This is my attempt at listing some Frequently Asked Questions for the
newsgroup comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip, which is where IBM tells us
all to look for support and exchange information about OS/2 Warp when
running the Internet Access Kit.

DISCLAIMER:  The information contained within this document was mostly
extracted from posts made to comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip and thus
has only the credibility of the original poster, which can range
anywhere from "propagator of ill-founded rumors," right on up to the
"official words of IBM," or even higher. ;-)

     THIS DOCUMENT IS PROVIDED "AS-IS" AND ANY USE HEREOF IS AT THE
     RISK OF THE USER.  ABSOLUTELY NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE AS TO
     THE COMPLETENESS, ACCURACY, TRUTHFULNESS, USABILITY, OR OTHER
     CHARACTERISTIC OF THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN.  FURTHER,
     ABSOLUTELY NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE AS TO THE OWNERSHIP OF
     ANY RIGHTS TO ANY OF THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN.  IF YOU
     NEED SOMEONE TO EXPLAIN TO YOU THAT YOU USE THE INFORMATION
     CONTAINED HEREIN AT YOUR OWN RISK, THEN YOU ARE EXPLICITLY
     PROHIBITED FROM USING ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN.

All information contained herein is copyright by the various authors
thereof, and on their behalf, I am demanding a royalty of $1,000 per
use for any use by Microsoft Network.  Any such usage is deemed to be
consent to this royalty agreement, and payment shall be immediately
remitted to:

     William A. Schultz          guru@deltanet.com (Bill Schultz)
     P. O. Box 18732
     Irvine, CA  92713-8732

I am actively soliciting comments, clarifications, and requests for
changes to this FAQ.  Either questions, answers, or both may be
submitted.  Of course, the bulk of the information contained herein
has been, and will continue to be, extracted from the newsgroup
discussion threads in comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip as time goes by.

This is file number 8 of 12.  It contains the eighth part of the FAQ.

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

     FAQ PART ONE:

          1.0  GENERAL QUESTIONS
          2.0  GENERAL IBM QUESTIONS
          3.0  GENERAL OS/2 QUESTIONS
          4.0  OS/2 INTERNET ACCESS KIT (IAK) QUESTIONS
          4.1  GENERAL IAK QUESTIONS
          4.2  GENERAL PROXY SERVER QUESTIONS
          4.3  DIAL OTHER PROVIDER QUESTIONS
          4.3.1  GENERAL DIAL OTHER PROVIDER QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART TWO:

          4.3.2  SLIP SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART THREE:

          4.3.3  PPP SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART FOUR:

          4.3.4  TIA SPECIFIC QUESTIONS
          4.4  ULTIMAIL/LITE QUESTIONS
          4.5  NEWS READER/2 QUESTIONS
          4.6  SENDMAIL QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART FIVE:

          4.7  WEB EXPLORER QUESTIONS
          4.8  FTP QUESTIONS
          4.9  GOPHER QUESTIONS
          4.10  RETRIEVE SOFTWARE UPDATES QUESTIONS
          4.11  OTHER IAK SOFTWARE QUESTIONS
          4.12  WINDOWS TCP/IP WITH IAK SOFTWARE QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART SIX:

          5.0  OS/2 TCP/IP QUESTIONS

     FAQ PART SEVEN:

          5.0  OS/2 TCP/IP QUESTIONS (Continued)
          6.0  OTHER BONUS PACK SOFTWARE QUESTIONS
          7.0  IBM RESOURCES
          8.0  THIRD PARTY SOFTWARE QUESTIONS
          9.0  OTHER RESOURCES

     FAQ PART EIGHT:

          9.0  OTHER RESOURCES (Continued)

     FAQ PART NINE:

          APPENDIX A - INSTRUCTIONS FOR INSTALLING FIXPACK 5

     FAQ PART TEN:

          APPENDIX B - SLIP CONFIGURATION EXAMPLE

     FAQ PART ELEVEN:

          APPENDIX C - PPP CONFIGURATION EXAMPLE

     FAQ PART TWELVE:

