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2000-2001 ZagNet User`s Manual

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1. Matt Wood x3861 Brett Hendricks x3910 Brett Hendricks x3910 Roger Melvin x6819 Sherry Woods x6626 Bob Toshack x3407 Music Office x6733 Jason Gilman x3660 Rev 8 16 00 UNIX Quick Reference The following are commonly used commands on UNIX systems This include Barney Chaos and the Sun workstations in the Computer Science Lab The commands on Chaos and the Sun workstations may differ slightly from these commands The following format is used for commands Italic indicates a variable that you supply Bold indicates typed exactly as shown alias Creates a temporary name for a UNIX command alias name command To remove an alias unalias name apropos Display a list of man pages containing keyword apropos keyword archie Searches Internet ftp sites for the specified file name archie file cal Display a calendar for the current month cal To display a calendar for the specified year cal year cat Displays the contents of a text file cat file cd Changes current directory to a different directory cd directory To change to you home directory cd Directory abbreviations Home directory Current working directory Parent Directory chmod Changes permission status for a file or directory chmod code file To keep a file private default for new files chmod 600 file To give everyone read permission chmod 644 file compress Reduces the size of a file and adds a Z to the
2. bj Under ordinary and normal circumstances a user s computer files including electronic mail are considered private In order to correct system problems or investigate misuse of resources it may be necessary for system administrators to examine users files including e mail and network traffic In such cases user privacy will be respected to the extent possible consistent with University policy and the law Personal web pages and e mail addresses may be listed on University directories unless the user specifically requests that this information be kept confidential Section 6 Agreement aj bj I understand that access to GUnet 1s a privilege and not a right I acknowledge that failure to conform to this policy statement may result in revocation of my GUnet account s and or network access Furthermore disciplinary action consistent with University policy may be taken by the appropriate University officers e g Student Life Department Chair supervisor and illegal activities may be referred to the appropriate authorities I understand the above stated conditions for accessing GUnet and the Internet and I agree to abide by these terms and conditions I understand that certain material found on the Internet is offensive to some people and that I access the Internet of my own free will Furthermore I request access to Gonzaga University computing resources and or an account on GUnet Name of user printed Signature of us
3. Once you have your network card and ZagNet software installed go through this manual to configure individual programs included with ZagNet These include Internet Explorer 5 0 Outlook Express 5 0 QvtNet PC or NCSA Telnet Mac and Fetch 3 0 Mac If You Need Assistance If you require assistance with connecting to the network or using the included ZagNet software contact the Help Desk at x5550 from 8 00AM to 4 30PM Monday Friday Introduction Page 1 ZagNet Support Services Help Desk Information x5550 As a part of ZagNet Gonzaga University has a technical Help Desk Students faculty and employees are able to call a single telephone number and receive help in solving computer related problems Students who are having problems connecting to ZagNet can call the Help Desk staff who will help them diagnose and solve basic network related problems If the problem can t be quickly resolved and appears to be network related the Help Desk staff will initiate a work order and transmit it to desktop support staff who will work with the student to resolve the problem In addition the Help Desk staff track all unfinished work orders to ensure they are resolved Students who are experiencing problems connecting their computers to ZagNet or the Internet or using any of the supported applications can send e mail to helpdesk gonzaga edu or call x5550 to talk to a Help Desk staff member Supported Applications ZagNet provides students w
4. IV Don t add signatures to Replies and Forwards Signatures 3 Click on the New button to create a new signature eat signaturo New Remove l Rename 4 Enter the text of the signature in the Edit Signature A Edit Signature block at the bottom of the w ndow Tet Greg Fences FRE 6 To include your signature on all outgoing mail check the Add signatures to all outgoing messages checkbox Canc aw 7 Click OK to save your new signature For More Information Outlook Express includes many additional features that you may find useful To learn more about these features use Outlook Express help system available under the Help menu Page 16 Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express Using Usenet News What is Usenet Usenet is a network of thousands of servers on the Internet that house thousands of discussion groups called newsgroups Each server can be configured to carry a select number of the newsgroups or all of the newsgroups These news servers periodically connect with one another to pass along any new articles that were created on its server or that were passed to it by another news server Because of this distributed architecture an article posted on Usenet may take several days to be distributed to all of the news servers that carry the newsgroup where the article was posted Gonzaga s news server carries approximately 10 000 of the most commonly read newsgroups of the more than 35 000 newsgroups on Usenet Most of th
5. the file must be located in your home directory on Barney At the Attchmnt prompt in your message editing area simply type the name of the file located in your home directory If you have created a sub directory in which the file is stored you must include the name of this directory in your filename Once you have entered the name of the file you may complete your message and send it to the recipient You may attach more than one file to a message You may also browse files in your home directory by pressing T while the cursor is at the Attchmnt There may be times when you receive an attachment that Pine cannot read Because Pine is a text based system it is not able to display many types of attachments such Word and WordPerfect documents spreadsheets graphics and html documents These documents must first be saved in your home directory and then transferred to a computer typically a PC or a Mac that is capable of viewing that type of file To save an attachment from a message you ve received open the message press gt to view the attachments select the attachment to save using the arrow keys and then press S to save the attachment Pine will often provide a default file name If not you can enter any filename you want and then press lt ENTER gt to save the attachment as a file in your home directory You can now transfer the file to a PC or Mac using an FTP application For more information on FTP see the document Transferring Fil
6. COM E SearchWeb amp Resource Locators Once you ve added a bookmark to your Favorites menu all you need to do to go to the web page you ve bookmarked is to select the bookmark from the Favorites menu After you have accumulated a large number of bookmarks you may find that the Favorites menu gets cluttered You can clean up the Favorites menu by selecting Organize Favorites from the Favorites menu This will open a window that will allow you to delete old bookmarks and arrange bookmarks into folders folders show up as sub menus within the Favorites menu Finding Information on the World Wide Web As mentioned earlier the World Wide Web contains millions of web pages that are constantly changing Because of this locating information could be difficult Fortunately there are a number of search engines on the World Wide Web that make it easy to search the Internet These search engines are constantly searching the Web for new or changed web servers and pages The information they find is addedto their databases which are indexed en 2 amp uw for easy and fast searching Forward Stop Address http www yahoo com a YaHool Check Email Whats New Personalize Help Yahoo Auctions TG A DRINK PEPSI amp DEW Siroo Yahoo Mail coins cards stamps cars JD GO ONLINE GET STUFF I re free email for life advanced search Shop Auctions Classifieds Sho
7. Express This is just a sample message of sending e mail with Outlook Express Greg Francis Unix System Administrator Gonzaga University francis gonzaga edu 509 323 6896 Page 15 If you don t know the person s address and they are at Gonzaga you can select Address Book from the Tools menu to search Gonzaga s White Pages See the instructions earlier in this chapter for more information 4 Enter the subject of the message n the Subject field 5 Click in the body of the message and either type the message or copy and paste the message from another program 6 If you wish to attach a file to the message do the following a Click on the Attach icon at the top of the message window b Locate the file you want to attach highlight it and click Attach 7 Click on the Send button in the message window to send the message Creating a Signature A signature is a block of text that is appended to the end of new messages A signature is usually used to provide information about the person sending the message People often include e mail addresses phone numbers employer titles and cute little quotes in their signature To create a signature in Outlook Express do the following ions 21x l Select Options from the Tools menu FF Se ecurty onnection aintenance General Read Send Compose Signatures Spelling a i Signature settings 2 Click on the Signatures tab in the Options window PE oe
8. FTP server you will need to disconnect For command line users this is done using the command quit GUI users will normally have a button or menu option to close the connection For Additional Help When you are connected to an FTP server you can enter the command help for a list of commands Typing help command e g help recv will usually provide some additional information on that specific command While logged into a UNIX server such as Barney you can enter man ftp at the command prompt username on Barney for detailed information on the use of FTP Downloading Files using FTP Page 31 command append local remote ascii binary bye cd remote directory close delete remote file dir remote directory help command Icd local directory Is remote directory open ftp server pwd quit recy remote file send local file size remote file status user user name Page 32 FTP COMMANDS QUICK SUMMARY Available in some FTP clients Used to invoke a command that is normally only available from the command prompt For example Is invokes the Is command on the local computer to list files in the current directory Appends the contents of the local file to the end of the remote file Set ASCII transfer mode Used for text HQX and uuencoded files Set binary transfer mode Used for graphics programs and most other files other than those listed under ascii Close the connection to the
9. FTP server and exit Same as quit Set the current remote directory to the specified directory Disconnect from the FTP server but don t exit the FTP software Deletes the specified remote file if user has required permissions List the contents of the specified remote directory If no directory is specified list the contents of the current remote working directory Same as Is Displays information concerning the specified command If no command is specified help lists the available commands Available in some FTP clients Change the current local directory to the directory specified Same as dir Open a connection to the specified FTP server FTP must already be running and no connection currently established Display the name of the current working directory Disconnect from the FTP server and exit the FTP software Copy the specified remote file to the local working directory using the current transfer mode binary or ASCII Send the specified local file to the remote working directory using the current transfer mode binary or ASCII Display the size of the remote file Show the current status of the FTP client Log into an already open FTP server as the specified user Downloading Files using FTP Text Editors on Barney pico vi emacs Text editors are programs used to edit text files Text files are limited to letters and numbers only they do not include graphics fonts or special formatting information found in
10. Pine session This is useful for users that often use the unix command line for programming viewing files and other tasks Reading Your E Mail 4 oO barney gonzaga edu 5 The INBOX message index 1S your mailbox In PINE 4 02 MESSAGE INDEX INBOX Message 4 of 32 NEN Pi Thi be h il ill 1 Aug 11 Mail Delivery Subs 3 275 gt Returned mail User unknown 11 228csc 2 416 HPADM RE FTP Sub Logi me 15 15 where any new mall WI appear qg 11 as ce 2 305 HPADM RE Are ihare one diff betwee A il h d ill gt h il T 2 966 gt Re What is this MAC address 11 J Allber 41 863 More ZagNet Inf tion ny mal you ave rea wi remain ere unti 11 Enge tee er 3 4045 HPADM 1 Re How saat oud FTP Sub Logi 5 A 5 11 CERT Advisory 14 934 CERT Advisory CA 93 10 mime_buffer_ 11 And Remi 3 392 A t 12 Info Li Validation D you either file it to another folder or delete it A ee Cat eee eee 11 ntsecurity digest 44 1299 ntsecurity digest V3 268 10 twiztah 2 562 SECURITY h k in the first column of the message index 10 Dale Bogle 2 094 Re rene gonzaga edu vn 10 Theresa Ketchum 1 093 gt Re days 10 Theresa Ketchum lt 1 020 gt u02 and fopt means that the message marked is addressed 10 hunnews owner hc 4 042 Hummingbird E News August 1998 10 Patrick Oonk 2 090 gt Source Back Orifice Unix client relea A 17 Aug 10 ntsecurity digest 56 557 ntsecurity digest VS 267 18 A 8 Jay B
11. To print a job to a specific printer Ip d printername file Is Lists the files and subdirectories in the current directory Is Itad filter Lists long format same as II t Lists sorted by modification time a Lists all files including files beginning with a dot d Suppresses the listing of the contents of a subdirectory lynx Runs the text based web browser lynx url mailid Shows accounts with keyword in the user s e mail address mailid keyword man Display the manual page for the specified command man command mesg Deny or allow access for other users to write to your account mesg y Allow users to write to your account mesg n Deny users ability to write to your account mkdir Creates a new directory within the current directory mkdir directory more Displays the contents of a file one screen at a time more file Use lt spacebar gt to scroll forward and q to quit mv Moves a file or directory to a different directory mv file directory Renames a file or directory mv oldfilename newfilename To inquire before overwriting an existing file mv i oldfilename newfilename news Display unread announcements passwd Changes account password pico Starts the Pico text editor Page 44 pine Starts the Pine electronic mail program ps Displays process information for processes created by you pwd Display the absolute pathname of the current directory rm Permanently deletes a file rm f
