These instructions may not work for everybody, but I'll help you if
I can. I will give priority to requests from NASA folks first.
==================================================================
NASA/JSC E-Mail Procedures
version 1.0
12/20/93
The latest, released version of this document can be obtained via
anonymous FTP from:
ftp.jsc.nasa.gov:/pub/emaddr.txt
If you would like to be placed on the e-mail distribution list
for this document, send a request to me at
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov.
Electronic mail (e-mail) at NASA is very complicated. There are
hundreds of different computer systems in use with dozens of
different e-mail packages. There are a dozen different ways of
addressing e-mail. There is an effort underway at NASA
Headquarters to simplify the e-mail addressing scheme, but until
that scheme is implemented everywhere, we all need some help when
communicating with people using other e-mail systems. This
document attempts to cut through the electronic fog and tell you
what you need to know to send e-mail from your e-mail system,
whatever it is, to any other e-mail system. This document
focuses on sending simple text messages. Later versions may have
more on sending computer files ("binary attachments") with your
messages.
Don't worry -- you can't break anything by trying the procedures
outlined in this document. Usually. And if they don't work,
please tell me about it so I can update the document. If I've
tested it, I marked it "(Tested <date>.)"
There are two e-mail addressing standards used by most NASA e-
mail systems, SMTP and X.400. My Simple Mail Transport Protocol
(SMTP) address is kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov, while my X.400
address is
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/O=NASA/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/.
Using either of these two standards, gateways between e-mail
systems and your e-mail system's native addressing format, there
are frequently many different methods to address an e-mail
message to a recipient on another system. I've tried to give the
simplest method or the method which works the best. One choice
I've made is to recommend using sprint.com as your SMTP/X.400
gateway instead of x400.msfc.nasa.gov because Sprint seems to be
faster.
To use this document, find the number of the system you're
sending FROM (let's say 20, JSC PROFS) and the number of the
system you're sending TO (say 33, SSP cc:Mail), then find the
procedure numbered with the first number, then a dot, then the
second number (like 20.33). Follow the directions there. If you
see a word enclosed in <angle braces>, don't type the word
itself. Substitute in the required information. For example, if
you see <user ID>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV, you must supply the user ID
of the recipient. (However, because some e-mail addresses
include the <angle brace> characters, there are exceptions to
this annotation rule. Be careful.)
Every e-mail system has a way of addressing messages to other
users, usually a "TO:" field. If the directions in the
appropriate section of this document just consist of an address,
like this...
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
..type that address into the "TO:" field of your e-mail system.
Use the recipient's first name and last name, etc.
This document is not comprehensive. It may not include your
specific e-mail system by name, or it might not include the e-
mail system you're trying to reach. If you see a great need for
including another e-mail system in this document, please contact
me.
If you need help on e-mail, I suggest you use the following
sequence:
1) Read the on-line help screens, if any.
2) Read the paper manuals for your e-mail system.
3) Ask your local office computer guru.
4) Call the user support "Help Desk" for your system.
5) Send me e-mail asking, "Ken, how do I send from Quirky Mail to
Bizarre Mail?"
6) Call me.
Ken Jenks, kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
(713) 483-4368
The e-mail systems included here are:
1. SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
2. America On-line, AOL
3. BIX
4. CompuServe
5. Fido Net
6. GEnie
7. MCI Mail
8. Prodigy
9. SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
10. BITNET
11. CSNET
12. ESNET/DECnet
13. SPAN
14. Fax, facsimile, datafax
15. NASAMail/TELEMAIL
16. Headquarters MS-Mail
17. ARC QuickMail
18. GSFC Mail
19. JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
20. JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
21. JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
22. JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
23. JSC SE Mail
24. JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
25. JESNET VMSMail
26. JSC VAX: CISV
27. JSC VAX: MEDICS
28. KSC MS-Mail
29. MSFC cc:Mail
30. MSFC Data General CEO
31. MSFC MS-Mail
32. MSFC Quick Mail
33. Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
If you want your e-mail system added to the list, give me a call
and we'll figure out the details.
1. From SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
There are at least a hundred different Simple Mail Transport
Protocol (SMTP) user agents. Each of them has a slightly
different user interface, but they all share the common method of
addressing e-mail called out in RFC-822. (Don't ask what an RFC
is; if you don't know, it won't hurt you.) The syntax of an SMTP
e-mail address is:
<user>@<host>.<domain>
UPPER/lower case do not matter. My preferred e-mail address is:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
where "kjenks" is my user ID, "gothamcity" is the name of my mail
host, and "jsc.nasa.gov" is the domain where "gothamcity" can be
found.
The domain can tell you something about the affiliation of the
person at the other end. For example, my domain indicates that I
an affiliated with the U.S. Government (.gov), I am affiliated
with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA),
and that I am affiliated with Johnson Space Center (JSC). Some
high-level domains, like .gov, are .edu for educational
organizations, .com for commercial organizations, .org for non-
commercial organizations, .ca for Canadians and .au for
Australians.
The host name may seem kind of silly, like my "gothamcity"
address, but it's the system administrator who determines these,
not necessarily the e-mail recipient.
1.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
To send e-mail from one SMTP account to another, you need to know
the other user's user ID, host and domain. The easiest way is to
find this is to call them on the telephone and ask. Even if the
person doesn't know this data, his system administrator or Help
Desk usually will. If this doesn't work, you could ask the user
to send a message to your SMTP account then look at the return
address. Note, however, that not all e-mail systems can issue or
pass through valid return addresses.
1.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
1.3. To BIX
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
1.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and it
should look like:
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
1.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
1.6. To GEnie
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
1.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
1.8. To Prodigy
<user>@prodigy.com
1.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
1.10. To BITNET
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
For example:
SMITH%FOO.B...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
1.11. To CSNET
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example:
1.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
For example:
1.13. To SPAN
To send e-mail to the Space Physics and Astronomy Network (SPAN),
the suggested syntax is:
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
For example:
1.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
The folks at the NASA Science Internet User Support Office
(NSIUSO) put out the following announcement:
It is now possible to send an electronic mail message directly into
a FAX machine through the GSFC FAX gateway. Send your message
(text only!) to the following address:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from e-mail direct to
the NSIUSO, you would address it to
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
To send to my office fax, use this:
\{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047\}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
(Tested 11/16/93.) Note the "backslash" characters ('\'). From
the UNIX command line, the {curly braces} are special characters
and must be "quoted" to prevent them from being interpreted by
the operating system. Your system may be different. Experiment,
and let me know the results so I can update this document!
1.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
METHOD 1: The suggested syntax is:
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, my NASAMail address is:
(Tested 11/16/93. Method 1 worked, but the return address
failed.)
METHOD 2: Alternatively, you can use the SMTP/X.400 gateway,
wherein my e-mail address is:
/PN=Kenneth.C.Jenks/O=NASA/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/@spri
nt.com
(Tested 11/18/93. The return address works.)
1.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
(Tested 04/22/93.)
1.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
(Tested 12/09/93.)
1.18. To GSFC Mail
To send e-mail to the Goddard Space Flight Center mail system,
the suggested syntax is:
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
For example:
1.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
JSC MS-Mail users can be reached at:
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses:
Server <post office> Organization
------ ------------- ------------
ACRV ACRV Space Station Assured Crew Return Vehicle
ENG1 ENG1
ISC01 ISC01 Information Systems Contract
ISC05 ISC05 Information Systems Contract
JSCCA1 CA1 Flight Crew Operations Directorate
JSCJA2 JA2
JSCMSM1 MSM1
JSCPA1 B1 Information Systems Directorate (ISD) , bldg 1
JSCPA2 PA2 ISD, bldg 12
JSCPT1 PT1 ISD, Technology Development Division
JSCVA1 VA1 Space Shuttle Orbiter Project Office
For example, Jerry King, the ISD e-mail guru, uses the JSCPA1
file server, so his SMTP address is:
1.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
METHOD 1: The suggested syntax is:
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example, my PROFS address is:
(Tested 11/16/93. The message went through, but the return
address didn't work.) Note: this method adds dozens of lines of
header information to your message.
METHOD 2: An alternate syntax is:
/PN=<user>/O=vmspfhou/PRMD=jscprofs/ADMD=telemail/C=us/@x400.msfc
nasa.gov
For example:
/PN=kjenks/O=vmspfhou/PRMD=jscprofs/ADMD=telemail/C=us/@x400.msfc
nasa.gov
(Tested 11/17/93. The message went through, but the return
address didn't work.) Note: this method does not add as many
lines of header information to your message as method 1, but the
address is longer to type.
1.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
There is no direct SMTP path to the TMIS VAX, so you'll have to
use X.400 addressing. The suggested syntax is:
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/AD
MD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail/C
=US/@sprint.com
Note that my (optional) "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes
the JSC Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account,
which may not be the same as my current mail code. In
desperation, you might try using JSC PROFS as a gateway:
/SN:<TMIS user ID>/C:us/ADMD:telemail/PRMD:jscprofs/O:tmismail/@sprint.com
For example, I can sometimes be reached at:
/SN:kejenks/C:us/ADMD:telemail/PRMD:jscprofs/O:tmismail/@sprint.com
1.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
(Tested 12/10/93.)
You can also try the X.400 gateway:
/PN=ALICE.L.AMAN/OU=SED/O=NASA/PRMD=JSC/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/@x400.msfc.nasa.gov
1.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
1.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
1.25. To JESNET VMSMail
1.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
(Tested 11/22/93.)
1.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
1.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
(Tested 12/01/93.)
1.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
<first name>.<last name>%ccm...@X400GW.MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
1.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
1.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
1.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
1.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
(Tested 11/16/93.) Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail
account in the Space Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to
receive SMTP e-mail. Ask the recipient if he has been set up for
this.
You can send binary attachments to SSP cc:Mail recipients using
UUENCODE. (If you don't know how to use this, ask your system
administrator. He'll confuse you thoroughly.) However, the
REMNET gateway strips off the file name of the incoming
UUENCODE'd file (it comes in as a "memo" icon which looks like a
floppy disk). The procedural work-around is to send the file
name in the text portion of the message. The recipient will then
select the memo icon and perform a "File/Save As" operation from
the cc:Mail menu. This is clumsy, but it works. One caveat: the
REMNET gateway can't handle multiple attachments; only the first
UUENCODE'd file is passed through to cc:Mail.
2. From America On-line, AOL
America On-line allows you to use the SMTP method of addressing
your e-mail. Just type the SMTP address of your intended
recipient in the "To:" field on the "CompoJSC SE Mail" screen.
(See section 1 for STMP addressing schemes.) After you enter the
address in the mail form, compose the text of your mail just like
you normally would. Once you are finished, click on "Send Now,"
and your mail is on its way!
AOL provides abbreviations for the SMTP addresses of other
popular e-mail systems. Instead of addressing your message to
the full SMTP address, you address it to <user ID>@<abbreviation.
Location Long Address Abbreviation Example Tested
----------- ------------------- ------------ ---------------- --------
CompuServe compuserve.com cis <nnnn>.<nnnn>@cis 12/02/93
MCI Mail mcimail.com mci <user number>@mci
AT&T Mail attmail.com att <user>@att
AppleLink applelink.apple.com apple <user>@apple
GEnie genie.com genie <user>@genie
Depending on where your mail is going, it can take anywhere from
a few hours to a few days for it to arrive.
(This information is based on the Expanded Mail Service file,
dated 31 May 1992, captured from America On-line by Dennis
McClain-Furmanski, mcc...@osric.cs.odu.edu, of Old Dominion
University, Norfolk, VA, USA.)
3. From BIX
BYTE Information Exchange (BIX) uses SMTP addressing. See
section 1 above. Just type your intended recipient's SMTP
address at the "TO:" prompt.
4. From CompuServe
4.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
To send a message to an SMTP (Internet) address, compose or
upload an ASCII text file of no more than 50,000 characters or
1000 lines using the CompuServe Mail editor. If you are
uploading the message, be sure that the file has been saved as an
ASCII or text only file. Binary files cannot be sent via SMTP.
At the CompuServe Mail "Send ($) to (Name or User ID):" prompt,
enter the SMTP address in this format:
INTERNET: <user>@<host>.<domain>
For example, from CompuServe, my e-mail address would be:
INTERNET: kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
4.2. To America On-line, AOL
INTERNET: <user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
INTERNET: stev...@aol.com
(Tested 12/02/93.) Note that the recipient will be charged for
messages you send to him, subject to the billing practices of
America On-line.
4.3. To BIX
INTERNET: <user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
INTERNET: rcam...@bix.com
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
INTERNET: dave...@bix.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
4.4. To CompuServe
4.5. To Fido Net
INTERNET: <first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
INTERNET: James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
4.6. To GEnie
INTERNET: <GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
4.7. To MCI Mail
METHOD 1:
MCIMAIL:<user number>
Where <user number> is the recipient's seven-digit number. Do
not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David W.
Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so, from
CompuServe, you would send e-mail to:
MCIMAIL:4261818
METHOD 2:
MCIMAIL:<Registered Name>
METHOD 3:
X400:(c=us;a=mci;s=<last name>;g=<first name>;d=id:<user number>)
While you may use just the <Registered Name>, it may not be
unique. If your message is not uniquely addressed, it will not be
delivered properly. CompuServe recommends the use of the <user
number> as opposed to the <Registered Name> whenever possible.
To reach a user with an MCI Remote Electronic Mail System (REMS)
address of John Smith, EMS of 123-4567 and a mailbox of JSmith,
you would use the following format:
X400:(c=us;a=mci;s=smith;d=ems:123-4567;d=mbx1:jsmith)
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
4.8. To Prodigy
INTERNET: <user>@prodigy.com
4.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
4.10. To BITNET
INTERNET: <user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
4.11. To CSNET
INTERNET: <user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
4.12. To ESNET/DECnet
INTERNET: <user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
4.13. To SPAN
INTERNET: <user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
4.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
At the Send To: prompt, enter:
FAX:<fax address>
Where <fax address> is composed of a mandatory country code, the
area code, and the phone number. The "country" code of the
United States is 1.
For example, to send to my fax, at the "Send To:" prompt, enter:
FAX:17134833047
Where 1 is the country code for the United States, 713 is the
area code for Houston, Texas, and 483-3047 is my fax phone
number. (Enter GO MAILHELP and choose Fax Rates off the menu for
a list of valid country codes.)
Notes:
1. All faxes should include a country code even if their
destination is within your own country.
2. Width of lines - up to 80 characters (Lines over 80
characters will be truncated.)
3. Maximum size for fax messages - 50,000 characters
(1,000 lines).
4. Fax messages formatted for - 8.5 x 11 size page,
approximately 1 inch margins on all sides.
5. Lines per page - 55
6. To ensure proper paging, you may enter a CONTROL L, at
the place where you desire a page break.
7. To insure proper delivery, each page of the message is
numbered. For example: Page 2 of 12
8. GO MAILRATES and choosing Fax Rates to determine costs
9. To send multiple fax messages, separate the routing
information with semi-colons.
For example:
Send to (Name or User ID):
FAX:17134833047;FAX:16145554321
10. You may include or exclude the parentheses () or dashes - in
the telephone number.
11. The message must be in complete ASCII (text) format. Binary
or graphic files or files which include binary material may
not be sent through fax.
12. The destination of a fax message determines its cost,
regardless of the point of origin.
13. Messages sent to fax machines have a cover page. Information
on this cover page includes:
TO: <recipient's name>
FROM: <your name>
DATE: <the date the fax is delivered>
SUBJECT: <information on the fax contents>
14. You will be prompted for the recipient's name and the
subject at the "Send to:" prompt. CompuServe Mail then will
ask you to verify the state or country and fax number and will
display the cost of the message.
For example:
To: FAX: 16145551234
Attn: John Doe, third floor
FAX message to Ohio
From: Jeff Masters
Subj: Subject of message
Mail to Fax $.75
(This information was downloaded from CompuServe 11/29/93 and
modified to fit my document format.)
4.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
INTERNET: <user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, my NASAMail address is:
INTERNET: KCJ...@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
4.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
INTERNET: <user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
INTERNET: DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
4.17. To ARC QuickMail
INTERNET: <first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
INTERNET: Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
4.18. To GSFC Mail
To send e-mail to the Goddard Space Flight Center mail system,
the suggested syntax is:
INTERNET: <user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
4.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
JSC MS-Mail users can be reached at:
INTERNET: <user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
4.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
INTERNET: <user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example, my PROFS address is:
INTERNET: kje...@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
4.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
X400: (PN:<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>;PRMD:Reston.SSFP;ADMD:telemail;C:US)
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
X400: (PN:Kenneth.C.Jenks;PRMD:Reston.SSFP;ADMD:telemail;C:US)
4.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
INTERNET: <user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached at:
INTERNET: aa...@a1sed.nasa.gov
4.23. To JSC SE Mail
INTERNET: <last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
INTERNET: gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
4.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
4.25. To JESNET VMSMail
4.26. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
INTERNET: <VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
4.27. To JSC VAX: CISV
INTERNET: <VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
INTERNET: je...@cisv.jsc.nasa.gov
4.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
INTERNET: <first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
INTERNET: jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov
4.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
INTERNET: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
INTERNET: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
4.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
INTERNET: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
INTERNET: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
4.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
INTERNET: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
INTERNET: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
4.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
INTERNET: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
INTERNET: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
4.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
INTERNET: <user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
INTERNET: <user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
INTERNET: kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
5. From Fido Net
Fido Net is the largest "network" linking bulletin board systems
(BBS's) around the world. It allows BBS users to share e-mail
and other data, usually via telephone lines and modems or
sometimes via more exotic technology like amateur radio packet
services.
Fido Net also has a connection to the Internet. Some Fido Net
users can send e-mail to people connected to the Internet using
the SMTP conventions. Basically, all Fido Net e-mail procedures
for sending e-mail to other systems involve using the SMTP
addresses of those other systems. See Section 1 for the
procedures for sending e-mail from an SMTP system to other e-mail
systems.
Fido Net BBS's vary greatly. There's RBBS, VBBS and every other
flavor of BBS you've ever heard of (and many you haven't)
connected to Fido Net, so you'll have to check your BBS's on-line
help files or ask your BBS SysOp how to send e-mail from your BBS
to SMTP addresses.
6. From GEnie
Sending e-mail from GEnie to other e-mail systems is based on
using SMTP addressing as in section 1 above. Type the SMTP
address at the "TO:" prompt, then add @inet# to the end of the
address.
6.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
<user>@<host>.<domain>@inet#
For example:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov@inet#
6.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>@aol.com@inet#
For example, from GEnie, the address for the screen name "Steve
Case" would be:
stev...@aol.com@inet#
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
6.3. To BIX
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
6.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and it
should look like:
So from GEnie, you would address your message to:
<nnnn>.<nnnn>@compuserve.com@inet#
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
6.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
From GEnie, address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net number>.z<zone>.fid
onet.org@inet#
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, from GEnie, my brother, James Jenks,
on his world-famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can
be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org@inet#
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
6.6. To GEnie
6.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>@mcimail.com@inet#
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so from GEnie his
SMTP address is:
426...@mcimail.com@inet#
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
6.8. To Prodigy
<user>@prodigy.com@inet#
6.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
6.10. To BITNET
<user>%<host>.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU@inet#
6.11. To CSNET
<user>%<host>.CSNET@RELAY.CS.NET@inet#
6.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example:
SM...@LBL.DNET.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.13. To SPAN
To send e-mail from GEnie to the Space Physics and Astronomy
Network (SPAN), the suggested syntax is:
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
6.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, my NASAMail address is:
KCJ...@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@inet#
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@inet#
6.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@inet#
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@inet#
6.18. To GSFC Mail
To send e-mail from GEnie to the Goddard Space Flight Center mail
system, the suggested syntax is:
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
JSC MS-Mail users can be reached at:
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov@inet#
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
6.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, my PROFS address is:
kje...@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
There is no direct SMTP path to the TMIS VAX, so you'll have to
use X.400 addressing. The suggested syntax is:
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP
/ADMD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com@inet#
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail
/C=US/@sprint.com@inet#
Note that my (optional) "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes
the JSC Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account,
which may not be the same as my current mail code.
6.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov@inet#
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
aa...@a1sed.nasa.gov@inet#
6.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@inet#
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@inet#
6.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
6.25. To JESNET VMSMail
6.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example:
je...@cisv.jsc.nasa.gov@inet#
6.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example:
LSHA...@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send e-mail from GEnie to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-
mail user by SMTP, address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV@inet#
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov@inet#
6.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send e-mail from GEnie to any
MSFC e-mail user by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send e-mail from GEnie to any
MSFC e-mail user by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send e-mail from GEnie to any
MSFC e-mail user by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@inet#
6.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com@inet#
or, sometimes...
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@inet#
For example, from GEnie, my cc:Mail account is:
kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@inet#
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
7. From MCI Mail
Sending e-mail from MCI Mail to most other e-mail systems is
based on using SMTP addressing as in section 1 above. For X.400-
based e-mail systems, the procedure is a little different.
7.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@<host>.<domain>
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
7.2. To America On-line, AOL
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <user>@aol.com
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Steve Case (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: stev...@aol.com
7.3. To BIX
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <user>@bix.com
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ron Campbell (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: rcam...@bix.com
7.4. To CompuServe
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<nnnn>.<nnnn>@compuserve.com
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Greg Evans (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: 76476...@compuserve.com
7.5. To Fido Net
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net number>.z<zone>.fid
onet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network,
and is very unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may
take weeks. You can't send things to people who put periods in
their names! Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long
messages (more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit
ASCII. Since these messages are passed over commercial phone
lines, please remember that every BBS operator between the
Internet and your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to
transmit your message.
For example, from MCI Mail, my brother, James Jenks, on his
world-famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be
reached from MCI Mail at:
Command: CREATE
To: James Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
7.6. To GEnie
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <GEnie mail
name>@genie.geis.com
7.7. To MCI Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, you can type
find name
to find the <user number> of other MCI customers.
7.8. To Prodigy
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <user>@prodigy.com
7.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
7.10. To BITNET
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
7.11. To CSNET
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
7.12. To ESNET/DECnet
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
7.13. To SPAN
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
7.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
7.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: KCJ...@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
7.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <user
ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters.
For example, to send from MCI to Debbie Williams' account on
Headquarters MS-Mail:
Command: CREATE
To: Debbie Williams (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
7.17. To ARC QuickMail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>_<last
name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Michael Hom (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
7.18. To GSFC Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
7.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <user>@<post
office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Jerry King (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: jk...@b1.jsc.nasa.gov
7.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: kje...@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
7.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
At the "Command" prompt, enter CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the EMS prompt, enter the ADMD portion of the X.400 address,
TELEMAIL
At the first MBX prompt, enter PRMD=Reston.SSFP
At the next MBX prompt, enter
PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>
At the next MBX prompt, press ENTER
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: TELEMAIL
MBX: PRMD=Reston.SSFP
MBX: PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS
MBX:
7.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Alice Aman (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: aa...@a1sed.nasa.gov
7.23. To JSC SE Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <last name>,<first
name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Will Gore (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
7.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
7.25. To JESNET VMSMail
7.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <VMS user
name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: je...@cisv.jsc.nasa.gov
7.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <VMS user
name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Linda Shackelford (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: LSHA...@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
7.28. To KSC MS-Mail
You may send e-mail to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message as follows:
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>-<last
name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Jeanne O'Bryan (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov
7.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message as follows:
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>.<last
name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Brent Sherman (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
7.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message as follows:
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>.<last
name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Brent Sherman (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
7.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message as follows:
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>.<last
name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Brent Sherman (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
7.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message as follows:
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address, <first name>.<last
name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Brent Sherman (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV
7.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
At the "Command:" prompt, type CREATE
At the "To:" prompt, enter <first name> <last name> (EMS)
At the "EMS" prompt, enter INTERNET
At the "MBX" prompt, enter the SMTP address,
<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com
However, some users can be reached at:
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example:
Command: CREATE
To: Ken Jenks (EMS)
EMS: INTERNET
MBX: kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
8. From Prodigy
Prodigy users can now send e-mail to other e-mail systems using
SMTP addressing via the Internet. See the procedures in section
1 for SMTP addresses. In order for Prodigy members to send mail
to SMTP addresses, they must:
-- be using Prodigy on an IBM compatible computer
-- have downloaded (at a cost of $4.95) the Mail Manager program
-- send any SMTP mail OFFLINE, using the Mail Manager program
With Mail Manager (MM), ANY 6K block sent (to other Prodigy
members, to the Internet, etc.) costs 10 cents. Prodigy members
also pay to receive Internet mail.
ANY Prodigy member can receive internet mail. Only those on DOS
machine with the MM software can send it. Using Mail Manager,
you must first select an option to send an Internet message, and
then fill in the Internet address. At present, there's a size
limit of 60,000 bytes per message received or sent to the
Internet.
(This Prodigy information is based on notes from ADAM "KEYS"
LASNIK (ala...@merle.acns.nwu.edu) and Jeffrey L. Needleman
(nee...@msen.com) in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup
alt.internet.services, in November, 1993. Mr. Needleman also
lists his Prodigy address, DMV...@prodigy.com, but please
remember that he will be charged for any messages sent to him.)
(Tested Prodigy to JSC MS-Mail via SMTP 11/25/93.)
9. From SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL uses X.400 as its native addressing scheme,
so the procedures here should be similar to generic X.400
addressing. However, since TELEMAIL is in the same Country and
Administrative Domain (/C=US/ADMD=TELEMAIL) as many other NASA
X.400 systems, some X.400 parameters may be omitted. X.400
parameters may be entered in any order, in either UPPER or lower
case.
10. From BITNET
BITNET is one of the oldest surviving computer networks. It
links together computers, usually IBM mainframes and VAX VMS
mainframes, across the world. The following procedures are taken
from the NASA Science Internet folks' procedures. I don't have a
BITNET address (I don't think I do, anyway), so I can't test
these procedures.
10.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
<user>%<host>@INTERBIT
10.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>%aol.com@INTERBIT
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
stevecase%aol.com@INTERBIT
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
10.3. To BIX
<user>%bix.com@INTERBIT
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
rcampbell%bix.com@INTERBIT
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
davejone%bix.com@INTERBIT
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
10.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and it
should look like:
So to send to CompuServe from BITNET, address your message to:
<xxxx>.<xxxx>%compuserve.com@INTERBIT
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
10.5. To Fido Net
<first name>.<last name>%f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org@INTERBIT
For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-famous Hermes
BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James.Jenks%f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org@INTERBIT
See warnings about Fido Net in procedure 1.17 above.
10.6. To GEnie
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com@INTERBIT
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
10.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>%mcimail.com@INTERBIT
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
4261818%mcimail.com@INTERBIT
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
10.8. To Prodigy
<user>%prodigy.com@INTERBIT
10.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
10.10. To BITNET
<user>@<host>
10.11. To CSNET
<user>%<host>@INTERBIT
10.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<user>%<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.13. To SPAN
<user>%<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV@DFTBIT
10.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
10.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
<user>%NASAMAIL@INTERBIT
For example, my NASAMail address would be:
KCJENKS%NASAMAIL@INTERBIT
10.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.18. To GSFC Mail
<user>%GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
<user>%<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
10.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
<user>%JSCPROFS@INTERBIT
For example, my PROFS address would be:
KJENKS%JSCPROFS@INTERBIT
10.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
10.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
<user>%A1SED.JSC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
aaman%a1sed.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>%SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,will%SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
10.25. To JESNET VMSMail
10.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<user>%cisv.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
For example:
jenks%cisv.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<user>%medics.jsc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov@INTERBIT
10.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.NASA.GOV@INTERBIT
10.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>%rsochou.remnet.ab.com@INTERBIT
or, sometimes...
<user>%yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@INTERBIT
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
kcjenks%yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@INTERBIT
11. From CSNET
The following procedures are taken from the NASA Science Internet
folks' procedures. I don't have a CSNET address (I don't think I
do, anyway), so I can't test these procedures.
11.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
<user>%<host>@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, my SMTP address would be:
kjenks%gothamcity....@RELAY.CS.NET
11.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>%AOL...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
11.3. To BIX
<user>%BIX...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
11.4. To CompuServe
11.5. To Fido Net
<first name>.<last name>%f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidon...@RELAY.CS.NET
See warnings about Fido Net in procedure 1.17 above.
11.6. To GEnie
11.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>%mcima...@RELAY.CS.NET
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
11.8. To Prodigy
<user>%prodi...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
11.10. To BITNET
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
11.11. To CSNET
<user>@<host>
11.12. To ESNET/DECnet
11.13. To SPAN
<user>%<host>.SPAN.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
11.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
<user>%NASAMAIL...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, my NASAMail address would be:
KCJENKS%NASAMAIL...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>%hqops.hq...@RELAY.CS.NET
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWilliam%hqops.hq...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>%qmgate.ar...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Michael_Hom%qmgate.ar...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.18. To GSFC Mail
<user>%GSFCMAIL...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
<user>%<post office>.jsc.na...@RELAY.CS.NET
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
11.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
<user>%JSCPROFS...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, my PROFS address would be:
KJENKS%JSCPROFS...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
11.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
<user>%A1SED.JSC...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
11.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>%SEMAIL.JS...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,will%SEMAIL.js...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
11.25. To JESNET VMSMail
11.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<user>%CISV.JSC...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<user>%MEDICS.JS...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>%KSC.NA...@RELAY.CS.NET
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne-obryan%ksc.na...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman%MSFC.N...@RELAY.CS.NET
11.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>%rsochou.re...@RELAY.CS.NET
or, sometimes...
<user>%yj0090c.re...@RELAY.CS.NET
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
kcjenks%yj0090c.re...@RELAY.CS.NET
12. From ESNET/DECnet
12.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
LBL::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, my SMTP address would be:
LBL::"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
12.2. To America On-line, AOL
LBL::"<user>@aol.com"
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
LBL::"stev...@aol.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
12.3. To BIX
LBL::"<user>@bix.com"
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
LBL::"rcam...@bix.com"
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
LBL::"dave...@bix.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
12.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and it
should look like:
So to send e-mail from ESNET/DECnet to a CompuServe user, address
your note to:
LBL::"<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com"
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
12.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax from ESNET/DECnet is:
LBL::"<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org"
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
LBL::"James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org"
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
12.6. To GEnie
Although this method has not been successfully tested, some folks
on the Internet suggested:
LBL::"<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
12.7. To MCI Mail
LBL::"<user number>@mcimail.com"
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
LBL::"426...@mcimail.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
12.8. To Prodigy
LBL::"<user>@prodigy.com"
12.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
12.10. To BITNET
The NASA Science Internet folks suggest:
LBL::"<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU"
But you might try just:
<host>::<user>
12.11. To CSNET
LBL::"<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET"
12.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<host>:<user>
12.13. To SPAN
<host>::<user>
12.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
LBL::"{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from E-mail direct to
the NSIUSO, you would address it to
LBL::"{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
To send to my office fax, use this:
LBL::"{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047\}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
12.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
LBL::"<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV"
For example, my NASAMAIL address would be:
LBL::"kcj...@NASAMAIL.nasa.gov"
12.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
LBL::"<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
LBL::"DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
12.17. To ARC QuickMail
LBL::"<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
LBL::"Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
12.18. To GSFC Mail
LBL::"<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"
12.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
LBL::"<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov>"
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
12.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
LBL::"<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV"
For example, my PROFS address would be:
LBL::"kje...@JSCPROFS.nasa.gov"
12.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
LBL::"/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP
/ADMD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com"
For example, from ESNET/DECnet, my TMIS Mail address is:
LBL::"/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail
/C=US/@sprint.com"
Since TMIS Mail is also hosted on a VAX, TM0003, you might be
able to send this to:
TMISMAIL::KCJ4368
-or-
TMISMAIL::KEJENKS
-or-
TM0003::KCJ4368
12.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
LBL::"<user>@a1sed.JSC.NASA.GOV"
For example, Alice Aman's address would be:
LBL::"am...@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
Since SED is also a VAX, your might also be able to send this to:
SED::AMAN
12.23. To JSC SE Mail
LBL::"<last name>,<first name>@semail.JSC.NASA.GOV"
12.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
12.25. To JESNET VMSMail
12.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
LBL::"<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV"
Or, since CISV is also a VAX, you might try:
CISV::<VMS user name>
For example, my CISV account would be:
LBL::"je...@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV"
12.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
LBL::"<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV"
Or, since MEDICS is also a VAX, you might try:
MEDICS::<VMS user name>
12.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
LBL::"<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV"
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
LBL::"jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov"
12.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
LBL::"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
LBL::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
12.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
LBL::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
LBL::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
12.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
LBL::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
LBL::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
12.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
LBL::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
LBL::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
12.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
LBL::"<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com"
or, sometimes...
LBL::"<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
LBL::"kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
13. From SPAN
Most (if not all) SPAN hosts run the DEC VMS operating system.
These procedures assume you are using the MAIL program from VMS.
Some VMS nodes "know" about other NASA nodes by name; on other
nodes, you'll need to supply the node number of your intended
destination.
Most of the following procedures use SMTP addressing through the
AMES e-mail gateway. If you get error messages such as:
-SYSTEM-F-NOSUCHNODE, remote node is unknown
-or-
%MAIL-E-LOGLINK, error creating network link to node 24810
-SYSTEM-F-UNREACHABLE, remote node is not currently reachable
...then your VAX is probably not connected to the SPAN.
However, you might try using the network number for AMES, 24810,
in place of the host name.
13.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
AMES::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my e-mail address would be:
AMES::"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
The AMES computer is one of the mail gateway machines. If your
node does not recognize the host name "AMES," try its network
number, 24810, in place of the host name:
24810::"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
13.2. To America On-line, AOL
AMES::"<user>@aol.com"
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
AMES::"stev...@aol.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
13.3. To BIX
AMES::"<user>@bix.com"
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
AMES::"rcam...@bix.com"
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
AMES::"dave...@bix.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
13.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and it
should look like:
So, from a SPAN computer, you would use:
AMES::"<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com"
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
13.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
AMES::"<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org"
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
AMES::"James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org"
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
13.6. To GEnie
AMES::"<user>@genie.geis.com"
13.7. To MCI Mail
AMES::"<user number>@mcimail.com"
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
AMES::"426...@mcimail.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
13.8. To Prodigy
AMES::"<user>@prodigy.com"
13.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
13.10. To BITNET
AMES::"<user>@<host>.BITNET"
13.11. To CSNET
AMES::"<user>%<host>@RELAY.CS.NET"
13.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<host>::<user>
13.13. To SPAN
<host>::<user>
13.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
AMES::"{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, from a SPAN computer, my fax "address" is:
AMES::"{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
13.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
AMES::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my NASAMail address would be:
AMES::"kcj...@NASAMAIL.nasa.gov"
13.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
AMES::"<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
AMES::"DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
13.17. To ARC QuickMail
AMES::"<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
AMES::"Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
13.18. To GSFC Mail
AMES::"<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"
13.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
AMES::"<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov"
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
13.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
AMES::"<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my PROFS address would be:
AMES::"kje...@JSCPROFS.nasa.gov"
Note: this method adds dozens of lines of header information to
your message.
13.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
AMES::"/SN=<last name>/FN=<first name>/I=<initial>/C=US/ADMD=telemail
/P=JSC/@sprint.com"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my TMIS Mail address is:
AMES::"/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP
/ADMD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com"
Note that my "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes the JSC
Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account, which may
not be the same as my current mail code.
13.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
AMES::"<user>@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, from a SPAN computer, Alice Aman's e-mail address
would be:
AMES::"am...@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
13.23. To JSC SE Mail
AMES::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my e-mail address would be:
AMES::"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
13.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
13.25. To JESNET VMSMail
13.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
AMES::"<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV"
For example:
AMES::"je...@cisv.jsc.nasa.gov"
13.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
AMES::"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my e-mail address would be:
AMES::"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
13.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
AMES::"<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV"
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
AMES::"jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov"
13.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
AMES::"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
AMES::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
13.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
AMES::"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
AMES::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
13.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
AMES::"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
AMES::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
13.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
AMES::"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
AMES::"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
13.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
AMES::"<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com"
or, sometimes...
AMES::"<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my SSP cc:Mail address would
be:
AMES::"kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
14. From Fax, facsimile, datafax
There is no way to send e-mail from a fax machine to an e-mail
address; this "system" is only included here because it is
possible to send e-mail to a fax machine. (There are a few
experimental exceptions to this rule. I've heard rumors through
the Internet of a machine which receives faxes and stores them
somewhere for later retrieval, and the Space Shuttle Program
Office has a fax gateway.)
15. From NASAMail/TELEMAIL
NASAMail is an e-mail system provided to NASA by Sprint. Sprint
has an almost-identical system which is also available
commercially named TELEMAIL. These systems use X.400 as its
native addressing scheme, so the procedures here should be
similar to generic X.400 addressing. However, since NASAMail is
in the same Country, Administrative Domain and Program Domain
(/C=US/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL) as many other NASA X.400
systems, some X.400 parameters may be omitted. X.400 parameters
may be entered in any order, in either UPPER or lower case.
When sending from NASAMail to some addresses, you must actually
include the "angle brace" characters, '<' and '>'. This differs
from the standard notation described at the beginning of this
document and is sure to cause some confusion. (Sorry.)
15.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
METHOD 1: In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)<host>.<domain>>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name, the <host> and the <domain> as described
in section 1 above. For example, my e-mail address is:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<kjenks(a)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov>)
In this case, you really do need to type some of the <angle
braces>. The "(a)" construct is necessary because the X.400
addressing scheme cannot include the '@' character.
NOTE: Some special characters are not compliant with the X.400
standards and you must use the following substitutions when addressing
the envelope:
Internet Symbol X.400 Equivalent
--------------- ----------------
@ (a)
% (p)
! (b)
- (u)
" (q)
METHOD 2: Alternatively, you can address your message to POSTMAN,
then type the following on the very first line of the text
message:
TO: <user>@<host>.<domain>
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.2. To America On-line, AOL
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)aol.com>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name as described in section 1.12 above. For
example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would be:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<stevecase(a)aol.com>)
In this case, you really do need to type the <angle braces>.
15.3. To BIX
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)bix.com>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name as described in section 1.12 above. For
example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached at:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<rcampbell(a)bix.com>)
In this case, you really do need to type the <angle braces>.
15.4. To CompuServe
(C:us;ADMD:CompuServe;PRMD:csmail;DDA Type:id;DDA Value:
<nnnn>.<nnnn>)
Where <nnnn>,<nnnn> is the recipient's CompuServe number. (Note
the change from a comma ',' to a period '.' in this number.) For
Public CompuServe Mail users, the DDA value is equal to the
recipient's user ID with a period in place of the comma. For
Private CompuServe users, this is the recipient's address in the
form of <EMI>:<mailbox>.
NOTE: A unique EMI (private E-Mail system identifier) is assigned
to each private mail system.
15.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<first name>.<last name>(a)f<Fido
number>.n<net number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org>)
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<James.Jenks(a)f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org>)
In this case, you really do need to type the <angle braces>.
Note that you can't send things to people who put periods in
their names! Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long
messages (more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit
ASCII.
15.6. To GEnie
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send e-mail to GEnie users
using procedures 2.1 and 1.14. In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<GEnie mail name>(a)genie.geis.com>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address. In
this case, you really do need to type some of the <angle braces>.
The "(a)" construct is necessary because the X.400 addressing
scheme cannot include the '@' character.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
15.7. To MCI Mail
Using the SMTP conventions, address your message to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
15.8. To Prodigy
Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@prodigy.com
15.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
15.10. To BITNET
Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<host>.BITNET
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.11. To CSNET
Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.12. To ESNET/DECnet
Using the SMTP conventions, address your message to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.13. To SPAN
Address your NASAMail note to POSTMAN, then type the following on
the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
For example, address the note to POSTMAN, then type the following
on the very first line of the text message:
15.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send a fax using procedures
2.1 and 1.19. Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the
following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: {<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the desired
FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from NASAMail direct to the
NASA Science Internet User Support Office (NSIUSO), you would
address it to POSTMAN, then type:
TO: {NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
Or to send to my office fax, address the note to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the first line of text:
TO: {Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
(Tested 11/17/93.)
15.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
In the "TO:" field, enter the recipient's address. For example,
my NASAMail address is:
KCJENKS
(Tested 11/19/93.)
15.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.17. To ARC QuickMail
Address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
TO: Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.18. To GSFC Mail
GSFC Mail uses a native X.400 addressing scheme. In the "TO:"
field, enter:
(FN:<first name>,SN:<last name>,O:GSFCMail, PRMD:GSFC)
15.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov>)
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
For example, Jerry King would have this address:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<jk...@b1.jsc.nasa.gov>)
(Tested 11/19/93. Return address works.)
15.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
(SN:<user>,PRMD:jscprofs,O:vmspfhou)
For example, my PROFS address from NASAMail is:
(SN:kjenks,PRMD:jscprofs,O:vmspfhou)
(Tested 11/16/93.)
15.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
(SN:<user>,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
(SN:kejenks,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
15.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
(SN:<user>,C:us,ADMD:telemail,PRMD:jscprofs,O:jesnet)
For example:
(SN:jsmith,C:us,ADMD:telemail,PRMD:jesnet,O:tmismail)
15.23. To JSC SE Mail
Using the SMTP conventions, address your message to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@semail.jsc.nasa.gov
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
15.25. To JESNET VMSMail
15.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)cisv.jsc.nasa.gov>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
For example, my CISV address is:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<jenks(a)cisv.jsc.nasa.gov>)
In this case, you really do need to type some of the <angle
braces>. The "(a)" construct is necessary because the X.400
addressing scheme cannot include the '@' character.
(Tested 11/22/93.)
15.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name as described in section 1.12 above. For
example:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<JSMITH(a)MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV>)
In this case, you really do need to type the <angle braces>.
15.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to POSTMAN, then type the following on the
very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC:
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
15.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by X.400. Address your message to:
(SN:<last name>,GN:<first name>,PRMD:MSFC)
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
(SN:sherman,GN:brent,PRMD:MSFC)
15.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by X.400. Address your message to:
(SN:<last name>,GN:<first name>,PRMD:MSFC)
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
(SN:sherman,GN:brent,PRMD:MSFC)
15.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by X.400. Address your message to:
(SN:<last name>,GN:<first name>,PRMD:MSFC)
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
(SN:sherman,GN:brent,PRMD:MSFC)
15.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by X.400. Address your message to:
(SN:<last name>,GN:<first name>,PRMD:MSFC)
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
(SN:sherman,GN:brent,PRMD:MSFC)
15.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)RSOCHOU.REMNET.AB.COM>)
or, sometimes...
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name as described in section 1.10 above. For
example, I can be reached at:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<KCJENKS(a)YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM>)
In this case, you really do need to type the <angle braces>.
(Tested 11/19/93. The message came through fine, but the return
address did not work.)
16. From Headquarters MS-Mail
17. From ARC QuickMail
To send e-mail from Ames Research Center's Macintosh-based
QuickMail system to most other e-mail systems, you will use SMTP
addressing.
17.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@<host>.<domain>
For example, my SMTP address would be:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
(Tested 12/10/93.)
17.2. To America On-line, AOL
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
17.3. To BIX
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
17.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So to send e-mail from ESNET/DECnet to a CompuServe user, address
your note to:
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
17.5. To Fido Net
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
17.6. To GEnie
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
17.7. To MCI Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
17.8. To Prodigy
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@prodigy.com
17.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
17.10. To BITNET
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
17.11. To CSNET
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
17.12. To ESNET/DECnet
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
17.13. To SPAN
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
17.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from E-mail direct to
the NSIUSO, you would address it to
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
To send to my office fax, use this:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047\}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
17.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, my NASAMAIL address would be:
17.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
17.17. To ARC QuickMail
17.18. To GSFC Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV
17.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov>
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
17.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example, my PROFS address would be:
17.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/AD
MD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com
For example, from ESNET/DECnet, my TMIS Mail address is:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail/C
=US/@sprint.com
17.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@a1sed.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example, Alice Aman's address would be:
17.23. To JSC SE Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<last name>,<first name>@semail.JSC.NASA.GOV
17.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
17.25. To JESNET VMSMail
17.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example, my CISV account would be:
17.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
17.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP:
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
17.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
17.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
17.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
17.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
17.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
1. From QuickMail, select ADDRESS BOOKS from under QuickMail in
the top menu bar.
2. Doubleclick on an address book (i.e., Mail).
3. Select SPECIAL.
4. Enter the recipient's First and Last Name.
5. In the field called "MAILCENTER," enter QMGATE; for "ZONE,"
enter ARCLAN
6. In the ADDRESS field, enter the recipient's SMTP address
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
18. From GSFC Mail
Goddard Space Flight Center's GSFC Mail uses X.400 as its native
addressing scheme, so the procedures here should be similar to
generic X.400 addressing. However, since GSFC Mail is in the
same Country, Administrative Domain and Program Domain
(/C=US/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL) as many other NASA X.400
systems, some X.400 parameters may be omitted. X.400 parameters
may be entered in any order, in either UPPER or lower case.
19. From JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
First, check the MS-Mail directory for your intended recipient.
If the name of the person appears in the MS-Mail directory, just
select the name and complete the message as usual.
19.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@<host>.<domain>
For example, my SMTP address is:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
You can send binary attachments to SMTP recipients. Your files
will be encoded using UUENCODE and added to your message. Make
sure your recipient is able to interpret UUENCODE'd files and has
the correct software to deal with your attachments.
(Tested 12/06/93.)
19.2. To America On-line, AOL
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
19.3. To BIX
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
19.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
To send from MS-Mail to a CompuServe recipient:
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
19.5. To Fido Net
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
For example, my brother's SMTP address on Fido Net is:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0. You will
need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for his
numbers.
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
19.6. To GEnie
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
19.7. To MCI Mail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.8. To Prodigy
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@prodigy.com
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
19.10. To BITNET
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.11. To CSNET
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.12. To ESNET/DECnet
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.13. To SPAN
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
To send to my office fax, use this:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, my NASAMail address is:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
You can send binary attachments to PROFS recipients. Your files
will be interpreted by PROFS as PROFS documents. Most PROFS
users do not know how to deal with this type of document, but it
does work.
19.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.17. To ARC QuickMail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.18. To GSFC Mail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
Select the recipient from the user list. One caveat: you can't
send a message to yourself.
19.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select VMSPFHOU from the list (under PROFS).
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "User ID:" field and enter the recipient's
PROFS ID: For example, my PROFS ID is kjenks.
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
(Tested 12/06/93.)
19.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/AD
MD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail/C
=US/@sprint.com
Note that my (optional) "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes
the JSC Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account,
which may not be the same as my current mail code.
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.23. To JSC SE Mail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
19.25. To JESNET VMSMail
19.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP:
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
19.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
1. Click on Compose.
2. Click on Address.
3. Click on the white "Roladex" card (not the "Roladex" box).
4. Select SMTP from the list.
5. Click OK.
6. Type an alias for your recipient. This will be saved in your
personal address book for your later use. Leave this field
blank if you don't want to save this e-mail address in your
personal address book.
7. Tab down to the "SMTP Address:" field and enter the
recipient's SMTP address:
<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
8. Click on either the "To" or "Cc" button, as appropriate, then
click on OK.
9. Fill in the subject for your message, then the text of the
message. Click on Send.
Next time you need to send to this recipient, use his address
from the alias in your personal address book.
(Tested 11/18/93.) Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail
account in the Space Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to
receive SMTP e-mail. Ask the recipient if he has been set up for
this.
You can send binary attachments to SSP cc:Mail recipients from
MS-Mail using this SMTP addressing. However, the REMNET gateway
strips off the file name of the incoming file (it comes in as a
"memo" icon which looks like a floppy disk). The procedural
work-around is to send the file name in the text portion of the
message. The recipient will then select the memo icon and
perform a "File/Save As" operation from the cc:Mail menu. This
is clumsy, but it works. One caveat: the REMNET gateway can't
handle multiple attachments; only the first attachment is passed
through to cc:Mail.
20. From JSC PROFS
The PROFS ("Professional Office") system runs on an IBM mainframe
at Johnson Space Center (JSC). It uses its own addressing format
which is limited to an eight letter user name and an eight alpha-
numeric character node name, so any users who are not in the
PROFS directories must be addressed using a round-about
addressing scheme. Before using any of the following procedures,
check the PROFS "remote nickname files" (PF6 twice from Main Menu
1) to see if your destination already has a node name.
Some of these "nodes" have only the internal PROFS tables and are
not synchronized with the directories on the remote computers.
For example, PROFS has a table which "knows" that
INTERNET(KJENKS) points to kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov, but
PROFS never checks ("synchronizes") with gothamcity to see if I'm
really still there.
This was the list of "REMOTE USERS Available from PROFS" as of
11/16/93:
System Date Description
DOWNEY 10/07/93 *** ROCKWELL DOWNEY CC:MAIL SYSTEM ***
EUROPEAN 11/09/93 *** EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY ***
GSFCMAIL 4/30/93 *** GSFCMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
HOUVMSCC 4/05/88 *** IBM Internal PROFS ***
HQSMAIL 6/22/93 *** HQSMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
INTERNET 10/14/93 *** INTERNET MAIL SYSTEM ***
JESNET 11/12/93 *** JSC DEC VAX USERS ***
KSCMAIL 11/02/93 *** KSCMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
LERCMAIL 5/07/92 *** LERCMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
LSOC1 8/31/93 *** SPDMS II USERS ***
MSFCMAIL 4/08/93 *** MSFCMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
MSMAIL 10/29/93 *** MICROSOFT MAIL USERS ***
NASAMAIL 5/21/93 *** NASAMAIL MAIL SYSTEM ***
NASDA 11/23/92 *** NASDA MAIL SYSTEM ***
OLDVSNEW 8/20/93 *** RSOC to JSC PROFS USERS ***
RSOCHOU 10/12/93 *** ROCKWELL HOUSTON CC:MAIL USERS ***
TMISMAIL 11/12/93 *** TMIS DEC VAX USERS ***
YJ0090 9/01/92 *** ROCKWELL SPACE DIVISION ***
The "Date" column indicates the date the list was last updated or
synchronized with the remote host's directory. This list is
likely to be out of date; check PROFS for the latest list and
dates (PF6 twice from Main Menu 1).
