From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Sat Jun 21 00:39:30 1997
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From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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Subject: MsgGroup and Early Usenet History

Something special for your review over the weekend.

PAT

  From: rh120@labdien.cc.columbia.edu (Ronda Hauben)
  Subject: MsgGroup and Early Usenet: Man-Computer Systems
  Date: 16 Jun 1997 13:53:13 GMT
  Organization: Columbia University

	Following is a draft paper I have worked on this past term for
a History and Technology Seminar at Columbia U. The paper is on the
early MsgGroup Mailing list, one of the early ARPANET Mailing lists
and early Usenet. I welcome comments and suggestions, etc toward
reworking it.

                      Ronda
                      rh120@columbia.edu
                      ronda@umcc.umich.edu

           ARPANET Mailing Lists and Usenet Newsgroups
             Creating an Open and Scientific Process
            for Technology Development and Diffusion     
                         by Ronda Hauben
                         rh120@columbia.edu
 
                  (Part 1 of 6)

Introduction
 
     In an article in the journal "The Information Society", Luciano
Floridi from Wolfson College at Oxford, notes the importance of the
Internet and how it has generated an excitement and promise for the
future. Floridi writes:
 
     [L]ast year the Internet finally appeared to the general 
     public as the most revolutionary phenomenon since the 
     invention of telephones, though in this case Time missed the 
     opportunity to elect the Internet Man of the Year.(1)
 
     Floridi, contrasts the significance of the new development
represented by the Internet with the relative lack of scholarly study
and knowledge about its development:
 
     A whole population of several million people interacts 
     by means of the global network. It is the most educated 
     intellectual community that ever appeared on earth, a global 
     academy that, like a unique Leibnizian mind, thinks always. 
     The Internet is a completely new world, about which we seem 
     to know very little....its appearance has found most of us, 
     and especially the intellectual community, thoroughly 
     unprepared. 
 
     However, to "know" something it is helpful to look at its early
development, as that is when its form and principles are most clearly
articulated.
 
     The foundation for the Internet was set by the development of the
ARPANET(b. 1969) and Usenet(b. 1979), which were connected to each
other in the early 1980s. This paper will examine some of the early
computer conferencing research work to link those on different
computers or using different operating systems on the ARPANET and then
on Usenet. It will explore how the foundation was set to promote
computer facilitated communication, which was some of the scientific
and collaborative work which made the Internet possible. There will be
an effort to quote early pioneers when possible to give an indication
of the process as well as the result of their work.
 
                             Part I
 
              Support for a Scientific Methodology
 
     Writing in the 1960s, the German philosopher Jurgen Habermas
described a scientific methodology developed by the U.S. Air Force to
solve difficult technological problems. He outlines the process of
communication established between those contractors who would work on
a problem and the Air Force personnel involved, the importance placed
on communication to identify the precise nature of the problem, and
then the combining of practice and theory to develop a methodology to
solve the problem.(2)

    Such a collaborative communication process was developed via the
early mailing list MsgGroup on the ARPANET and this process helped to
make it possible to develop and expand the ARPANET into the Internet.

ARPA and the ARPANET
 
     When the Soviet Union lauched Sputnik I, the world's first man
man satellite on October 4, 1957, they took the world by surprise. In
the U.S., President Eisenhower summoned scientists to provide advice
to the White House on how to advance U.S.  science and technical
developments. Believing that the competition within the
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) was a problem that had to be solved
if the U.S. was to advance in its ability to do forefront scientific
and technological development, Secretary of Defense Neil McElroy
created a new agency, apart from the three existing branches of the
services. This new agency, the Advanced Research and Projects Agency
(ARPA) was to provide support for advanced space research. By the
early 1960's, ARPA recognized the need to expand its scope, and J.C.R.
Licklider was brought in to head a new office that would take on
research in computer science. Licklider served as the first head of
the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) at ARPA from 1962
to 1964. The earliest work of the IPTO was to fund research in the
time-sharing of computers, to make interactive computing available in
a way not possible with the batch operated computers common at the
time.(3)
 
     By the late 1960's however, time sharing of computers had
developed and there were different computer time sharing systems
around the U.S. Those at ARPA began to envision a linking up of these
different systems so that the resources could be shared and so those
using different computer hardware and software would be able to
communicate with each other.(4) Also, the work of pioneers like Paul
Baran at RAND in the U.S. and Donald W. Davies working in the United
Kingdom, indicated that a more economical form of data transmission,
i.e. packet switching, would provide an appropriate technology for
data transmission. Recognizing the need to do research in creating a
computer data network that would make it possible to share resources
among researchers doing work on different hardware and software
platforms, a contract was awarded to BBN to begin the construction of
a subnetwork that would connect various ARPA contractors at
universities and other sites with ARPA contracts. The new network
became known as the ARPANET.  Those connected to the ARPANET grew
rapidly and by the mid 1970's there was the recognition that a new
form of communication had developed on the ARPANET called electronic
mail or more commonly, email.

MsgGroup Begins
 
     In a message submitted to the Msggroup mailing list dated June 7
1975, Steve Walker, of ARPA (IPTO) and Net Manager of the ARPANET(5)
describes a proposal for communication research on the early
ARPANET. He writes that he is "seeking to establish a group of people
concerned with message processing" in order to "develop a sense of
what is mandatory, what is nice, and what is not desirable." He notes,
"We have a lot of experience with lots of services and should be able
to collect our thoughts on the matter."
 
      The methodology he proposes, however, is of particular
importance.  He is encouraging the creation of a new form of computer
conferencing to be developed on the early ARPANET. "My goal," he
writes, "at present is not to establish 'another committee' but to see
if dialogue can develop over the net." He notes that there is probably
something less formal already occurring, but he wants to broaden it to
be able to include more of those who could make a
contribution. Participation will be encouraged, but it is
voluntary. "I do not wish to force anyone to participate," he
explains, "but I strongly urge anyone with comments (positive or
negative) to toss them in."
 
      Also, the form of participation was to be open ended, rather
than requiring particular kinds of contribution. "While supporting
philosophical discussions," he writes, "I like very much the specifics
of ... evaluation ... can we try to do this," he asks, promising that
"the results may surprise many of us."
 
      He requests that the participants "encourage a FORUM-type set up
if it's not too difficult to set up, realizing that many (myself
included) will have little time to contribute." Though he recognizes
that such sporatic participation may be thought to fragment the group,
he proposed they should be made and will prove to be a contribution.
 
      "I've asked Dave Farber to maintain a list of Message Group
participants," he continues, noting that Dave Farber, then on the
faculty at the University of California Irvine, a participant on the
ARPANET, would help facilitate participation in the online forum
Walker was proposing. Extending his invitation to newcomers to be full
participants without feeling they have to gather any particular
background, he explains, "those who don't wish to have their message
files filled with possible `junk mail' should feel free to withdraw."
But he expresses the hope that it will be possible "from all this to
develop a long term strategy for where message services should go on
the ARPAnet and indeed in the DoD." And Walker ends his message by
encouraging participation, "Let's have at it."
 
     The mid 1970's was a period of change in developing the
usefulness of computer mail on the ARPANET. Previous to 1975, the
creation of programs making email possible on the ARPANET was more of
an informal undertaking, according to a study of ARPANET email posted
to MsgGroup by Raymond R. Panko(6). Panko notes the earliest work in
developing email capabilities grew up on the earliest time sharing
systems funded by ARPA in the early 1960s.  "But the value of computer
mail had become obvious to ARPA by the beginning of 1975," he writes
how ARPA had, like a number of other...organizations, had begun to use
computer mail for its bread and butter communication and had become
aware that a relatively mature communication medium was becoming
available.  It was against this background of increasing interest by
ARPA in email that Steve Walker issued the invitation to take part in
an online conference to develop a computer conferencing system.
     
    Farber responded to Walker's invitation, "I too second the motion
of Steve to Let's have at it."(7) Farber promises to maintain a file
of correspondence for those who participate in case they miss any of
the messages or do "not feel like making like a file clerk."
 
      Those involved agree to accept the challenge of exploring how to
create a network conferencing system using ARPAnet communication. In
considering the difficulties of using such technology during this
period in the mid 1970s, David Crocker, at the University of Southern
California presented his evaluation of three possible programs that
those on MsgGroup could use to form their online conference. One of
the programs was FORUM, a conferencing system developed under DoD
funding by Murray Turnoff at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
Crocker explains that this conferencing system "has a long start-up
curve and requires that all paticipants have access to the same
machine."(7) Another proposed conferencing program TCTalk, Crocker
notes, "requires that all have operating access to the operating
system Tenex," which was one of the operating systems used by some of
those on the ARPANET.(8)
 
     Since those on the ARPAnet were using a variety of different
computers and several different operating systems, Crocker believed
that neither a program dependent upon a single type of computer nor
one requiring a particular operating system would be
appropriate. Instead he explained that there was a program being used
to send email on the ARPANET (i.e. Net Mail) that was already being
used by those on the ARPAnet and it made communication between users
with diverse computer systems and operating systems possible. Crocker
also noted some of the other advantages of Net Mail. He wrote(9):
 
     Use of Net Mail a) is extrememly convenient for most, if not 
     all, of us, since we already exercise it for other 
     activities; b) allows passive observation of the dialogue, 
     rather than forcing everyone to explicitly catch up on 
     recent comments....; c) mail is easily deleted and so "junk" 
     mail is not really a serious problem. Most, if not all of us, 
     have mail reading systems which allow a "menu" review of mail, 
     prior to reading the contents. 
 