12. URLs are used to describe the location of web pages on the Internet Using a URL you can locate any web page on the Internet The structure of a URL is fairly simple it consists of a protocol identifier a server address and a web page name For example the URL http www gonzaga edu zagnet index html specifies the hypertext transfer protocol http the www gonzaga edu web server and the web page named zagnet index html zagnet is the path to the file on the www gonzaga edu web server There is typically a default web page on each web site that alleviates the need to specify a web page name unless you want to go to a specific page on that web server For example the URL http www gonzaga edu will automatically load the default web page on the www gonzaga edu server Since a URL is the unique address to a web page to go back to a web page in the future the only thing you have to remember is the URL Explorer will use the URL to locate the web page and reload all of the data for that web page By keeping a list of URLs you can easily return to pages you have visited before You can also send a person a URL via e mail and the other person can use the URL in their copy of Explorer or any other web browser and load the same page you saw Using the World Wide Web Page 3 Loading a Web Page using a URL If you have the URL for a web page you can eas ly go to that web page using Explorer To load a web page using a URL do the following
13. and many excellent tutorials and resources on the Internet A number of classes at Gonzaga also teach web page development Page 38 Student Web Pages on Barney GONZAGA UNIVERSITY ES On Line Library Resource These options and more are available through LIBRIS http ibris gonzaga edu GONZAGA LIBRARY CATALOG Searches for books media state and federal documents and titles of magazines and journals held in the Foley Library ARTICLE INDEXES DATABASES ABI Inform Indexes approximately 800 business management and trade journals Some articles may be available online as full text ATLA Comprehensive index to periodicals book reviews scholarly essays conference proceedings and books on religion and related fields Bio amp Agf Index to periodicals in agriculture biology and related fields CINAHL Comprehensive amp authoritative index to current published literature in English for nurses and other allied health professionals Compendex Engineering Index Major index to engineering periodicals conference proceedings and related materials Links through EI Village ERIC 1966 to Present Index to journal articles and unpublished documents in the field of education Find Law A searchable directory of Internet legal resources ProQuest Direct Provides access to summaries of articles from over 5 000 publications including newspapers Many articles also appear in full text
14. check your e mail You can now do that from the convenience of your computer without tying up your phone line What Comes with ZagNet ZagNet is the student network and support system It includes network access to your residence hall software for your computer and technical support staff should you encounter problems It also includes academic resources such as access to the library Encyclopedia Britannica Online and academic software on Barney Gonzaga s academic server You also receive an e mail account that you retain your entire time at Gonzaga a server to place your personal web page on and Usenet a global discussion network consisting of more than 10 000 discussion groups Where to Begin There are a couple of steps you should take to prepare to use ZagNet e Purchase and install a network card for your computer e Install the ZagNet software on your computer e Sign the Acceptable Use Policy e Pickup your e mail account Assistance n installation of the network card and installation of the ZagNet software is available during the first part of the semester Connection Central in the Crosby Center For more information contact the Help Desk at x5550 Signing the Acceptable Use Policy and picking up your e mail account can be done at the orientation days at the beginning of school and in ADO16 during the rest of the year between 10 00AM and 11 00AM Extended hours are available the first two weeks of each semester
15. clicked on The window will be divided into two panes the top pane will list all the articles in the newsgroup and the bottom pane will show the text of the currently selected article Unread articles will be bold text and previously read articles will be plain text 5 To read an article click on the article subject Page 18 Using Usenet News Note Articles with the same title are grouped menu MIIE File Edit View Tools Message Help into a thread to make it easier to follow the o g TE x 3 x New Post Reply Group Reply Forward Print Stop Send Recy Addresses discussion Threads are indicated by a plus REST STE s gn PC OT a triangle Mac A thread Can be EE nt x Ar My Raven save story amp also my 1s Mark Elenbaas personal safety Sameer Hemch expanded or contracted by simply clicking on oa A Bate ogee Pi 4 sentmail jan 2000 16 Re safety Fedeee Adpae the appropriate symbol semi ma 200 1 Re ey van 4 subscriptions 15 GW 56x a 6 To reply or post a response to the current en From Al To lg news gonzaga edu article select the appropriate reply type from o Te alt os windows95 crash c the Message menu a bilan ane The way I see it there is risk in everything that we do in our everyday rec sking i life Hoever there is nothing we do in our everyday life that can give us rec skiing
16. documents created by word processors Text files include mail messages source code batch files and configuration files Text files are the most common type of file you will use on Barney For this reason there are several options available to you when you are working with text files Text Editors Available on Barney There are three text editors that are available on Barney These are pico vi and emacs Each can be run by typing their name at the username prompt For extensive help on each of these editors type man editor at the username prompt In addition both pico and emacs have help systems available while they are running Each of these text editors 1s significantly different from the other Pico is a simple editor with basic functions such as cut and paste searching and spell checking Pico was written by the same group that wrote the e mail software pine so there are a great deal of similarities between the editor in pine and pico Within pico commands are listed at the bottom of the screen Because of its ease of use and similarity to pine pico is the default editor on Barney Programs such as tin Threaded Internet News use pico whenever an editor is needed Pico is suggested for those users that need some simple text editing without the complexity of vi or emacs Vi is a more sophisticated and complicated editor than pico It has more powerful searching capabilities can replace blocks of text jump to line numbers and
17. has News NNTP server Jnews gonzaga edu 1 2 Veri fy your e mail addre S S and click Next gt If your Internet service provider has informed you that you must log on to your news NNTP server and has provided you with an NNTP account name and password then select the check box below T My news server requires me to log on 13 Enter news gonzaga edu as your news server and click Next gt lt Back Cancel 14 Click Finish Configuring Gonzaga White Pages Directory Services 15 Click the Add button and select Directory Service 16 Enter whitepages gonzaga edu as the LDAP server and click Next gt 17 Click on Next gt to skip auto checking of addresses 18 Click Finish 19 Double click on whitepages gonzaga edu to make additional changes ci 5 whitepages gonzaga edu Properties General Advanced Server Port Number Directory service LDAP ass 20 Change the descriptive name to Gonzaga White Pages I This server requires a secure connection SL Search Search timeout 21 Click on the Advanced tab Shot log 1 minute Maximum number of matches to return 100 Search base Jo G onzaga University c US I Use simple search filter 22 Set the Search Base to o Gonzaga University c US 23 Click OK to save the changes Cancel Apply 24 Click Close to close the Internet Accounts w ndow Note You will now be asked if you want to download the curr
18. nordic 21 the rush that a skydive does If you want to stay safe stay home If Your response can be sent back to the original u Sy af at eperen rush ofyour kte goto youre DZ and wach y 300 message s 294 unread 291 not downloaded nn 2 Working Onine poster to the newsgroup itself or both Once you ve completed your message article send it by clicking on the Send button 7 Ifyou want to post a new article click on the New Post button Subscribing to Newsgroups You can read the articles within a newsgroup whether you are subscribed to the newsgroup or not subscribing to a newsgroup just makes the newsgroup easier to access Subscribing to a newsgroup tells Outlook Express to list the newsgroup in your folder list and to keep track of which articles you ve read It does not mean that you will receive mail from the newsgroup nor does it inform anyone else that you are subscribed to the newsgroup You can subscribe or unsubscribe to a newsgroup at any time amp Newsgroup Subscriptions 21x a s Accountls Display newsgroups which contain To subscribe to a newsgroup p skiing I Also search descriptions news PT Newsgroup Description Subscribe alt h2pcr2me skiing anno Unsubscribe l Launch Outl O ok Expre S S alt hipcrime skiing announ Ursii 5 rec skiing Reset List rec skiing alpine rec skiing backcountry rec skiing marketplace 2 Click on news gonzaga edu in the folder list tc king nord rec s
19. on high volume groups that can receive hundreds of new articles a day To reduce the clutter of a high volume newsgroup you can mark all the articles as read and then only view unread articles This will reduce the total number of articles listed making it much easier to browse through To hide read articles do the following 1 Open the newsgroup and read the articles you are interested in 2 When you are done reading articles Mark All Read from the Edit menu 3 Next time you open the newsgroup for reading select Hide Read Messages from the Current View sub menu of the View menu This will hide all the previously read articles A Note about Usenet and Spam Because of Usenet s distributed nature it is a prime target for spammers to post their spam on and to harvest e mail addresses to mail spam to Every time you post an article on Usenet your e mail address 1s being distributed all over the world to thousands of servers Spammers collect the e mail addresses of Usenet posters and add them to their spamming lists We attempt to block spam coming into Gonzaga but posting to Usenet will increase the likelihood that you will receive spam messages Page 20 Using Usenet News Using Telnet Telnet s amethod of connecting to a server and accessing the server s resources remotely Access s usually text based and requires some knowledge of the system you are connecting to At Gonzaga Barney and Grace can all be accessed using telnet In
20. on using Outlook Express to read and compose e mail Your E Mail Address Everyone at Gonzaga has the option of getting an account on Barney For those that are using these accounts for e mail their e mail address 1s userid gonzaga edu where userid is your account name For example if my name was Jane Doe and my userid account was jdoe my e mail address would be j doe gonzaga edu Students using other servers would put the server name and domain after the As an example if Jane were on the Grace server in Computer Science her address would be jdoe cps gonzaga edu Most students will use Barney as their e mail server so their address will end with Wgonzaga edu Locating an E mail Address for Someone at Gonzaga 3 Search for E Mail Addresses at Gonzaga Microsoft Internet Explorer Eile Edit View Favorites Tools Help It is often desirable to locate another person s e 2 gt 2 2 3243 mail address to send them mail Gonzaga has a Ades fE nie Poarey corzapnedulema WWW search engine on the Web and on Barney to look 2 for someone s e mail address based on either en Sar ri their first or last name The web based search is anaes at http barney gonzaga edu email This directory contains e mail addresses for faculty staff and current students at Gonzaga To locate an address enter the first and or last name of the person for whom you are searching select a group and then click Search Leaving a field blank will matc
21. order to use the applications on Barney or Grace you must use telnet Barney e mail is available through telnet Pine POP and IMAP both Outlook Express The ZagNet software includes a telnet client for you to use Students with PCs will use QvtNet and Macintosh users will use NCSA Telnet Configuration of the software is different on the two platforms but once you are connected to a server e g Barney the commands are all the same since the commands are being executed on the remote server not the local machine A Typical Telnet Session A telnet session begins by connecting to remote server logging into the server executing commands on the server and then logging out of the server The following 1s the list of steps required to log into Barney that will work with any telnet client The specific commands required for individual telnet clients will vary from client to client To connect 1 Launch the telnet client 2 Open a new session 3 Enter the name of the server you want to connect to e g barney gonzaga edu and begin the session 4 Log into the remote server using your account Barney or Grace Once you are connected you will typically have a command line on which to type commands These commands are then executed on the remote server Any files messages etc you see are on the remote server not your computer To disconnect l Normally you will type a command to disconnect from the system On Unix systems su
