Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!agate!apple!oliveb!tymix!antares!dbilar From: dbilar@antares.UUCP (Dave Bilar) Newsgroups: news.newusers.questions Subject: Re: How do I find the domain of a friend? Summary: In addition to Dave Mack's reply... Keywords: comp.mail.maps Message-ID: <477@antares.UUCP> Date: 16 Aug 89 18:14:04 GMT References:<5446@inco.UUCP> Reply-To: dbilar@antares.UUCP (Dave Bilar) Followup-To: news.newusers.questions Distribution: usa Organization: Tymnet/McDonnell Douglas (British Telecom??), San Jose, CA. Lines: 72 In article <5446@inco.UUCP> mack@inco.UUCP (Dave Mack) writes: >In article raulmill@usc.edu (Raul) writes: >>I have a friend who goes to another school (Cal State University, >>Northridge) >From UUCP map u.usa.ca.1: > #N csun.edu, csun > #O California State University, Northridge (CSUN) > #C Larry Wake > #E postmaster@csun.edu [...] > #U polyslo csuchico csusac csustan sdsu csuf3b fedeva dcrlg1 srhqla [...] Notice how many sites in #U above have "csu" as part of ther names? The CSU maintains a net linking its campuses. If you can find a link from usc to csu[xxxx] your mail will move rather quickly over dedicated lines, once it reaches CSU-NET (or whatever they call it.) A quick scan of u.usa.ca.1[thru 10] for "csun" with your favorite editor is certainly called for. If you search for your site's name, you may find a neighbor site which is already connected to csun. Who knows? >The UUCP maps are posted to newsgroup comp.mail.maps and are probably >the single most valuable source of information about how to contact >other sites, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ [...] Hear! Hear! (here! here! ?????) :-) > >Since you're on the Internet, all you need to do is send mail to >"username@csun.edu" and if they have a name server it should get to >her. If not, you'll need to find out which host she has an account >on and send mail to "username@hostname.csun.edu". > I have found it time well spent, although very time consuming, to subscribe to comp.mail.maps, and create a KILL file of all the maps I'm not interested in. This takes quite some time, and can be easily be done as a "background" process at times when your boss isn't looking. :-) This is easy for me thanks to windowing software or using two CRT's. (Be sure to switch yourself back to the foreground process before too long!) Once I got the KILL file created, only the *.ca articles got through (plus a few more from a time when I wanted to find a university in Ohio... I'll have to re-kill the Ohio maps next time.) It takes some time to go through an entire world of "new" articles in comp.mail.maps, killing each one, but the result outweighs the problem. Good Luck... >>-- >>Raul Rockwell | >>INTERNET: raulmill@usc.edu | >>UUCP: ...uunet!usc!raulmill | 55 mph = 82 nc >>U.S.SNAIL: 721 E Windsor #4, GLENDALE CA 91205 | > >Your signature is broken, Raul. Try again. ...not if one uses the Kill function of their editor...:-) > >-- >Dave Mack Hey Dave--Got any openings over there? :-( -- Dave Bilar, KA6UQJ Speaking only for himself... UUCP: {uunet,ames,pyramid}oliveb!tymix!antares!dbilar USPS: McDonnell Douglas Network Systems Co., PO Box: 49019, ATTN: Mailstop F21, San Jose, Ca. 95161-9019 (408)922-8078 "Remember: its not _just_ an electric bulb, its a Dark Sucker!"