     Proposing that Net Mail will best satisfy the aims of the
research, he writes: "I have spent the better part of this spring
looking at our teleconferencing capabilities (as part of a seminar...)
and as a result, suggest we continue to use Network mail as our
communication tool, rather than using TCTALK or FORUM."
 
     Listing the participants in MsgGroup at this early period and the
sites where they have their computer accounts(10), Farber identifies
Burchfiel, Myer and Gilbert from Bolt Beranek and Newman, the
Cambridge, MA contractor who created the IMP subnetwork for the
ARPANET. He lists Tasker, McLinden, Walker, Farber, Stefferud, Ellis,
Kirstein, Iseli, Dave Crocker, and Paul Bara. at ISI at the University
of Southern California.  At Office-1, he lists Uhlig and Watson, at
MIT-DMS, Vezza, and at Harvard-10, Mealy.
 
      In a message noting the promising potential of this 
new form of computer networking communication, another early 
MsgGroup participant(11), Tasker writes, "Sitting here in the 
offices of a potential military user...I am extremely gratified 
and excited to see the msg group interacting and that those 
interactions appear to be converging around real capabilities 
that I think can be sold to the operational military guy. A scant 
three or four months ago I never would have even hoped for the 
current state of affairs and the direction it indicates." 
 
     In a similar vein, Ron Uhlig at Office 1 expressed his 
enthusiastic support for MsgGroup. Describing the informal 
project he was working on for the Army Material Command 
(AMC), he wrote(12):
 
     For  those  of  you  unfamiliar  with  our  "experiment"  
     in Army Materiel Command, we have  been  using OFFICE 1 for 
     communication among seven  of  the  key  managers  in  data  
     processing in Army Materiel Command (AMC)....In general, we 
     have  had  the  same  kind  of experience in improved 
     communication that  ARPA  had  when  they  began  using a 
     message system on the network. Continuing major cuts in the 
     Army Materiel Command work force plus  some  fairly major 
     reorganizations which are  now  being   planned   are   
     leading   us  to  give  serious consideration  to  adopting  
     an  on-line  computer  based message system for key managers  
     throughout  the  command.  We are in the early stages of 
     trying to define what such a system needs to look like....
     Since we are aiming  more  at  the informal communications 
     we are not terribly concerned  with  the  DOD  traditions... 
     Our primary concern is that  the  message  system  be  
     easily  usable  by noncomputer science people, some of whom 
     are actively hostile to computers in general.  The  
     demonstrations  that  we  have  given  to  various 
     noncomputer science,  non  technical  personnel  around  AMC 
     have generally been well  received.  But  one  must  know 
     far too much "computerese" to use any of the existing 
     systems."
 
Elaborating on the need for online conferencing, he writes:
 
     We have  a  strong  need  for  teleconferencing  because  
     our key managers are greatly dispersed geographically. The 
     message system that we eventually  adopt  needs  a 
     teleconference capability. We don't want message  handling  
     and  teleconferencing  to be in two separate systems. 
     Because of this we also want to make it easy in the middle 
     of a message  based  teleconference  to link to a data bank 
     somewhere in AMC to  pick  up information which is needed at 
     that point in time. An FTP type capability, simple to use 
     for the novice, would meet the need very nicely.

     Concluding his comments, he promises continued feedback: 

     As we get better definition  on  our requirements 
     during the next few months I will  put  additional  messages  
     into the network to keep you  all  current  on  our  
     thinking. This  message is only intended to be introductory.(10)
 
     A subsequent message by Crocker suggested they ignore
authentication issues, whcih like other security issues, were
considered secondary and were avoided for the time being.(13).
 
     Given the current state of network/system/mail security, I 
     suggest we ignore authentication issues. 
 
     Summarizing the progress made in the first month since the
beginnings of the new form of network communication, Steve Walker
writes(14):
 
     The MsgGroup...was formed...by a group of interested people 
     commenting on how message services should appear to users 
     (as opposed to how they should function internally.) I'm 
     pleased with the progress of this `conference'. I am trying 
     to arrange for Stefferud to serve as a `paid' organizer so 
     that the groups ramblings can come out in a coherent form. I 
     would encourage your continued participation here and in 
     groups such as Dave Farber's Compcom get together.
 
                        Part II
 
          Vision of New Form of Computer Communication
 
     Documenting the success of the work done by those on MsgGroup and
subsequent ARPANET mailing lists, a report prepared for a technical
conference in 1979 by several MsgGroup participants, observed that
there had been important advances in email and conferencing
capabilities. (15) The report explained how these achievements are not
only a natural outgrowth of technological advances, but also the
result of the convergence of communication and computers. "In various
current networks of computers," they write, "large numbers (thousands)
of individuals and agencies are able to communicate among themselves
via message exchange using many different computers and terminals in
the process." This was not an easy feat to achieve.
 
     Their report notes the value to people who have access to 
these computer message services (CMS). They write(16):
 
     Those who have access will be able to communicate through 
     the CMS facilites with others who have access as the number 
     of connected individuals and agencies grows, the value of 
     being connected will grow....The key source of value lies in 
     the range of easily addressable potential communication. 
 
     In the development of MsgGroup conferencing efforts, several
describe the unique capabilities that a mailing list like MsgGroup has
made available to those participating.  For example, in a post,
Pickers(17) describes how a mailing list creates a participatory
process that is superior to what traditional meetings could make
possible. He writes:
 
     Unlike normal conferences, where there are limited 
     microphones, a chairperson and where audience energy tends 
     to wear down, MSGGROUP style conferencing never resolve issues 
     much less adjourns. This effect follows naturally from the 
     observation that every participant reenters the discussion 
     by choice, perhaps following a recuperative and regenerative 
     period of rest.
 
     Others on MsgGroup consider the problem of emotional messages
(also known as flaming). However, Gaines, in a post(18), proposes that
such problems are secondary and should be recognized as "the price we
have to pay for an open discussion group where people are free to
voice their ideas....We must expect that this whole process produces a
fair amount of nonsense...."
 
Most importantly, however, he points out: 
 
     We are feeling our way in a murky area, and have to expect 
     to make mistakes. Let us judge the msggroup by the good 
     ideas that surface which by the nature of the area have to 
     be expected to be few and far between but worth the overhead 
     of the other traffic when they arrive.
 
     Emphasizing the unique nature of the contributions to MsgGroup,
Charles Frankston with a login at MIT, warned that analogies between
electronic mail and telephone and paper communications must be made
very carefully. Electronic mail, he writes(19), "is a new medium and
it may not necessarily make sense to use it in the same fashion as
existing medium, any more than it would have made sense to use
telephones in precisely the same fashion as telegraphs that preceeded
them."
 
     Observing that "electronic mail is currently used extensively for
communications which today does go to many recipients," he cites
interoffice memos as an example.  "As a new medium I also claim
electronic mail has generated new uses not heretofore possible, he
continues, "For example, most of my use of the medium consists of back
and forth technical discussions, often among persons widely dispersed
geographically....In fact, the great advantage of electronic mail for
this sort of use, is that it is easy to simply cc anyone I think might
be interested or have information to provide on the current topic."
 
     Another report, titled "The Convergence of Computing and
Telecommunications System," by Dave Farber and packet switching
pioneer Paul Baran, was posted to MsgGroup(20). Farber and Baran were
able to collaborate to write the report via the ARPANET despite the
fact they lived in geographically different regions of the U.S. In the
report, they wrote that "A major change in computer communication is
taking place....Tomorrow, computer communication systems will be the
rule for remote collaboration."
 
Problems and Benefits
 
     In their report, Farber and Baran observed that the falling costs
of computing would lead to a situation where certain industries and
institutions would feel threatened by the "prospect of obsolescence of
their present justification." One such industry they predicted would
be publishing.
 
     In his study of email, Panko, too, noted a similar barrier to
technological development of email and email conferencing. He observed
the inability of commercial users to recognize the advantage of email
and of the increased communication that email and online conferencing
made possible. However, both Panko's study and the report by Farber
and Baran emphasized that many others would welcome the new forms of
communication that this convergence of computers and communication
technology would make possible. Panko pointed to the promising
development represented by the 15 million people involved with CB
radio in the U.S., out of a possible 70 million households. This
promised that a warm welcome would greet the increased ability for
communication to be made available via email and email conferencing.
 
Social Issues Become Important
 
     Panko documented how government funding of computer science
researchers to solve the problem of computer conferencing
communication across different computers and different operating
systems had yielded great social and technical benefits. He wrote(21):
 
     "Historically, computer media were first extensively 
     developed on the ARPANET. Anyone familiar with the Advanced 
     Research Projects Agency (after whom the ARPANET is named) 
     realizes that ARPA was the dominant funder of leading-edge 
     computing during the 1960's. Essentially, ARPA was funding 
     the community of hobby computerists par excellence. Funding 
     was fat and creativity was given free reign during business 
     hours. Moreover, ARPA contractors found their staffs working 
     long overtime, developing space war games, stock market 
     information services, and -- as noted above, computer mail 
     systems. In other words, hobby computering at a grand scale 
     was the original source of many advanced mail systems today. 
     Computer mail had a strong hobbiest flavor in its use as 
     well as in its origins. Colleagues in artificial 
     intelligence, data base design, and other exotic fields used 
     computer mail to build and maintain their community."
 
     "Furthermore," he added, "in applications where computer
teleconferencing has been successful, discussion has often been
free-wheeling and chatty. The longest conferences tend to be breezy
and rambling, yet very successful in exchanging ideas and
viewpoints...."
 