22. we on whi tepages gonzaga edud want to search your address book or the white pages and then enter the first or last name of the person you are looking for You select the address you wish to send to by hilighting the person s name and pressing lt ENTER gt Note that people are listed even if they don t have an e mail address Using Electronic Mail Pine Page 25 Creating a Signature File A signature file s a text file whose contents will automatically be appended to the end of outgoing messages It typically contains information such as your name e mail address and organizational affiliation Pine adds the signature into the message as soon as you enter the composer so you can choose to remove it on a message by message basis For example kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkxkxk Mickey Mouse Ph D President Walt Disney University 1 800 PIP SQUK MOUSE DISNEY COM kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkxk To create a signature file press M to go to the main menu then S to select a configuration option and finally S to edit your signature When you are done editing your signature press X to exit the editor and Y to save your changes You may also create a signature file in your home directory using a text editor such as pico vi or emacs This text file is the same as creating the signature directly in Pine Attachments You may attach a file to your e mail message To do this
23. EDU required elements above Once these Theresa Ketchum ketchumegu gonzaga edu 5 2 Gonzaga E Mail Managers DISTRIBUTION LIST elements are entered the alias s available DZ AddbkList FreuEntry PrevPoage 3 AddNew ComposeTa for your use Simply enter the alias in the To field of your message composer area Help g OTHER CHOS Mi ew Update Hes tEntry Hex tFage Delete Where You may also easily create a distribution list Each distribution list has a nickname a full name and a list of addresses The addresses may be actual addresses or they may be other nicknames in your address book They may even refer to other distribution lists A distribution list is created the same way as an address for a single person the only difference 1s that you enter multiple addresses on the Addresses line by separating each address with a comma Printing Your Messages To print an e mail message you must first let Pine know where you would like the message to print Type help printing at the username prompt to find the appropriate command At the Main Menu in Pine type S for Setup Once in Setup choose P for Printer You will then be given three options At this point enter arrow down to the Personally selected print command option and press lt ENTER gt When asked Command for custom printer enter the information which you retrieved from the help printing area in Unix This printer will then be used each time you print unless you choose
24. NCSA Telnet 2 Select Open Connection from the File menu 3 Type the remote server you want to connect to and click Connect Page 22 Using Telnet Using Electronic Mail Pine General Information Pine is an e mail program located on Barney and is accessible through any telnet application that supports VT100 terminal emulation or better The primary benefit of Pine over other e mail programs is that t is accessible from anywhere on the Internet Whether you are in Spokane Florence or at home if you have Internet access you can get to Pine Pine help is context sensitive In other words each Pine screen you use will have its own help text explaining the choices available for that screen Pressing the key G when composing will display the help screen for the screen you are currently viewing in Pine The bottom two lines of the screen are used to list the commands currently available If there are more commands available than will fit on a screen the O key will page through the list of available commands When composing mail and in a few other places in Pine you have to use control keys Control keys are entered by pressing the lt CTRL gt key and the appropriate letter key at the same time In Pine control key commands are shown as a followed by a letter key For example X would mean that you need to press the lt CTRL gt key and the X key simultaneously Electronic Mail Addresses Each user on the Internet has a un
25. Note If you don t have an e mail address yet you will not be able to proceed further with the configuration of Outlook Express 4 Select your preferred method for downloading e mail from Barney My incoming mail server is a IMAP a server Incoming mail POP3 IMAP or HTTP server bame gonzaga edu Note IMAP is recommended unless you will only be a rea ding mail from this computer ae a that is used for your outgoing e mail bamey gonzaga edu 5 Enter barney gonzaga edu as the incoming and outgoing mail server and then click Next gt Cancel 6 Enter your mail server username and then click Next gt This is your login name on Barney e g francis or msmith7 Warning At this point you can elect to enter and save your password If you choose to do this anyone that has access your computer will be able to read and send e mail as you Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 Page 9 7 Click Finish to save your mail account settings If this is your first account in Outlook Express you will be given the option to import information from other mail clients Unless you have information you want to import simply click Next gt and then Finish to skip importing information from other mail clients 8 If you selected IMAP as your mail server type in step 4 above do the following steps If you selected POP3 skip to step 9 a Click No when asked f you want to download a list of folders b Select Accounts from the Too
26. The disadvantage of IMAP 1s that it is slightly slower than POP because it must retrieve messages from the mail server rather than from your local hard drive POP is recommended for those users that are going to primarily read their e mail from one computer It is also recommended for those users that have older computers IMAP is recommended for those users that want full access to their e mail regardless of the computer they are using More information on IMAP and POP can be found at http www imap org A Note Regarding Outlook Express 5 02 for Macintosh The following configuration guide deals primarily with the configuration of Outlook Express for Windows The Macintosh client offers similar functionality but the layout of the windows and the configuration options are slightly different The following instructions should be sufficient to configure the Macintosh client as well Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 The configuration for Outlook Express is easiest when using the Internet Connection Wizard The wizard runs automatically when Outlook Express is launched for the first time After the initial account is created a new account can be added by selecting Accounts from the Tools menu in Outlook Express and then clicking on the Add button in the Internet Accounts window that appears and selecting Mail You can also modify the settings for your account by opening the same Internet Accounts window The information you will be entering includes
27. Use Policy The d sk space consumed by web pages counts against the total disk space allotment your account s allocated on Barney The amount of disk space your account is using is displayed each time you telnet into your account Location of Web Files on Barney The web server on Barney cannot access any of the files or directories in your account other than the directory public_html located n your root directory The public_html directory can only be accessed by the web server if the access permissions are set correctly This prevents others from accessing files in your account without your permission When your account is setup on Barney the public_html directory 1s automatically created for you with the correct permissions The file index html is the default web page within the public_html directory or any sub directory within public_html This is the web document that will be opened if no specific file is specified in the URL For example http barney gonzaga edu jdoe will display the index html file in jdoe s public_html directory while http barney gonzaga edu jdoe resume html will display the resume html file in jdoe s public_html directory It s always a good idea to have an index html in your public_html directory so people have a starting web page for your account File and Directory Permissions By default Barney makes any file you create readable and writeable only by you This 1s to protect your files from being accessed b
28. ZagNet User s Manual The Definitive Guide to Gonzaga s Student Network 2000 2001 Edition Produced by Information Technology Services Copyright 1997 2000 Gonzaga University Table of Contents Introduction and W CICOMIC eeerlenlesllen lenken lee l ZIS NE ESUPPOH DCL VIC CS ora E NNE 2 Usne the World Wide Webun an assee i 3 C nHsur ne OULOOK Express ee Hein 7 Using Electronic Mail Outlook ExpreSs cccccccccccccceceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeessseesseseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees 12 C STON TS IN S a a xe sacdcat atone tase T E oe eens ascot 17 Usine Beine beenden 21 Using Electronice Mark PINE Pererin E OE 23 Pownloaane Files Si FIP ses ken 28 Text Editors on Barney PICO VL mies nee 33 Student Web P 4868 00 Bay ee 37 Librs Onlime Library Resource ee au 39 Computer LAAT 97mall00 reellen 42 MINOT IR CCT 1 CS rs ssc er se ee 43 Puronas me 2 Eompurr nn GM ea Path ata as aes a ve an ahaa ees 45 Interne AV OL SINC eiei n en Steele ec cache onsets A eno ed E ee 47 Appendices Appendix A Acceptable Use P lteysa asn en A l Table of Contents Introduction and Welcome Welcome to ZagNet Gonzaga s student network As a user of ZagNet you have high speed access to campus computing resources the Internet electronic mail and the World Wide Web You also have a technical support team to assist you with using ZagNet should you encounter problems ZagNet alleviates the need to use a modem to dial into the library or
29. a host of other features Its power comes primarily from its ability to move to precise locations within a file using very few keystrokes This makes it an excellent editor for configuration files and source code In addition vi comes preinstalled on most UNIX systems This makes moving from one UNIX system to another easier Emacs is the most powerful of the three editors It has customized environments for writing source code in various languages allows split screens custom commands and more For those users that are going to do a lot of programming or working with large text documents in UNIX emacs can save a lot of time once the initial learning curve is completed Its sophistication is matched by its complexity The remainder of this document will focus on the vi editor Users interested in pico or emacs should refer to their respective man pages their online help or other resources Vi is a Screen oriented editor That means that the entire screen is used when editing a file In order for vi to work correctly you must be using terminal emulation that supports moving around the screen VT100 and VT220 are common emulations that support screen editing Text Editors on Barney pico vi emacs Page 33 Vi is run by either typing vi or vi filename atthe username prompt If no filename is specified vi opens a new document The characters in an empty file are used to indicate empty lines in the file Command and Input Modes Vi
30. ading POP3 mail above but open up a Inbox Outlook Express File Edit View Tools Message Help Q o x f E New Mail Reply Reply All Forward Print Delete Send Recv Addresses Find Inbox Folders x sjofel a Fom Subject Received gt Deleted Items r Stephen Barnhart E Mail Directory Change_Request 4 12 00 12 38 PM Drafts amp Bill Hebert Procmail filters for SMTP and mktemp 5 8 00 3 56 PM B A barney gonzaga edu amp Victor Carlos Julian Gantus E Mail_Directory_Change_Request St Al 6 3 00 6 06 PM fa Inbox Conrad327 aol com art gallery 6 22 00 3 21 PM i sentmail amp The SANS Institute SANS Flash Most dangerous flaw found in 7 17 00 11 47 AM E drafts EI Kelsey O Keefe End of email account 7720 00 12 20 PM A admin B7 The SANS Institute SANS FLASH For Outlook and Outlook Ex 7 21 00 3 09 PM A alumni Ea Wayne Martha Pomerleau Connecting with MOW 7 24 00 7 27 AM Bi bar A infosecurity emailch com SECURITY WIRE DIGEST VOL 2 NO 2 7 24 00 11 32 AM i cio amp Microsoft Product Security Microsoft Security Bulletin MS00 050 7 24 00 12 05 PM Bi he JA hpq From Stephen Barmhart To francis gonzaga edu A HPUXAdm Subject E Mail_Directory_Change_Request 4A listmgmt GB ma My name is 5 C Barnhart am the Grandson of Dr T C Barnhart An He was one of the founding Fathers Here would like to make contact with those who might have worked with or was a
31. aga s You can also search one of the national e mail directories for their onzaga Universit 2 E Mail Directory gt This directory contains e mail addresses for faculty name and e mail address or staff and current students at Gonzaga To locate an you can even search one of 5 address enter the first and or last name of the person Locations for whom you are searching select a group and then the web search engines like click Search Leaving a field blank will match all Alta Vista or Yahoo for a entries in that field their name Search First Name Matt For More Information on Last Name Wood Internet Explorer Yahoo E mail Search Group All 2 Student Faculty Staff Internet Explorer and the Test Heme Pabe tear World Wide Web have seagen many features that cannot be included in such a short introduction For information on these features use Explorer s built in help system To access help use the Help menu inside of Internet Explorer Page 6 Using the World Wide Web Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 Requesting an E Mail Account It s recommend that you already have your e mail account before configuring Outlook Express Accounts are available both Saturday and Monday of Fall orientation weekend on the 2nd floor of the Crosby Student Center During the rest of the year they are available in ADO16 during normal working hours What is Outlook Express 5 0 Outlook Express 5 0 provides e mail Us
32. another printer Using Electronic Mail Pine Page 27 Downloading Files using FTP Transferring files to and from Barney or other server is done using the File Transfer Protocol more commonly referred to as FTP Using FTP you can transfer files to and from Barney regardless of whether you are using a PC a Mac a UNIX server halfway around the world or any other type of computer that supports FTP How FTP Works FTP works by having an FTP client log into an FTP server Barney 1s configured as both an FTP client and server so you can both log into and out of Barney using FTP Personal computers are typically only an FTP client FTP clients can only log into FTP servers no one can log into an FTP client This is done to keep others from logging into a computer without authorization and transferring files to or from that computer FTP servers must be configured with accounts and passwords to ensure sufficient security When logging into an FTP server an FTP client must enter an account and password Many FTP servers are configured with an account called anonymous This account allows a user to login and download files from the server even though they don t have an account on the FTP server This 1s commonly used on servers that archive software such as shareware and public domain software and are commonly known as Anonymous FTP Sites Barney allows anonymous logins for downloading software used for ZagNet Once an FTP client has logged into a
