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RFC1935 on What is the Internet, Anyway?



this is an internet "rfc" that actually contains some (relatively) plain
english that might be of interest to folks on this list...

>To: IETF-Announce:;
>Subject: RFC1935 on What is the Internet, Anyway?
>Cc: rfc-ed at isi.edu
>Date: Tue, 09 Apr 96 11:55:03 PDT
>Sender: ietf-announce-request at IETF.CNRI.Reston.VA.US
>From: RFC Editor <rfc-ed at isi.edu>
>
>
>A new Request for Comments is now available in online RFC libraries.
>
>
>        RFC 1935:
>
>        Title:      What is the Internet, Anyway?
>        Author:     J. Quarterman & S. Carl-Mitchell
>        Date:       April 1996
>        Mailbox:    tic at tic.com
>        Pages:      11
>        Characters: 30,369
>        Updates/Obsoletes:  none
>
>        URL:        ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1935.txt
>
>
>We often mention the Internet, and in the press you read about the
>Internet as the prototype of the Information Highway; as a research
>tool; as open for business; as not ready for prime time; as a place
>your children might communicate with (pick one) a. strangers, b.
>teachers, c. pornographers, d. other children, e. their parents; as
>bigger than Poland; as smaller than Chicago; as a place to surf; as
>the biggest hype since Woodstock; as a competitive business tool; as
>the newest thing since sliced bread.  What is the Internet, anyway?
>
>>From Matrix News, 4(8), August 1994.  Permission is hereby granted for
>redistribution of this article provided that it is redistributed in
>its entirety, including the copyright notice and this notice.
>Contact: mids at tic.com, +1-512-451-7602, fax: +1-512-452-0127.
>http://www.tic.com/mids, gopher://gopher.tic.com/11/matrix/news A
>shorter version of this article appeared in MicroTimes.
>
>This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
>does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
>this memo is unlimited.
>
>This announcement is sent to the IETF list and the RFC-DIST list.
>Requests to be added to or deleted from the IETF distribution list
>should be sent to IETF-REQUEST at CNRI.RESTON.VA.US.  Requests to be
>added to or deleted from the RFC-DIST distribution list should
>be sent to RFC-DIST-REQUEST at ISI.EDU.
>
>Details on obtaining RFCs via FTP or EMAIL may be obtained by sending
>an EMAIL message to rfc-info at ISI.EDU with the message body 
>help: ways_to_get_rfcs.  For example:
>
>        To: rfc-info at ISI.EDU
>        Subject: getting rfcs
>
>        help: ways_to_get_rfcs
>
>Requests for special distribution should be addressed to either the
>author of the RFC in question, or to admin at DS.INTERNIC.NET.  Unless
>specifically noted otherwise on the RFC itself, all RFCs are for
>unlimited distribution.
>
>Submissions for Requests for Comments should be sent to
>RFC-EDITOR at ISI.EDU.  Please consult RFC 1543, Instructions to RFC
>Authors, for further information.
>
>
>Joyce K. Reynolds
>USC/Information Sciences Institute
>
>...
>
>Below is the data which will enable a MIME compliant Mail Reader 
>implementation to automatically retrieve the ASCII version
>of the RFCs.
>Content-Type: text/plain
>Content-ID: <960408120800.RFC at ISI.EDU>
>
>SEND /rfc/rfc1935.txt
>Content-Type: text/plain
>Content-ID: <960408120800.RFC at ISI.EDU>
>

                  Rodney Thayer           ::         rodney at sabletech.com
                  Sable Technology Corp   ::              +1 617 332 7292
                  246 Walnut St           ::         Fax: +1 617 332 7970     
                  Newton MA 02160 USA     ::  http://www.shore.net/~sable
                           "Developers of communications software"





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