          APPENDIX D - ABBREVIATED SENDMAIL DOCUMENTATION

EDITOR'S NOTE:  This document is very much a work in process.  In fact,
I have not yet completed editing it.  However, because there is so
much useful information available herein, I have decided to go ahead
and post it anyway.  This should result in some comments from all of
you which might save me the trouble of editing this further. (i.e., if
nobody thinks this is a good idea, or that it is way too long. ;-)

9.0  OTHER RESOURCES (Continued)

From: mglaris@pic.net
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: OS/2 Talk Daemon
Date: 23 Apr 1995 16:21:14 GMT
Message-ID: <3ndupq$p2g@gandalf.pic.net>
References: <3n6rb2$v@crucible.inmind.com> <3na1jt$66h@gandalf.pic.net> 
<qzSmv4uYOxsX082yn@stack.urc.tue.nl>
Reply-To: mglaris@pic.net

In <qzSmv4uYOxsX082yn@stack.urc.tue.nl>, galactus@stack.urc.tue.nl 
(Arnoud "Galactus" Engelfriet) writes:
>In article <3na1jt$66h@gandalf.pic.net>, mglaris@pic.net wrote:
>> In <3n6rb2$v@crucible.inmind.com>, mweinman@inmind.com writes:
>> >Is there an OS/2 Talk Daemon anywhere? I've looked and can't seem 
to find
>> >one.. similar to WinTalk, but workable under Warp and IAK..
>> 
>> There is a talk daemon that comes witht TCP/IP for OS/2.  I thing I 
have seen
>> others out on ftp.cdrom.com as well.
>
>Can someone please post or mail me where exactly this file
>can be found? I've tried both /os2/unix and /os2/network/tcpip
>on hobbes and the boris.infomagic.com mirror, but I couldn't
>find ytalk* anywhere.


Look at:

http://www.leo.org/cgi-bin/leo-dls/pub/comp/os/os2/tcpip/00-index.html

I think you want the file ytalkos2_91.zip

Good Luck.

Mike Laris
mglaris@pic.net

=====

From: gt0040a@prism.gatech.edu (Tom Sorensen)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: talk
Date: 28 Mar 1995 20:46:17 -0500
Message-ID: <3lae59$504@acmey.gatech.edu>
References: <3l99ps$b75@zeus.embratel.net.br> 
<3l9nvs$gud@potogold.rmii.com>

afelson@rainbow.rmii.com (Adam Felson) writes:

>luca@embratel.net.br wrote:
>: Does anyone know of a good talk program for OS/2 TCP/IP ?

>Whose version of talk would you have it be compatible with?  DEC, HP,
>and Sun all use different protocols for talk.  I'd suggest you forget

True, but ytalk will talk to them all (the problem isn't that they all 
use
different protocols, it's that the talk protocol is poorly specified).
You can get ytalk for OS/2 from ftp.cdrom.com's infinite /os2/incoming
directory, or you can get it from wc51.residence.gatech.edu in 
/f/pub/archive

-- 
Tom Sorensen * gt0040a@prism.gatech.edu * ccastts@prism.gatech.edu
Team OS/2 * Chairman, GT ACM OS/2 SIG * Secretary, Georgia Tech ACM
"OS/2 is what DOS and Windows should have been. Windows/NT aspires to 
become
what OS/2 is." - Lee Reiswig, May, 1993.

=====

From: alan_cairns@sunshine.net (Alan Cairns)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: Free Agent 0.38, What is it?
Date: Sun, 02 Apr 1995 13:40:53 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <3ln2b0$cqd@wolfe.wimsey.com>
References: <3lmf34$nmo@ulowell.uml.edu>

jas@enterprise.uml.edu (Jim Sherwood) wrote:

>I keep seeing posts about problems using Free Agent
>and other posts saying it is great.  What is it?
>Why do I want it?  Where do I get it?  Thanks
>Jim jas@enterprise.uml.edu

It's a Windows programme (sigh). It's an off-line news reader, rather
like CSNav. I'm trying it out just now - indeed this message is being
written off-line.

