Text of TeleFinder Chat from Friday, October 24, 1997 11 AM PDT.

In attendance:

From Spider Island: Rusty Tucker,

Sysops: Michael Davidson, mikael fredriksson, Jim Smith, Ken Sutherland, Bob Nunn, Donald McHose



Rusty Tucker: Hi Jim!

Rusty Tucker: hey

Jim Smith: Hi Rusty.

Michael Davidson: Hi Rusty, Jim.

Michael Davidson: I didn't think you were going to be here today Rusty. How did the conference go?

Rusty Tucker: It was pretty good. got a lot of insight into what different newspapers want to do online.

Michael Davidson: Cool. that would be an important market.

Rusty Tucker: I made a little presentation about what I though would be a good approach - kind of a combination Hotmail/Newsite/BBS/ISP

Michael Davidson: Did you get any potential customer leads ?

Michael Davidson: How did that go over?

Rusty Tucker: The people there are mostly TF users to begin with

Michael Davidson: O, that's not bad either

Rusty Tucker: Good, got a lot of heads scratching :)

Michael Davidson: LOL

Michael Davidson: ISP seems like a weird component, but I use an ISP that is from a newspaper

Ken Sutherland: good evening all

Rusty Tucker: The ISP component is important now since Web Access is not universal yet

Michael Davidson: The BBS component would be real nice too for local newspaper subscribers

Rusty Tucker: Once it is, they can drop that part

Bob Nunn: I agree and the pieces are getting cheaper to get there. I would love to be able to offer a low cost or free access to the local kids.

Rusty Tucker: For smaller papers I would offer free dial-up TCP access to the local data/email only

Michael Davidson: Are many newspapers into becoming ISP's (like i said, I use one that is)

Rusty Tucker: Yes, as it turns out Knight-Ridder is into the ISP biz a little bit to

Donald McHose: The N.C Charlotte Observer has become a rather large one

Michael Davidson: Is that Knight-Rider, the communications program of old?

Rusty Tucker: They made a presentation about their sites ( SJ-Merc etc ) that was pretty close to my own thoughts.

Michael Davidson: or is that a newspaper chain

Rusty Tucker: They're a news paper publisher, very big

Jim Smith: The local newspaper, which is part of Knight-Ridder, does, however its king of sub for KR.

Jim Smith: kind - king

Michael Davidson: What main component do they want from TF Rusty that it doesn't yet have?

Rusty Tucker: As I was doing research for the presentation I found out that HOTMAIL is now bigger than AOL!

Michael Davidson: whoa...and I know almost nothing about hotmail...tell me something about it

Bob Nunn: And AOL has them in their filter list for spam still

Rusty Tucker: Something like 8 Million + subscribers!

Rusty Tucker: :) surprised not at all!

Rusty Tucker: Filtering them as a competitor more likely

Rusty Tucker: Hotmail is your email on via a web browser, much like HDS mail for TF

Ken Sutherland: could that be anti-competitive practice ?

Rusty Tucker: its free, supported by advertising

Michael Davidson: Wait a minute, I used to get a lot of junk mail from hotmail sites....so, although it is probably true about AOL, hotmail seems to send lots of spam

Bob Nunn: They are one of the rampant spam producers. I don't they do much to qualify their users.

Donald McHose: sounds like a web version of Juno

Rusty Tucker: yep that's it

Rusty Tucker: There's lot and lots of legitimate hotmail users though

Rusty Tucker: and getting more so

Michael Davidson: yeah, I'm sure there are...out of 8 million...I didn't get that much hotmail spam :)

Michael Davidson: Again, Rusty, What main component do they want from TF Rusty that it doesn't yet have?

Rusty Tucker: AOL should talk about SPAM, ever visit their Conference areas?!