33. cd Consult help in FTP for the specific command in your FTP client ASCII and Binary Files Files can either be stored as ASCII or binary files ASCII files are typically text files created by text based editors such as Notepad SimpleText vi or pico ASCII files contain only 7 bits of data per character while binary files are composed of 8 bit characters Types of binary files include applications word processor documents graphic files and most other types of files Most documents generated on a PC or a Mac are binary files A special type of Macintosh file 1s MacBinary this is a binary file that preserves Macintosh specific information for the file including the type of document and the application that created it When transferring files from a Macintosh for use on a different type of computer transfer files using plain binary rather than MacBinary When transferring files with FTP you need to set whether to transfer the file as ASCII or binary If you are unsure which method to use transfer the file using binary mode ASCII mode should typically be used for text files and files ending with uu or hqx To set ASCII mode type ascii while connected to an FTP server For binary mode type binary To determine which mode you are in type type Transferring Files Once you have connected to the remote FTP server logged in with a valid user name and password set the appropriate local and remote directories and set the correct transfer m
34. ch as Barney and Grace use the command exit Other systems may use different commands such as logout or quit 2 Quit the telnet client Using Telnet Page 21 Using Telnet Clients Included with ZagNet QvtNet Windows The following are instructions for using QvtNet to telnet To open a connection to Barney or Libris Library l Launch terminal in Start gt QvtNet 2 Select Open from the File menu to bring up the Open Session window 3 Type barney or foley and then click OK To open a connection to any other remote server 1 Launch terminal in Start gt QvtNet er an Host Name or IF Address Configuration bamey 7 amey Cancel 2 Select Open from the File menu to Hep bring up the Open Session w ndow 3 Type the remote server you want to connect to and click OK telnet Y rodin Username NCSA Telnet Macintosh o D I Run Maximized NCSA Telnet comes preconfigured for accessing Barney and Libris Library and does not require any additional configuration Opening a connection to Barney and Libris are as easy as selecting a menu item To open a connection to Barney or Libris Library Open Connection 0 fhi Open Special a lt Default gt Load Set Save Set Print Selection Page Setup P Quit 0 1 Launch NCSA Telnet 2 Select the remote server from Open Special under the File menu To open a connection to any other remote server l Launch
35. ckward one character SE Scroll forward one screen j Move down one line in same column AU Scroll backward a half screen k Move up one line in the same column D Scroll forward a half screen spc Move one right one character AN Scroll backward one line Move to first real character in previous line aie Scroll forward one line i Move to first real character in current line ate Move to first real character in the next line Context Movement Move to the end of the current line W Move forward to beginning of a word 0 Move to the first character of the current line B Move backward to beginning of a word G Goto line number 1f entered or end of file Move to the beginning of a sentence Move to the end of a sentence Movement by Search Move to beginning of prev paragraph Search forward for text following Move to beginning of next paragraph 2 Search backward for text following Inserting Text Changing Text 1 Insert before current character r char Replace current character with character a Insert after current character R text ESC Replace current character s with text I Insert at beginning of current line s text ESC Substitute current character with text A Append to end of current line S text ESC Substitute entire line with text O Insert new line above current line cw text ESC Change current word to text o Insert new line below current C text ESC Change rest of current line to text ESC Return to command mode J Join next line s to end of current lin
36. ddress indicates the person doesn t have a known e mail address Checking and Reading Mail in Outlook Express POP3 When using POP3 your mail must be downloaded from Barney to your local computer before it can be read Once it is on your local computer it can be read replied to filed and or deleted All mail folders are stored on your local hard drive All new mail 1s downloaded from Barney into your Inbox folder You can either have Outlook Express check mail for you automatically see Options under the Tools menu or you can force it to check for mail by clicking on the Send Recv in the main window Outlook Express must be running on your computer in order for it to automatically download mail Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express Page 13 WE Inbox Outlook Express OF x If you have new mail on Barney Outlook Bie ER Vow Took Meso Heb a ea x s Express will download all of the mail to your New Mail Reply Reply All Forward Print Delete M Addresses Find local computer If the messages are long or Gem a 177 ns oS Outlook Express Mail Delivery Subsy Postmaster notify User unknown contain file attachments this may take a few T i a re aa H Outbox M BEERWORT NORM C HPADM Subscribe j moments The status bar at the bottom of the ee Ines Beeren E Drafts Eroa Porr e Leo To francis gonzaga edu main window will indicate how many read a RAs c
37. e Deleting Text Copying and Placing Text x Delete current character s nyy Yank cut n lines and place in buffer X Delete previous character s p Put yanked text after cursor dw Delete current word s P Put yanked text before cursor db Delete previous word s dd Delete line s Undo n md Delete lines n through m u Undo last command D Delete from cursor to end of line U Restore current line to original state Writing Files Quitting and Resetting vi wq Write to current file and quit q Quit must save first Ww Write to current file without quitting q Quit without saving changes w file Write to new file without quitting se Re edit current file discarding unsaved changes W Write to file ignoring read only status Inserting commands will remain in insert mode until the ESC key is pressed Page 36 Text Editors on Barney pico vi emacs Student Web Pages on Barney Introduction The academic server Barney s available for hosting student created web pages Web pages located on Barney can be accessed by anyone using a browser on the World Wide Web These pages might be used for personal information student projects entertainment resumes or any other information you may wish to provide that you would like others to see Restrictions Anyone that has an account on Barney may have a web page including students clubs and employees of Gonzaga The creation and display of web pages are governed by Gonzaga University s Acceptable
38. e form n ms str 1 str2 opt This command will search from lines n to m for the string str If it finds str it will replace it with str2 depending upon the option used Options include g for global c for confirm and p for print changes For example if I wanted to search lines 100 to 200 for the string tony and replace it with toni with a confirmation of the change for each instance I would use the command 100 200s tony toni c Saving and Quitting vi When quitting vi there are several options for saving or throwing away changes to the document wq Write to current file and quit q Quit must save first Ww Write to current file without quitting q Quit without saving changes w file Write to new file without quitting e Re edit current file discarding unsaved changes W Write to file ignoring read only status Text Editors on Barney pico vi emacs Page 35 WARNING UNIX does not maintain multiple versions of a file like VAX systems do Unless you specifically write to a different file you are modifying the original file Once the changes have been written to the file there is no way to recover the previous contents of the file VI COMMAND QUICK REFERENCE Running vi Getting More Help vi Runs vi and starts a new file man vi Displays the man page for vi editor vi file Runs vi and opens file man ex Displays the man page for ex line oriented editor Scrolling Line Character Movement B Scroll backward one screen h Move ba
39. e or below the current line You can also replace existing characters blocks of characters and lines Commands are entered in command mode unless stated otherwise Remember many of these commands can be preceded with a number to indicate the number of times or count the command should be performed Inserting Text Changing Text 1 Insert before current character r char Replace current character with character a Insert after current character R text ESC Replace current character s with text I Insert at beginning of current line s text ESC Substitute current character with text A Append to end of current line S text ESC Substitute entire line with text O Insert new line above current line cw text ESC Change current word to text o Insert new line below current C text ESC Change rest of current line to text ESC Return to command mode J Join next line s to end of current line Deleting Text Copying and Placing Text x Delete current character s nyy Yank cut n lines and place in buffer X Delete previous character s p Put yanked text after cursor dw Delete current word s P Put yanked text before cursor db Delete previous word s dd Delete line s Undo n md Delete lines n through m u Undo last command D Delete from cursor to end of line U Restore current line to original state Entering a command to insert or append text will leave you in insert mode until you press the ESC key You can also search and replace text strings using a command in th
40. e other newsgroups are either regional for companies or for a very specific group Requests for adding a newsgroup that Gonzaga doesn t carry can be sent to Greg Francis at francis gonzaga edu As an example the Seattle newsgroups were added at the request of someone from the Seattle area Newsgroups designated for the posting of files such as music or images will not be carried because of the excessive disk space required to store the files What is a Newsgroup A newsgroup is a discussion area on Usenet that was created for the posting of a specific topic Topics can be anything examples include artificial intelligence the show Friends politics and skydiving Many of these newsgroups are purely for entertainment while others can yield valuable information for research projects One thing to remember about newsgroups is that anyone can post to them this means all information on Usenet should be questioned and verified In addition to the Usenet newsgroups there is a set of newsgroups that are local to Gonzaga Each of these newsgroups begin with gu to indicate it is local to Gonzaga Anything posted in one of these groups is not distributed outside of the university Topics for the Gonzaga newsgroups include announcements events and the sale of textbooks and other items Clubs and other campus organizations can request a newsgroup of their own by contacting Greg Francis at francis gonzaga edu To make finding newsgroups easier newsgroup
41. enet news and directory service access It can compose messages in html and plain text formats has an integrated spell checker and a powerful address book The next three chapters will cover the configuration and use of Outlook Express This chapter will go through the configuration the next will discuss reading and composing mail and the final chapter will discuss reading Usenet news using Outlook Express It is highly recommended that you use Outlook Express 5 0 or later The ZagNet installation process will install Outlook Express 5 01 for Windows or Outlook Express 5 02 for Macintosh These later versions have much better support for IMAP and have more extensive features than earlier versions POP or IMAP Mail Protocol Gonzaga s student mail server Barney supports two types of mail protocols POP aka POP3 and IMAP When you configure Outlook Express you will need to select either POP or IMAP This won t effect how your mail is sent or looks but it will change where it 1s stored You can always change your mind and switch the protocol you want to use later The primary difference between POP and IMAP is that POP downloads all your messages from the mail server to your local hard drive and then deletes them from the mail server IMAP keeps the mail on the server and downloads only those messages you click on to read POP s primary advantage is that all of your messages are downloaded at once It can also be configured to periodical
42. ent list of newsgroups If you choose to do so you will also be given the opportunity to subscribe to newsgroups At this point you have configured Outlook Express to read and send electronic mail access Gonzaga s Usenet news server and to be able to query Gonzaga s directory service to lookup e mail addresses for people at Gonzaga To learn how to use these services go to the appropriate chapters in this manual or use Outlook Express help system Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 Page 11 Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express Electronic mail more commonly referred to as e mail 1s one of the oldest and most popular uses of the Internet Gonzaga s electronic mail system allows you to communicate with other students faculty and staff on campus and anyone that 1s connected to the Internet either directly or through an online service such as America Online Electronic mail has historically been the most popular network service at Gonzaga Students are provided a number of e mail clients to choose from The two supported clients are Outlook Express and Pine Pine is a text based mail program on Barney accessed using telnet and is described in the section Using Electronic Mail Pine Outlook Express is a free graphical client available from Microsoft for both the Macintosh and Windows that also includes a Usenet client and other capabilities This document will provide some basic information regarding e mail and will also provide information
43. er Date Revised 10 29 98 Network and Computer Resource Acceptable Use Policy Page 2 of 2
