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1 Introduction
E-Mail, or electronic mail, is just mail sent between users electronically. E-Mail
is the most productive, resource available on the Internet. The abililty to send
messages electronically (and very quickly) has made "the world smaller".
The essential part of email is your address. Due to the nature of the Internet,
the way it has grown and developed, with no one group or government regulating
ot coordinating it, no centralised records have been kept or individual email
addresses.
At the moment, therefore, there are no "white pages" for the internet where you
can (easily) lookup other peoples email addresses. The best way is to phone up
and ask your collegues what their email addresses is!
1.1 E-Mail Address
So, how do you understand your address?
You normally have a userid (your login name) and the domainname
of the computer to which you connect to gain access to the Internet (which
is separated by a @ symbol.
An example: If you were connecting to Netcom their domainname would be something like
netcomuk.co.uk so, if you add your userid (loginname) to this domain your
email address would look like:
loginname@netcomuk.co.uk
If you conneted to Enterprise their domainname is enterprise.net so,
adding your userid (loginname) to this would result in your email address:
loginname@enterprise.net
If you are connected to someone like Demon Internet you may have a slightly
different looking email address (just to make things more complicated!). Demon's
domainname is demon.co.uk but your userid (loginname) goes between
the @ sign and the domainname:
anything@loginname.demon.co.uk
In this example you can put anything where "anything" is! Demon offer you multiple
email accounts by allowing you to put any mailbox before the @ sign! We have various
accounts, for example:
sales@netconnect.demon.co.uk |
support@netconnect.demon.co.uk |
chris@netconnect.demon.co.uk |
E-Mail addresses do differ within other countries. Usually it is the high-level
domain that alters (the part which says which country the user lives). Here is
a list of high-level domains for some countries.
uk | United Kingdom |
ie | Ireland |
de | Germany |
nl | The Netherlands |
fr | France |
no | Norway |
se | Sweden |
it | Italy |
be | Belgium |
au | Australia |
jp | Japan |
ru | Russia |
za | South Africa |
fi | Finland |
ca | Canada |
There are three domains which apply "anywhere" in the world:
com | Commercial organisation such as a company |
net | Network such as an Internet Service Provider |
org | non-profit making organisation like a charity |
COM, NET and ORG really do not tell you where the recipient is based. ie. if you
wanted to send a mail to loginname@company.net you wouldn't know where that
company was situated (whereas if it had a .de or .it high-level domain you
would know that the company was is Germany or Italy).
1.2 How Does E-Mail Work?
It is actually quite similar to the way the postal service works!
If, for example, I sent a letter from Darlington to London the post office would
take my letter with all the other letters to London, taken to a sorting office
and sorted for that area then delivered to its destination. The destination
could be a mailbox which holds the mail until the receiver has time to collect
his/her mail (ie. many companies use PO Boxes to store mail which can then be
collated at specific and suitable times more than once a day in most cases).
The process for email is very similar. I create an email here in Darlington, which
is destined for a person working in a company in Berlin (Germany). The mail is
sent (by me) to my ISP (similar to posting a normal letter in the post box) who
then "sorts" the mail and directs it to the correct country where it arrives
at its destination. Usually this could be a company who then sorts the mail for
each employee.
ie. stefan@company.de
The .de denotes that the mail is destined for Germany (de stands for
Deutschland), the company part tells the sorter of the mail that it
is destined for a company within Germany. Finally, the name stefan
is most likely an employee working for the company with his own mailbox.
1.3 How Useful is E-Mail?
It is very useful. It is much cheaper and easier to send certain information
via email than it is to send bu facsimile or normal post.
If, for example, you wanted to send the same fax to 15 people Internationally,
this would be expensive and time consuming.
The same process could be done by email much more quickly and cheaply. To create
a mail to be sent to "multiple" recipients is just a matter of putting all their
email addresses in the to: section when you create an email. The best thing
about this is that you only need to send it once!
Another good example is for a person who wants to send a picture, sound sample
or some data to another person (or even persons).
You could send a disk by express air mail but this is very expensive and will still
take 2 or more days. E-Mail allows you to attach data (such as files) to
your mail messages!! The recipient would receive this within minutes and can
decode the information immediately.
TIP: the term "Snail Mail" is a derogatory term used by Internet users to
refer to ordinary mail, which is very very slow when compared to electronic mail.
1.4 What is Netiquette?
Netiquette is just a collection of do's and don'ts when you are connected to the
Internet. Mainly directed towards E-Mail and newsgroup users it is really a
tradition or, some would say, culture that has been developed on the Internet.
One of the problems with electronic mail is that it is difficult to express
sarcasm, humour, sadness, dissapointment so that the receiver fully understands
what you are trying to say. Indeed on occassions many receivers can view what
you have said in completely the wrong context. Say something sarcastic and the
receiver may think you are waging a personal attack!
Generally, between friends, email mis-understandings are easily recognised as you
begin to understand the other persons humour and style of writing. Newsgroups
are much different: you are sending a message to, potentially, 1000's of receivers
who will all view your message in a different way. These people will then
flame you by sending a nasty response in return. You can easily start
getting a name for yourself and (in extreme circumstances) be banned/warned off
certain newsgroups.