It seems to work in seamless most of the time. Occasionally it GPFs
for no apparent reason, but it would likely do that in native Windows
too.

The screen management is a bit complicated, but that may just be
because I only got it yesterday and haven't actually read the help
file yet.

It's freeware, and you can get it by web explorer (if yours does FTP)
at www.forteinc.com/forte/. If your WE doesn't do FTP the web page
will tell you where to get it by FTP.

Cheers

=====

Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
From: albertg@andelys.gaylord.org
Subject: Re: Free Agent 0.38, What is it?
Reply-To: albertg@Postes.Gaylord.Org
Message-ID: <D6JKrE.KtE@agora.rdrop.com>
References: <3lmf34$nmo@ulowell.uml.edu>
Date: Wed, 5 Apr 1995 03:09:14 GMT

In <3lmf34$nmo@ulowell.uml.edu>, jas@enterprise.uml.edu (Jim Sherwood) 
writes:
>I keep seeing posts about problems using Free Agent
>and other posts saying it is great.  What is it?
>Why do I want it?  Where do I get it?  Thanks
>Jim jas@enterprise.uml.edu

It's a Windows Newsreader app for either online or offline reading.  

I got it this afternoon to try out - and already they are on ver 
agent046.zip ;-)

Seems quite good - along the lines of WinVn but much slicker.

If you want to read more, or get the program to try out, use the 
following url to get there:

http://www.forteinc.com/forte/btbeta.htm

Albert

-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
+   Albert Gaylord Root@Postes.Gaylord.Org              +
-  - = -(http://postes.gaylord.org/)= - = -              -
+          Voice 1 - (503) 297-1113                    +
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

=====

From: matt@ship.net@direct.ca   (Matt Ion)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: Good OS/2 Internet Clients
Date: 2 Apr 1995 17:40:22 GMT
Message-ID: <3lmni6$e9f@fun.Direct.CA>
References: <dlouks.6.000F92FF@vintages.synapse.net>
Reply-To: mion@direct.ca (Matt Ion)

In <dlouks.6.000F92FF@vintages.synapse.net>, 
dlouks@vintages.synapse.net (David Louks) writes:

>What I want is to replace all of the window sockets I use with OS/2. I 
still 
>need the following;
> 
>- a good FTP client, I don't like the one bundled with Warp

NetSuite FTP (get NSUITE1B.ZIP from Hobbes, /os2/network/tcpip or /new)

>- an archie client

Use Retrieve Software Updates, there's an EXCELLENT PM* Archie beta
there.

>- a news reader, preferably PM based - I will try the Nr/2 upgrade to
   see if I like it but just in case

NetSuite News (also a part of the NSUITE1B package - bonus!)

>- a finger client, PM Based

Can't help ya there...



  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
------
  Opinions expressed      /         ROCK-IT SCIENCE Mobile Audio and 
Security
  do not necessarily     /| ...the   1040 MIDI & Music BBS Technical 
Services
  reflect those of any  [ SOUNDMAN    !!TEAM-OS/2!!   FidoNet  
1:153/7040.106
  marginally sane human  \|           !!TEAM-OS/2!!   Internet  
matt@ship.net
  being anywhere.         \         FAX: (604)253-8312    DATA: 
(604)736-6330
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
------

=====

From: subpop@ibm.net
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: MUD Clients for OS/2 FOUND!
Date: 25 Mar 1995 21:29:23 GMT
Message-ID: <3l21vj$tbk@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>
Reply-To: subpop@ibm.net

For all of you who were looking for MUD clients for OS/2, try ftp-ing 
to
hobbes.nmsu.edu and look in /os2/network/tcpip.

There you will find TT2_099.ZIP (TinTin) as well as CIRCLE2.ZIP (Circle 
Mud).

Happy MUDding, everyone!