     Thus he noted the great stimulus given to these email
developments by the support of government financed programs.
 
     In their report, Farber and Baran recognize that social questions
would arise as a result of these important new communications
developments. And they realized that too little emphasis would be
given to examining the social consequences that had to be considered
to determine what the future should be for these social
developments. For example, the issue of how decisions over the new
medium would be made wasn't being given adequate consideration.(22)
"Little attention," they wrote, "is paid to the `public interest.' In
part, the term defies definition. Is the public interest the interest
of the cross- subsidized residential telephone user? Is it the
interest of a business which faces a reduced communications bill? Is
the public interest to be viewed primarily in the short term
irrespective of long term damage to existing institutions in achieving
immediate savings."
 
     Summarizing the promise for the future that enhanced 
communication would hold, Lauren Weinstein wrote(23): 
     
     The whole point of Msggroup to me is that we are free to 
     communicate without undue worry about costs, and to borrow a 
     line from the closing episode of the `Connections' program 
     from PBS, `the easier it is to communicate, the faster 
     change occurs." It is this very change that is creating the 
     systems, concepts and most importantly, the EXPECTATIONS of 
     people for message systems of the future."

                     Part III
 
             Government Use at the FCC
 
     While the ARPANET was helping to research how ARPA would use
online communication, other government entities found it helpful in
broadening the mechanism of input into their work.  Stephen Lukasik
had been a director of ARPA from 1970 until 1975.  After he left ARPA
(then called DARPA), he spent some time at government contractors
Xerox and RAND. By September 1979, he posts on MsgGroup(24):
 
     I recently assumed the position of Chief Scientist at the 
     Federal Communications Commission in Washington.
 
     He notes that he is looking to fill the position of Deputy Chief
Scientist/Engineer who will assist him in directing technical,
scientific and engineering activities of his office at the FCC. He
also announces that there will be positions in a new Technical
Planning Staff within the agency. And he requests input from those on
MsgGroup.
 
     In October, 1979, Lukasik announced that he was to give the
keynote at the December Computer Networking Workshop at the National
Bureau of Standards (NBS).(25) "The topic will be regulation of
computer communication," he wrote. And he asks for both questions and
input into his talk. "I would be interested to know what questions and
concerns you have in this area. Your viewpoints would also be
welcome." He signed his message Steve Lukasik, Chief Scientist, FCC,
and his message included "reply to: LUKASIK@usc-isi" so that replies
could be sent to him by email.
 
     In February 1981, Stefferud posted an unofficial copy of an FCC
Notice of Inquiry (NOI) to MsgGroup, though those interested in
receiving an official copy were instructed to write
MJMarcus@ISI(26). "This copy is being circulated," the message
explained, "via MsgGroup to allow individuals with ARPANET access to
comment informally on the NOI. Interested parties may file comments on
or before March 16, 1981," Stefferud noted. "You may file informal
comments by sending messages to MJMarcus@ISI. To be considered by the
FCC, your informal comment should include your full name and
U.S. Postal Service Address."
 
     Stefferud described how it was even possible to file informal
comments via email, "All such messages will be forwarded to the
Secretary for filing in the Docket as stated in paragraph 23 of the
NOI where informal comments are solicited from DEAF-NET users." DEAF
NET was a demonstration telecommunications network project for the
deaf funded by Department of Health, Education and Welfare
funds. Questions about procedure could be sent by email to Mike Marcus
or "with MsgGroup distribution so we may share your questions and
answers."
 
     "Any discussion of this NOI in the regular manner of group
discussion via MsgGroup distribution," Stefferud noted, "will also be
made available to the FCC as informal public comments in response to
the NOI, and as such will be forwarded to the Secretary for filing in
the Docket."
     
     "This is a new kind of activity for MsgGroup," Stefferud wrote,
"and we hope that it might afford some progress in the use of network
facilties for the type of inquiry." He went on to note that the FCC
was not sponsoring his actions, but that the FCC staff was aware of
what he was doing to facilitate online input into an FCC process.
 
     "The use of MsgGroup is not sponsored by the FCC, though it 
     is understood that FCC staff members are aware of our 
     undertaking."
 
     The text of the Notice of Inquiry in FCC 80-702 General 
Docket 80-756 followed as a message to MsgGroup. The issue 
involved Digital Communications protocol conversions between 
different networks.  
 
Email comments to the U.S. Postal Service
 
     Another example of government officials seeking input from
MsgGroup participants involved United States Postal Service interface
specifications for Electronic Computer-Originated Mail (ECOM). Richard
Shuford posting from MIT-AI (27) in a message dated July 8, 1981,
noted that there had been an announcement in the Federal Register on
June 19, 1981 (page 32111) of a public meeting for questions and
comments on the proposed system. That meeting was then held at the
Postal Services headquarters in Washington, D.C. However, as there
seemed to be no press coverage that the meeting would happen, only
"professional Federal Register readers" knew of the meeting to attend
it. Shuford described how the result of this situation was that "the
meeting was therefore attended only by representatives of large
corporations that have some economic interest in what the Postal
Service does with electronic mail." However, a few days before this
post on MsgGroup Shuford had received a call from a Postal Service
consultant who worked at SRI International. The consultant said that
he wasn't on the ARPANET but wanted Shuford to send a message to those
on the ARPANET for him. "He feels very strongly," wrote Shuford, "that
comments on the proposed system should come from a wider variety of
`stake-holders' (as he calls them) in the future of electronic
mail. In particular, he would like to hear comments from personal
computer users and others who are not interested in electronic mail
from a purely commercial point of view." He related how the deadline
was in 2 weeks on July 23, 1981 and that comments could be sent by
regular mail to Charles Shaw, Director of Electronic-Mail Systems
Development at the Postal Service Research and Development Laboratory
in Maryland.
 
     Shuford explained that the consultant was making his request in
an unofficial capacity and that therefore comments sent to Harris
should not mention his request.
 
     In response, Pickers at SRI-UNIX observed(28):
     
     "In a message which is sent to 100+ institutions, 200+ 
     individuals and spanning both North America and Europe (5 
     million square miles), the suggestion to keep an individual's name in 
     confidence seems a bit incongruous."

     Steve Kudlak, at MIT-MC disagreed. He wrote(29):
 
     "ACTUALLY THATS NOT TOO UNREASONABLE TO BELIEVE. We all know 
     the Arpanet is another world and I assume a very high 
     percentage of us are nice enuff to hold someone's name in 
     confidence if they requested it."  
 
     Several messages later, on July 18, Shuford explains that Ron
Newman at Parc-Maxc had located an email address for the consultant
and that it was possible to send him one's comments directly by
email.(30) "He will then have them printed and will pass them along to
the proper people at the Postal Services.  Please keep in mind,"
Shuford emphasized, "that any comments passed along in such a manner
are officially regarded as `informal' comments. And that to register
`official' opinion, traditional procedures had to be followed." Thus a
way to make input directly into a government proceeding was available
via email.
 
     Many different issues were discussed on MsgGroup and when some on
the list suggested limiting what could be discussed, others on the
list would invariably complain and encourage a broadness of subjects.
 
Debating the Focus of MsgGroup
 
     For example, Brian Reid at Carnegie Mellon University, objected
to efforts to limit the discussion on MsgGroup. He wrote(31):
 
     MsgGroup is the closest that we have to a nationwide Computer 
     science community forum.  MsgGroup is supposedly devoted to 
     topics involving electronic mail.  One of the many virtues 
     of computer-based mail systems is their astounding ability 
     to support conferencing.  All of us are still learning a lot 
     about the ways in which people communicate over these 
     marvelous mail systems, and about the kinds of discussions 
     that can and cannot be made to work over computer-based mail 
     networks.
 
     Despite the large amount of supposed chitchat that passes 
     over MsgGroup... I believe that such conferencing schemes 
     are still very much at the research stage, and that 
     ARPA and the public will ultimately benefit from our 
     experiences using MsgGroup as a nationwide community forum, 
     no matter what the topic at hand.
     Until such time as people start suggesting the overthrow of 
     our government over MsgGroup, I don't think any sensible 
     topic should be off limits unless you decide that said topic 
     falls outside the scope of MsgGroup.  If you decide to 
     restrict the topics that ought to be discussed in MsgGroup, 
     then I submit that there ought to be a "Network-Forum" 
     mailing list which could be a general-purpose forum.
 
     The crucial issue for the MsgGroup, however, was seen to be 
the discussion of message systems and eventually of office 
automation. In May of 1980, Stefferud announced that office 
automation should be a significant focus of the MsgGroup mailing 
list. He wrote(32):
 
     As the "Coodinator in Chief" of MsgGroup, I would like to 
     take this opportunity to ask whether we should shift our 
     focus to office automation in general, as a natural 
     expansion from the message systems orientation that we have 
     had for the last five years?  (Yes!  Count them, five whole 
     years!)
 
     It is my opinion that the ARPANET provides the best 
     available prototypical office automation environment, one 
     that contains all the required facilities, elements, 
     functions, and features somewhere or other around the net.  
     I use a wide variety of systems on different hosts to get my 
     work done.  I truly use the network as my electronic office, 
     which is somewhat remarkable because I am working as a 
     management consultant, rather than as a computer or network 
     technician.
 
     Unless we hear some serious dissent, we should consider this 
     change of focus to be a fait accompli.
     Cheers - Stef
 
     His proposal was greeted with support(33):
 
     I agree wholeheartedly with Stef that we should accept our 
     destiny and let all office automation be within the Msggroup 
     purview. I, too, conduct large amounts of my work via 
     various network facilities, and often describe the "office 
     of the future" to groups as already existing within the net 
     framework. So by all means let's continue discussions such 
     as the recent one on the Prime OA stuff.
     [Howard]
 
     But it was also greeted with an opposing view from Gaines at 
Rand (34). He wrote:
 
     I think the term "office automation" is at once too broad 
     and too narrow for the charter of MsgGroup.  The MsgGroup 
     ought to broadly focus on issues relevant to computer 
     generation, manipulation, and transmission of messages....
     But, there are nevertheless aspects of office automation 
     that are pretty distant from issues related to messages.  
     Taste and judgment rather than any sort of strict rules 
     should be the determinant of whether something is 
     appropriate for the MsgGroup, and we ought to take kindly to 
     rather far removed discussions if somebody considers that 
     they are worth presenting to the MsgGroup.  However, I think 
     we ought to still say that our focus is on issues related to 
     computers and messages. The field of office automation is 
     too narrow. Messages are used in other context than what 
     people normally associate with the office environment....  
     Men communicate for a large variety of reasons in a wide 
     variety of circumstances and we should not narrowly 
     constrain ourselves to any one subset of that universe of 
     communications.
 
     "So here's a vote against a change of focus and a vote for a 
very wide latitude in interpreting what falls within the purview 
of MsgGroup," concluded Gaines.
     
     Stefferud responded that his view of office automation was 
not a narrow one, but a broad one encompassing the broad scope 
that was being proposed by others. He wrote(35):
 
     Thanks...for your careful comments.  I concur with 
     your assessment and suggestion.  I see the new focus as 
     being wider as you propose it, but your clarification is 
     very helpful.
 
     From my ARPANET experience, I find that office automation 
     should mean the application of computer networking and 
     computer mail facilities to all kinds of work in all 
     possible locations.
 
     Office Automation does not belong exclusively to the Word 
     Processing Industry any more than to the TWX Switching 
     Industry or the ADP Systems Industry.  It belongs to the 
     integration of all these, which to this date has only been 
     demonstrated in these hallowed ARPANET halls.
     And, to me, COMPUTER NETWORK MAIL is THE KEY ADDED INGREDIENT.
 
     So to further set our new context - Onward!  Stef
 
     While new and exploratory uses of the Net were tried out on
MsgGroup, there was also discussion of the kinds of uses that had to
be prevented. In a post by Leonard Foner(36) explains that as a
"tourist" on the ARPANET he was able to get an account at MIT but had
to sign and return an application form which detailed "good uses of
MIT's computer resources, as well as caveats about things that a
tourist should not do. It is fairly simple at least to warn them about
abusing the network," he wrote, especially against using it for
commercial purposes, which were forbidden. He recommended, "That all
users of the net...should be informed as to its intended uses, and
what is strictly forbidden (such as profit-making from the
Net)....Discussion of funded research on the net seems fine," he
continued, noting that that was what the ARPANET was created to
support."
 
     In 1977, a message from IPTO's Steve Walker indicated that 
he would no longer be following MsgGroup in his old status, but 
that he had found the work done by those participating in  
MsgGroup very valuable. He wrote(37):
 
     It has been a long time since I have sent a message to this 
     group but I have certainly enjoyed the dialog which has 
     taken place here for the past two and a half years.
     In remembering all the things that have happened during that 
     time, it is with a good bit of reluctance that I announce my 
     departure from ARPA in late January for a position with the 
     Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering.  In 
     my new position I hope to be able to influence the 
     acceptance by the Defense Dept of secure computer systems, 
     interactive message systems and general networking 
     capabilities.  I plan to remain active on the ARPAnet and to 
     maintain close contact with groups such as yours.
     I am personally proud to have been associated with the 
     collection of people on the ARPA network who got this whole 
     message handling, electronic mail thing started.  Keep up 
     your excellent work.
 
     "Have a good holiday season," his message ended.
 
The Need for Interneting 
 
     By 1979, Crocker noted that he and others were working on a
project to create a new distributed mail program MMDF, Multi-channel
Memo Distribution Facility(38), "to allow mail transmission between
machines which have access to a variety of communication lines." In
particular, he wrote, "We want to allow interneting and to eliminate
the need for being attached to the ArpaNet."
 
     A report by the DCA (Defence Communications Agency) in July 1980
documented how the ARPANET had grown to over 66 nodes and included
4000-5000 users(39). The report explained how even though the ARPANET
was successful, there were problems. "The basic hardware and software
are becoming obsolete," it noted. It described how the nodes used
minicomputers developed in the 1960s which no longer had sufficient
memory and other capabilities to support technical components to the
network. The ultimate goal, "of our planning," the report explained,
"is to provide for an ARPANET II which will be a virtual network and
will make use of several different networks."
 
     The report described how in the next 3 years the ARPANET Host
Protocols Network Control Program (NCP)would be replaced with a new
DOD Standard Protocol Set. The new protocols were DOD Standard
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the Internet Protocol
(IP). Also, new computers would replace the IMPs and TIPs that formed
the IMP subnetwork administered by BBN. All Honeywell equipment was to
be replaced with the BBN C/30 costing $20,000 - $35,000 (depending on
the configuration) if funding could be obtained, and the software
would run in a virtual mode.  Unix and the Transition to TCP/IP
 
     Other messages noted that there were many sites that wanted
network connections, but that the ARPANET couldn't accommodate
them. It was during this 1979-80 period that Usenet was being
introduced at Duke and the University of North Carolina to provide an
online network for those in the Unix community.(40)
 
     In a post on July 4, 1981, Mike Muuss at the Ballistic Research
Laboratory noted that it was possible to run Unix on many of the
computers being used by those who wanted network connectivity. He
wrote(41):
 
     "Unix runs on everything these days"
 
     This would help facilitate the transition from the IMP with NCP
subnetwork to TCP/IP protocols that was being planned for January. 1
1983. "There exists AT LEAST one choice of software for UNIX systems,"
writes Muuse in a post on the fa.digest-p on January 14, 1982,(42)
"(all machines), T(w)enexes, Multics, and IBMs, so the majority of the
"ordinary" systems will at least be able to talk, even if non
conveniently." However, he noted that there was not a TCP/IP
implementation for the ITS machines at MIT that archived and carried
many of the ARPANET Mailing lists.
 
     By May 3, 1982, a post by Steve Hartwell noted, "Let's not
forget, there are more unix sites than arpanet sites." And Usenet was
helping to meet the goal of providing "interoperabilty among our
differently hosted mesage systems." (43).
 
     Also, the problem of large mailing lists had become clear on the
ARPANET. Lists that had several hundred participants like Msggroup and
others were a heavy load on the host machines that were used to send
them out.
 
     Horton noted the superiority of Usenet to ARPANET for mailing
lists as it made it possible to send one copy to each site, rather
than having to send out a copy to each person subscribing(44), "Note
that one of the big points of USENET is that only one copy of each
digest or article is sent to each site...."
 
       Those sites using Unix as their operating system could connect
to Usenet and thus have access to some of the ARPANET mailing
lists. Mark Horton, posting on MsgGroup in 1983 wrote(45):
 
     I'll repeat my invitation to any sites, ARPANET or 
     otherwise, who want to join Usenet - drop me a line and I'll 
     point you at a nearby contact.  If you run UNIX, the code is 
     all written; if you run something else, you'll have some 
     work to do....
 
     Also, by this period several of those who had participated in
MsgGroup and the ARPANET were participants on the discussion on
Usenet. And the MsgGroup themes of supporting and exploring the
development of communication using an online network were continued
via Usenet and the ARPANET mailing lists which were ported to Usenet
by Horton at the University of California at Berkeley.
 
                             Part IV
 
                       The Early Days of Usenet
 
     Usenet was created in 1979 by graduate students at the Duke
University and the University of North Carolina who were trying to
create a network to connect those who had access to the Unix operating
system.(46) By the summer of 1980, Mark Horton, at the University of
California at Berkeley had joined Usenet.  Berkeley was also a site on
the ARPANET and Horton soon began to port the discussion from several
ARPANET mailing lists onto Usenet. At first those on Usenet could only
read the discussion on the ARPANET mailing lists, but by Fall 1980,
contributions from Usenet participants began to be a part of the
ARPANET lists carried on Usenet.
 
     Among the earliest ARPANET mailing lists carried on Usenet were
Sf-lovers and Human Nets. By Spring of 1981, however, a new mailing
list was started to deal with office automation. That mailing list was
made available on Usenet as FA.apollo. It was named after one of the
workstations. In an early post to the mailing list, Roger Duffy
wrote(47):
 
     Hello,

          Welcome to the APOLLO mailing list.  APOLLO discusses 
     personal work station computers, such as the APOLLO work 
     station computer, the Three Rivers Corporation PERC, or the 
     recently announced Xerox STAR.  APOLLO provides a way for 
     interested members of the ARPAnet community to discuss what 
     is wrong with these machines, compare notes on work in 
     progress, and share useful insights about these kinds of 
     systems.  The list is managed by Hank Dreifus <Dreifus at 
     WHARTON>.
 
     He explained that "APOLLO is currently discussing initial
reactions to the Xerox Star Workstation." And he ended his message,
"Lastly, welcome to APOLLO.  I trust you will enjoy being part of
these discussions."
 