44. ered and will help it respond quicker especially on older computers Creating Folders for Storing Mail POP3 You can create additional folders to file your mail in so it doesn t clutter your Inbox This 1s useful because it also allows you to group all the mail for one topic or person into a single location To create a folder do the following 1 Right click on Local Folders and select New Folder 2 Enter the name of the new folder and click OK The folder will now be listed in your folder list under Local Folders To save messages into this folder just drag the message from its current folder to the new folder Page 14 Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express Checking and Reading Mail in Outlook Express IMAP When using IMAP portions of your mail will reside on the remote server Barney and portions can reside on your local drive This allows you the maximum flexibility when using Outlook Express but it can also be somewhat confusing as well Reading and filing mail with IMAP is nearly identical to using POP3 with the exception that IMAP adds an additional folder set to your folder list This folder is called barney gonzaga edu It contains your Inbox on Barney and any mail folders you have on Barney as well Any folder in here is also going to be accessible from Pine Folders that reside in Local Folders are on your local hard drive and cannot be accessed by Pine To read your mail follow the same steps as you would for re
45. es To and From Barney FTP This document is also available in the ZagNet Manual Page 26 Using Electronic Mail Pine Using the Pine Address Book Pine s address book allows you to keep a list of addresses you send mail to so you do not have to remember addresses that are often complex Each entry in the address book has three required fields which are Nickname A short easy to remember label to identify the entry This is what you type in as you are addressing the message in the composer If there is a matching entry in your address book s Pine will extract the corresponding FullName and Address fields to generate the actual address for your message Fullname A longer field where you can put the full name of the person or organization Whatever you put as the name here will appear on the message when it 1s finally delivered Address The actual e mail address es E barney ganz aga edu 5 PINE 4 02 ADDRESS BOOK Folder INBOX 27 Messages 1 Admin HPUX hpux aden ine dutchworks nl To add an al as to your address book I ee i Chris Gill illeits gonzaga edu press M to go to the main menu and then u ls Devic inos deviveiros taleu o ZALININ rancis Greg gnc seco A to update your address book Press a Oe ad i Kai Dah iri kai tgu gonzaga edu the key to add an alias to the address Z ae a tel seed Matt Wood muoode ts gonzaga edu book You will be prompted for the three Novel Discussion List NOVELL LSTSERV SYR
46. file name compress file To restore a compressed file uncompress file Z UNIX Quick Reference cp Makes a copy of a file cp file newfile To copy a file into a different directory cp file directory To inquire before overwriting an existing file cp i file newfile diff Compares two files and compares the differences diff file file2 exit Ends your computer session finger Displays user information at the specified host computer finger userid host For information on people located on Barney finger userid forward To forward your mail to another account forward userid host To stop the forwarding of mail forward none ftp Starts the file transfer program with a remote computer ftp address srep Finds lines in a file matching the specified character pattern grep cin pattern file c Lists a count of the lines that matched the pattern i Ignores case n Lists line number for each line head Displays the first ten lines of a file head file To display the first n number of lines of a file head n file jobs Displays active jobs and their corresponding job numbers jobs To start a job in the background job amp To return a job to the foreground fg jobnumber To send a running job to the background lt Control gt z bg Page 43 kill Terminates a process by its process identification number pid kill pid Strongest form of kill kill 9 pid Ip Print a file to the default printer Ip file
47. full mage format Available on the GU campus network Psysch Info Psychological abstracts from 1887 to the present PubMed Access to Medline the most comprehensive index to the world s medical literature and additional biomedical information resources Sociofile Collection of citations and abstracts reflecting the world s periodical literature in sociology and related disciplines UnCover 1988 to Present UnCover is a database containing tables of contents of 10 000 plus recent journals Document delivery of articles located in UnCover is available for a fee Libris Online Library Resource Page 39 OTHER LIBRARY CATALOGS Washington State and Spokane Area Libraries Gonzaga Chastek Law Library Whitworth College Spokane Public Eastern Washington University North Idaho College University of Washington University of Idaho and other libraries Library of Congress California Digital Library REFERENCE SOURCES AND GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS e Books in Print e Dictionaries Rhyming Dictionary Roget s Internet Thesaurus WW Webster s Dictionary and others e Directories amp Phone Books AT amp T 800 Directory Canada411 Publishers Association on the Net and others e Encyclopedias Encyclopedia Britannica Online Encyclopedia Smithsonian The Catholic Encyclopedia and others e Geography CIA World Factbook The Embassy Page World Flags Country Studies and others e News CNN MSNBC Spoke
48. gin with the lowercase letter a To list files in your local directory 1 e where you are FTPing from the command will vary depending on which FTP client you are using Common ones include Ils local listing Idir local directory and Is l the executes a command on your local computer If none of these work check help while at the FTP gt prompt for a list of available commands Changing to a Different Directory Quite frequently you will want to transfer files to or from a directory that is not the default directory you logged into To change to a different directory you will use the ed command For example to change to the public_html directory in the listing above you would type cd public_html Type cd to go to the parent directory of the current directory Another option is to enter an absolute path name such as cd home staff cis francis Following are some examples of changing the current directory Downloading Files using FTP Page 29 cd manpgasc Changes to the manpgasc directory in the current directory o0 Changes to the parent directory of the current directory cd home staff cis francis Changes to the directory home staff cis francis Once you have changed to the new directory use the Is command will list the files in the new directory As with listing files in a local directory the commands for changing directories also varies depending upon the FTP client you are using The two most common options are Icd and
49. h all entries in that field If you telnet into Barney you can type mailid keyword replacing keyword with a portion of an 646 the person s name e g mailid jane would list Last Nam all of the J anes at Gonzaga Group All Student Faculty Staff C List Home Page if Known Search Page 12 Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express Gonzaga also has something called the Gonzaga White Pages These white pages can be searched from either Outlook Express or from within Pine To search the white pages from within Outlook Express do the following l Click on the Addresses icon in the main Outlook Express menu The Address Book window will appear 2 Click on Find People icon in the Address Book window 3 Select Gonzaga White Pages fromthe Look Mrs Es 1 Sr Gonzaga WhiePages sd ieee in popup menu Note If Gonzaga White Pages isn t listed go to the section titled Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 to add the directory step 15 3 Enter part of the name of the person you want to search for in the Names field For a more advanced search click on the Advanced tab Note Students that have requested confidentiality will not appear in the e mail directory If you are on the directory and would like to be removed contact Greg Francis at x6896 or francis gonzaga edu 4 Right click on the person you would like to send mail and select Send Mail from the Action sub menu A dash in place of their e mail a
50. http barney gonzaga edu Page 2 ZagNet Support Services Using the World Wide Web What is the World Wide Web The World Wide Web the Web is composed of hundreds of thousands of independent web servers containing millions of web pages that are loosely linked together These web servers are owned and operated by companies schools organizations the government and individuals There are nearly a dozen university operated web servers at Gonzaga alone Because of the distributed nature of the Web and the Internet the reliability of individual web servers may vary What may be accessible one day may be down the next Such is the nature of the Internet The Web contains information on almost every topic Since the content of the Web s created by many individuals many diverse opinions exist on the Web Content is often governed by a policy at the location where the web server is located This is the case with Gonzaga any information that 1s placed on a web server at Gonzaga whether university owned or private 1s governed by Gonzaga s Acceptable Use Policy Using Internet Explorer 5 for Web Browsing The most difficult part of using Internet Explorer as a web browser is understanding how the World Wide Web works By understanding the basics of how to access documents on the Web you are well on your way to utilizing the most common features of Explorer Understanding URLs URLs Universal Resource Locators are the addresses of the Web
51. ile To confirm prior to deleting file rm i file To recursively delete a directory rm r directory rmdir Deletes an empty directory rmdir directory To confirm prior to deleting directory rmdir i directory spell Checks the spelling of the contents of a file spell file tail Displays the last ten lines of a file tail file To display the last n number of lines of a file tail n file telnet Starts a telnet session with a remote computer telnet address tin Starts threaded Usenet news reader vi Starts the vi text editor with a file vi file Ww Displays a list of who is logged onto Barney we Counts lines words and characters in a file we file xmodem Transfer a file via modem non PPP xmodem rstb file r Receive a file fm local computer to server S Senda file fm server to local computer t Transfer a text file b Transfer a binary file ytalk Talk with another user that is logged onto a computer ytalk username host UNIX Quick Reference Purchasing a Computer If you are planning on purchasing a computer you may want to take a couple of things into consideration before making the purchase This handout doesn t attempt to offer any definite answers but it may be useful when making a purchasing decision Keep in mind that the information contained in this document was written in August of 2000 The computer market changes so rapidly that the information that was valid when this document was wri
52. in same column U Scroll backward a half screen k Move up one line in the same column D Scroll forward a half screen spc Move one right one character Y Scroll backward one line Move to first real character in previous line E Scroll forward one line Move to first real character in current line 7 Move to first real character in the next line Context Movement Move to the end of the current line W Move forward to beginning of a word 0 Move to the first character of the current line B Move backward to beginning of a word G Goto line number if entered or end of file Move to the beginning of a sentence Move to the end of a sentence Movement by Search Move to beginning of prev paragraph Search forward for text following Move to beginning of next paragraph 2 Search backward for text following A sentence is defined as a period or followed by two spaces or a new line Page 34 Text Editors on Barney pico vi emacs Remember you can cause the above commands to repeat multiple times simply by entering a number before you type the command This is especially useful with the G command as it will allow you to jump to a specific line anywhere in the file e g 100G jumps to line 100 Entering and Editing Text Vi offers several ways to insert and change text You can insert text beginning at the current character after the current character at beginning or end of the current line or insert a new line abov
53. information with information from other sources This 1s especially true when looking at a particular computer vendor You should check on the company s technical support ratings satisfaction ratings whether or not they have toll free technical support etc Purchasing a computer is a major expense and should be evaluated seriously before making a purchase Purchasing through Gonzaga University Students are able to purchase some brands of computers through the campus at reduced pricing Apple Macintosh and several brands of PCs are available at educational discounts through Purchasing For more information on purchasing through Gonzaga call Purchasing at 323 5672 Purchasing a Computer Page 45 Software There are thousands of software packages available for both the PC and Macintosh platforms The software that will be most commonly used will be word processors Internet software presentation programs and spreadsheets Most of Gonzaga has standardized on Microsoft Office for word processing Word spreadsheets Excel and presentations PowerPoint If you choose to use a different package try to select one that is able to read documents created by Microsoft Office products Microsoft Office is available in the campus bookstore Typical Configuration for Students The following are typical configurations available in August 2000 They are meant to be used as a baseline for making a purchasing decision These systems will not meet the need
54. ique address This address is composed of the user s account followed by an and then the server where the account is located For example if a user had an account of horatio ona server known to the Internet as iea com their address would be horatio iea com The user s account does not have to correspond to the user s name Most users at Gonzaga have an Internet address of username gonzaga edu For students the account is usually their first initial followed by the first seven characters of their last name For faculty the first eight characters of their last name are used for their account This will depend upon whether or not there are people with similar names When addressing mail to someone at gonzaga edu only the account name is required Gonzaga provides several ways to look up student and employee e mail addresses User s can search the web at http barney gonzaga edu email type mailid followed by a person s name while at the prompt in Barney or search the Gonzaga White Pages through Pine see below Entering and Exiting Pine To run Pine simply enter the command pine at the username prompt This will take you to Pine s main menu From there you can press I to go into your INBOX folder Using Electronic Mail Pine Page 23 Typing Q from most places in Pine will exit Pine and return you to the username prompt Pressing Z in Pine will temporarily suspend Pine Typing fg at the username prompt will resume a suspended
