| ==Phrack Magazine== |
|
|
| Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 14 of 28 |
|
|
| **************************************************************************** |
|
|
| A L I T T L E A B O U T D I A L C O M |
| *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-* |
|
|
| by |
|
|
| Herd Beast |
|
|
| (hbeast@phantom.com) |
|
|
| Introduction |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Dialcom is an interesting system for hackers for two reasons: |
| First, it is used by business people, reporters and many other world |
| wide, and it offers a variety of information services, from a |
| bulletin board to stock market updates and news services. Second, |
| Dialcom runs on Prime machines, so using Dialcom is a good way to |
| learn Prime. True, it's not the best, as access is generally restricted, |
| but it's better than, say, learning VMS from Information America. |
|
|
| In these days, where everyone seems to be so centered about the |
| Internet and the latest Unix holes, it's important to remember that the |
| information super-highway is not quite here, and many interesting things |
| are out there and not on the Internet. Phrack has always been a good place |
| to find out more about these things and places, and I wrote this article |
| after reading the Dialog articles in Phrack. |
|
|
| Well, gentle reader, I guess that my meaning-of-life crap quota is full, |
| so let's move on. |
|
|
| Accessing Dialcom and Logging In |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Dialcom is accessible world-wide. It offers connection to Tymnet, Sprintnet, |
| and other networks as well as dialin modems. Since I am not writing to |
| Washington people only, I will specify only the easiest methods -- Tymnet |
| and Sprintnet -- and some of the more interesting access methods. |
|
|
| Dialcom is basically a Primecom network. Each user has an account on |
| one or more of the systems connected to that network. To access Dialcom, |
| the user needs to access the machine his account is on. First, he logs |
| into a public data network and follows the steps required to connect to |
| a remote note. On Tymnet, this means getting to the "please log in:" |
| prompt, and on Sprintnet it's the famous '@' prompt. |
|
|
| For Tymnet, you must enter at the prompt: DIALCOM;<system number> |
| (eg, DIALCOM;57). The same goes for TYMUSA connection from outside |
| the USA. |
|
|
| For Sprintnet or other PADs, you must enter the correct NUA: |
|
|
| System # Sprintnet NUA Tymnet NUA |
| ======== ============= ============= |
| XX 3110 301003XX 3106 004551XX |
| (32, 34, |
| 41 - 46, |
| 50, 52, |
| 57, 61, |
| 63, 64) |
|
|
| It should be noted that Dialcom keeps its own X.25 network, Dialnet, |
| and the NUAs on it are those of the systems (connect to address "57" |
| for system 57). |
|
|
| Dialcom has other access methods, meant to be used from outside the |
| USA, but sometimes available from within as well. |
|
|
| One is a COMCO card, which is inserted into a reader connected to the |
| computer and the modem through a serial link. The user then calls a |
| special dial-up number, and can connect to Dialcom (or any other NUA). |
| The card contains a number of "tax units" which are deducted as the |
| connection goes through, until they are exhausted and the card is useless. |
| The user calls the dial-up and types in ".<CR>". The amount of tax units |
| on the card will then appear on the screen, and the user can connect to a |
| host. COMCO dial-ups: |
|
|
| Location Number |
| ======================= ============== |
| Australia +61-02-2813511 |
| Belgium +32-02-5141710 |
| France +33-1-40264075 |
| West Germany +49-069-290255 |
| Hong Kong +852-5-8611655 |
| Netherlands +31-020-6624661 |
| Switzerland +41-022-865507 |
| United Kingdom +45-01-4077077 |
| USA (Toll Free) +1-800-777-4445 |
| USA +1-212-747-9051 |
|
|
| The other way is through Infonet. I will not turn this into an Infonet |
| guide, save to write the logon sequence needed to access Dialcom. |
| At the '#' prompt, enter 'C'. At the "Center:" prompt, enter "DC". |