-- Amy R. Fisher
   subpop@ibm.net

=====

From: normanmo@clark.net (Norman Moore)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: SIO & SLIP ... works fine for me!
Date: 28 Mar 1995 14:37:12 GMT
Message-ID: <3l96uo$7r0@clarknet.clark.net>
References: <3l8l4n$mt1@kaiwan.kaiwan.com>

In message <3l8l4n$mt1@kaiwan.kaiwan.com> - guru@kaiwan.com   (Bill 
Schultz) wr
ites:
>In <>, mrhuey@wizvax.wizvax.net (Ramsay D. Seielstad) writes:
>
>
>OK.  I am a "newbie" here in Warp land (I last used OS/2 in v 1.3).
>
>So, what is an "SIO" and how do I get one?
>
>I can read through all the garbles in this newsgroup, and I can easily 
believe
>that the reason I am not having some of the problems some of the 
others are
>reporting is that I am running a 486/66 with 16MB of main memory.  
However,
>I am still plagued by flaky serial port stuff.  I am using the 
"standard" serial
>drivers "out of the box" (as patched by Fixpack 5).  So, if installing 
SIO might
>remove the flakes from my serial port, I would be willing to do it, 
but I don't
>have a clue where to get one :-)


     You should be able to get the file 'SIO145.ZIP' (SIO version 1.45) 
at 
most OS/2 FTP sites like Hobbes (hobbes.nmsu.edu), or from most BBSs 
that 
carry OS/2 files.

 ....Enjoy,

 ....Norm

=======================================================================
========
|     Norman Moore                     |     Although I LOVE my 
Country....   |
|     Rockville, Maryland  USA         |                                      
|
|     OS/2 v3.0 Warp!!!                |     ....I FEAR my 
Government!!!      |
|     normanmo@clark.net               |                                      
|
=======================================================================
========

=====

From: itimms@ariel.ucs.unimelb.EDU.AU (Ian Timms)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: SIO and PPP (for you
Date: 28 Mar 1995 14:50:25 GMT
Message-ID: <3l97nh$ovv@news.unimelb.EDU.AU>

To: mikeh@rain.org
Subject: Re: SIO and PPP (for you Norman)
Reply-To: itimms@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au

On the 03-16-95, mikeh@rain.org was chatting with All:

mikeh>In message <3k5j49$222@treasure.coastalnet.com> - 
cn1019@coastalnet.com
mikeh>writes:
mikeh>
mikeh>>In <3k3pba$9ra@clarknet.clark.net>, normanmo@clark.net (Norman 
Moore) writes:
mikeh>>>
mikeh>>>     Well then it's quite obvious that YOU are doing something 
WRONG!!
mikeh>>
mikeh>>I don't think so. If PPP runs with com.sys why not with SIO.sys? 
It's
mikeh>>supposed to be a direct replacement.

Ah, but it's NOT. SIO does not support many of the enhanced features
that COM.SYS does, particularly DMA transfer and synchronous mode 
functions,
enhanced mode auto detection, okay so it's not much use to a lot of us, 
but 
SIO is definitely not a 'direct replacement'.

mikeh>  It has been determined by others that com.sys does not handle 
the
mikeh>operation of the DTR signal as required under certain conditions.
mikeh>Whereas SIO does. This has caused problems with PPP.

I have had absolutely NO trouble with DTR handling using COM.sys, I DID 
have
lots of problems when I tried SIO because it assumed various defaults
regardless of what I intentionally set using the mode command.

[deletia]
mikeh>>> For starters, is "mode DTR=ON" the exact command you used???  
If so,
mikeh>>> which com port do you want to turn DTR=ON for??  But even if 
you did use
mikeh>>
mikeh>>Now, I'm trying not to be insulted, but do you have a clue? I 
do. I have the
mikeh>>setup correct because PPP functions without SIO.
mikeh>
mikeh>  Most PPP users use a CMD script. This is where it is put. Mine 
looks
mikeh>like this.
mikeh>
mikeh>/* options for the "mode" system call */
mikeh>ModeOptions='57600,n,8,1,buffer=on,rts=hs,dtr=on'

Place the MODE command in STARTUP.CMD this will ensure that the port
is correctly initialised when the system starts, and provides an 
stable base upon which comms programs can start.

mikeh>>Oh My, it's my problem. I should have guessed! SIO doesn't work 
here.
mikeh>>Shall I prove it to you? My setup is fine. My response is better 
than
mikeh>> "It works here". That is worse than useless.
mikeh>
mikeh>  Actually, I think it's IBM's problem, as they don't seem to 
handle the
mikeh>DTR control correctly some onf the time.