     A flurry of discussion followed, and it soon began to center 
on the pros and cons of having a programming language available 
with the Xerox Star Workstation.
 
     Summarizing responses from those on the mailing list and
participating on the Usenet newsgroup, Hank Dreifus at the Wharton
School in PA noted several generalizations he felt applied to the
subject area(48).
 
   o   Everyone's view of Personal Workstations is different.

   o   The machine(s) selected are wide ranged and apparently
       well suited for each application chosen.

   o   There is no wrong Personal Workstation machine.
        
   o   The technology of Personal Workstations is not well
       established as of yet.

   o   There is a demonstrated need for this technology,
       it appears to be one year away from general use.
                
     The summary listed the common characteristics of workstations and
described the parts not yet available. "The intention is to educate
ourselves about personal workstations," explained the post, "They
sound neat, but what they are under the surface is still a hot topic."
 
     Particular discussion in the list focused on the Xerox 
machines -- the Xerox Star, their high end machine and the 820, a 
less expensive product.
 
     Questions were raised as to whether the 820 could be networked to
the Star. Others asked what software would be available with the Star
(49) and particularly if there would be a programming system
available. One response noted that the Star would come with a low
power programming language, but that a more powerful programming
environment called the Mesa development system had been developed at
Xerox would not be made available(50).
 
     Apparently, the poster noted, "the reasoning behind this involves
consistency in system software." The post explained that Xerox felt it
would keep users from doing harm to the system by restricting access
to the Mesa programming environment. Those who wanted new applications
would have to ask Xerox to create them.
 
      Another post explained that if Xerox wanted to succeed in
selling the Star (51) "it is essential that they provide a decent
programming language with it. Otherwise," the post continued, "it will
be just a word processor or maybe a little more." He went on to
explain that those using the Star would need specific specialized
applications and only if there was a programming language would it be
possible to have those written.
 
     A subsequent post noted that though the initial purchase of the
Star was expensive, that would end up being a minimal cost compared to
the cost of renting software. He wrote (52):
 
     You people seem to be concentrating on the hardware costs of 
     STAR, which, from my reading of the information available is 
     just the start-up. I think this is like worrying about 
     Gillette's pricing of the razor-blade holder. Most people 
     will be renting software (...blades) forever. This could get 
     very expensive.
 
     Soon the moderator of the Apollo mailing list announced that the
name of this office automation system mailing list would changed and
on Usenet would become FA.works for personal workstations, as it
wasn't appropriate to name the list after one particular product(53).
 
     The economics of buying a workstation was the subject of
discussion. One post noted (54) that because workstations like the
Star appeared expensive ($10,000 per person) they would probably be
attractive to managers rather than office peons.  Another poster (55)
responded pointing out that for an engineer earning $30,000 a year,
his or her time might cost the company $60,000, when the cost of the
technology being used was added to the salary paid. If having such a
personal workstation like the Star made work more productive, it would
save the company money and thus be worth the investment. He wrote (56)
"so if I do my work 10% faster, the company in some way, "saves" 6,000
(the savings could be in hiring less engineers or by getting more work
done per unit time or by getting the job done more effectively."
 
     Another post cautioned that there was an interest cost to
borrowing for capital investment (57). "At today's rates, $10K capital
investment costs the economy 20% interest, either directly because
they had to borrow it, or indirectly because they don't have it to
invest elsewhere. So your increase in productivity," he noted, "would
have to be at least 20% to break even. He went on to discuss the
difficulty of proving such "increases in productivity."
 
     One of the participants on the FA.apollo newsgroup, and on the
successor newsgroup that followed it, FA.works, was Randy Ivanciw. He
had also posted on the MsgGroup list. He became a regular contributor
to the FA.Apollo and FA.works.(58)
 
     In his introduction, he wrote:
 
     I am Randy Ivanciw, a computer specialist with the US Army
     Development and Readiness Command (DARCOM).  My major duties
     include long range and short range planning for office 
     automation. I work at DARCOM headquarters (I am a civilian) 
     as a member of a 7 person staff dealing with the use, 
     planning, implementation and other nasties of office 
     automation.
 
     He explains how the installation at DARCOM benefitted from 
the discussion on the list, which helped to make possible a broad 
view of what they were trying to do. He wrote:
 
     In reading the debates pro and con on big systems and little
     systems, where big systems are large mainframes and little
     systems are personal workstations....Let me illustrate how 
     we have attempted to incorporate both worlds in our OA 
     plans.
 
     Describing the system he helped create, he writes:

     DARCOM has a DEC 10 (DARCOM-KA) on the ARPANET which it uses
     to provide electronic mail and other OA services to a broad
     community of users throughout the command (the command is 
     all over this country).  Access is via ARPANET.  Advantages here
     are that for a relatively inexpensive yearly charge a 
     remotely located single user can obtain OA service with a 
     communications capability as powerful as the ARPANET.  This 
     service is in such demand that we cannot supply services in 
     large enough quantities (thus the DEC 10 will soon be 
     replaced with a couple of 11/780s to provide more services).
 
     Outlining a 3 level office automation system, he explains 
how it is used to encourage participation.
 
     For example, let me paint a typical scenario of one of 
     DARCOM's subordinate commands or activities just entering 
     into the world of office automation:
 
     The Commander or somebody at the command wants to try office
     automation.  Now they are unsure of its benefits so they 
     don't want to spend mucho money.  The buy a mailbox on our 
     DARCOM-KA (LARGE MAINFRAME).  With this mailbox they can 
     experiment with all the OA tools.
 
     After a short while they want 5 or 10 other people at their 
     command or activity to get mailboxes so that they can 
     communicate via electronic mail.  They buy more mailboxes on 
     the large mainframe.
 
     Then it is determined that office automation is good for the
     command.  They make large scale plans to provide OA services 
     to 100, or 200, or 300, or how-ever-many prople.  At this 
     point the economies of scale move towards the LARGE CLUSTER 
     machine.  With a large cluster installed locally, the 
     command is essentially running their own OA.
     But soon they find that more and more users are demanding 
     service. Enter the small cluster.  As one division goes from 
     one or two users (who were getting OA services on the large 
     cluster) to a demand to provide services to 8 or 10 people 
     in that particular division, a micro computer is installed 
     in the division to provide those services (and offset the 
     demand on the large cluster).(59) 
 
     His post indicates a process within ARPA encouraging office
automation. The discussion on FA.apollo and then FA.works mailing
proved helpful to those like Ivanciw who were charged with such a
task, but who didn't find their questions were answered by the
vendors. For example, Ivanciw, describes the difficulty he encountered
during a sales event trying to get information about how successfully
the Xerox 820 and Star Workstations could be connected to the
Ethernet. He writes (60), "So what it breaks down to is this: there
are not too many folks at Xerox that know how these things connect to
the ethernet.  The literature is written so that one can assume a
lot."

     A response to his post described how the two different Xerox
workstations had been developed and how there was ethernet
capabilility really functioning on only one of them. Paul Karger, who
had worked at Xerox, wrote (61):
 
     The key to getting through the Xerox propaganda is to 
     realize that there is NOT one, but TWO office automation 
     product lines which have been forcefully "merged."  These 
     lines were developed by two competing groups and don't 
     really have much in common....
 
     The two product lines evolved and were designed separately....  
     I hear that the Xerox sales force is claiming that they have 
     an integrated product line for office automation.  Low cost 
     820's up to the Star.  Ah . . .  I don't think I can agree 
     with that.  I believe they are undermining their credibility 
     when they try to convince people of this.
 
     Karger's post included a diagram with two columns describing the
origins of the two sets of products designs(62). In a postscript to
his message, he wrote:
 
     P.S.  Randy -- to answer your specific message, the products 
     in column one all have the Ethernet designed and built in 
     from the start.  The products in column two have had the 
     Ethernet added with chewing gum and bailing wire (if at all).
 

                         Part V 
 
              Questioning What Should Be Discussed
 
     Not surprisingly there were managers at Xerox who were not happy
about the kind of frank discussion ongoing on the ARPANET mailing
lists. A post by David Liddle, Vice President of the Office Products
Division at Xerox explained his reluctance to have Xerox products
discussed by Xerox employees on the ARPANET (63):
 
     Many of you in Xerox are aware of a newly created Arpanet 
     distribution list named Apollo. It was established to 
     promote discussion of personal workstation computers. As you 
     might expect, much of the recent discussion has involved the
     Xerox 8010 Star information system. Because many of the 
     messages ask for information about this product and its 
     associated development software, you may feel tempted to 
     reply to some of them.
     It is ARPA policy that the Arpanet be used only for 
     government supported research and development. It is against 
     Xerox policy to use the Arpanet to discuss products....
     Xerox employees use the Arpanet for ARPA related research 
     purposes only, not for answering questions or distributing 
     information about our products.
     Questions from potential customers about the Xerox 8010 and 
     other OPD products should be referred to Arnold Palmer, 
     Field Sales Manager, Xerox Corporation, 1341 West 
     Mockingbird Lane, Dallas, Texas 75247, phone (214) 689-6689.
     David E. Liddle
     Vice President
     Office Products Division
     
     A response to Liddle's post challenged the reasons he had given 
for limiting discussion. Lars Ericson at CMU wrote(64): 
 
     The use of the ARPANET for informal discussion of computer 
     science -- related issues is a primary win. It is clear that 
     such discussion is beneficial to ongoing government research 
     projects -- DARCOM and Office Automation for example, are 
     well represented on the Work Station.
 