| Dialcom NUAs are 31370093060XX, where XX is the system number. |
|
|
| Once the connection to a Dialcom system has been established, you will |
| be greeted by the Prime header: |
|
|
| Primecom Network 19.4Q.111 System 666 |
|
|
| Please Sign On |
| > |
|
|
| And the '>' prompt. This is a limited prompt as most commands cannot |
| be issued at it, so you need to login. |
|
|
| Dialcom user id's are typically 3 alphabetic characters followed by |
| several digits. The password may contain any character except for |
| ",;/*" or spaces, and my experience shows that they tend to be of |
| intermediate complexity (most will not be found in a dictionary, but |
| could be cracked). |
|
|
| Password security may become useless at this point, because the Dialcom |
| Prime systems allow ID to take both user id and password as arguments |
| (which some other Primes do not) and in fact, Dialcom tutorials tell |
| users to log on like this -- |
|
|
| >ID HBT007 IMEL8 |
|
|
| -- which makes ``shoulder surfing'' easier. |
|
|
| One you log on, you will see: |
|
|
| Dialcom Computer Services 19.4Q.111(666) |
| On At 14:44 07/32/94 EDT |
| Last On At 4:09 06/44/94 EDT |
|
|
| > |
|
|
| And again, the '>' prompt. |
|
|
| >off |
| Off At 14:45 07/32/94 EDT |
| Time used: 00h 00m connect, 00m 01s CPU, 00m 00s I/O. |
|
|
| Security at Dialcom |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| As mentioned, while passwords are relatively secure, the manner in |
| which they are entered is usually not. |
|
|
| As for the accounts themselves, it's important to understand the |
| general way accounts exist on Dialcom. Dialcom users are usually |
| part of a business that has an ``account group'' on Dialcom. Each |
| user gets an account from that group (HBT027, HBT054). Each group |
| also has a group administrator, who controls what each account can |
| access. The administrator determines which programs (provided by Dialcom) |
| each user can access. A foreign correspondent for a magazine might |
| have access to the news services while other users might not. The |
| administrator also determines how much the user can interface with |
| the Prime OS itself. Each user can run a few basic commands (list |
| files, delete, sign off) but above that, it's up to the administrator. |
| The administrator may opt to remove a user from the controlling menuing |
| system -- in which case, the user has no restrictions forced upon him. |
|
|
| Group administrators, however, handle only their groups, and not the |
| Dialcom system. They need, for example, to notify Dialcom staff if |
| they want an account removed from the system. |
|
|
| Another (different yet combined) part of the account/group security |
| are accounts' ``security levels'' (seclevs). Seclevs range from 3 |
| to 7, and determine the access an account has to various places. |
| Seclev 4 users, for example, are not restricted to seeing only users |
| of their group on the system, and can delete accounts from the menuing |
| system. |
|
|
| User accounts own their directories and files within (but high seclevs |
| can read other users' files). Each account's security is left in some |
| extent to its owner, in that the user sets his own password. When |
| setting a password, a user can set a secondary password. Any user wishing |
| to access that user's directory will need that password. Furthermore, |
| the user can allow other users to attach as owners to his directory if |
| they know his password (come to think of it, couldn't they just login |
| as him?). This is all controlled by the PASSWD program (see ``Common |
| Commands'', below). |
|
|
| Dialcom also allows for login attempt security using the NET_LOCK |
| program. NET_LOCK blocks login attempts from addresses that have |
| registered too many login failures over a period of time (the default |
| being blocking for 10 minutes of addresses that have registered more |
| than 10 failed login within 5 minutes). NET_LOCK -DISPLAY is accessible |
| to users of Seclev 5 and shows addresses currently blocked and general |
| information. Other options are accessible to Seclev 7 and are: |