The DTR problem you have is quite possibly the same that I have with my
new modem which for some reason refuses upon occasion to drop carrier
even though it has been setup to do so when DTR is turned off for the 
required amount of time. Flaky bloody hardware yet again, but I ain't
going back to suffering with 9600.

 Cheers, Ian.

%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% Ian Timms         [Team OS/2]  % Disclaimer: All opinions expressed %
% itimms@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au% herein are mine and mine alone! ;-)%
% CIS:100236,1404 Fidonet:3:633/379 % ===( The author of RxAsync )=== %
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
___
 * MR/2 2.1 #141 * It's OS/2, Jim, but not OS/2 as we know it.

=====

From: jahk@uiuc.edu (Jack Tan)
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-
ip,comp.os.os2.misc,comp.os.os2.setup
Subject: Re: UNIX for OS/2-- What are the best programs?
Date: 2 Apr 1995 22:45:05 GMT
Message-ID: <3ln9dh$bpq@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
References: <3lkuqa$g8s@babyblue.cs.yale.edu>
Reply-To: jahk@uiuc.edu

pfrommer@scus1.ctstateu.edu (Dave Pfrommer) writes:

>I'd like to make a shell that runs like UNIX.  What are the best
>utilities (shells, programs, etc) to use?

This is from my Web page.  When it gets up and running, you'll be able
to grab the files directly from the page.  I'll announce it here and
comp.os.os2.announce when ready.  Most of the files are available at
ftp-os2.cdrom.com, in /pub/os2/32bit/unix or /pub/os2/16bit/unix.
   
     _________________________________________________________________

                                 UNIX AND OS/2
     _________________________________________________________________
   
   Many of the traditional (and some not-so-traditional) Unix
   command-line utilities have been ported to OS/2. They make use of
   OS/2's large address space and long filenames in HPFS while
   maintaining syntactic similarities with their Unix counterparts. 
Much
   of the software comes from the GNU sources at the Free Software
   Foundation, but other developers have also made significant
   contributions as well.
   
   Various ports of Unix editors, such as ed, vi, and Emacs, are
   available. Additionally, many programs accept directory separators 
as
   both OS/2-style backslashes and Unix-style forward slashes.
   
   Since many of the 32-bit applications were compiled using Eberhard
   Mattes's emx package, quite a few of these require the emx runtime
   DLLs. The applications listed below are those obtainable via ftp.
   
   Symbolic links can be added to OS/2 via the Toronto Virtual File
   System (TVFS) installable file system. TVFS is released under IBM's
   Employee Written Software (EWS) program.
   
   MegaDesk and 9 Lives! will expand the OS/2 desktop into a virtual
   desktop.
   
   4OS2 [VIO,16 -- 1,2], [VIO,32 -- 1,2] is a shareware, non-Unix shell
   which supports filename completion, aliases, and other many other
   features. YAOS (Yet Another OS/2 Shell) [VIO,32] can be layered over 
a
   command interpreter to provide filename completion and aliases.
   
   It is also possible to gain X Window and X Window-like capabilities
   under the OS/2 Presentation Manager.
   
   Compilers, such as gcc/g++, can be found under software development.
   
   The OS/2 Frequently Asked Questions List gives information on
   commerical packages of Unix software on OS/2, such as MKS Toolkit.
   
                            COMMON UNIX COMMANDS
                                       
   There are several GNU packages which contain commonly-used Unix
   commands:
   
     * GNU file utilities [VIO,16]: cat chmod cmp cp cut dd du expand
       head install ls mkdir mv paste rm rmdir split tac tail touch
       unexpand
       
       GNU file utilities [VIO,32]: chmod cp dd df dir du install ls
       mkdir mv rm rmdir touch vdir
       
     * GNU shell utilities [VIO,32]: basename date dirname echo env 
expr
       hostname id logname nice pathchk printenv printf pwd sleep tee
       test tty uname whoami yes
       
     * GNU text utilities [VIO,32]: cat cksum comm csplit cut expand 
fmt
       fold head join nl od paste pr sort split sum tac tail tr 
unexpand
       uniq wc
       
   
   
                                OTHER PROGRAMS
                                       
   Other GNU, Unix, and Unix-like programs:
   
     * adaptor (automatic data parallelism translator) [VIO,32]
     * awf (nroff-like text formatter) [VIO,16, 16]
     * awk (text scanning/processing language)
          + GNU awk 2.15.5 [VIO,16, 32]
          + M. Breanna's fast awk [VIO,32]
     * bash (command line shell) [VIO,32]
     * bc (calculator) [VIO,16, 32]
     * cal (calendar) [VIO,16, 32]
     * chain (for Cypherpunks remailers) [VIO,32]
     * compress (file compression)
          + compress 4.0 [VIO,16]
          + compress 4.12 [VIO,32]
     * cols (text column formatter) [VIO,32]
     * cpio (copy archives in/out) [VIO,32]
     * cron (timed execution) [VIO,16+32, 16+32, 32, 32]
     * CVS 1.4 (Concurrent Version System revision control system)
        ////
          + source and //// binaries [VIO,16] ////
          + source and //// binaries [VIO,32]
     * dbm (database manager libraries for Microsoft LIB format) 
[VIO,16,
       32]
     * dc (desk calculator) [VIO,32]
     * df (file system disk usage) [VIO,32]
     * diff (compare files)
          + GNU diff [VIO,16, 32]
          + GNU wdiff 0.5 [VIO,32]
          + PMdiff 2.7 [PM,32]
     * dired (directory editor, like Emacs 'dired' mode) [VIO,32]
     * doscheck (filename check for DOS and SYSV compatibility) 
[VIO,32]
     * du (directory disk usage) [VIO,32]
     * ed (line editor) [VIO,32]
     * elm 2.3.11 (mail front-end) [VIO,32]
     * Emacs (extensible programmer's editor)
          + Eberhard Mattes's GNU Emacs [VIO,PM,32]
          + Joe's Own Version of Emacs (JOVE) source and binaries
            [VIO,16]
          + MicroEMACS 3.12 [VIO,16, 32, 32]
     * ephereris (astronomical ephereris) [VIO,32]
     * file (guess file type) [VIO,16]
     * find (locate a file) [VIO,32]
     * flex (fast lexical analyzer) [VIO,16, 32]
     * flip (Unix OS/2 text file conversion) [VIO,DOS/2]
     * freeze/melt (compression program) [VIO,32]
     * fudge (data analysis/curve fitting) [VIO,32]
     * getline (command recall/editing) [VIO,32]
     * grep (text string search)
          + grep [VIO,32, 32]
          + egrep [VIO,16, 32]
          + fgrep [VIO,16, 32]
          + Bob Zimmerman's grep [VIO,32]
     * groff (text formatting) [VIO,32]
     * gzip (GNU gzip file compression) source and binaries [VIO,16, 
32]
     * hpgl (HP-GL conversion) [VIO,32]
     * indent (C source code formatter) [VIO,16, 32]
     * ispell (spell checking)
          + GNU ispell 4.0 [VIO,16]
          + GNU ispell v3.0.09b [VIO,32]
     * jlist (Kanji file viewer) [VIO,32]
     * joe (GNU JOE editor 1.0.8) [VIO,32]
     * kill (process killer) [VIO,16, 16, 16, 32, 32, 32, 32, 32] 
[PM,32,
       32, 32]
     * ksh (Korn shell)
          + Ian Stewartson's ksh, source and binaries [VIO,16]
          + ksh [VIO,32]
     * less (enhanced file pager) [VIO,16, 32]
     * lex (scanner generator): see flex
     * m4 (GNU macro processor v1.4) [VIO,16, 32]
     * make (file dependency executor)
        ////
          + dmake 4.0 [VIO,16]
          + pdmake [VIO,16]
          + GNU make 3.71 [VIO,32]
     * makedepend (update makefile dependencies) //// [VIO,32]
     * man (display Unix-style manual pages) [VIO,16, 32]
     * md5 (message-digest algorithm) [VIO,32]
     * mime64 (MIME64 encoder/decoder) [VIO,32]
     * mmv32 (move, copy, append lines/files with wildcards) [VIO,32]
     * more (file pager) [VIO,32, 32]
     * nice (give up timeslices to other programs) [VIO,16]
     * patch (updated source files using a diff file) [VIO,32]
     * (PostScript file utilities) [VIO,32]
     * perf (generate perfect hash functions) [VIO,32, 32]
     * perl (Perl programming language)
          + perl 4.0 patchlevel 19 [VIO,16]
          + perl 4.0 patchlevel 36 [VIO,32]
          + Oraperl (Oracle DBMS variant of Perl) [VIO,32]
     * ps (list processes) [VIO,16, 16, 16, 16, 32, 32, 32, 32] [PM,16,
       32, 32, 32]
     * psnup (PostScript page fitter) //// [VIO,16]
     * pushd/popd/dirs (C shell directory commands) [VIO,16]
     * python (programming language) [VIO,32]
     * recode (character set conversion: GNU recode 3.4) [VIO,32]
     * rcs (revision control system) [VIO,16, 32]
     * rawhide (recursive file finder) [VIO,16]
     * rev (print filter for reversing pages, double sides, etc.)
       [VIO,32]
     * sc 6.21 (spreadsheet) [VIO,32]
     * sed (stream text editor) [VIO,16, 32]
     * shar (create/extract shell archives) [VIO,16, 16]
     * strings (extract text from executable files) [VIO,16]
     * sums (calculate Unix checksums) [VIO,16]
     * tar (tape archiver)
          + tar [VIO,16]
          + GNU tar [VIO,16]
          + GNU tar with network & SCSI tape support [VIO,32] (part1,
            part2)
     * tcl 7.3 (programming language) [VIO,32]
     * TeXinfo 2.16 (GNU hypertext/online-help tool) [VIO,16, 32]
     * tr (translate characters) [VIO,32]
     * uqwk 1.8 (offline mail/news reader) [VIO,32]
     * vi (screen-based visual editor)
          + elvis 1.5 vi clone, source and binaries [VIO,16]
          + elvis 1.8 vi clone, source and binaries [VIO,32]
          + levee vi clone, source and binaries [VIO,16]
          + stevie vi clone [VIO,16]
     * which (locate an executable or DLL) [VIO,DOS/2+32]
     * YACC (parser generator)
          + Berkeley YACC [VIO,32]
          + GNU bison 1.22 [VIO,32]
   
-- 

Jack Tan
jahk@uiuc.edu
[TEAM OS/2]

=====

From: rdempse@ibm.net
Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: Looking for OS2 WWW server to visit
Date: 2 Apr 1995 06:14:05 GMT
Message-ID: <3llfbd$29ti@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>
References: <3j5igv$cd@tilde.csc.ti.com> <steveja-
2203951118410001@134.18.127.93>
Reply-To: rdempse@ibm.net

In <steveja-2203951118410001@134.18.127.93>, steveja@werple.mira.net.au 
(Deckah) writes:
>In article <3j5igv$cd@tilde.csc.ti.com>, BGC@msg.ti.com (Brad Curtis) 
wrote:
>Its address is http://www.intac.com/nnjos2/pharmacy/WarpPharmacy.html


WOW! That sucker is FAST at loading URLs.



                                                        r.l.dempsey
                                                        rdempse@ibm.net

***********  END OF PART EIGHT OF TWELVE PART WARP/IAK FAQ  ***********
