Subject: How to send mail to CIN
As most of you know, the Conservation Information Network, an information utility run by the Getty Conservation Institute in cooperation with the Canadian Heritage Information Network, has as one of its components an email service, of sorts. The mail system makes use of GEMDES, a Canadian government system (formerly called Envoy 100), and until recently, it was not possible to send mail between CIN and the Internet. Fortunately, this has changed, but before I tell you how to go about sending mail to CIN users, I want to give a you few reasons why you probably shouldn't do so without first obtaining the consent of your intended recipient. Note also, that I won't be soliciting CIN users for the DistList, for reasons that will become obvious. A. Cautions Caution 1. GEMDES mail is EXPENSIVE! The CIN mail system is not free. Far from it. Users are charged $.70 for every 1000 characters read or typed. This includes the characters they have to type to issue a read-mail instruction, to type in a response, and of course, all the characters in your message. The item you are now reading (up to the end of the last sentence) would cost your recipient a little over $.70. A typical DistList would cost about $15 and a largish DistList as much as $25. The Conservation Email Directory would cost $135. Unsolicited mail to CIN users (especially *this* CIN user) will most likely not be greeted with enthusiasm. To make matters worse, many CIN users do not understand the pricing structure, although the Getty folks try to explain it periodically. I managed to run up a $190 bill in my first month, when the net first came up. Caution 2. CIN users are often not very comfortable with email. As a practical matter CIN users (perhaps because of the high costs) seem not to read their mail very often. GEMDES users have, to be generous, a confusing manual and many (probably most) will have difficulty responding to your message. When your message arrives it comes tagged with a semi-cryptic note at the beginning of the message (which note the user will likely never have seen before) instructing the user on how to reply to the Internet. Unfortunately the note is long gone by the time the user replies. As far as I can tell, CIN users haven't been informed about the existence of a gateway, so presumably the Getty folks are not yet prepared to support gatewayed mail, so the user will probably be on his/her own. Caution 3 Do not PUBLICIZE the gateway Do NOT repost this information to other lists, publish it in print or in any other way widely disseminate the information. I have spoken to the folks at nasamail.nasa.gov about our use of the gateway and they are very helpful, but they are concerned about the gateways capacity being overstressed if the traffic increases drastically. Now we are not going to tip the scales, but if someone were to repost this to PACS-L or ALCTS Network News and the traffic increased dramatically, the NASA people will have trouble and I will have broken my word and will have to commit seppuku and it will all be on your head. (The NASA people are willing to talk about "re-architecting" the gateway to handle more traffic if it does become necessary, but I have promised them that my announcement here would not add much to the burden) B. HOW TO DO IT So, if you still want to try it, and know that your recipient is technoid enough to handle it and is willing to pay dearly for the privelege, (uh, need I mention that I will NOT appreciate receiving mail in my cin account?), here's how to do it. CIN accounts have names like cin.xyz where xyz is the individual user/institution (usually it's a reasonably mnemonic name). To mail to user cin.xyz, mail your message to hold on to your chair, (you thought normal Internet names were fun...) To: /c=canada/admd=telecom.canada/id=cin.xyz/ s=gettyconservationinstitute8/ [at] nasamail__nasa__gov Note that there should NOT be a line break after the xyz/ It really is one long line, but who has a terminal that wide? Now, your mail User Agent (the program you use to compose messages and to post them), in most cases will choke on this address (who wouldn't), so you will have to ask your system people for help on how to do it on your specific machine. For the techies among you, everything before the @ is an x.400 address (you will be seeing more of these as time goes by), and nasamail.nasa.gov is a gateway. C. ADDITIONAL INFO FOR UNIX USERS For those of you on BSD unix systems (eg SunOs), if your mail user agent (or the shell, for that matter (remember, you may have to 'escape' the slashes like this: To:\/c=canada\/admd=etc...)), chokes on that address, you can act as your own user agent post the message directly with sendmail. With your editor, create a file that looks like this: To:/c=canada/admd=etc... Subject: This is my subject This is my message. The first header (To:) should be the very first line of the file and there must be a blank line between the last header (in this case the Subject: field) and the first line of the body of the message. Although this example is indented for clarity, your message, of course, won't be. Save this file as (for example) cin.msg and then at the shell prompt type: /usr/lib/sendmail -t < cin.msg These instructions are for BSD and similar systems. I don't know where sendmail is on, eg, System 5, so you may need to modify this accordingly. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:9 Distributed: Saturday, July 13, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-9-004 ***Received on Saturday, 13 July, 1991