| -ON, -OFF, -ATTEMPTS (number of attempts so that NET_LOCK will block |
| an address), -LOCK_PERIOD (the period in which these attempts must |
| occur), -LOCK_TIME (time to block), -WINDOW (a time window in which the |
| lockout feature is disabled). |
|
|
| A little unrelated is the network reconnect feature of the Prime |
| computers. When a user gets disconnected from the system because |
| of a network failure, or for any other reason which is not the |
| system's fault, he can log back in and reconnect into the disconnected |
| job. When this happens, the user sees, upon logging on: |
|
|
|
|
| You Have a Disconnected Job: |
|
|
| HBT007 d09 1 109 NT NETLINK 989898989 6 3 |
|
|
| Do You Want to Reconnect? |
|
|
| Which means user's HBT007 job #9 (a NETLINK command) is waiting for |
| a reconnection. At this point, the user can continue, leaving the |
| job to hang until the system signs it off when a certain amount of |
| time expires; sign the job off himself; or reconnect to that job. |
| (Try "HELP" at the prompt.) This wouldn't be important, but experience |
| shows that many disconnections occur when someone logs into Dialcom |
| over a network, and then uses NETLINK (or another program) to connect |
| to another site over a network, and somewhere, some time, he issues |
| a control sequence (let's say to tell NETLINK to do something) that |
| gets processed by the first network, which logs him off. So there |
| is potential to log into the middle of people's sessions (yeah, like |
| detached ttys). |
|
|
| Common Commands |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Common commands are in reality the basic Prime commands that every |
| account has access to. Here they are, in alphabetical order. |
|
|
| `CLEAR' Clear the screen. |
|
|
| `DATE' Shows the date at which a command was entered. Output: |
|
|
| >DATE |
| Proceed to next command |
|
|
| >BAH |
|
|
| Friday, June 38, 1994 10:01:00 AM EDT |
|
|
| `DEL' Deletes a file. |
|
|
| `DELP' Deletes several files based on wildcards. Can verify deletion |
| of every file, and delete only file modified before, after, or |
| between certain dates. |
|
|
| `ED' Is the default and simplest file editor on Dialcom (some of its |
| brothers are JED and FED). Once invoked, ED enters INPUT mode, |
| in which the user just types text. To enter EDIT mode, where |
| you can issue commands, you need to press <CR> on a blank line |
| (the same thing will get you from EDIT mode back to INPUT mode). |
| The EDIT mode uses a pointer to a line. All commands are carried |
| on the line that the pointer points to. "T" will bring the |
| pointer to the top of the text, "B" to the bottom, "N" to the |
| next line down, "U" to the next line up, and "L <word>" to |
| the line containing <word>. ED commands include: |
|
|
| P: PRINT the pointer line. P<number> will print <number> |
| of lines. |
| C: Change words. The format is "C/old word/new word". |
| A: Appends words. The format is "A <words>". |
| R: Retype pointer line. The format is "R <new line>". |
| SP: Check the spelling of the text, and then point to |
| the top of the text. |
| SAVE: Will save the text and exit ED. |
| Q: Will quit/abort editing and exit ED. |
|
|
| `F' List all file info. Output: |
|
|
| DIALCOM.TXT 001 13/30/94 13:50 ASC D W R |
|
|
| Which means file name "DIALCOM.TXT", size of 1 file blocks, |
| lat modified on 13/30/94 at 13:50, is an ASC type file, and |
| the account has the permissions to D(elete), W(rite), and |
| R(ead) it. |
|
|
| `HELP' (`?') Displays a nicely formatted menu of available commands. |
|
|
| `INFO' System info. INFO <info-file-name> displays an information |
| file, for example, INFO NETLINK. |
|
|
| "INFO ?" lists info files. |
| "INFO BRIEF" lists info files grouped by application |
| "INFO INFO" lists info files with their descriptions. |
|
|
| `L' List all file names. Output: |
|
|
| <S666-6>HBT007 (Owner) |
|
|
| DIALCOM.TXT |
|
|
| `LS' Display information about available segments and the account's |
| access to them. Output: |
|
|
| 2 Private static segments. |
| segment access |
| -------------- |