Some things you should try and avoid when sending an email or message to a newsgroup:
- Shouting - if you WRITE LIKE THIS you may think you are trying to emphasize
your words/comments but, on the Internet, it is classed as shouting! Avoid using
capitals within sentances.
- Signatures - you are best cutting down your signature to a maximum of 4 or
5 lines. Many "old-hat" (users connected for a few years) Internet users cannot
stand the glorification of signatures. Some people even have huge ASCII art as their
signatures that can take anything upto 15 lines. This will not be tolerated by most users.
- Flaming - if you disagree strongly (mainly on a newsgroup) or launch a personal
attack against another user you may be flamed. If you are flamed it will involved many
people writing to you (in person or in public!) to tell you that you are wrong to say
what you said and that they strongly disagree with your comments.
If you are flamed you stand the chance of being banned or warned from using a newsgroup,
IRC channel etc.
- Cultures - remember that most discussion groups contain users from all over the
world. What you think may be interesting (or even the "norm") may be totally unacceptable
to another user (from another country). Therefore, be careful before you respond to
messages.
- Threads - many newsreaders put news messages into threads which means that if
you respond to a message it connects (like a tree) to the previous message regarding the
topic. Therefore if you are following up a news message keep the content of
your message in the same topic as the subject.
- Crossposting - if you create a news message, do not (if possible) crosspost the
same message to multiple, but similar, newsgroups. If you feel that you have to crosspost,
make sure you put an apology into the message and that you don't do it too often.
- !!! or "....." - do not use lots of exclamation marks at the end of
sentances in order to tell a user you are shocked, suprised etc!!!!! Also, do not use
lots of "...." to break up sentances. Some people.....for example....use these dots
to break sentances...and words...but who knows why....?
- Bold - avoid using lots of bold or highlighted text if possible. This is particularly
true within IRC channels where some people are quite offended by the use of lots of bold
and highlighted text.
- Repeat Mail - if possible try not to repeat sending a mail to a newsgroup. True,
many newsgroups are very busy and some people may not see your message! By sending
your message 2 or 3 times, however, you will make the newsgroup even busier. You also stand
a good chance of making many people annoyed.
- Commerical Posts - if you run a company avoid posting blatent commercial
messages to a discussion newsgroup. By all means tell people you like a product (as you will
always find people who write back and tell you they disagree) but do not announce products
unless you think people will benefit from the announcement - ie. if you have released
a new patch which fixes bugs etc.
- Quoting - avoid quoting reams and reams of text if someone sends you a long email.
Just keep the basic facts or your returned mail will seem to last forever.
Most newsgroup readers work by using threads so a person reading your mail can easily
refer to the previous message if they need to.
1.41 Smileys
Smileys are intended to portray a different "mood" or emotion.
Smiley | Meaning of the Smiley |
---|
:-) | Happy or being funny |
:-( | Sad/Frowning (Quite unhappy) |
;-) | Winking/Sarcastic |
:-D | Laughing |
:-O | Shocked |
:-/ | Fairly negative |
:-p | Sticking tongue out |
:-| | Straight faced - quite negative (but not that unhappy) |
1.42 Using Abbreviations
You will find the abbreviations are very common in every day Internet life (email, newsgroups,
IRC etc) mainly so phrases do not have to be written in full. Here are some common phrases:
Abbreviation | Meaning |
---|
IMHO (or IMO) | In My (Humble) Opinion |
AFAIK | As far As I Know |
BTW | By The Way |
FUBAR | Fed Up Beyond All Recognition |
NRN | No Response Necessary |
OTOH | On The Other Hand |
ROTFL | Rolls On The Floor Laughing (action) |
LOL | Laughs Out Loud (action) |
RTFM | Read The Flipping Manual |
ATM | At The Moment |
FYI | For Your Attention |
RSN | Real Soon Now |
WTF | What The Flip? |
CU (or CUL8R) | See You Later |
1.5 Anatomy of a Mail Header
An electronic mail message has a specific structure to it that's common across every type of
computer system.(4) A sample would be:
Received: from ajk.tele.fi ([131.177.5.20]) by relay-9.mail.demon.net
id aa912139; 1 Feb 97 14:10 GMT
Message-Id: <9702011411.AA11723@ajk.tele.fi>
Date: Sat, 1 Feb 1997 16:12:21 +0200
From: Tomi Ollila
Reply-To:
To: enquiries@active2.demon.co.uk
Cc: amitcp-group@nsdi.fi
Subject: NC Demo
Hi Chris,
I'm just testing latest demo.
I believe some of these things is thought by you too, So I just make sure
you have taken these into consideration :)
The line, with `From' and Received:' are usually not
very interesting. They give the "real" address that the mail is coming from (as opposed to
the address you should reply to, which may look much different), and what places the mail went
through to get to you. Over the Internet, there is always at least one `Received:'
header and usually no more than four or five. When a message is sent using UUCP, one
`Received:' header is added for each system that the mail passes through. This can
often result in more than a dozen `Received:' headers. While they help with dissecting
problems in mail delivery, odds are the average user will never want to see them. Most mail
programs will filter out this kind of "cruft" in a header.
