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LIBRES: Library and Information Science Research Electronic Journal __________________________________________________________________ ISSN 1058-6768 February 28, 1994 Volume 4 Issue 1 Quarterly LIBRE4N1 MUNS GENERIC NETWORK RESOURCE REVIEWS by Raleigh C. Muns, MLS INTERNIC - Internet Network Information Center "What is the Internet?" and "how do I get connected to the Internet?" are two commonly asked questions which information professionals will recognize as being more complex than the uninitiated normally realize. Simplification of those two questions in the popular media (i.e., those questions seem to never be addressed), coupled with advertising campaigns unrelated to reality, create an environment where prospective travelers of the information superhighway assume that one merely needs to be told where to sign up and where to buy the software in order to, as in a current AT&T advertising effort, send faxes from the beach and tuck babies in by telephone. The National Science Foundation (NSF) funded InterNIC, the subject of this review, has become my preferred resource for dealing with the real complexity of the two initial questions above. Experienced Internet users are familiar with the amateurish feel of a large number of online Internet resources. The InterNIC, as a product of three nationally recognized corporations awarded an NSF contract "to provide and/or coordinate services for the NSFNET community" has a professional and polished appearance and feel. The obvious goal is to sell the Internet, which dovetails nicely into the activities of those of us who are doing just that. The InterNIC is reachable by gopher client software, telnet software, and even by dialing a toll-free telephone number. If you have a gopher client and know how to point it, point it to Internet address RS.INTERNIC.NET; if you have the capability to use the fairly ubiquitous remote login TELNET command from your local system or computer, TELNET to RS.INTERNIC.NET, then type GOPHER (a good way to check out gopher if you don't have access to it in any other form); if you are savvy with, and have access to, File Transfer Protocol (FTP) software, you can FTP to RS.INTERNIC.NET (not recommended); or, if you're not embarrassed at being totally confused, you can personally phone 1-800-444-4345, navigate the obligatory touch tone menus, and talk to real human beings about accessing the Internet. The explication below assumes gopher access, either directly, or by use of the TELNET command (see above). INTERNIC INFORMATION SERVICES - GENERAL ATOMICS The InterNIC is divided into three distinct pieces, one for each of the members of the corporate troika. First up, General Atomics which maintains the "InterNIC Information Services" portion of the InterNIC. This is the part of the InterNIC which really does tell the user what the Internet is and points to a myriad of ways of accessing it. Areas of value here are found under the gopher menu choices: Internet Information for Everybody Getting Started on the Internet Getting Connected to the Internet Under "Internet Information for Everybody" one can find a plethora of statistics on Internet growth in a number of formats. Postscript versions of graphs reside next to ASCII versions of the same data, thus allowing a wide range of accessors. For example, this is where one can find an ASCII graph of the increase in the number of Internet hosts from 213 in 1983 to 1,776,000 in 1993. Under "Getting Started on the Internet" one can find the 1st edition of Brendan Kehoe's ZEN AND THE ART OF THE INTERNET, and a modified version of a chapter from Ed Krol's THE WHOLE INTERNET USERS GUIDE AND CATALOG titled "FYI on 'What is the Internet'." Both Krol's and Kehoe's works, in their commercially published forms, are staples in my own Internet instruction activities. Under "Getting Connected to the Internet," the latest version of Peter Kamiski's "PDIAL: Public Dialup Internet Access List" (December 9, 1993) can be found. This is the best resource available for connecting individuals, as opposed to institutions, to the Internet. Most of the resources in this area are scattered throughout the Internet, but the InterNIC archive provides commercial quality stability, coherence, and flexible means of access to these materials. DIRECTORY AND DATABASE SERVICES - AT&T Second up is AT&T which handles "Directory and Database Services." The most interesting item maintained by AT&T is its "Directory of Directories" which points to products and services accessible through the Internet, including FTP, gopher, and library catalog sites. This directory is small compared to some of the sources familiar to Internet veterans, such as Diane Kovac's excellent compilations of listservs, electronic journals, and newsletters found in various incarnations on the Internet. By reading the document "How to list a resource" one is given the procedures for registering a "free" entry in the Directory. There exists the option to pay for an "expanded" entry ($100 per month for a minimum of three months). Entries in this directory are apparently not actively sought by the maintainers. Rather, the means by which the number of entries, and thus the size and utility of the directory, will increase will be by contributing individuals and organizations. AT&T institutes an ongoing verification process where contributors must continually verify the status of their resource. REGISTRATION SERVICES - NSI Finally, NSI handles the "Registration Services" area which consists of assigning asn's and IP numbers, and registering domains. I found this area to be of limited use, especially for beginners. Frankly, such information is beyond my ken and interests, but it should be noted for those with the background to appreciate it. Raleigh C. Muns / Reference Librarian / Thomas Jefferson Library University of Missouri - St. Louis / SRCMUNS@UMSLVMA.UMSL.EDU Opinions published are exclusive to the author and do not represent, nor intend to represent, opinions and stances of the University of Missouri. _____ Articles and Sections of this issue of _LIBRES: Library and Information Science Research Electronic Journal_ may be retrieved via anonymous ftp to cc.curtin.edu.au or via e-mail message addressed to LISTSERV@KENTVM or LISTSERV@KENTVM.KENT.EDU (instructions below) Papers may be submitted at anytime by email or send/file to: Diane K. Kovacs- Editor-in-Chief, _LIBRES: Library and Information Science Research Electronic Journal, EDITORS@KENTVM.KENT.EDU _________________________________ *Copyright Declaration* Copyright of articles published by LIBRES: Library and Information Science Electronic Journal is held by the author of a given article. 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