| 4000 RWX |
| 4001 RWX |
|
|
| 11 Private dynamic segments. |
| segment access |
| -------------- |
| 4365 RX |
| 4366 RX |
| 4367 RWX |
| 4370 RWX |
| 4371 RX |
| 4372 RWX |
| 4373 RX |
| 4374 RWX |
| 4375 RX |
| 4376 RX |
| 4377 RWX |
|
|
| `NAME' Changes UFD name. Output: |
|
|
| >NAME |
|
|
| Old Name: John Gacy |
| UFD Name: Herd Beast |
| All done |
|
|
| >WHO |
|
|
| Herd Beast <S666-6>HBT007 |
|
|
| `NETWORK' Accesses a database that contains dial-up number for Sprintnet, |
| Tymnet, Datapac and Dialcom's Dialnet by State/City. |
|
|
| `OFF' Sign off the system. |
|
|
| `ONLINE' Who's online? The amount of data displayed depends on the |
| account's seclev. Seclevs below 4 are restricted to seeing |
| only users of their group. Output: |
|
|
| HBT007 PRK017 MJR |
|
|
| `PAD' Allows you to send commands to an X.29 PAD, these commands |
| being the SET/SET?/PAR? commands and their parameter/value |
| pairs. |
|
|
| `PASSWD' Change your password. PASSWD has two forms: a short one, |
| which just changes the user's password, and a long form, |
| invoked by PASSWD -LONG, which allows the user to set |
| a second password for other users accessing his directory, |
| and also to determine if they can have owner access to |
| the directory. |
|
|
| `PROTECT' Protects a file (removes permissions from it). |
|
|
| "PROTECT DIALCOM.TXT" will remove all three (D, W, R) |
| attributes from it. This will result in: |
|
|
| >DEL DIALCOM.TXT |
| Insufficient access rights. DIALCOM.TXT (DEL:10) |
|
|
| But -- |
|
|
| >DELETE DIALCOM.TXT |
| "DIALCOM.TXT" protected, ok to force delete? y |
|
|
| `SECLEV' Your security level. Output: |
|
|
| Seclev=5 |
|
|
| `SIZE' Size information about a file. Output: |
|
|
| 1 Block, 404 Words |
|
|
| `STORAGE' Shows storage information. |
|
|
| `SY' Show users on system. (Same restrictions as for ONLINE apply.) |
| Will show user name, time on, idle time, devices used, current |
| jobs and state, etc. Output: |
|
|
| 41 Users on sys 666 |
|
|
| Names use idle mem State command object devs |
|
|
| HBT007 *11 0 155 R1 SY 6 3 from Tymnet via X.25 |
|
|
|
|
| `SYS' Displays account information and system number. Output: |
|
|
| <S666-6>HBT007 on system 666. |
|
|
| `TERM' Used to tell the Dialcom computer what terminal the user is |
| using. A list of supported terminals is generated by "TERM |
| TERMINALS". TERM options are: |
|
|
| TYPE <terminal type> (TYPE VT100) |
| WIDTH <width> (Terminal width, if different |
| than default) |
| TOP (Start listings at top of screen) |
| PAUSE (Pause listings when screen is |
| full) |
|
|
| -ERASE, -KILL <char> (Sets the erase or kill character) |
| -BREAK <ON|OFF> (Enables or disables BREAKs) |
| -HALF or -FULL (Half duplex of full duplex) |
| -DISPLAY (Output current terminal information) |
|
|
| `WHO' Displays account information. Output: |
|
|
| <S666-6>HBT007 |
|
|
| Which means user HBT007 on system 666 on device 6. |
|
|
| Communicating on Dialcom |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Users who want to communicate on Dialcom have two choices, basically. |
| These are the Dialcom bulletin board and electronic mail. The Dialcom |
| bulletin board has two versions. The first consists of several message |
| bases (called ``categories'') which are shared between some Dialcom |
| systems (and mostly used by bored employees, it seems); there are also |
| private bulletin boards, which are not shared between the systems. They |
| belong to account groups, and only users in an account group can access |
| that group's bulletin board system. These version of the Dialcom board |
| are often empty (they have no categories defined and hence are unusable). |
|
|
| This is accessed by the command POST (PRPOST for the private board). |
| Once POST is activated, it will display a prompt: |
|
|
| Send, Read or Purge: |
|
|
| If the answer is READ, POST will ask for a category (a list of categories |
| will be displayed if you type HELP at that prompt). Once a category |
| has been joined, you will be able to read through the messages there: |
|
|
| Subject: ? |
| From: HBT007 Posted: Sat 32-July-94 16:47 Sys 666 |
