[comp.binaries.ibm.pc.d] Why does SIMTEL exist?

pfeifer@hpavla.HP.COM (Mark Pfeifer (summer)) (10/24/89)

Question about Simtel20 -

Why does Simtel exist??  It's a great serive that I've often made use
of, but why does the government make this available to the world?



--------------------------------------------------------------------
Mark Pfeifer				pfeifer@hpavla.hp.com
Summer Student          
Hewlett-Packard Avondale Division	Also at:
Avondale, PA				mark@sun.udel.edu
					University of Delaware
#include <disclaimer.h>
#define OPINIONS mine
--------------------------------------------------------------------

josef@peun11.uucp (Moellers) (10/27/89)

pfeifer@hpavla.HP.COM (Mark Pfeifer (summer)) writes:

>Question about Simtel20 -

>Why does Simtel exist??  It's a great serive that I've often made use
>of, but why does the government make this available to the world?

Shhhht, shut up you fool.
The whole world has avoided asking this question, 'cause if the gov'
starts thinking about it they'll definitely stop it 8-{)

		Josef Moellers

	paper mail:			e-mail:
c/o Nixdorf Computer AG		USA:  uunet!philabs!linus!nixbur!mollers.pad
Abt. DX-PC			!USA: mcvax!unido!nixpbe!mollers.pad
Pontanusstrasse				Phone:
D-4790 Paderborn		(+49) 5251 146245
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| "Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life.	|
|  Can You give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out	|
|  death in judgement"							|
|			Gandalf to Frodo in "The Fellowship of the Ring"|
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+

WANCHO@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL ("Frank J. Wancho") (10/30/89)

Mark,

Good question.  The answer is that the original intent was two-fold:
to provide a number-cruncher for unclassified FORTRAN programs and
have a host with net connectivity to communicate with others.  But, by
the time we got the machine six years ago, most of the available
FORTRAN applications were classified.  There was, however, a large
Army community of isolated users who needed net mail capability and
had no machines of their own.  We provided (and still provide) that
service to those users and others in DoD and federal agencies and
their contractors.  Our paying customers are now the principal reason
this machine exists, and the public domain collection access is
incidental.

At about the same that this machine came on the net, another project
needed to be moved off its host up at MIT.  That was a mailing list
for CP/M users and its directories of public domain software.  The
directories were created to reduce the mail burden to announcements of
new arrivals rather than sending the files out as mail to the list.
We had spare space on our boot disk, and the lists and its directories
were moved here.

Because we make the collections available via anonymous ftp,
ostensibly for Army users, we cannot prevent and do not intend to
prevent access by anyone else.  One reason is that the wider the
audience, the better our chances of getting something back which is an
improvement on what we already have.  And, so it goes.

There's much more to the story, such as the reason we tolerate
shareware, which is an extension of one of the concepts of the
original project - making products available for try-before-buy.

I hope that answers your questions.

--Frank