55. ith access to a broad range of electronic resources Students are able to create their own web pages electronically submit assignments search the World Wide Web for research and other materials run academic software applications communicate with others both on and off campus and access scholarly research materials and electronic journals all from the comfort and convenience of their rooms Available resources include student e mail the World Wide Web academic software LIBRIS the Foley Center online library catalog Encyclopedia Britannica Online the Project MUSE electronic research journal collection Bell and Howell s Proquest and other Internet resources As a part of this network access Gonzaga will provide students with limited support for computer and network software Students who need help connecting to the ZagNet network and the Internet or who have questions about using Internet Explorer Outlook Express QvtNet NCSA Telnet or Pine should call the Help Desk at x5550 to receive help The university support staff will not be able to provide support for other hardware issues or software applications For other software and hardware issues students should call the vendor s support line for assistance Further Information This manual is intended to provide a basic introduction to ZagNet services and applications More extensive information is available in the electronic manuals for the applications and on Barney s web site at
56. ity are provided primarily to support the mission of the University Users may occasionally use GUnet for personal needs as long as such use is consonant with established University policy and does not inhibit academic or administrative use of GUnet The University cannot provide and will not be responsible for software kept on personally owned computers nor are they responsible for the installation repair maintenance or upgrade of personally owned hardware Users should not leave a computer logged on if the user will be away from the computer for an extended period of time e g two hours or the computer is in an unsecured area Data on local hard drives should be secured either through password protection or physical security e g locked office when the user is not present Personal accounts are private and should not be shared with others The use of University resources including GUnet for political gain or exclusive personal gain shall not be permitted Revised 10 29 98 Network and Computer Resource Acceptable Use Policy Page of 2 g The University may restrict the use of computing and network resources This includes blocking spam messages and deleting user files and mail to conserve disk space on University owned computers Employees students and other authorized users may post electronic documents and images e g web pages for public access provided that those documents conform to policies contained within the document
57. k journal or magazine Example adventures of huckleberry fin journal of higher education SUBJECT Use when you are BROWSE e Searching the EXACT subject heading of a book journal or magazine Example art modern BROWSE Use when you are CALL Interested in browsing a CALL NUMBER SECTION Example hv1400 Assistance is available from the Foley Library Reference Desk 323 5931 If you need any help with your research through out the year Please ask the Reference Desk or call x5931 Libris Online Library Resource Page 41 Bldg Admin Admin Admin Foley Herak Herak Herak Hughes Jepson Music Rosauer 1 Hours of computer labs subject to change Room 243 134 425 ISM 220 223 103 104 137 07 101 Gonzaga University Computer Labs Fall 2000 Normal Hours 1 24 Hours TBA TBA M Th 8a 8p F 8a 5p Sat 10a 4p Sun 1p 5p TBA TBA M F 8a 10p M F 8a 5p M Th 9a 10p F 9a 5p Sat 12p 5p Sun 2p 10p Office hours M Th 8a 9p F 8a 6p Sun 6p 10p Type WinNT Mac Win98 Mac Win95 Mac Various WinNT WinNT Mac WinNT Win95 Win98 Mac Mac Win95 Software MS Office 97 Pro 2 WordPerfect 8 0 Internet Explorer MS Office 98 2 ClarisWorks 4 0 Internet Explorer MS Office 97 Pro 2 WordPerfect 8 Netscape MS Office 98 2 Netscape Desktop Publishing MS Office 97 Pro 2 Internet Explorer MS Office 98 2 Clarisworks Internet Explo
58. kiing resorts europe rec skiing resorts misc rec skiing resorts north a ter skiing snnwhnard Subscribed 3 Click on the Newsgroups button in the right pane A Newsgroup Subscriptions window appears that lists all the newsgroups on the current news server in this case news gonzaga edu 4 Youcan either enter a filter in the Display newsgroup that contain box or you can scroll through the list to select a newsgroup 5 Click on the newsgroup s you want to subscribe to and click subscribe Using Usenet News Page 19 6 Once you are done subscribing to newsgroups click the OK button While there are many thousands of groups there is not one for every topic imaginable so you may not be able to find the topic you are interested in If that s the case you might look for a more general topic newsgroup that would be appropriate for the discussion of the topic you have in mind Unsubscribing from Newsgroups If you are no longer interested n reading a particular newsgroup you can easily unsubscribe from it To unsubscribe from a newsgroup simply click on the newsgroup name in the folder list right click and select Unsubscribe from the pop up menu This will remove the newsgroup from your folder list and delete any information about the newsgroup from Outlook Express Dealing with High Volume Newsgroups When you re reading a newsgroup there will often be messages that you don t read This is especially true
59. l Launch Internet Explorer 2 Select Open from the File menu 3 Enter the URL to open and click OK Explorer will attempt to contact the web server where the web page described by the URL is located If the web server is busy unavailable or doesn t exist Explorer will report an error If this happens verify that you entered the URL correctly and try again or wait and try again later Links computer labs and other really cool things No doubt you will wa parser If you have any questions feel free to e mail me at francisi One of the most powerful features of the World Wide Web and the reason that it s called a web 1s the ability for one web page to link to another web page A link is created by embedding a URL within a web page These links to other pages are normally indicated on the web page as underlined colored text typically blue By clicking on the link Internet Explorer will attempt to locate the server for the link s URL and load the new web page This is just as f you had manually entered the URL in the Open dialog box e 2ae bet Information e 2ae bet Documentation Barney Accessing E Mail with IMAP Barney Frequently Asked Questions Coming Soon Bamey Documentation Computer Lab Information Accessing Usenet Hews Download applications from local FTP server e Creatine Mailing Lists at Gonzaga pre information is on the way I m always open to new ideas so if These links are not limited to linking to
60. lent way to store e ersonal rad a ty Bi l jul 1998 sentmail jun 1998 mail Messages for later use and are highly Help Cletmlist FreuFldr PreyvPage Add Rename OTHER CHOS 4 iew Fidel Mnextriar SMM Nextrage A Delete unerel recommended for those that want to keep F l l l their e mail messages after reading them Sending E Mail To send an e mail message type C to compose You will be prompted for the primary recipient s address To other recipients addresses Cc files to attach Attchmnt and the message subject Subject Any of these may be left blank except the To field After scrolling through the top options with the lt ENTER gt key or the down arrow you will see the cursor resting in the Message Text area It is in this area which you enter your message When you are ready to send the message simply press X Control X to Send You will then be prompted with Send Message At this point you will either type in Y for Yes or N for No N will take you back to the message editing area If you wish to cancel the message without sending it press C for Cancel at the message editing area When the cursor is at the To or Cc field C harmey gonzaga edu 5 you can search either your address book or FIHE 4 02 COMPOSER SELECT ADDRESS Folder IMEOX 276 Messages addressbook the Gonzaga White Pages by pressing T Personal AddressBook in addressbook 1 N Gonzaga White Fages After pressing im select whether you u ren
61. ls menu i Ba i i General Servers Connection Security Advanced IMAP Folders Root folder path I Check for new messages in all folders c Double click on the barney gonzaga edu mail account Special Folders IV Store special folders on IMAP server d Click on the IMAP tab wa Drafts path drafts sts e Uncheck Check for new messages in all folders f Ifyou want to save your sent mail on Barney check Store special folders on IMAP server and enter sentmail as your Sent Items folder and drafts as your Drafts folder Note The good thing about keeping your outgoing mail in a folder on Barney is that it will be accessible from anywhere The downside is that it will take longer to send messages and it will count toward your 40MB disk limit on Barney g Click OK to save your settings h Click Close to close the Internet Accounts w ndow 1 When asked if you want to refresh your folder list click Yes j Enter your password and click OK Note If you have requested your account but it hasn t been created yet you will receive an error that you could not connect to your account on Barney Configuring Usenet News 9 Select Accounts from the Tools menu Page 10 Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 10 Click onthe Add button and select News Internet News Server Name 1 Verl fy your name and click Next gt ir ore of the Internet news NNTP server your Internet service provider
62. ly check the mail server for new mail Since it connects only periodically any mail that has already been downloaded to your local computer can be read even if the network is down or the mail server is offline The disadvantage of POP is that once the messages are downloaded to your local hard drive you can t read the downloaded mail from another computer e g another room or from a computer lab This disadvantage can be diminished by turning on the Leave messages on server option but this means that you re keeping two copies of every message not very economical Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 Page 7 IMAP is a newer protocol that was designed with the premise that the client computer you are always connected to the network and that the mail server is always available It keeps all of the messages on the mail server and only downloads the header information for the mail messages subject sender recipient and length When the user clicks on a message IMAP downloads the rest of the message from the mail server for display but doesn t delete it from the server IMAP also allows you to utilize mail folders on the server for filing messages These folders are compatible with Pine so that all of your mail is available not only from Outlook Express but from Pine and through the web coming January 2001 as well This is advantageous if you want to be able to read and file mail from other computers besides your own including computers off campus
63. n FTP server the user is able to view file directories download and upload files to the server and even delete files if they have proper authorization Logging into an FTP Server How you log into an FTP server will depend on whether you are using a command line interface such as UNIX or a graphical interface such as Mac or Windows From UNIX e g Barney or other command line interface you would type ftp server_name e g ftp barney gonzaga edu to log into the specified server If a successful connection occurs you will be prompted for your username and password If you are connecting with an anonymous FTP site type anonymous for the username and your e mail address as the password If you have entered a valid username and password you will then have a prompt from which to enter commands barney gonzaga edu Graphical FTP Clients Graphical user interface GUI operating systems such as Mac and Windows normally don t require you to enter commands directly Regardless of the FTP client software you use on a GUI computer 1K 08 17 97 Automatic ml Text Binary Page 28 Downloading Files using FTP you must first open a connection and then enter a username and password Once you have logged in you will typically be able to browse files and directories just as you would on your local hard drive Many of the following instructions have little relevance to GUI users since they typically do
64. n t need to enter commands directly Some FTP client software for GUI computers e g WinQVT for Windows does require the entering of commands Listing Files and Directories When you are connected to an FTP server you can view a listing of files on that server by entering the command Is or dir This will list all of the files and directories in the current directory If you FTP into Barney the current directory starts as your home directory Here is a typically listing from Is Lw r r 1 francis cis 21103 Aug 6 13 28 ANSYS52 drwx 2 francis cis 1024 Aug 12 08 40 Mail drwxr xr x 2 francis cis 1024 May 31 08 17 bin rw r r 1 francis cis 27 May 29 15 11 forward drwxr xr x 2 francis Cis 1024 Aug 2 17 56 manpgasc drwxr xr x 10 francis cis 2048 Aug 5 15739 public html E a 5 1 francis cis 153238 Jul 10 16 27 unx staff lis aA a a 1 francis cis 458473 Jul 10 16 27 unx students lis Those lines that begin with a d indicate directories e g Mail and bin above and those that begin witha are files e g forward above The number near the center of each listing e g 153238 for unx_staff lis is the size of the file in bytes Finally the name of the file or directory is at the far right of the listing e g public_html If there are a great deal of files in the current directory you can limit the listing to a select group of files by setting criteria for the Is command For example Is a would list only those files that be
65. nloading articles to read The following instructions assume that you have already set up the news server news gonzaga edu when configuring Outlook Express in Chapter 5 of this manual Another newsreader called tin is available if you telnet into Barney To read articles in Usenet news do the following 2 2 4 a New Post Rent troup Reni Fonverd Are Stop l Open Outlook Express Ba De reagan veal cette 2 Click on news gonzaga edu in the folder list amp sentmai eb 2000 12 A sentmail jan 2000 16 Newsgroup Unread Total Synchronization Settings 4 sentmail mar 2000 1 alt books tom clancy 154 157 O New messages only 4 spam alt os windows95 crash cr 0 0 O New messages only 4 subscriptions 15 alt tv buffy v slayer 703 703 New messages on security unix 33 33 O Newm 3 Expand the newsgroup list by clicking on the A spp 1 N han ea minus sign next to news gonzaga edu on the PC 2 web 2 e news gonzaga edu Or the small triangle on a Mac 9 alt books tom clancy alt os windows95 crash c A alt tv buffy v slayer 7 comp securi ty unix 3 A tec skiing j 4 To read the articles in a newsgroup click on the a name of the newsgroup you want to read et Note If you aren t currently subscribed to any newsgroups Outlook Express will ask you if you want to download a list of newsgroups Outlook Express will download the articles for the newsgroup you
