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1990-03-05
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ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NODE NETWORK
INFO BULLETIN #6
BID/FILE NAME: INFONODE.006
I have received several questions regarding the node network, so this
bulletin will attempt to answer them. If one person has a question,
I'm sure there are several others wondering about the same thing.
1-Q: When I check for the route and quality of a node I often see two
routes listed with different calls and different quality. What does
this mean? A: What this is showing is that there are two different
routes between the two nodes. (Sometimes you'll find three shown.)
When attempting to make a connection, the node will try the route with
the best quality first, but if the connection fails going that way,
it will try the next best route. It will try all possibilities before
it sends a "failure" report to the user.
2-Q: I've found a couple of nodes that have very different commands
than the nodes I'm used to. Do you have any information on these?
There are four or five different types of nodes out there now:
NET/ROM, TheNet, the G8BPQ switch, K-NODES and possibly another.
NET/ROM and TheNet are basically identical, and the BPQ switch uses
most of the same common commands. CONNECT, NODES, ROUTES and USERS
are the same on all three. NET/ROM and TheNet have CQ (available in
Version 1.3 only), IDENT, and PARMS, while the BPQ switch has BBS,
BYE, INFO and PORTS. The K-NODE is completely unknown to me. I've
never personally used one, so am not familiar with it. If someone
that is familiar with it would send me information as to the command
structure and how it compares with the other nodes, I'll be happy to
share it with all of you in a future bulletin.
3-Q: In all the nodes I've connected to, I have never found an "armed"
CQ in the Users command, nor have I ever gotton an answer to any of my
CQ's. Is this a non-used feature around here? A: It appears that very
few people make use of this feature, and I don't know why. It works
very well. If I connected to a node and entered:
"CQ Anyone around this evening? This is Larry in San Francisco"
anyone monitoring the frequency that that node is on should see:
"WB9LOZ-15>CQ: Anyone around this evening? This is Larry in San
Francisco"
and anyone entering USERS on that node would see either
"Uplink (WB9LOZ) <~~> CQ(WB9LOZ-15)" if I connected direct, or
"Circuit (SFW:W6PW-1 WB9LOZ) <~~> CQ(WB9LOZ-15)" if I connected
from a different node. Anyone wishing to QSO with me could then
connect to the node, if they weren't already connected, and connect
to WB9LOZ-15. It's simple to use, but not many use it. Maybe we
need to spread the word on this feature.
4-Q: I almost never see anyone but myself in the USERS report. Am I
doing something wrong, or are the nodes just not used very much?
A: You're doing nothing wrong. The USERS command will show ALL users
of the node, so if you're the only one listed, you're the only one
using it. I've seen as many as nine stations listed on a node at one
time. Apparently you're just using nodes that aren't being used.
5-Q: When I enter USERS I see things like HOST and CIRCUIT. What do
they mean? A: There are five of these descriptions used by the nodes.
UPLINK: The station shown connected directly to the node.
DOWNLINK: The node has made a connection from the first station shown
to the second station shown. Example: DOWNLINK (K9AT-15 N6UWK)
would mean that the node connected to N6UWK at the request of K9AT.
CIRCUIT: Indicates that the station has connected from another node.
It shows the alias and call of the other node prior to the user's
call. Example: Circuit (SF:WB9LOZ-2 WA6DDM) would mean that
WA6DDM was using this node, but he connected to it from the
SF:WB9LOZ-2 node.
CQ: See question #3 above.
HOST: The user is connected directly from the node terminal. This is
seen when the owner of the node is a user, or the BBS associated with
the node is using it to forward messages.
Thanks for all of your questions and comments!
73, Larry, WB9LOZ @ W6PW