     Ericson continued:
 
     Mr Liddle also seems to forget that the reason PARC efforts 
     are so immensely saleable these days is precisely BECAUSE of 
     their participation and open-ness (as opposed to IBM, say) 
     in the ARPA/university research community, and not in spite 
     of it.
 
     "Mr. Liddle's Xerox policy announcement," Ericson wrote,
"represents the sort of irrelevant (to ARPANET interests)
administrative miserlyness that we may come to expect from Xerox now
that the 13-piece suits have brought PARC to market."
 
     Also responding Little's post, Joe Newcomer emphasized ARPA's 
policy forbidding commercial use of the ARPANET(65).
 
     Joining the controversy, Crocker explained (66):

     It is my understanding that the purpose of this discussion is
     to consider the technical aspects of personal work-stations.  
     Arpa and the rest of the military are investing quite a bit 
     of money in this area, so that this discussion would seem to 
     be extremely appropriate to the Arpanet mission.
 
     He added:
 
     I do not believe that conformance with the Arpanet 
     proscriptions necessarily requires commercial participants 
     to be prohibited from voicing opinions about the technology 
     in general or from answering specific questions about their 
     product. Touting their product is another matter.
  
     Crocker's proposal was that, "I suggest that each company 
assign one technical (not marketing) person to respond to 
queries.  This will permit direct information, while making 
"tone-control" easier."
 
                             Part VI
 
                      Limited Distribution?
 
     Not only was there reluctance on the part of representatives of
some commercial entities to have open conversation of all issues on
ARPANET mailing lists ported to Usenet, but also there was a sense
among ARPANET participants that their contributions should be
considered privileged private publications and their distribution
strictly limited. A conversation describing this issue developed on
FA.digest-p carried on the ARPANET and on Usenet. In January 1982 a
post noted that Computer World magazine had gotten copies of the TCP
digest from someone and published verbatim quotes from the
digest(67). Though the source of the leak acknowledged what had been
done and agreed to stop, "it gave everybody a real scare," the post
noted. "My temporary solution to this issue," the poster proposed, "is
to add the following notice to the Masthead:
 
 
"TCP/IP Digest            Thursday, 8 Oct 1981      Volume 1 : Issue 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------
                         LIMITED DISTRIBUTION
          For Research Use Only --- Not for Public Distribution
---------------------------------------------------------------------
At least this ensures that anybody who gets fed a copy knows that
it is not supposed to be shouted to the treetops.  Comments?"
 
     Christopher C Stacy at MIT disagreed with such a publication 
identifier. He wrote (68):
 
     I think that the explicit banner on the masthead of the 
     Digest is a bad idea, because this will cause many people to 
     think that if such a banner is NOT present (ie., on any 
     other Digests or on future TCP Digests) that it is alright 
     to redistribute the material.
 
     In another post, Stacy described his understanding of why ARPANET
mailing lists had to have limited distribution. (69) He pointed to an
incident that had occurred when MIT had to fight for its continued
existence on the ARPANET after an article in the journal Datamation
about the WINE-TASTERS mailing list appeared. He also cautioned of the
possible liability problems when evaluating and discussing various
commercial products, as with the INFO-TERMS mailing list which
evaluated terminals.
 
     "But laying down the law," he wrote, "is a fairly useless way of
solving this sort of problem. The problem is one of awareness,
cooperation and trust. Only if people understand and care, will they
take steps to protect a fragile institution like the ARPANET," he
wrote.
 
     Another post noted that the mailing list digests "do not 
exist as authorized publications." (70) He felt that they should 
be considered "internal communications between research project 
members authorized to use the net."
 
     A post asking about the implications of the Daniel Ellsberg 
case to this issue by Mike Muuse was answered by Paul Karger. 
Karger wrote (71):
 
          While putting a restricted distribution statement on a 
     digest may be a psychological limitation on distribution, 
     there are a couple of problems. First, since ARPA and DCA 
     are part of the DoD, there are specific regulations on what 
     may or may not be marked as FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY.
     The regulations are in part designed to not let people 
     invent other kinds of markings. This dates back to the 
     Ellsberg case and the desire to limit the ability of 
     government people to conceal information from the "public" 
     (whoever that is). 
 
     Though Karger said his familiarity with the regulations was a
little stale, "I would be very careful about developing new ways to
restrict distribution of government information," he cautioned.
 
     Through this discussion, concerns for limiting the ARPANET
discussions were raised, and answered with the limitations that the
current state of relevant law allowed US government officials to
impose on the ARPANET mailing list discussions.
 
     Thus the way was cleared for broader distribution of the posts on
ARPANET mailing lists, making the transition from the limited
circulation available on the ARPANET to the broader participation
Usenet made possible.

                            Part VII
 
                       Usenet Welcomes All
 
     While access to the ARPANET was limited, Usenet welcomed all who
were willing to connect in a public way (72). "Usenet is a public
network," wrote Mark Horton, "and those on it should announce
themselves."
 
     "It seems to be a common thing," he wrote, "for a new site to
come upon USENET without telling anyone they exist." What happens," he
explained, "is that someone hears about USENET from someone already on
the net, who sends them their copy of whatever code they are running."
He asked, "When you start getting network news, you should announce
your existence to the net by filling out the enclosed form and posting
it to the newsgroup net.general....  This form will be used as your
entry in the USENET directory.  Note," he continued, that is the
policy of USENET that all sites receiving public newsgroups (such as
net.all and fa.all) are public in the sense that the fact they are on
USENET is public.  The name and phone number of a contact person, as
well as the name and location of the site, is important. If you are
doing some kind of secret work there is certainly no need to divulge
the nature of your work. If you feel that you must keep your existence
a secret, you should not be joining USENET," Horton clarified.
 
     A form was provided for a new site to fill in. Horton asked that
those joining Usenet post their announcement and basic configuration
information in NET.general. NET.general was the one newsgroup that all
were on Usenet during this period were encouraged to read (73). "net
general," wrote Horton, "is for stuff that everybody is supposed to at
least consider reading.  "It's useful for INITIAL QUERIES and
ANNOUNCEMENTS." However, he noted that "It is NOT there for
discussions." He explained, "If you see something in net.general you
want to comment on, you should almost always just REPLY to the author,
not follow up to the world. If a continuing discussion is needed,
start a new newsgroup." He also suggested replying to initial queries
from NET.general in NET.misc. "NET.misc," he wrote, "is a good way to
keep net.general free of trivia without starting new newsgroups for
short lived topics." He urged those on Usenet to realize that not all
might be interested in a particular topic but "feel obligated to read
things in net.general because of their possible importance."
 
     Matt Glickman, who helped Mark Horton write the code for B News,
supported Horton's request for maintaining NET.general as a newsgroup
that would concern all. He wrote (74):
 
     Just reminding everybody (It feel it is my duty...) that 
     net.general is no run-of-the-mill newsgorup. No sir. It's 
     not net.misc and it's not net.news. net.general should only 
     contain GENERAL interest information of interest to the 
     ENTIRE network. Especially, no dreaded newsgroup discussions 
     whatsoever! Please behave yourselves. 
 
     Therefore, while the posts on NET.general don't document the
interesting discussion carried on on early Usenet, they do convey some
of the general concerns and views of the pioneering Usenet
participants.
     
     Many of those on early Usenet were programmers or system
administrators. As such, they are particularly sensitive to
misspellings and other textual and writing errors. In a post on
NET.general, one user gathered comments from all interested about
concerns about what they considered poor writing that appeared on
Usenet. In response, Rob Glaser from Yale wrote (75):
 
     It is true that many technical people use the English 
     language sloppily. In an informal setting such as USENET, 
     however, content ought to be valued over form, timelines 
     over lengthy deliberation. I'd rather see a timely article 
     with a few grammatical mistakes (as long as it is basically 
     coherent) than the same piece, impeccably written but 
     appearing days later." 
 
     He also observed that the software (inews) for posting 
sometimes was problemmatic and helped create the grammatical or 
other errors one saw online. He wrote:
 
     Another factor to keep in mind is that, judging from some of 
     the submissions we receive over the net, the inews 
     submission interface is not always conducive to perfection 
     (not a slap at the news designers, just the imcompetents, 
     myself included, who make dumb mistakes.) 
 
     He then went on to describe how he had had to redo even this post
twice before getting it right. "For instance," he wrote, "I messed up
two earlier versions of this flame (one of which may have been sent,
my apologies if it was) before (*pray*) finally getting things right."
 
     Other posts on NET.general included requests for recommendations
for buying something worthwhile or complaints about problems users
were having with commercial entities to see if others had similar
problems or could help.
 
     For example, a post by Larry Piovano (76) described how he was
planning to buy a color tv with a 13" screen. He asked for
recommendations and experiences of others to help him decide which
brand to get. "I wish to buy one," he wrote, "that will not die in
short order." Bill Shannon from Digitial Equipment answered (77), "My
12 inch Sony has been going strong for 10 years with no repairs, no
adjustments, no problems! And I'm sure they've gotten better (and more
expensive)." A response on Usenet responded (78):
 
     Suggest SONY. I have two trinitrons and they work 
     wonderfully...." 
 
     The post continued:
 
     I have had my SONY for a couple of years now and have had no 
     problem. I suggest you get one with an electronic tuner (no 
     moving parts to wear out). Try the wireless remote control. 
     Its a great toy if your lazy."
 
     A similar question about recommendations regarding the Hayes
Smart modem was posed by John L. McAlpine in Canada at the
Saskatchewan Linear Accelerator. He wrote (79):
     
     Use of HAYES Smart Modem
     
     1) I would appreciate receiving comments on the reliability 
     of above modem.
     2) If anyone has available the appropriate patches to use 
     this modem with uucp for auto-dialling I would appreciate 
     receiving same.
 
     A post by Ron Gordon at Bell Labs (Murray Hill) warned other
Volkswagon Rabbit owners of a potential radiator tank leak. He wrote
(80):
 
          Attention VW Rabbit owners, you may have a problem! The 
     radiator overlow tank on my vehicle developed several cracks 
     which permitted coolant to escape. Because the overflow tank 
     is directly connected to the radiator system without a 
     valve, a leak in the overflow tank is just as bad as a leak 
     in the radiator!
 
     He went on to ask if other VW Rabbit owners were having a similar
problem. "My tank failed after 16 months at 15,000 miles," he wrote,
"Should enough evidence become available, a formal complaint may be
filed with VW and the Consumer Protection Agency."
 
     Another Usenet poster asked if there could be a consumer forum
newsgroup to monitor companies that ripoff consumers. In his post,
Randy King wrote (81):
 
     What provisions, if any, have been made to provide a sharing 
     of gripes about national "ripoff" companies and the like? I 
     would like to hear some comment on this, as well as see the 
     establishment of a newsgroup (as if any more were needed). 
     It might be very interesting to see what goes [on-ed] out 
     there and to provide readers with some insight to companies 
     so that they may not be smitten by these "invisible 
     stalkers! 
 
"What's the feeling out there," his post asked.
 
     Responding to an answer by Andy Tanenbaum from Bell Labs about
the intent of his post, King wrote that he had had in mind an
insurance company, but that the forum could discuss both problemmatic
and beneficial companies. (82)
    
     Several of the posts on NET.general suggested creating new 
     newsgroups, such as a post by Linda Seltzer at Bell Labs (83):
 
     I would like to start a newsgroup called net.music
    `for communication among composers, news of concerts
     and conferences, news about computer music, news of
     good new records, etc.  Anyone interested in
     subscribing to this group please send mail to
     research.lin or alice.seltzer
     - Linda Seltzer
     
     Another post noted that her email was inaccurate in her 
post, and that it should be alice!seltzer (84).
 
     Other posts concerned general questions or problems. For example,
Andy Tannenbaum posted about a piece of junk mail he had received from
a head hunter who seemed to have gotten his name from the list of
conference attendees who attended the previous USENIX winter
conference (85). "I DON'T want junk mail from employment agencies," he
wrote. "If you want to put up a recruiting note at a USENIX, fine. But
as long as I have a means here to express my dissatisfaction, I want
it to be known that I look with bad feelings toward companies that
badger me by abusing a valuable resource." His post ended, "I wouldn't
want a future list of conferees to not have addresses just because
some losers bother some of the good folks on the list with junk
mail. Don't call us, we'll call you."
 
     A post by Jay Lepreau asked if there were any archive of bugs for
software that had been posted on Usenet so he wouldn't have to do work
others had already done. He wrote (86):
 
     Has anyone out there been archiving any of the "net.*bugs" 
     newsgroups or just have old stuff still kicking around? We 
     just joined Usenet around the beginning of November; if 
     anyone has stuff from before that I'd appreciate hearing 
     from you. I'm TIRED of fixing bugs i know have been found & 
     fixed before. I can send you a shell script to pull stuff 
     out of your .nindex if you've got A news; I don't know how B 
     news works.
 
     A post from Scott Baden announced (87) that he was in the process
of creating an annotated bibliography on two topics: "Functional
Programming languages" and about "Applicative architectures." He asked
those with any references or comments to email them to him, promising,
"I'll make a copy of the bibliography available to all interested
parties. If you have already started a bibliography I'd be interested
in collaborating with you."
 
     News items were posted as was one on the AT&T settlement 
with the U.S. government posted on January 8, 1982 by Steve 
Bellovin. The post explained (88):
 
     AT&T and the U.S. government have settled their seven-year-
     old anti-trust suit out of court. Under the terms of the 
     settlement, AT&T will divest itself of the local operating 
     companies; it will retain AT&T Long Lines (the long distance 
     service), Western Electric, and Bell Labs. The 
     reorganization will be completed within 18 months.
 
     Questions about Usenet were posted, as in a post by Randy King
asking how long it took a post to get to the majority on Usenet. He
wrote (89):
 
     This may have been answered long before my emergence onto 
     NETNEWS, but I will ask it anyway! Does anybody have a feel 
     for how long it takes a posted article to reach the majority 
     of the NETNEWS community? I realize that there are N! 
     variables here, but a general ordinary run-of-the mill 
     answer would suffice. Two Days? Three Days? A month? Fifteen 
     minutes? (HA). How 'bout it.
 
     A response from Horton described the process of distribution 
of Netnews during this period. He wrote (90):
 
     It depends on the newsgroup and where you are. If you are 
     somewhere inside Bell Labs or on a key machine with a dialer 
     (decvax, duke) it will probably get out to 70 - 80% of the 
     net within a few hours. If not, you probably have to wait 
     for an overnight poll, but it will get most places ( >90% ) 
     overnight. There are some far reaches that won't get it for 
     2-3 days (more if something is down) and it may take another 
     2-3 days for a reply or followup to get back to you.
 
     Horton went on to describe how distribution of the Mailing 
Lists carried on Usenet occurred. He wrote:
 
     The fa newsgroups are different. They are fed in at Berkeley 
     which then waits for ihnss [at Bell Labs-ed] and decvax [at 
     Digital Equipment Corp-ed] to poll. ihnss only polls once a 
     day (in the early morning). decvax calls often. So Bell Labs 
     (which gets most stuff from ihnss) tends to have fa stuff 
     each morning from the previous day. Those getting news from 
     duke or decvax get it randomly, faster depending on when 
     decvax happens to call ucbvax (at Berkeley-ed) usually 
     several time a day.
 
     Horton also described other delays affecting how users got 
news from Usenet. He wrote:
 
     And of course there are the delays from the time the news 
     shows up on a system to when any given person actually reads 
     it - often once a day, but some people log in on neighboring 
     machines to get news and don't get it that often. I have 
     gotten replies to queries as much as 3 weeks later, not 
     counting the famous unix-wizards drought where it took 2 
     months to reach the masses before it even got into USENET!
 
     In summary, he wrote, "But a rough rule of thumb is that by
overnight, most of the net will have at least had the chance to read
your article."
 
      Along with the advantages of being on Netnews were the problems
that users were confronted with. One such problem concerned discussion
over what was appropriate discussion or in bad taste. Others claimed
it was censorship to bar certain discussions. Describing this problem,
Horton wrote:
 
     Also, PLEASE restrict your "questionable taste" stuff to 
     net.jokes.q for the time being until this whole thing is 
     settled. I am seeing stuff in net.general about dead babies 
     that certainly offends me (and no, I'm neither dead nor a 
     baby) and probably half the rest of the net. I'm still 
     seeing poor taste jokes in net.jokes. There are people out 
     there that are trying not to get this stuff, and they are 
     being barraged with it anyway! This includes limericks - 
     most of them belong in net.jokes.q. If you would be 
     unwilling to get on your local TV station and recite what 
     you're posting (with your mother and your boss in the 
     audience) you shouldn't be broadcasting it to an equally 
     wide audience of random people. Remember, also, that a 
     record is kept on every machine of everything you say.
 
     He also asked for input from those who found such posts offensive
toward trying to determine an appropriate policy with regard to such
posts. He wrote (91):
 
     I haven't been hearing from many people who actually ARE 
     OFFENDED by the net.jokes.q stuff. I'd like to get input 
     from them (either privately by electronic mail or publicly 
     in net.news) in regards to the policy that needs to be 
     formed. How you feel about various proposed solutions is 
     important. Anyone who further understands the Affirmative 
     Action issues should speak up -- I don't claim to understand 
     them very well.
 
     Another concern involved what were appropriate posts on
Usenet. J.C. Winterton asked that users not post articles from the
wire services but instead that people subscribe to newspapers for such
information rather than trying to send it around on Usenet. He wrote
(92):
 
     Notwithstanding the fact that some persons do work for Bell, 
     it STILL costs a bundle to send this stuff around the 
     continent on this network when it is being shipped by the 
     wire services anyway. Why not just subscribe to a large 
     daily newspaper or two. If you really are interested in the 
     entertainment world you can subscribe to Variety. The New 
     York Times and the Times of London probably carry everything 
     else. And where these are unavailable, there are other major 
     papers. I don't believe that usenet should become an arm of 
     AP, Reuters, etc. I am reasonably sure that they would be 
     somewhat upset with the infringing of their copyright as 
     well. That a thing can be done is not a reason to do it! 
     Besides, by distributing wire service stuff this way (with 
     or without authorization) is probably helping to unemploy 
     some poor newspaper carrier, etc. etc."
 
     Commenting on the proliferation of new newsgroups and newsgroup
names, Horton promised to issue a list of the newsgroups "officially
blessed" to help resolve the problems of multiple names for similar
groups. But he also encouraged those with various views on the issue
to speak up. He wrote (93):
 
     I am coming to realized that people are waiting for me to 
     say something. We are discussing what to do about the 
     proliferation of newsgroups - if you want to be involved in 
     this discussion please send me mail.  (We might even, ahem, 
     start a newsgroup.)  I hope to have a list of active 
     newsgroups, "officially blessed" (whatever that means), in a 
     few days.
 