Rusty Tucker: The component s I think you need are:

Rusty Tucker: - a strong OS to support a high volume commercial system

Rusty Tucker: - PPP access w/ firewalling on a per user basis

Rusty Tucker: - "BBS" components in the web server ( got that )

Rusty Tucker: - really good web based email ( getting that :) )

Rusty Tucker: - good web based chat ( haven't seen it anywhere yet )

Rusty Tucker: - an automated business end for advertising and user tracking

Rusty Tucker: - a listserver

Rusty Tucker: - some offline search agents as a service to the users.

Rusty Tucker: - personal web sites so each user can create their own

Rusty Tucker: That would about cover it. If there was a 'turn-key' solution for this, I think it would be a good sell to newspaper sites.

Michael Davidson: Wow...If I gave you 3 months, could you come to a site and set this up with current software?

Rusty Tucker: brb

Bob Nunn: Where would you get the strong OS? Everything else can be done sort of.

Ken Sutherland: could we have FUN

Bob Nunn: Depends on the budget

Michael Davidson: sort of is a lot of the problem

Ken Sutherland: yup,yup,yup

Ken Sutherland: BEOS?

Bob Nunn: I have most of what he has listed with the exception of the listserver. I use mail forwarding to serve lists now but they are not elegant to adjust and maintain.

Rusty Tucker: Maybe, I'm going to be talking with a couple of the other folks from the conference about this next week.

Michael Davidson: Why would a newspaper choose TF as a main component to do the setup as outlined by Rusty?

Rusty Tucker: Selling MacOS is the hard-part.

Bob Nunn: Because nothing else is any closer...

Rusty Tucker: I'm pretty sure you need to sell it on Unix or NT

Donald McHose: ouch

Bob Nunn: Both likely.

Rusty Tucker: Unfortunately that's the reality of the Commercial site market

Michael Davidson: But Rusty, one main component that TF on a Mac can offer small to kind of large companies is the ease of setup and maintenance and that is VERY important

Rusty Tucker: I think so too.

Rusty Tucker: Otherwise you spend all your profits on maintenance.

Michael Davidson: Maybe you can't get the huge companies because of Mac, but get the less than huge ones

Michael Davidson: and breakdowns and configuring and ....

Bob Nunn: The system integrates well with our NT, and our UNIX system is a ways away still. We are converting to a Progress Based Unix System from our old HP mainframe

Rusty Tucker: The problem is MS and Netscape will be trying to sell into the same accounts

Michael Davidson: You haven't included the PPP ISP part above...

Michael Davidson: Yes, that could be a real problem.

Michael Davidson: So what does TF have that MS and NS doesn't. The wonderful interface (that beginners can start out on).

Michael Davidson: Ease of use and ease of setup should be your focus, IMHO.

Rusty Tucker: just a sec

Rusty Tucker: ok

Rusty Tucker: I'd use dht PPP hardware and modem banks

Michael Davidson: Let newbies log onto a TF bbs interface, from there they can go where they want on the net.

Michael Davidson: dht??

Rusty Tucker: the

Michael Davidson: I'd make TF/User and Server talk PPP, Server would be a small ISP.

Rusty Tucker: The good thing is that Macs totally DOMINATE the press rooms, and they won't give em up!

Rusty Tucker: And close to 50% of web sites are made by mac ( according to Web Week )

Donald McHose: Wish that would translate into printed words.

Michael Davidson: That is a great thing . I've heard that percentage too Rusty...emphasize that in the sell

Rusty Tucker: Serving %'s are something else though.

Rusty Tucker: Just take a look at netcraft sometime

Rusty Tucker: Apache, Netscape, MS and everybody else fights for the 10% that's left over

Ken Sutherland: we are developing a plugin for VIG that uses user manager for pap, also working on Radius if that helps?

Rusty Tucker: I think that helps big time

Rusty Tucker: especially the RADIUS part

Donald McHose: amen

Ken Sutherland: we need a hybrid solution for the clients

Rusty Tucker: Then you can work with the PPP hardware

Michael Davidson: What TF sysops are currently using the PPP hardware (Vicom)

Ken Sutherland: brotho

Ken Sutherland: most

Donald McHose: We have a sonic box( limited at best but problem free)

Rusty Tucker: Vig might work if you want to be a 10 line ISP, maybe more

Michael Davidson: Are there 3 PPP hardware solutions? sonic, Vicom, and the one from Jose?