66. ode ASCII or binary you are ready to transfer files To transfer files to the FTP server from where you logged in from use the send command To transfer files from the FTP server to where you logged in use the reev command Using either send or recv you specify the name of the file you want to transfer For example to send a file named sample from the local computer to the FTP server you would type send sample Some FTP clients allow you to use wildcards such as to transfer many files at once others do not Depending on the size of the file being transferred the time needed to transfer the file can take a second to several hours Gonzaga s Internet connection is sufficient to transfer most files in Page 30 Downloading Files using FTP under five minutes unless the file is very large If transferring files between two computers on GUnet Gonzaga s network or ZagNet Gonzaga student network the transfer time will be even shorter If transferring files over a modem transfer times can be several hours for large files If you need to transfer additional files to or from the same FTP server change the directories and file types as needed and then transfer the files There is no limit to the number of times that the directory and file type can be changed in a single session If desired a file transfer can usually be canceled by pressing Control C Disconnecting from an FTP Server When you have completed transferring files to or from the
67. omp lang java hell rec arts movies revi Greetings messages you have a ii uric Cnt Ar ali aa reali WO eg S rec skydiving Tam in ira process of a The Bible h Paint Art Gallery Thope an eventually acquire one oil on canvas painting representing each verse of the King J ona bible This would make a ak in the collection sd Ihave not yet decided on a location for this gallery After I obtain a To read the mail n your Inbox do the following reasonable number ofthe paintings I will approach several major cities for possible location sites and we will decide on a location based on many different factors I would like to invite any of your students who would like to donate a 1 L h O k E m des A this aree a me by no nn must of H gt ormed size an need to assign a specific bible verse to eac x aune ut O O Xp re S S 121 message s 117 unread 25 are Online Ui 2 Click on the Inbox in your folder list 3 Ifyou check mail manually click the Send Recv button to download your new mail 4 Click on the message that you want to read The text of the message will appear below 5 Once you ve read the message you can delete it by clicking on the Delete icon at the top of your Inbox window or you can file it into another folder by clicking on the File icon Note It is recommended that you either delete the mail from your Inbox or file it to another mailbox if you want to keep it for later use This keeps your Inbox unclutt
68. operates in two different modes command and input The input mode is used while inserting text into the file Some commands are available in input mode but most are only available in command mode Command mode is used for moving around the file deleting or inserting blocks of text and saving the file In addition command mode can be used to execute shell commands such as Is and more The ESC escape character is used to enter command mode from input mode ESC can also be used within command mode to cancel a command that has been partially entered Input mode is entered by i nserting or a ppending text When entering a command in command mode entering a number before the command will cause the command to repeat that number of times For example entering B scrolls the file back one screen and entering 5 then B would scroll the screen back five screens Note the indicates that the CTRL control is held down while pressing the letter Moving Around Within a File As stated previously one of the greatest strengths of vi is its ability to move around within a text file using a minimum of keystrokes You may move by character word sentence paragraph and page Following are some commands that can be used to move around within a file These commands only apply while in command mode Scrolling Line Character Movement B Scroll backward one screen h Move backward one character F Scroll forward one screen j Move down one line
69. ory Server whitepages gonzaga edu Web Server http barney gonzaga edu This is the web server where student web pages are located The official Gonzaga web server is http www gonzaga edu Internet Worksheet Page 47 ZagNet Information for Residence Halls Location 301 Boone 801 Boone Alliance B ren Campion Crimont Cushing Desmet Dooley Dussault iEub ole ow lal Madonna Rebmann Roncal Ji Ste Catherine St Monica Sharp Apt House Welch Chardin Page 48 Internet Worksheet Network and Computer Resource 3 7 nr ts De Zu Sel ee Acceptable Use Policy GONZAGA UNIVERSITY Section 1 Introduction aj bj c dj This policy is established to make users of Gonzaga University s computing resources aware of their privileges and responsibilities This policy is established to maximize the value of those resources to the university community while permitting maximum freedom of use consistent with law the University s mission statement the Student Handbook the Personnel Policies and Procedures Manual the Faculty Handbook and a productive environment Any use of Gonzaga University computing resources which violates policies contained in these manuals and handbooks also violates this policy nothing in this policy shall contradict existing University policy Violation of this policy can result in reprimand reduction or loss of computing privileges and or referral to University authoritie
70. other web pages They can also refer to an e mail address a file to be downloaded an audio or video clip etc These are all special forms of URLs that help make the World Wide Web a rich environment For example the Downloads web page on Barney http barney gonzaga edu tech download html is a list of links that will download files from Barney through anonymous FTP if they are clicked on Bookmarks There are millions of web pages on the World Wide Web ENE Add Page to Faworites Among those you will find a number of pages that you organize Favorites want to return to later Rather than write down the URL e aaa and manually enter it each time you want to go to that earch Search for E Mail Addresses at Gonzaga web page you can create a bookmark for that page A Search for Personal Web Pages at Gonzaga AltaVista Main Page bookmark remembers the URL and the title of the page m and stores th s informat on n a bookmark file These SEARCH COM bookmarks are available under the Favorites menu Page 4 Using the World Wide Web To add a web page to your bookmarks do the following Favorites Add Page to Favorites Organize Favorites 1 Go to the web page you wish to bookmark Update Subscriptions Subscribe Search for E Mail Addresses at Gonzaga Search for Personal Web Pages at Gonzaga 2 Select Add to Favorites from the Favorites menu AltaVista Main Page E Infoseek Yahoo E SEARCH
71. pping Travel YellowPgs Maps Media News Sports Stock Quotes TV Weather Connect Chat Clubs Games GeoCities Greetings Mail Members Messenger Personals People Search For Kids more Using any of these search engines cries you can do a keyword search that will effectively search millions of web pages in just a few seconds The search engine returns a list of links that match your search criteria The better the search In the News Russia attempts to rescue crew of downed sub US urges quick Supreme Court review of Microsoft case Live Democratic national convention in Los Angeles more Yahoo Shopping Thousands of stores Millions of products Departments Stores Features Apparel The Sports Authority Luxury Dell Computers Bluefly Electronics 1 800Flowers Back to School Custom coffee Gift ideas Yahoo Wallet Beauty Sports Music Video DVD criteria you enter the better the search results For example searching for Word help would return many thousands of hits but searching for Microsoft Word printing problem makes the search more specific Arts amp Humanities Literature Photography Business amp Economy B2B Finance Shopping Jobs Computers amp Internet Internet WWW Software Games Education Using the World Wide Web News amp Media Full Coverage Newspapers TV Recreation amp Spor
72. re your messages n other than the INBOX folder To create a folder press L to list your folders At this point a new screen will appear with the word Mail highlighted Pressing the lt ENTER gt key will list on the folders in your Barney account If you wish to add a new folder press A for Add Pine will ask you the Folder name to add Type in the name for the folder and press lt ENTER gt You will see the name of the new folder added to your expanded folder list Page 24 Using Electronic Mail Pine You may save a message to a folder either while you are reading the message or while you have the message highlighted in the message index In either of these situations press S to save You will then be prompted with a message similar to SAVE to folder in Mail postmaster Type the name of the folder you wish to save the message in and press lt ENTER gt Your message will be moved to the new folder and marked for deletion in the current folder barney gonzaga edu 5 EEE You can switch between folders by FINE 4 02 FOLOER LIST en pressing L andthen lt ENTER gt to get Local folders in Mail i Savadmassages ect Create the list of folders then using the arrow HPUX su 0 Id I NEO a alana keys to select the folder you want to calvin commar ts g guinte open and then pressing Enter again to Humor i ee open the selected folder ae Here mac cs macs ist mfiesta l migrateproc rie netscape nen news novel Folders are an excel
73. rer Dynamic configuration to meet class needs MS Office 97 2 Netscape Visual Studio 6 0 MS Office 2000 MS Project AutoCAD Visio Express Netscape Internet Explorer MathCAD Matlab Ansys and other Engineering Applications Biology software MS Office Pro 2 Netscape Internet Explorer MS Project Borland C Microsoft Visual C 6 0 MS Office 97 2 Netscape Music Composition MS Office 98 2 Netscape Music Composition MS Office 98 2 ClarisWorks Internet Explorer SPSS Netscape PageMaker Photoshop educ software 2 MS Office includes Word Excel PowerPoint MS Office Pro also includes Access database software 3 Some computer labs charge for printing to laser or color printers Contact that lab for details Page 42 Print 3 DotMat Laser Laser Laser DotMat Laser Laser DotMat InkJet Laser Color Plotter Laser Laser Color Laser Laser Restrictions Lab closed occasionally for classes Lab hours dependent upon tutor availability Comm Arts students have 24 hr access Open during library hours Access limited to certain classes Lab hours dependent upon workstudy avail Must have a lab account Engineering students only Engineering students have 24 hr access Biology classes and students only Lab closed occasionally for lectures Music students only Educational students have priority Contact Vicki Craigen x5552 Donna Campbell x6676 John Caputo x6656
74. runk 2 743 HPADM ulimit and bl specifically to you Ifno 1s shown you are SAS Sidnio ee SP paben poche sair Tg Upata i 144 Hel FidrList PreuM PrevP Delet Repl not the primary recipient of the message The OTHER cros Tutemeg nocnsg Nextar Undelete Farar two most common reasons for receiving a message not addressed specifically to you is if the message 1s from a mailing list you are a member of or if the message was CC d carbon copied to you Choose the message you wish to read by highlighting it using the up or down arrow keys Once the appropriate message 1s selected press the gt or lt ENTER gt key to view the message To scroll through the message you may use the arrow keys or the key for the previous page and the space bar for next page of a long message While you are either reading the message or while you have the message highlighted in the index you may press R to reply to the message F to forward the message or D to delete the message Messages marked for deletion will not be purged until you exit Pine You may undelete a message that hasn t been purged yet by pressing the U key If you do not delete the message or move it to another folder it will remain in your INBOX folder To return to the index of mail press I Pressing P will move you to the previous message and N will move you to the next message in your INBOX Creating Using Folders Pine gives you the opportunity to create folders to sto
75. s for disciplinary action Violation of law may result in referral to appropriate authorities This policy provides general guidelines regarding the use of GUnet Refer to http www gonzaga edu tech aup for specific examples of acceptable and unacceptable uses of GUnet as defined by this policy Section 2 Definitions aj bj ic dj e iff GUnet the physical network media and the attached computers and software owned or controlled by the University GUnet includes ZagNet the student network connecting the residence halls to the campus network Internet the global computer network composed of millions of computers and thousands of networks Logged on connected to a service with a non public user identification e g personal account Resource any computing device peripheral software or related consumable e g paper disk space central processor time network bandwidth owned or controlled by the University Service any software that makes a computer s files or other locally stored information available for use by another computer or facilitates the transfer of data between two remote computers Services include but are not limited to web file and e mail server software Spam unsolicited mass e mail for the purpose of advertising a service personal gain or other inappropriate use Section 3 General Usage Statement aj bj c dj ie Network and computing resources at the Univers