|
|
| quit |
| /q |
| /quit |
|
|
| Continue to Next Item? |
|
|
| Answering SEND at the first prompt will allow you to send a message in a |
| category. |
|
|
| Answering PURGE will allow you to delete messages post by your account. |
| When you enter PURGE and the category to purge message from, the system |
| will show you any posts that you are allowed to purge, followed by a |
| "Disposition:" prompt. Enter DELETE to delete the message. |
|
|
| The second way to communicate is the Dialcom MAIL system. MAIL allows |
| sending and receiving messages, it allows for mailing lists, filing |
| mail into categories, holding mail to read later and so on. MAIL is |
| invoked by entering, uh... oh, yes, MAIL. |
|
|
| It works along similar lines to those of POST, and will display the following |
| prompt: |
|
|
| Send, Read or Scan: |
|
|
| SEND: Allows you to send a message. It will prompt with "To:", |
| "Subject:" and "Text:" (where you enter the actual message, followed |
| by ".SEND" on a blank line to end). After a message is sent, the |
| "To:" prompt will appear again -- use "QUIT" to leave it. |
|
|
| A word about the "To:" prompt. There are two configuration files which |
| make its use easier. First the MAIL.REF file, which is really a mailing |
| list file. It contains entries in the format of -- |
|
|
| <Nick> <Accounts> |
| DOODZ DVR014 ABC0013 XYZ053 |
|
|
| -- and at the "To:" prompt, you can just enter "DOODZ" and the message |
| will be sent to all three accounts. When you enter a name, MAIL searches |
| through your MAIL.REF, and then through the account administrator's, and |
| only then parses it as an account name. Second is the mail directory, |
| which contains the names and account IDs of many users the account is |
| in contact with. To display it, type "DIS DIR" at the first prompt. |
| You'll get something like this: |
|
|
| HERD-BEAST 6666:HBT007 WE'RE BAD AND WE'RE KRAD |
|
|
| Which means you can type "HERD-BEAST" at the prompt, and not just |
| HBT007. Also, there are special options for the "To:" prompt, most |
| notable are: CC to send a carbon copy; EX to send the message with |
| ``express priority''; DAR to request that if the message is sent |
| to a user on another Dialcom system, POSTMASTER will send you a |
| message verifying that your message has been sent; and NOSHOW, |
| to keep the receiver from seeing everybody else on the "To:" list. |
| For example (all these people are in the mail directory), |
|
|
| To: DUNKIN D.DREW CC FOLEY NOSHOW EX |
|
|
| You enter the message about to be sent at the "Text:" prompt. That |
| mode accepts several commands (like .SEND), all of which begin with a |
| dot. Any command available at the "To:" prompt is available here. |
| For example, you can add or remove names from to "To:" field using |
| ".TO <ids>" or ".TO -<ids>", and add a CC using ".CC <id>". |
| You also have a display command, ".DIS". ".DIS" alone shows the text |
| entered so far; ".DIS TO" shows the "To:" field; ".DIS HE" shows |
| the entire header; etc. Finally, you have editing option. ".ED" will |
| load editing mode, so you can change the text you entered. ".LOAD |
| <filename>" will load <filename> into the text of the message. ".SP" |
| will check the spelling of text in the message, and there are other |
| commands. |
|
|
| READ: Allows you to read mail in your mailbox. Once you enter READ, |
| MAIL will display the header of the first message in your mailbox |
| (or "No mail at this time") followed by a "--More--" prompt. To |
| read the message, press <CR>; otherwise, enter NO. After you are done |
| reading a message, you will be prompted with the "Disposition:" prompt, |
| where you must determine what to do with the message. There you can enter |
| several commands: AGAIN to read the message again; AG HE to read the |
| header again; AP REPLY to reply to the message and append the original |
| message to the reply; AP FO to forward the message to someone and add |
| your comments to it; REPLY to reply to the sender of the message; REPLY |
| ALL to reply to everybody on the "To:" field; FILE to file the message; |
