the way messages move
     around on the net, sometimes they get out of order and "notes"
     loses track of the subject.  When this happens it fills in
     "Orphaned Response" as a default subject.  This is fixed in recent
     versions of "notes" but not every site is running up-to-date
     code (unfortunately).

 6.  What does :-) mean?

      This is the net convention for a "smiley face".  It means that
      something is being said in jest.  If it doesn't look like a smiley
      face to you, flop your head over to the left and look again.

 7.  How do I decrypt jokes in net.jokes?

     The standard cypher used in net.jokes in called "rot13."  Each
     letter is replaced by the letter 13 farther along in the alphabet
     (cycling around at the end).  Most systems have a built in command
     to decrypt such articles; readnews has the "D" command, rn has the
     "X" or "^X" commands, notes has "%" or "R".  If your system doesn't
     have a program to encrypt and decrypt these, you can quickly create
     a shell script using "tr":
	tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m
     On some versions of Unix, the "tr" command should be written as:
	tr "[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]" "[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]"

 8.  net.general: Is John Doe out there anywhere?

     I suspect that these items are people looking for Freshman room-
     mates that they haven't seen in ten years.  If you have some idea
     where the person is you are usually better off calling the
     organization.  For example, if you call any Bell Labs location and
     request John Doe's number they can give it to you even if he works
     at a different location.  If you must try the net, use newsgroup
     net.net-people *NOT* net.general.

 9.  net.math: Proofs that 1=0.

     Almost everyone has seen one or more of these in high school.
     They are almost always based on either division by 0 or taking the
     square root of a negative number.

10.  net.games: Where can I get the source for empire or
     rogue?

     You can't get the source of rogue.  The authors of the game, as is
     their right, have chosen not to make the sources available.

     The source for empire is available from John Buck provided you have
     the necessary Unix license.  Contact him at ...philabs!polyf!john
     for details.

11.  net.unix-wizards: How do I remove files with non-ascii
     characters in their names?

     You can try to find a pattern that uniquely identifies the file.
     This sometimes fails because a peculiarity of some shells is that
     they strip off the highorder bit of characters in command lines.
     Next, you can try an rm -i, or rm -r. Finally, you can mess around
     with i-node numbers and "find".

12.  net.unix-wizards: There is a bug in the way UNIX handles
     protection for programs that run suid.

     There are indeed problems with the treatment of protection in
     setuid programs.  When this is brought up, suggestions for changes
     range from implementing a full capability list arrangement to new
     kernel calls for allowing more control over when the effective id
     is used and when the real id is used to control accesses.  Sooner
     or later you can expect this to be improved.  For now you just
     have to live with it.

13.  net.women: What do you think about abortion?

     Although abortion might appear to be an appropriate topic for
     net.women, more heat than light is generated when it is brought
     up.  Since the newsgroup net.abortion has been created, all
     abortion-related discussion should take place there.

14.  net.singles: What do MOTOS, MOTSS, and MOTAS  stand for?

     Member of the opposite sex, member of the same sex, and member of
     the appropriate sex, respectively.
     SO stands for "significant other".

15.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this name be changed?

     The name was devised to honor the first space shuttle.  It was
     realized at the time the group began that the name would quickly
     become out of date.  The intent was to create a bit of instant
     nostalgia.

16.  net.columbia: Shouldn't this group be merged with net.space?

     No.  Net.columbia is for timely news bulletins.  net.space is for
     discussions.

17.  How do I use the "Distribution" feature?

     When postnews prompts you for a distribution, it's asking how
     widely distributed you want your article.  The set of possible
     replies is different, depending on where you are, but at Bell Labs
     in Murray Hill, New Jersey, possibilities include:
	mh3bc1	local to this machine
	mh	Bell Labs, Murray Hill Branch
	nj	all sites in New Jersey
	btl	All Bell Labs machines
	att	All AT&T machines
	usa	Everywhere in the USA
	na	Everywhere in North America
	net	Everywhere on Usenet in the world (same as "world")

     If you hit return, you'll get the default, which is the first part
     of the newsgroup name.  This default is often not appropriate --
     PLEASE take a moment to think about how far away people are likely
     to be interested in what you have to say.  Used car ads, housing
     wanted ads, and things for sale other than specialized equipment
     like computers certainly shouldn't be distributed to Europe and
     Korea, or even to the next state.

     The newsgroup "na.forsale" exists for postings of sale
     announcements.  Its distribution is limited to North America;
     posters should restrict this distribution even further, if
     possible and appropriate.

18.  Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning
     of their articles?

     Some earlier versions of news had a bug which would drop the first
     512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.  The bug was
     triggered whenever the article started with whitespace (a blank or
     a tab).  A fix many people adopted was to begin their articles
     with a line containing a character other than white space.  This
     gradually evolved into the habit of including amusing first
     lines.

     The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
     and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
     prevent articles from losing text.  The "bug-killer" lines are
     therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.

     HOWEVER, new sites just installing the news from 4.2 BSD tapes
     are likely installing a version of news with the bug; the 4.2
     distribution had a buggy version of news.  If you know anyone
     running an unmodified news from the 4.2 BSD tape, have them 
     obtain a more up-to-date version from someone else on the net.

19.  What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?

     Try the white and yellow pages of your phone directory, first; a
     sales representative will surely know, and if you're a potential
     customer they will be who you're looking for.  Phone books for
     other cities are usually available in libraries of any size.
     Whoever buys or recommends things for your company will probably
     have some buyer's guides or national company directories. Call or
     visit the reference desk of your library; they have several
     company and organization directories and many will answer
     questions like this over the phone.  Remember if you only know the
     city where the company is, you can telephone to find out their
     full address or a dealer.  The network is NOT a free resource,
     although it may look like that to some people.  It is far better
     to spend a few minutes of your own time researching an answer
     rather than broadcast your laziness and/or ineptitude to the net.