IRC (Internet Relay Chat)
Jonathan I. Kamens
jik at athena.mit.edu
Thu Mar 7 10:35:58 AEST 1991
(Note Followup-To.)
In article <1991Mar6.200002.2563 at unx2.ucc.okstate.edu>, unx20238 at unx2.ucc.okstate.edu (Lonny L. Lowe) writes:
|> I have searched high and low for ANY information on IRC or Internet Relay
|> Chat, and have found NOTHING. Do any of you know how to access IRC, or maybe
|> just point me in the right direction?
A recent posting in news.newusers.questions, addressing this question, is
appended to the end of this message.
--
Jonathan Kamens USnail:
MIT Project Athena 11 Ashford Terrace
jik at Athena.MIT.EDU Allston, MA 02134
Office: 617-253-8085 Home: 617-782-0710
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Article: 4329 of news.newusers.questions
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From: eps at toaster.SFSU.EDU (Eric P. Scott)
Newsgroups: news.newusers.questions
Subject: Re: Telnet Sites
Summary: Bzzz
Message-ID: <1406 at toaster.SFSU.EDU>
Date: 6 Mar 91 10:09:42 GMT
Article-I.D.: toaster.1406
References: <1398 at toaster.SFSU.EDU> <bh.910305153546 at lab18.eng.auburn.edu> <1054 at caslon.cs.arizona.edu>
Reply-To: eps at cs.SFSU.EDU (Eric P. Scott)
Organization: San Francisco State University
Lines: 63
In article <1054 at caslon.cs.arizona.edu> tlglenn at cs.arizona.edu
(Ted L. Glenn) writes:
> For those of you who don't know, Brian is looking for Internet Relay
>Chat (IRC) servers. A list of servers available via telnet is:
They're NOT available "via telnet" except possibly for protocol
hackers. These are TCP services but don't use TELNET protocol.
IRC client software is available for UNIX, VAX/VMS, and VM/CMS
systems (and possibly others)--you run that to use IRC.
Mainstream distribution: tolsun.oulu.fi:irc/irc2.6pre18.tar.Z
Experimental release: cs.bu.edu:irc/irc2.6pre18.bu.1.tar.Z
Above contain client and server code. Most sites will _not_
be running servers, but instead connect to one of the (well
over a hundred) currently operating.
Alternative UNIX client: rvw2.hhs.ri.cmu.edu:ircII2.06.tar.Z
There are also some GNU Emacs clients "out there"--about 3
"competing" versions at last count.
No special privileges are required to compile and install client-
side software. However, the UNIX versions require a fair
amount of experience to configure properly and actually compile.
System administrators are generally capable of handling it; many
end-users are not due to its complexity (and size, if your site
believes in miniscule disk quotas). Note that this software is
continually in a state of development, and you would be expected
not to fall too far behind... incompatible changes are the norm
with major releases. If you're willing to make a local support
commitment, IRC can be ... quite interesting.
Relevant mailing lists:
irclist at tolsun.oulu.fi
for IRC developers; patches, announcements of
new versions, discussions of proposed features,
etc. appear here
operlist at cs.bu.edu
for administrators of the IRC subnetwork;
"human" issues rather than technical (coding)
stuff appear here; connectivity management
here as well
Requests for subscription should be sent to irclist-request
and/or operlist-request at the same domains--NOT to the lists
themselves. There is also an alt.irc newsgroup which never
really caught on.
Another Internet chat system is Forumnet. This makes use of
a "proprietary" server at the University of Kentucky.
f.ms.uky.edu:forumnet/fn.0.10.tar.Z
UNIX client
f.ms.uky.edu:forumnet/vms-fn/*
VAX/VMS client (requires TWG or Multinet TCP/IP)
Questions about this software should be directed to
sean at s.ms.uky.edu.
-=EPS=-
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