| SA to save the message into a text file; NEXT to read the next message |
| in your mailbox; and D to delete the message. |
|
|
| SCAN: Allows you see a summary of the messages in the mailbox. Both |
| READ and SCAN have options that allow you to filter the messages you |
| want to read: FR <ids> to get only messages from <ids>; TO <ids> to |
| get only messages sent to <ids>; 'string' to get only messages containing |
| ``string'' in the "Subject:" field; "string" to get only messages |
| containing ``string'' in the message itself; FILE CATEGORY to get only |
| messages filed into ``CATEGORY''; and DA Month/Day/Year to get only messages |
| in that date (adding a '-' before or after the date will get you everything |
| before or after that date, and it's also possible to specify two dates |
| separated by a '-' to get everything between those dates. For example, |
| to get all of Al Gore's messages about Clipper before August 13th: |
|
|
| READ FILE CLIPPER FR GOR 'Great stuff' DA -8/13/94 |
|
|
| There is also a QS (QuickScan) command that behaves the same as SCAN, |
| only SCAN shows the entire header, and QS just shows the "From:" field. |
|
|
| However, there is more to do here than just send, read or scan. |
| Some of it was mentioned when explaining these commands. Both sent |
| and received messages can be saved into a plain text file or into |
| a special mailbox file, called MAIL.FILE. Messages filed into the |
| MAIL.FILE can be grouped into categories in that file. |
|
|
| SAVING MESSAGES: Messages are saved by entering "SA filename" at a |
| prompt. For sent message, it's the "Text:" prompt, while entering the |
| message, and the command is ".SA", not "SA". For received message, it's |
| either the "--More--" or the "Disposition:" prompt. |
|
|
| FILING MESSAGES: Messages are filed in two cases. First, the user |
| can file any message into any directory, and second, the system files |
| read messages that lay in the mailbox for over 30 days. Received messages |
| are filed by entering "FILE" at the "Disposition:" prompt. This files |
| the message into a miscellaneous category called BOX. If an optional |
| <category-name> is added after "FILE", the message will be filed into |
| that category. If <category-name> doesn't exist, MAIL can create it |
| for you. After a message has been filed, it's not removed from the |
| mailbox -- that's up to the user to do. Sent messages behaved the same |
| way, but the command is ".FILE" from the "Text:" prompt. |
|
|
| To display categories of filed mail, enter DIS FILES at a prompt. To |
| read or scan messages in filed, just add "FILE <category-name> after |
| the command (READ, SCAN, etc). To delete a category, enter D FILE |
| <category-name>. To delete a single message in a category, just use |
| D as you would on any other message, after you read it from the |
| MAIL.FILE. |
|
|
| Connecting via Dialcom |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Dialcom allows its customers to access other systems through it. |
| There are some services offered specifically through Dialcom, such as |
| the BRS/MENUS service, which is an electronic library with databases |
| about many subjects, Telebase's Cyclopean Gateway Service, which offers |
| access to many online database services (like Newsnet, Dialog and even BRS) |
| and more. These services have a direct connection to Dialcom and software |
| that maps Dialcom user ids to their own ids (it's not usually possible for |
| someone to access one of these services without first connecting to Dialcom). |
|
|
| Another method is general connection to X.25 addresses. Since Dialcom |
| is connected to X.25, and it allows users to use the Prime NETLINK |
| commands, it's possible to PAD out of Dialcom!!#! |
|
|
| NETLINK is invoked by entering NETLINK. NETLINK then displays its own, |
| '@' prompt. The commands available there are QUIT, to quit back to |
| the OS; CONTINUE, to return to an open connection; CALL, to call an |
| address; and D, to disconnect an open connection. |
|
|
| CALL takes addresses in several formats. A system name, to connect to |
| a Dialcom system, or an address in the format of DNIC:NUA. For example, |
|
|
| @ CALL :666 |
| Circuit #1 |
| 666 Connected |
| [...] |
|
|
| @ CALL 3110:21300023 |
| Circuit #2 |
| 21300023 Connected |
| [...] |
|
|
| NETLINK establishes connections in the form of circuits. A circuit can |
| be broken out of into command mode (the '@' prompt), using "<CR>@<CR>", |
| and another can be opened, or parameters can be changed, etc. |
| NETLINK has other commands, to log connections into a file, or set PAD |
| parameters (SET, PAR), or turn on connection debugging, or change |
| the default '@' prompt, and more. |
|
|
| Things to Do on Dialcom |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Much of what Dialcom offers was not covered until now and will not |
| be covered. That's because most the services could use a file each, |
| and because many account groups have things enabled or disabled |
| just for them. Instead, I will write shortly about two of the more |
| interesting things online, the news service and clipping service, |
| and add pointers to some interesting commands to try out. |
|
|
| The news service, accessed with the NEWS command, is a database of |
| newswires from AP, Business Wire, UPI, Reuters and PR Newswire. |
| The user enters the database, and can search for news by keywords. |
|
|
| After entering NEWS, you will see a menu of all the news agencies. |
| Once you choose an agency, you will enter its menu, which sometimes |
| contains a copyright warning and terms of usage and also the list |
| of news categories available from that agency (National, North America, |
| Business, Sports, etc). Once you choose the category, you will be |
| asked for the keyword to search for. If a story (or several stories) was |
| found containing your desired keyword, you can read through the |
| stories in the order of time, or the order they appear, or reverse |
| order and so on, and finally mail a story to yourself, or enter new |
| search keywords, or jump to another story, or simply quit. |
|
|
| The news clipping service, available with the command NEWSTAB, allows |
| the user to define keyword-based rules for selecting news clippings. |
| The system then checks every newswire that passes through it, and if |
| it matches the rules, mails the newswire to the user. |
|
|
| After entering NEWSTAB, you are presented with a menu that allows you |
| to show, add, delete, and alter your rules for choosing news. The rules |
| are made using words or phrases, logical operators, wildcards and |
| minimal punctuation. A rule can be as simple as "HACKING", which will |
| get every newswire with the word "hacking" in it mailed to you, or |
| if you want to be more selective, "NASA HACKING". Logical operators |
| are either AND or OR. For example, "HACKING AND INTERNET". Wildcards |
| are either '*' or '?' (both function as the same). They simple replace |
| any number of letters. Punctuation is permitted for initials, |
| abbreviations, apostrophes or hyphens, but not for question marks and |
| similar. All of this is explained in the NEWSTAB service itself. |
|
|
| For the file hungry, Dialcom offers several file transfer programs, |
| including KERMIT and Dialcom's FT, which implements most popular |
| protocols, like Zmodem, Xmodem, etc. |
|
|
| A small number of other fun things to try: |
|
|
| NET-TALK The ``interactive computer conferencing system'' -- build |
| your private IRC! |
|
|
| CRYPTO Dialcom's encryption program. Something they're probably |
| going to love on sci.crypt. |
|
|
| NUSAGE By far one of the better things to do on Dialcom, it was |
| left out of this file because it is simply huge. This |
| program allows the user (typically an administrator) to |
| monitor network usage, sort the data, store it, peek |
| into all the little details (virtual connection types, |
| remote/local addresses, actions, time, commands, etc). |
| Unfortunately, it's completely beyond the scope of this |
| file, as there are tons of switches and options to use |
| in order to put this program to effective use. |
| |
|
|