76. s are given names that group them into categories and subcategories For example rec skydiving means the subject of skydiving in the recreation category Newsgroup names can get fairly complex for example rec arts sf tv babylon5 info is for information on the science fiction television show Babylon 5 Fortunately newsgroup names are searchable making it much easier to locate topics of interest Using Usenet News Page 17 A Note about Usenet Etiquette Since art cles posted to Usenet are distributed to thousands of news servers around the world and can be read by millions of people it s important that users understand how to post correctly and that they understand proper Usenet etiquette Before posting you should look at the articles in news announce newusers and news answers One particularly good article is A Primer on How to Work With the Usenet Community by Chuq Von Rospach This article is posted frequently in both news announce newusers and news answers it is also located on Barney s web site at http barney gonzaga edu tech usenetcommunity html Breaking the rules of Usenet can result in a lot of hostile mail called flames from other users on Usenet Using Usenet can be fun and informative but it s important to be knowledgeable about posting and be prepared to have your opinions blasted by others that disagree with you Using Outlook Express to Read Usenet News Outlook Express is capable of connecting to a Usenet news server and dow
77. s listed in Section 1 b and United States and international copyright law Section 4 Unacceptable Uses aj bj c dj ie g hj it thy tk Using GUnet for any unlawful activity Sending spam or creating or retransmitting chain e mail messages Sending e mail from another user s account Altering the header of an e mail message to prevent the recipient from determining the actual sender of the e mail Logging into or using any computer account or accessing modifying or creating any files without the account owner s permission Introducing new services or resources e g personal web server or altering existing services or resources e g registering personal domain name on GUnet without the approval of Information Technology Services Transmitting without authorization information proprietary to the University or information that could be construed as a statement of official University policy position or attitude Distributing information encouraging the patronage of network sites containing material prohibited by policies contained within the documents listed in Section 1 b Wasting resources such as print services disk space and network bandwidth Intercepting network traffic without authorization Using GUnet for any activity that results in degradation of University provided services denies services to other GUnet users or jeopardizes the security or capabilities of GUnet Section 5 Privacy aj
78. s of everyone PC w Windows 95 98 Minimum Recommended Processor Intel Celeron 600 MHz Pentium II 700 MHz Memory 64 MB RAM 96 MB RAM Hard Disk 4 3 GB 6 4 GB CD ROM 40x DVD Monitor 15 SVGA 17 SVGA Modem 56 kbps v 90 56 kbps v 90 Sound 16 bit SoundBlaster 32 bit SoundBlaster Network SMC 9432TX SMC 9432TX Macintosh Minimum Recommended Processor iMac or G3 PowerMac iMac 333 or G4 PowerMac Memory 64 MB RAM 96 MB RAM Hard Disk 4 0 GB 6 4 GB CD ROM Standard Speed DVD Monitor 15 Color 17 Color Modem 56 kbps v 90 56 kbps v 90 Sound Built in Built in Network Built n Built in Most consumer computer models come with either a modem or no communication device In order to use ZagNet you will need to purchase a 10BaseT Ethernet card separately see note below Some manufacturers either include an Ethernet card or include it as an option Apple includes Ethernet with all new Macintosh computers To access ZagNet you must have an Ethernet card Gonzaga will support only SMC PC and Apple or Asant Mac 10BaseT Ethernet cards If you are not planning to connect to ZagNet or other network then an Ethernet card is not necessary Page 46 Purchasing a Computer Internet Worksheet Introduction Every computer connected to ZagNet requires certain address information that will uniquely identify it to the network and will allow it to communicate with other computers on the Gonzaga campus and the Internet The following work
79. sheet will determine the values for your computer Basic Configuration Information The following information is required in order for your Internet connection to work properly IP Address 147 222 e g 147 222 131 125 The IP address is the unique identifier for your computer It is a series of four numbers separated by periods The periods are required whenever using an IP address All IP addresses on campus begin with 147 222 For residence halls the third number specifies the residence hall see back of this form and the fourth number is the specific port number in the residence hall The port number is written on the wall jack where you connect the network cable Router Gateway Address 147 222 254 e g 147 222 131 254 The router gateway address is unique for each residence hall Only the third number of the four is different depending upon the residence hall The router gateway addresses for each of the residence halls is on the back of this form The following information is the same for each of the residence halls Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 This is also known as a Class C address DNS Name Server Address 147 222 1 253 Backup DNS Server 147 222 2 253 Search Domain gonzaga edu Additional Information The following information is used by various Internet applications such as e mail clients Usenet news clients etc SMTP POP Server barney gonzaga edu NNTP News Server news gonzaga edu LDAP Direct
80. sman Review UNCG s News amp Newspapers Online and others e Quotations Bartlett s Book of Familiar Quotations and The Commonplace Book e Style Manuals Citing Electronic Resources Elements of Style and Pitsco s Launch to Citing WWW Addresses e Miscellaneous Nobel Prizes and Statistical Abstract of the United States YOUR LIBRARY RECORD Enter your library card number found on the your GU ID card not your social security number and view your library record items checked out overdue on hold and fines You can even renew books you have checked out INTERLIBRARY LOAN If you need a book or article that 1s not located at the Foley Library you can request to have them sent to you from another library Request forms for interlibrary loan of books or articles can be found at http www foley gonzaga edu ill index html This process can take one to two weeks and is free to Gonzaga students Page 40 Libris Online Library Resource GU Catalog Searching Tips BASIC COMMANDS KEYWORD Use when you are e Looking for a particular subject Example gonzaga university Unsure of the exact wording of a title keyword search Example gone wind AUTHOR OR Use when you are NAME Looking for something BY OR ABOUT a person Example crosby bing or bing crosby Looking for something BY or ABOUT an organization Example central intelligence agency TITLE Use when you are BROWSE e Searching the EXACT title of a boo
81. student of his Contacts 7 x i My e mail add Starwalkn earthlink net There are no contacts to display Click on Contacts to create a new contact Phone 360 357 8703 Olympia Wa Thank you 10 messagels 0 unread jo Working Online the Inbox in barney gonzaga edu instead of the one in Local Folders The same applies for creating mail folders and filing mail You can create mail folders either on Barney or your local drive If you want it to be available from Pine create the folder in barney gonzaga edu Composing New Mail Outlook Express makes it easy to compose new e mail messages It includes an address book feature the ability to easily attach files to messages and also the ability to copy text from a word processor directly into an e mail message To create a new message do the following 1 Launch Outlook Express E Composing e mail in Outlook Express Fie Edit View Insert Format Tools Message Help 2 Clickthe New Mail icon or select Mail Message from the New sub menu of the File menu An empty message window will appear 3 Enter the recipient s address in the To field To enter multiple addresses just press the Enter key Outlook Express will add additional lines as needed Using Electronic Mail Outlook Express AB 3 Ban a5 aaa E Send sat Copy Paste Undo Check Spelling Attach Priority Sign Encrypt Offline To heipdesk gonzaga edu BE Subject Composing e mail in Dutlook
82. ts Reference Libraries Dictiomarie s Quotations Regional Marketplace Y Auctions Pokemon Longaberger Hello Kitty Yahoo Careers search over a million jobs New on DVD Cider House Rules Erin Brockovich more Broadcast Events 3 30pm ET Democratic National Link http www yahoo com r de 4 Page 5 Here are some search engines you may find useful http www altavista com http www go com http www yahoo com http www lycos com Yahoo http www yahoo com has an extensive list of search engines on their web site To find the list go to Yahoo and search for search engines Finding E Mail Addresses on the Web While there is no master directory of e mail addresses on the Web many organizations maintain online e mail directories for their employees and for universities their students Gonzaga provides such a directory at http barney gonzaga edu email This page also has links to several sites that search the Internet for e mail addresses and add them to their databases similar to how web search engines build their databases Search for E Mail Addresses at Gonzaga If you are looking for the 2 P an DB e mail address of a specific BE gt EE e e http barney gonzaga edu email 90 person you Can see if the Live Home Page Apple Computer a GU Network Into HF Support SETI company they work at or EB the school they attend has an online directory like Gonz
83. tten may not apply today Considerations There are a number of things to keep in mind when purchasing a computer These include what field you are entering whether or not you will be working on a network what type of work you will be doing on the computer and how often you can afford to replace the computer You should also take into consideration the entertainment side of computers since many personal computers that are purchased for business purposes are also used to play games Who to Ask You might think that the logical answer would be one of the computer gurus down the hall a computer support person at Gonzaga or a salesperson at a computer store While they may give you an abundance of technical details about computers they may not necessarily know your needs The best source of information can be from those people that are working in the same field they often have experience in areas you Il be working and they may have gone through the same ordeal themselves Professors can also be a good source of information they should know the current needs of their field and should be able to give you some good pointers You might also try local user groups the people that often attend user group meetings are new computer owners from all walks of life Other sources of information include computer magazines trade journals and the Internet The most important thing to consider when asking others for their recommendations is to back up their
84. ve set the access permissions correctly others may access your pages The URL Universal Resource Locator for your default web page is http barney gonzaga edu youruserid For example if your userid was jdoe the URL for your default page would be http barney gonzaga edu jdoe Your default page is named index html and is located in your public_html directory on Barney Other pages can be accessed directly by entering the name of the web page after your user id For example http barney gonzaga edu jdoe resume html would display the file resume html in your public_html directory Creating HTML Documents Web pages are commonly referred to as HTML documents because they use the HyperText Markup Language HTML to provide formatting information There are many programs that can create HTML documents including Netscape Navigator 3 0 Gold Netscape Communicator 4 0 Claris Home Page Microsoft Office 97 and earlier versions with free plug ins from Microsoft and dozens of other programs Since HTML documents are simply text documents with special tags to provide formatting information they can also be created using text editors and word processors These include text editors on Barney such as pico vi and emacs How you create the documents is arbitrary and depends on your preferences The web server on Barney doesn t care which program created the web page as long as it is in the correct format There are dozens of books on creating web pages
85. y others unless you specifically give them permission to read the files In order for a web page to be readable by the web server the file and the directory it is in must have public read permissions When using FTP to transfer files to Barney Barney will automatically create the file with global read privileges so that you don t have to change these privileges manually Student Web Pages on Barney Page 37 To make a file readable by everyone type chmod 644 filename at the prompt replacing filename with the actual name of the file to set To make a directory readable by everyone type chmod 755 directoryname at the prompt Type man chmod for more information regarding the chmod command Transferring Files to Barney HTML documents may be created directly on Barney or may be created on a different computer and then uploaded to Barney Files can be uploaded to Barney using FTP if there is a direct connection e g your computer is on ZagNet or modem PPP connection 1 e connecting via Verio Northwest or other ISP between your computer and Barney If you are connecting over a modem and are not using PPP the file may be uploaded using a modem transfer protocol For more information on transferring files to Barney see the section titled Downloading Files from Barney using FTP or the handout Downloading Files from Barney using a Modem Accessing Student Web Pages from the World Wide Web Once you have placed your web pages on Barney and ha
86. your e mail address and name various server addresses and other details Multiple users can use the same computer by creating multiple Identities This manual does not include instructions on setting up identities or other advanced options Refer to the Help menu in Outlook Express for information on additional configuration options Page 8 Configuring Outlook Express 5 0 Configuring E Mail To configure Outlook Express do the following l Launch Outlook Express You may receive a warning that Outlook Express is not your default mail client If you are only using Outlook Express on this computer you will probably want to make it the default mail client 2 Enter your name and then click the Next gt button If Outlook Express launches directly to ts main window at least one account has already been created A ZagNet technician or someone else may have already created the account for you or Outlook Express might have been installed and configured prior to your arrival at Gonzaga You can see whether you already have the account configured by selecting Accounts from the Tools menu clicking on the Mail tab and examining the list of mail accounts If you already have one setup then you can probably ignore the remaining steps If you aren t sure create a new account by selecting Accounts from the Tools menu clicking on Add button in the Internet Accounts windows and selecting Mail 3 Enter your e mail address and click Next gt

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