You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-60        
 
Author Message
mdw
What are we missing? Mark Unseen   Jun 3 15:32 UTC 1991

This is an item to complain about things that ought to be on this
system (but aren't).

Things I can think of, off-hand.

        watch
        bday

        rz,sz, etc. -- all those things remmers put on M-net

        kermit
60 responses total.
morel
response 1 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 3 20:52 UTC 1991

elm
morel
response 2 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 3 21:01 UTC 1991

mailchk
mdw
response 3 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 3 23:28 UTC 1991

What, exactly, does "mailchk" do?  There are some 4.2bsd utilities
that do similar sorts of things -- "biff" seems to be the most
similiar, that I can think of...
morel
response 4 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 4 00:30 UTC 1991

Ok.  It's not that I have to have mailchk per se, I'd just like *something*
that would let you know that you have new mail.
.]
remmers
response 5 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 4 01:08 UTC 1991

I uploaded rz and sz and am compiling them as I type.  They'll give x/y/zmodem
upload & download capability.

I can bring the latest ckermit over from emunix.  It's a very new and much
expanded version that has 2K packets, sliding windows, a macro language, and
other goodies. (It's also rather large, not surprisingly.)

'mailchk' is a program I wrote that tells you what mail you've got sitting in
your unread mail file  -- similar to the directory that comes up when you run
Berkeley mail, but much smaller that Berkeley mail.  I find it useful in
conjunction with' tail' to see if I have any new mail messages.  It doesn't
notify you synchronously of new mail arrival; but we seem to have 'biff' here
for that.

I've also got Unix versions of arc, zoo, and unzip that might be handy to have
around.  I'll upload and install them.

We need 'elm'.

We need the latest 'nethack'.  Not sure where to get it.

We need a working emacs.  'Jove' seems to be here, but when I ran it, it gave
me an error message and quit; haven't investigated this.  GNU Emacs would be
nice, but its resource requirements might be excessive.

Gnu C would be nice to have too, being an ANSI compiler & all.  I can bring
that over from emunix and work on installing it also.
bad
response 6 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 4 04:19 UTC 1991

        Biff is correct. I asked Kite about biff at one point, way back when...
mdw
response 7 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 4 06:38 UTC 1991

The copy of jove here (along with virtually everything else, for space &
time reasons) was compiled under 1.1 - there's probably something about
3.5 that it just doesn't like.  Once we get more disk space, we should
be able to compile a more up to date version.

I have source to some version of elm (probably what's running
on M-net.)  Probably best to wait until we have space, again...

Nethack seems to be ftp'able from several hosts -- "jyu.fi = 128.214.7.5"
and more, although my information may be out of date.  Certainly
seems doable.  I also have a binary of 'rogue' here, although I think
it's an old version.
arthur
response 8 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 29 16:09 UTC 1991

Flex and Bison  (the GNU Lex and Yacc). Gas (the Gnu assembler).
And Gnu Emacs (resources allowing), for those of us who
like to program in Lisp.  Besides, then you can include Emacs
in the list of optional login shells.

It would be nice to have a copy of Moria, too. Or maybe MUD :)
mdw
response 9 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 29 21:33 UTC 1991

The file
        /usr/mdw/,take4
contains my current copy of what we are missing, which I think includes
everything mentioned in this item thus far.  People might want to look
and speak up if they can supply any of those pieces.

It just occured to me I don't have jan's write pgm on it (I think) --
Jan seems quite interested in getting an updated copy to us with (I
think) the changes to let it live with an unmodified version of login.
We need to think about 'mesg d' though.
mju
response 10 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 29 22:47 UTC 1991

Patch, for applying patches to sources and such.

The C version of "shar", which includes things such as "safe unshar"
(i.e., it won't execute things like "rm -rf /" that it finds in the
shar file) and a "smart unshar" that automatically strips off the
header and footer, and then unshars the archive.

The "less" pager.
remmers
response 11 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 29 23:54 UTC 1991

I got nethack from jyu.fi; it's sitting on my home pc right now.
1.3 MB in compressed form -- too big to install until we have
another disk.

I'll be happy to install the GNU stuff.  If source isn't currently
on emunix I can ftp it easily from prep.ai.mit.edu.  I've installed
much of it on emunix and so am familiar with the procedures.

I suspect GNU Emacs will be too much of a resource hog.  But I could
get Jove and install that.

For LISP programmers, I could get xlisp, a PD Lisp with object
oriented features.

I can bring over the latest elm, but I'd prefer that somebody with
more knowledge of the intricacies of mail setups install it and other
mail-related stuff.  Marc?

(I can install mailchk, of course.)
mju
response 12 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 01:19 UTC 1991

Sure, I'll install Elm -- just stick it somewhere on here, and let me know
where it is.
popcorn
response 13 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 15:55 UTC 1991

This response has been erased.

mdw
response 14 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 17:35 UTC 1991

I am currently running "catman -w" which will create
a "/usr/man/whatis" database, which will allow whatis
to run.  Once we have more space, we should probably run
"catman" again & store preformatted pages of everything.

Some people will want to do weird stuff to store compressed
versions of stuff, & delete the nroff source.  I think that would
be an excellent way for Grex to lose the nroff source -- as
has undoubtedly already happened to M-net.  Disk is
getting cheap enough that I'd really like to see us
spend just a bit of it to keep stuff like PD source,
man pages, & such online instead of archiving it,
and then never having it around.

(It seems to be done -- a "whatis" just worked for me.)
arthur
response 15 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 18:04 UTC 1991

   Marcus, I agree about keeping source around.  If we all decide
we don't really have the diskspace for that, we should at least
keep a note around with address of the net archive that the sourc
came from.
remmers
response 16 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 23:16 UTC 1991

How about keeping source to PD stuff in /usr/local/src in
some uniform format, like 16-bit compressed tar archives?

Hmmm...  Why don't I just go create this directory and put
the source for the things I've compiled in there?
remmers
response 17 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 23:19 UTC 1991

...done!
remmers
response 18 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 00:14 UTC 1991

The termcap file here seems to be a bit deficient.  No descriptions
for vt102, vt220, or vt320, for instance.  Any objections if I
import some termcaps from other systems (e.g. emunix) and install
them?
morel
response 19 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 01:21 UTC 1991

Please do, John, as long as space limitations allow.
mdw
response 20 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 04:34 UTC 1991

Only thing you might want to think about is distinguishing between
ours & suns.  As long as you're about it, I have some aa60 defs...
popcorn
response 21 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 04:35 UTC 1991

This response has been erased.

remmers
response 22 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 19:52 UTC 1991

Being a vain sort, I will clearly identify any termcaps that I install
as mine.
;.
steve
response 23 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 00:00 UTC 1991

   Might I make the suggstion that we import the M-Net version of termcap?
Its gotten a lot of funky entries over the years; I'd hate to see it go to
waste.
remmers
response 24 of 60: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 10:39 UTC 1991

I've downloaded M-Net's termcap file to my pc.  There are a number of
entries in it worth bringing over, I think.
 0-24   25-49   50-60        
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss