1. bae 64 encoding
- Posted by PogoWolf <pogowolf at IASTATE.EDU> Jan 27, 1997
- 1426 views
Letter to all... could we please switch back to the normal uue encoding? Most of us, can't use the base 64. Plus base 64 really dosn't add THAT much more compression.... I'm on a terminal, I don't have access to the base 64 decoding program. just the normal uue thanks!~ --- /) \ /\ / /ogo \/ \/olf *************************************************************************** * * * E-mail:pogowolf at iastate.edu * *HomePage:http://www.public.iastate.edu/~pogowolf/homepage.html * * * *You can learn alot about a person by the news groups they subscribe too!!* ***************************************************************************
2. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Michael Packard <lgp at EXO.COM> Jan 27, 1997
- 1424 views
On Mon, 27 Jan 1997, PogoWolf wrote: > Letter to all... > > could we please switch back to the normal uue encoding? > Most of us, can't use the base 64. > Plus base 64 really dosn't add THAT much more compression.... > > I'm on a terminal, I don't have access to the base 64 decoding program. > just the normal uue really? I'm using PINE on a unix shell account and it works fine. PINE is on just about ALL unix shells. Michael Packard Lord Generic Productions lgp at exo.com http://exo.com/~lgp A Crash Course in Game Design and Production http://exo.com/~lgp/euphoria
3. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Cameron Kaiser <spectre at ODIN.EGATE.NET> Jan 27, 1997
- 1406 views
- Last edited Jan 28, 1997
Michael Packard dared to utter: really? I'm using PINE on a unix shell account and it works fine. PINE is on just about ALL unix shells. Hmm, but what about those of use who use Elm? Cameron Kaiser http://www.sserv.com/ spectre at sserv.com
4. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Michael Packard <lgp at EXO.COM> Jan 27, 1997
- 1399 views
On Mon, 27 Jan 1997, Cameron Kaiser wrote: > > Michael Packard dared to utter: > really? I'm using PINE on a unix shell account and it works fine. PINE > is on just about ALL unix shells. > > Hmm, but what about those of use who use Elm? use pine, its way better. Actually I changed to pine when elm started screwing up my e-mails. When I replied to a message, it would send an empty message. Pine is pretty easy to learn and has lots of cool features, including base 64 attachments. Michael Packard Lord Generic Productions lgp at exo.com http://exo.com/~lgp A Crash Course in Game Design and Production http://exo.com/~lgp/euphoria
5. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Arthur Adamson <euclid at HORANDATA.NET> Jan 28, 1997
- 1403 views
At 07:09 PM 1/27/97 -0500, you wrote: >---------------------- Information from the mail header ----------------------- >Sender: Euphoria Programming for MS-DOS <EUPHORIA at >MIAMIU.ACS.MUOHIO.EDU> >Poster: Cameron Kaiser <spectre at ODIN.EGATE.NET> >Subject: Re: bae 64 encoding >------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > >Michael Packard dared to utter: >really? I'm using PINE on a unix shell account and it works fine. PINE >is on just about ALL unix shells. > >Hmm, but what about those of use who use Elm? > > >Cameron Kaiser >http://www.sserv.com/ >spectre at sserv.com > And PC's??? Arthur P. Adamson, The Engine Man, euclid at mail.horandata.net
6. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Andrew Baron <abaron at CWAVE.COM> Jan 27, 1997
- 1410 views
- Last edited Jan 28, 1997
> And PC's??? > Arthur P. Adamson, The Engine Man, euclid at mail.horandata.net There is a Pine port to the PC. However it depends on what you have for a mail server. I have a POP3 and use EudoraPro which will decode the files, but Pine intended for IMAP servers. People who use Dial-Up and have IMAP will just have to suffer.
7. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Michael Packard <lgp at EXO.COM> Jan 27, 1997
- 1382 views
- Last edited Jan 28, 1997
Weird. I figured everyone called a service provider through a terminal program on their pc. I use commo, which is about as dumb terminal program as you get (it works though, and is 100 times faster to get to my email through the unix shell account than starting windoze\winsock\netscape) log into my shell account and run pine from unix. Everyone who has a unix(or linux) shell account should have access to pine. I use tin to read the newsgroups. Michael Packard Lord Generic Productions lgp at exo.com http://exo.com/~lgp A Crash Course in Game Design and Production http://exo.com/~lgp/euphoria
8. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Warren Evans <warren.evans at USA.NET> Jan 28, 1997
- 1407 views
-------------------------------------------------------------------------= ------ M. Packard wrote: Weird. I figured everyone called a service provider through a terminal program on their pc. I use commo, which is about as dumb terminal program as you get (it works though, and is 100 times faster to get to my email through the unix shell account than starting windoze\winsock\netscape) log into my shell account and run pine from unix. Everyone who has a unix(or linux) shell account should have access to pine. I use tin to read the newsgroups. Michael Packard -------------------------------------------------------- You're right, of course - using the Unix shell is much faster. I use Telix for that. But I've gotten hooked on Agent 99's features - sorting, folders, filters, etc. For instance my filters for alt.best.of.internet remove about 70-80% of the posts. It really helps not to have to look at so much junk. I know, tin has killfiles - Agent's are just easier to use. I handle the speed problem by using Sean's Scheduler to pick up news and email at 4am. I surf the web with images turned off, and still have time to read my downloaded newsgroups and email during the World Wide Wait. (Ob Euphoria Reference) Speaking of speed, perhaps future Euphoria versions could benefit from the concept of the jiffy. In physics, a jiffy is sometimes defined as the time it takes light to travel one meter. In programming, it can be 1/100th or 1/60th of a second, depending on the language. Jiffies are much more appropriate to computer speeds than seconds. Regards, Warren
9. Re: bae 64 encoding
- Posted by Michael Packard <lgp at EXO.COM> Jan 28, 1997
- 1392 views
On Tue, 28 Jan 1997, Warren Evans wrote: > > (Ob Euphoria Reference) Speaking of speed, perhaps future Euphoria > versions could benefit from the concept of the jiffy. In physics, a > jiffy is sometimes defined as the time it takes light to travel one > meter. In programming, it can be 1/100th or 1/60th of a second, > depending on the language. Jiffies are much more appropriate to > computer speeds than seconds. In animation and video a "jiffy" is 1/60 of a second (one field of NTSC video) Michael Packard Lord Generic Productions lgp at exo.com http://exo.com/~lgp A Crash Course in Game Design and Production http://exo.com/~lgp/euphoria