     Chain letters also posed a problem on early Usenet. Henry Spencer
from the University of Toronto posted asking users to recognize the
problem and keep it from harming the Net. He wrote (94):
 
     Some turkeys evidently have decided it's funny, funny, funny 
     to start sending chain letters around Usenet.  With all the 
     mail headers on them, these messages are many Kbytes.  For 
     some strange reason, when we're paying phone bills for 300-
     baud long distance calls, this does not seem amusing.  This 
     is EXACTLY the sort of thing that could lead to humorless 
     administrators closing down people's network connections on 
     the grounds that the money is being wasted.  For heaven's 
     sake people, STOP IT!!! Your thoughtless empty-headed 
     practical joke is endangering the network that many people 
     worked long and hard to set up!
 
     Noting the kinds of problems those on Usenet had to deal with,
Horton observed the obligation to those on Usenet to consider its best
interest. He urged that those with different views of the issues
involved be active and participate in the discussions over what to do
(95). "I propose that anyone with opinions on this issue discuss it on
net.news. I want to hear from both sides. This is YOUR NETWORK,
remember!
 
     Others on Usenet had hoped that it would make it possible to form
a new form of media or to influence the political process in a way not
formerly available. "Not to belittle any new newsgroup," George Otto
wrote (96), "but it strikes me that we are developing a real
electronic newspaper here."
 
     In a similar way, rdg at allegra wrote (97), "Wouldn't it be
great to use this electronic medium to send notes to our government
officials. i never seem to write postal letters or telegrams, but we
all seem to find these electric notes enough to use often. Can you
image net.reagan with a few authentic replies."
 
     Scott Braden added (98), "Or what if we could lobby our 
favorite senator? (net.lobby, net.senator?" 
 
     The dilemma of funding Usenet posed a problem to some sites 
as described in the post by Chris Kent at the University of 
Cincinnati. He wrote (99):
 
     We at the University of Cincinnati are on a budget crunch. 
     Therefore, I have been told to cut down on outgoing calls or 
     lose the ability to place them. I ask you all to cooperate, 
     please; try to avoid routing program sources through us 
     whenever possible. We will continue to transship news, so 
     that won't be a problem, but will probably poll only every 
     other day....I am sorry it has to come to this -- but some 
     people higher up seem to see this as just wasted money.  I 
     will keep you all posted as to our situation.
     Chris Kent (cincy!chris)
          
     Others like Mel Haas at Bell Labs (houxm) reported that the 
funding of various sites could be jeopardized by an irresponsible 
activity on the net and that all users should be aware of the 
problems that might be caused. He wrote (100):
 
     This is a plea to clean up the net.  Please !  There are 
     whole sections of the net that are being watched by the 
     payers of the bills, and what shows now is not good.  The 
     flame and flash content of the past few weeks has far 
     outweighed the useful.  Don't revive the "db" stuff in 
     net.cooks!  Don't send everything to net.general! and, 
     certainly, don't send anything to both net.general and 
     another! Put net.news stuff in net.news, net.records stuff 
     in net.records, etc. Show some consideration for others in 
     the wording and content of your submittals. 
 
     He pointed out that responsible use would help establish how 
the Net was a money saver for the sites paticipating and thus 
support continued use. He wrote:
 
     Try to make the net a useful exchange of useful nformation 
     and ideas, that will pay for the service and help people. In 
     other words, make the net a useful tool, not a place to 
     expose yourself, our ego and your bad manners.  Thank you.    
     Mel Haas,  houxm!mel
 
     Explaining his need for access to Usenet even though he was 
would no longer have Net access through the University of 
California Berkeley, Michael Shilol wrote (101):
 
     I recently graduated from Berkeley where I enjoyed this 
     network very much, both for entertainment and for receiving
     the latest news on many subjects.
 
     I am now starting a job and will soon be loosing my account
     on the Berkeley Vax. My question is: 
     Is it possible for me to get access to this network in any
     way? 
 
     Can my company get access to it?
     Is there a way to pay for this privilege?
 
     He noted that the useful technical information available on
Usenet was so valuable that a company could benefit financially from
being connected, "This network has been so useful to me for finding
information that I think it is worth money and/or equipment to get
it."
 
     And he concluded his post:
     "Any answers, comments, suggestions appreciated."
 
     He then had a form of signature giving both UUCP and ARPANET 
address forms.
 
     Michael Shiloh
     CSVAX.shiloh@berkekey
     UCBVAX!shiloh
 
     In another post, George Otto at Indian Hill Bell Labs noted the
technical superiority of Usenet newsgroups to mailing lists.  He
described the problem of keeping mailing lists on different computers
in sync. He wrote (102):
 
     Is anyone working on making mailing lists just as efficient 
     as newsgroups? One problem with using mailing lists for 
     maintaining communications among those in a small group of 
     people is the difficulty of keeping the lists on many 
     machines in sync.  I tried looking into setting up a
     program under my ID that would allow others to mail to me 
     for automatic redistribution to a list I maintained, but 
     never found a good way to do it.  
 
     He noted that Usenet solved the problem in a superior way by 
making it possible for people connected to different computers to 
participate in a common newsgroup. He wrote:
 
     The beauty of using USENET it that members of affected 
     groups can be on different machines and need do one or two 
     simple things to be attached to the common group.
 
 
                           Conclusion
 
     These posts on NET.general show how those using different
computers at a wide variety of different academic and research sites,
many of which were not officially sponsored by any funding agency,
were able to participate in the kind of collaborative communication
and some of the mailing lists formerly only available to those with
access to the ARPANET. More importantly, Usenet made the process of
posing a problem and collaborating with others to try to determine how
to solve it more widely available. Such a process is needed to solve
the difficult technical and social problems which computers and
networking technology present for our times. Habermas writes that
there is a need to understand such a scientific approach to technical
issues and challenges. What he doesn't recognize is that the
technology itself is needed to help in the process. The early ARPANET
as demonstrated through posts on the MsgGroup mailing list and early
Usenet provide beginning insight into how people using and directing
technology can be part of the important scientific and regenerative
process that contributing to the online community makes possible.

     ---------
Footnotes available at

http://www.umcc.umich.edu/~ronda/usenet.hist/msgnts.txt/

               
           Netizens: On the History and Impact
                of Usenet and the Internet
         http://www.columbia.edu/~rh120/
        and in print edition ISBN # 0-8186-7706-6



                       -----------------------

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: My thanks to Ronda once again for
her hard work in compiling the history of 'the net'. She has been
on this project for a long time now, and periodically she sends
me her latest efforts to share with the readers of this group.

Long-time readers know this already, but it should be noted for
newer participants that TELECOM Digest is to the best of my 
knowledge the oldest continuously published mailing list on the
net which is still in operation from the 'old days' of the early
1980's. This digest began in August, 1981 and will soon be sixteen
years old. There are many mailing lists on the net which began in
the 1980's and are still around, but I do not think any of them 
were around when this one was started by Jon Solomon that summer.
This digest was originally part of the 'Human Nets' mailing list,
and it came into existence when several participants in Human Nets
wanted to have a more technical discussion on telephone networks and
services. There are still about a dozen or so of the original
charter subscribers to this digest on the mailing list, which has
grown from a couple dozen names in the summer of 1981 to several
thousand names today.

Just as this digest started as an offshoot of Human Nets, other
mailing lists have started as an offshoot of this one. The first
was started by Dennis Rears for privacy discussions, as a result of
a very long and controversial thread which got started here. Then
later came the well-liked and highly regarded 'Computer Underground
Digest'. It likewise had its origins here as a discussion on 
computer fraud and hackers. If memory serves, I think a well-known
netter at the time had just been indicted and put on trial for 
'hacking' ... the thread was long and controversial and very heated.
I had to cut if off finally, and the editors of CuD took over the
thread for their first couple of issues.

A dispute over the management/editorial direction of this digest led
to the formation of alt.dcom.telecom several years ago as an
alternative to comp.dcom.telecom, and a second dispute in 1993 led
to the formation of comp.dcom.telecom.tech as an alternate news
group.

This digest like others on the net operated freely and without charge
for many years. From 1981 with enough submissions received to put out
a sort of skimpy issue every three or four days to 1994 when the 
volume of mail first began routinely exceeding a hundred pieces per
day, it continued to be a part-time 'hobby' for me. Now the mail
runs about 200-300 items per day (NOT counting mail-daemons which
number 100+ per day) with typically 25-30 requests for addition
to the mailing list and/or deletion/change of address, etc. At one
point I made an effort to use every single piece of mail in the digest
but in the last year I seldom use more than 10-20 percent of what
comes in. A good percentage of what comes in each day is spam; it is
rare I do not receive a dozen or more of the Make Money Fast and
related things each day. I suppose all moderators have seen much the
same kind of growth in their mail as well as the huge amount of trash. 

Lacking any formal institutional ties which would provide me with
a living wage, I had to make a decision three years ago to either
cut back on the amount of time spent on the digest (it quite easily
could consume six to eight hours per day of work) *or* find a source
or two or three of funding. I chose the latter course, preferring to
as much as possible maintain the quality here. 

That's why I count on the many letters I receive in snailmail from
readers who have made it their business to assure me of getting the
rent paid and food to eat each day. If you have not written to me
recently at Post Office Box 4621, Skokie, IL 60076, please do so
today. Your letters do mean a great deal, and I encourage you to
stay in touch.

Thanks again to Ronda for an excellent portrait of the net as it
existed in the early 1980's. Her other work is on file in the
Telecom Archives as well.      PAT]
e