Rusty Tucker: Does it do real routing , or just spoofing?

Ken Sutherland: also tribal link 2 & 8

Ken Sutherland: nice and smooth

Ken Sutherland: smooth

Rusty Tucker: The PPP server they're selling to Keyspan spoofs, I think you need real routing

mikael fredriksson: Hi!

Ken Sutherland: hi

Donald McHose: hey

Ken Sutherland: why not standardize the recommended setup rusty

Michael Davidson: Any real routing solutions out of the 4 ppp hardware/software choices?

Ken Sutherland: at least we would have a reference to work from

Rusty Tucker: Tribe is real

Rusty Tucker: 2 or 4 ports only though

Rusty Tucker: ( i think )

Ken Sutherland: tribelink 8

Ken Sutherland: £800

Michael Davidson: That might work for me, 8 would be the most I would want

Rusty Tucker: and it does radius , right Ken?

Michael Davidson: is that $1000

Ken Sutherland: $1200

Ken Sutherland: hang as many tribes as you need

Michael Davidson: So, is Tribe the only real routing choice?

Michael Davidson: as many as you can afford, that is :)

Ken Sutherland: configure via TCP and Netscape

Rusty Tucker: There's a lot of solutions for ISPs... big time stuff, real cool

Rusty Tucker: Ken what about RADIUS for Tribe?

mikael fredriksson: I used a Tribelink 8 on my setup at home worked without any problems

mikael fredriksson: yes it does use radius

Rusty Tucker: good deal

Michael Davidson: so clue me in, what if I went with a non-real routing solution (spoofing??)

Michael Davidson: What would I loose

Ken Sutherland: rusty uses portmaster, another good product, up to 30 lines per box

Rusty Tucker: Drew at MacConnect was telling me about a totally digital modem bank, completely remote manageable

Michael Davidson: So multiple tribelink 8's is the best solution now

Rusty Tucker: and just 1 wire set into the wall!

mikael fredriksson: But it only can use 56 k on the serial ports if you use it as a 8 port

Rusty Tucker: Can you do multiple Tribes?

Donald McHose: Sounds like USR's sys.

Ken Sutherland: is that the Ascend box?

Michael Davidson: Was that the tribelink you spoke of mikael?

Rusty Tucker: It probably is

mikael fredriksson: Yes Tribelink 8

Rusty Tucker: Full digital to the Telco

Michael Davidson: I could live with that

Ken Sutherland: K56 all the way

Rusty Tucker: only the client side to Telco is analog, then full digital inside the Telco and Telco to you

Ken Sutherland: Q. is access via power lines available in the USA?

Michael Davidson: So what kind of service line do you need for a tribelink 8

Donald McHose: no

mikael fredriksson: And it can handle 400 accounts without a radius server

Ken Sutherland: anything from 64K up

Rusty Tucker: 400 is not enough for me

mikael fredriksson: Then you need a Radius server...

Donald McHose: Right now only the Brits have it and they are not planning to import at this time ,so I've heard

Donald McHose: export I mean

Rusty Tucker: Oh, that make sense 400 internal or unlimited via server

Michael Davidson: 400 is enough for many though

Ken Sutherland: we will have it within next 12 months

Michael Davidson: Where can I get a lot more info about Tribelink 8

Ken Sutherland: full digital access, speed unknown

Ken Sutherland: goto there site

Donald McHose: That is going to be a trip.I cannot wait to hear how it does.An old idea coming to age

Michael Davidson: (I guessed that Ken) What is their company name? Tribelink?