The `Date:' header contains the date and time the message was
sent. Likewise, the "good" address (as opposed to "real" address)
is laid out in the `From:' header. Sometimes it won't include
the full name of the person (in this case `The President'), and
may look different, but it should always contain an email address of
some form.
The `Message-ID:' of a message is intended mainly for tracing
mail routing, and is rarely of interest to normal users. Every
`Message-ID:' is guaranteed to be unique.
`To:' lists the email address (or addresses) of the recipients of
the message. There may be a `Cc:' header, listing additional
addresses. Finally, a brief subject for the message goes in the
`Subject:' header.
The exact order of a message's headers may vary from system to system,
but it will always include these fundamental headers that are vital to
proper delivery.
1.6 Bounced Mail
When an email address is incorrect in some way (the system's name is
wrong, the domain doesn't exist, whatever), the mail system will
bounce the message back to the sender, much the same way that
the Postal Service does when you send a letter to a bad street
address. The message will include the reason for the bounce; a common
error is addressing mail to an account name that doesn't exist. For
example, writing to Simon Edwards at the Royal Institute of Technology
at Melbourne will fail, because his account name has changed (although
it wasn't know when the original message was sent).
Date: Sun, 1 Dec 96 18:13:18 GMT
From: relay-7.mail.demon.net Mail System (MMDF)
Sender: mmdf@relay-7.mail.demon.net
Subject: Failed mail (msg.ac527252)
To: enquiries@active2.demon.co.uk
Cc: postmaster@yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au
Message-ID: <849463998.718074.27@relay-7.mail.demon.net>
Your message could not be delivered to
's9407349@yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au (host: yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au) (queue: smtpns)' for the following
reason: ' ... User unknown'
As you can see, a carbon copy of the message (the `Cc:' header
entry) was sent to the postmaster of the Institute. The Postmaster
is responsible for maintaining a reliable mail system on his system. Usually
postmasters at sites will attempt to aid you in getting your mail where it's
supposed to go. If a typing error was made, then try re-sending the message.
If you're sure that the address is correct, contact the postmaster of the site
directly and ask him how to properly address it.
The message also includes the text of the mail, so you don't have to
retype everything you wrote.
Your message follows:
Received: from active2.demon.co.uk ([158.152.82.3]) by relay-5.mail.demon.net
id ac527252; 1 Dec 96 18:04 GMT
From: Active Software
Reply-To: Active Software
To: s9407349@yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au
CC: Ellis Pritchard ,
Ellis Pritchard ,
Michael Neuweiler
Date: Sun, 01 Dec 1996 17:42:24 -0000
Message-ID:
Organization: Active Software
Subject: Image Engineer
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
1st December 1996
Dear Simon,
The full text of the message is returned intact, including any headers
that were added. This can be cut out with an editor and fed right
back into the mail system with a proper address, making redelivery a
relatively painless process.
1.7 Mailing Lists
People that share common interests are inclined to discuss their hobby
or interest at every available opportunity. One modern way to aid in
this exchange of information is by using a mailing
list---usually an email address that redistributes all mail sent to
it back out to a list of addresses. For example, the NetConnect mailing
list has the address of netconnect@amigaworld.com. Any mail sent to
that address will "explode" out to each person named in a file maintained on
the AmigaWorld server.
Administrative tasks (sometimes referred to as administrivia)
are often handled through other addresses, typically with the suffix
`-request'. To continue the above, a request to be added to or
deleted from the NetConnect list should be sent to majordomo@amigaworld.com.
When in doubt, try to write to the majordomo version of a
mailing list address first; the other people on the list aren't
interested in your desire to be added or deleted, and can certainly do
nothing to expedite your request. Often if the administrator of a
list is busy (remember, this is all peripheral to real jobs and real
work), many users find it necessary to ask again and again, often with
harsher and harsher language, to be removed from a list. This does
nothing more than waste traffic and bother everyone else receiving the
messages. If, after a reasonable amount of time, you still
haven't succeeded to be removed from a mailing list, write to the
postmaster at that site and see if they can help.
Exercise caution when replying to a message sent by a mailing list. If
you wish to respond to the author only, make sure that the only
address you're replying to is that person, and not the entire list.
Often messages of the sort "Yes, I agree with you completely!" will
appear on a list, boring the daylights out of the other readers. Likewise,
if you explicitly do want to send the message to the whole list,
you'll save yourself some time by checking to make sure it's indeed
headed to the whole list and not a single person.
A list of the currently available mailing lists is available in at
least two places; the first is in a file on ftp.nisc.sri.com
called `interest-groups' under the `netinfo/' directory.
It's updated fairly regularly, but is large (presently around 700K),
so only get it every once in a while. The other list is maintained by
Gene Spafford (spaf@cs.purdue.edu
), and is posted in parts to
the newsgroup news.lists
semi-regularly. (See section
Usenet News, for info on how to read that
and other newsgroups.)
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