Rusty Tucker: http://www.tribe.com/

Donald McHose: Were is it I've done a search to no avail

Michael Davidson: Thanks Rusty

Rusty Tucker: still loading, don't know for sure yet

Ken Sutherland: tribe offers full TCP and AppleTalk over TCP, nice for IP5

mikael fredriksson: http://www.zoomtel.com/

Ken Sutherland: zoom bought them a year ago

Ken Sutherland: never improved them though

Michael Davidson: thanks mikael

Michael Davidson: I am not a lover of zoom, at all

Bob Nunn: Glad to hear that. Might have made them typical zoom quality.

Michael Davidson: Why should I not go with Vicom instead of tribelink

Bob Nunn: Comes down to scale and budget I would think.

Ken Sutherland: rusty, custom tool request, 1 that would start a ppp hookup and then log onto TF, all configured via TF and a easy setup, your ideas

Ken Sutherland: VIG is a software solution, not as efficient

Rusty Tucker: Seems like just clicking the "connect" button in TF, or do you mean something like "Internet Monkey?"

Ken Sutherland: hmm...

Michael Davidson: New monkey out yesterday (v 2.0)

Ken Sutherland: a combination of TCP and modem setup that would update ic4? maybe?

Ken Sutherland: and ot/ppp

Rusty Tucker: Monkey does all that, I think

Ken Sutherland: license it then 8-)

Rusty Tucker: I think it will install other components too.

Rusty Tucker: You can license it now, from RockStar

Rusty Tucker: http://www.rockstar.com/

Rusty Tucker: check it our

Michael Davidson: Monkey is at www.rockstar.com; anybody can license it

Ken Sutherland: but only rusty can integrate it 8-)

Bob Nunn: Rusty - will the 8.01 update have the multihoming? Will their be a TF Server version to support it or will it work straight up?

Rusty Tucker: 8.1 should have OT 1.3

Michael Davidson: Can someone give me the Vicom website URL?

Rusty Tucker: that supports 'single link' multi-homing, i haven't tried it yet

Rusty Tucker: http://www.Vicom.co.uk/ ?

Rusty Tucker: maybe not

Bob Nunn: I think it is Vicom.com

Michael Davidson: No bob, it isn't that

Ken Sutherland: http://www.vicomtech.com/

Donald McHose: It should.The splash notes have started on it extolling that feature

Bob Nunn: Used to have it bookmarked but I got organized and can't find nuthin now.

Michael Davidson: http://www.vicomtech.com/ IS THE CORRECT URL

Bob Nunn: They are advertising version 4 now.

Michael Davidson: says v 4.0 is out now

Michael Davidson: o, I'm late again (bob)

Rusty Tucker: any last q's before we wrap for today?

Bob Nunn: 128 k ISDN ;)

Ken Sutherland: GIVE US PPP Please

Rusty Tucker: I think you should get PPP from Vicom or Hardware

Rusty Tucker: BTW - any word on the HDS mail update?

Rusty Tucker: Is there a new version?

Donald McHose: yes

Bob Nunn: I have the new beta up. Works great. I haven't tested all of the new features yet

Rusty Tucker: I see it, cool!

mikael fredriksson: I will only let one logon and the next one will get a access denied

Bob Nunn: Jon tells me he is still working on the FTP Client and will soon have a beta.

Donald McHose: That's nice ...sigh

Rusty Tucker: oh, that's not good! Ken is that the plan or a bug?

Bob Nunn: Try mine mikael, I have been on it today.

Bob Nunn: http://206.30.216.253/mail

Donald McHose: brb

mikael fredriksson: any test user and pw?

Ken Sutherland: nope

Bob Nunn: Don't have a test user set up. I thought you were a member.

Ken Sutherland: oat FC6 should be out this weekend or the start of the week

Ken Sutherland: sorry had to go for a ppp, what was the question\'

Bob Nunn: You can sign up from the web - http://www.headgap.com/webbbs.spml

Michael Davidson: brb

Rusty Tucker: Time for lunch here, see you all next week!

Bob Nunn: mikael was having trouble getting the mail server to admit any one after the first person was on. He has to restart the server. See ya Rusty.

Donald McHose: See-YA!!


October 25, 1997 -- ©Copyright 1997, Spider Island Software