20.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient.
If that fails, address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab
down to the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message
area and type the following on the very first line of the text
message:
TO: <user>@<host>.<domain>
For example, to send to my SMTP address, you will find that
KJENKS is my normal PROFS ID, and INTERNET(KJENKS) is in the
remote nickname file. If I'm not there, or if you want to do it
the hard way, address the message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), fill in
the subject, then type:
TO: kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
(Tested 11/19/93. Return address works.)
20.2. To America On-line, AOL
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@aol.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
20.3. To BIX
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@bix.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
20.4. To CompuServe
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <nnnn.nnnn>@compuserve.com
(Note the period '.' instead of the comma ',' in the CompuServe
user number.) In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup
"alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep 1991, John Sonderman
(JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American University -
University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
20.5. To Fido Net
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-famous Hermes
BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached using:
TO: James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
Note that you can't send things to people who put periods in
their names! Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long
messages (more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit
ASCII. Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is
very unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take
weeks.
20.6. To GEnie
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
This method has not been successfully tested. Note that the
recipient will be charged for messages you send to him, subject
to the billing practices of General Electric.
20.7. To MCI Mail
Address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the
Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message area and
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so address your
message as above, using this address on the first line:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
20.8. To Prodigy
Using the SMTP conventions and the Internet-to-Prodigy gateway,
address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the
Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message area and
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@prodigy.com
20.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
20.10. To BITNET
Using the SMTP conventions and the SMTP/BITNET gateway, address
your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and
fill it in, then tab down to the message area and type the
following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
20.11. To CSNET
Using the SMTP conventions and the SMTP/CSNET gateway, address
your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and
fill it in, then tab down to the message area and type the
following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
20.12. To ESNET/DECnet
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
20.13. To SPAN
Using the SMTP conventions, address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
20.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
The folks at the NASA Science Internet User Support Office
(NSIUSO) put out the following announcement:
It is now possible to send an electronic mail message
directly into
a FAX machine through the GSFC FAX gateway. Send your
message
(text only!) to the following address:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where "user" is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The "number" entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from e-mail direct to the
NSIUSO, you would address your PROFS note to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN),
tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the
message area and type the following on the very first line of the
text message:
TO: {NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
To send to my office fax, use this:
TO: {Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
(Tested 11/16/93.)
20.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
Check the remote nickname files for your intended recipient. All
NASAMail users should be in the synchronized directory. Address
your message to:
NASAMAIL(<user>)
For example, from PROFS, my NASAMail ID is:
NASAMAIL(KCJENKS)
(Tested 11/19/93. Return address works.)
20.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
Using the SMTP conventions and the Internet gateway, address your
message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it
in, then tab down to the message area and type the following on
the very first line of the text message:
TO: <user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
20.17. To ARC QuickMail
Using the SMTP conventions and the Internet gateway, address your
message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it
in, then tab down to the message area and type the following on
the very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
TO: Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
20.18. To GSFC Mail
Check the remote nickname files for your intended recipient. All
GSFC Mail users should be in the synchronized directory. Address
your message to:
GSFCMAIL(<user ID>)
20.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
METHOD 1: Check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. All JSC Microsoft Mail users on <post offices>
JSCPA1B1, VA1, PT1, PA2, ISC05, JA2, JSCENG1, ACRV, and ZR1
should be in the synchronized directory. Address your message
to:
<post office>(<user ID>)
See procedure 1.19 above for the list of <post offices>.
Warning: some of the <post office> names used by PROFS do not
match the <post office> names used by SMTP addressing. For
example, <post office> B1 on file server JSCPA1 is called B1 from
SMTP but it's called JSCPA1B1 from PROFS.
(Tested 11/19/93. The return address worked.)
METHOD 2: If method 1 fails, address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov>
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
For example, to send to Jerry King's MS-Mail account, you will
find that NISCJCK is his normal PROFS ID, JKING is his PROFS
alias, and JSCPA1B1(JKING) is in the MS-Mail remote nickname
file. If he's not there, or if you want to do it the hard way,
address the message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), fill in the subject,
then type:
Be careful; this line of text has the following restrictions.
(1) It must come in the very first line, (2) in the far left
column, and (3) the word "TO" be typed in UPPER CASE. (4) There
must be a space after the colon.
20.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
Address your message normally. Type the USER command at the
bottom of Main Menu 1 to find user ID's.
20.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
Check the remote nickname files for your intended recipient. All
TMISMAIL users should be in the synchronized directory. Address
your message to:
TMISMAIL(<user ID>)
For example, from JSC PROFS, my TMISMAIL ID is:
TMISMAIL(KEJENKS)
(Tested 11/22/93. Return address works.)
20.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
Check the remote nickname files for your intended recipient. All
JESNET users should be in the synchronized directory. Address
your message to:
JESNET(<user ID>)
20.23. To JSC SE Mail
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, to reach Will Gore, the "TO:" line you type should
read:
TO: gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
20.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
20.25. To JESNET VMSMail
20.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. It's barely possible that the recipient is in the
INTERNET file.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
(Tested 11/22/93.)
20.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
First, check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient.
If that fails, use SMTP addressing to address your message to
NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then
tab down to the message area and type the following on the very
first line of the text message:
TO: <VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
20.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP
using the SMTP conventions and the NASAMail/SMTP gateway, address
your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to the Subject and
fill it in, then tab down to the message area and type the
following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC:
20.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
METHOD 1: Check the remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. All MSFC Mail users should be in the synchronized
directory. Address your message to:
MSFCMAIL(<user ID>)
(Tested 12/06/93.)
METHOD 2: As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC
e-mail user by SMTP. Using the SMTP conventions and the
NASAMail/SMTP gateway, address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN),
tab down to the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the
message area and type the following on the very first line of the
text message:
TO: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
20.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Using the SMTP conventions and the NASAMail/SMTP
gateway, address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to
the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message area and
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
20.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Using the SMTP conventions and the NASAMail/SMTP
gateway, address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to
the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message area and
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
20.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Using the SMTP conventions and the NASAMail/SMTP
gateway, address your message to NASAMAIL(POSTMAN), tab down to
the Subject and fill it in, then tab down to the message area and
type the following on the very first line of the text message:
TO: <first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
20.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
SSP cc:Mail users are somewhat arbitrarily split into users
registered at Rockwell's Downey, California, cc:Mail and users
registered at Rockwell Space Operations Company's Houston
cc:Mail. Check both remote nickname files for your intended
recipient. All SSP cc:Mail users who are allowed to receive e-
mail (and that's NOT all of them) should be in the synchronized
directory. Address your message to:
ROCKWELL(<user ID>)
-or-
DOWNEY(<user ID>)
..for Rockwell/Downey users or:
RSOCHOU(<user ID>)
..for RSOC/Houston users.
For example, from JSCPROFS, my SSP cc:Mail account is:
DOWNEY(KCJENKS)
(Tested 11/16/93) ...but Tom Harmon, who sits in the same office
with me, is:
RSOCHOU(TJHARMON)
21. From JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
The TMIS VAX, TM0003, "knows" the e-mail directories of many
other NASA e-mail systems. Before you try any of the following
procedures, try addressing your message to the recipient as
usual, by typing the recipient's last name in the "TO:" or "CC:"
field.
21.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
In the "TO:" or "CC:" field, type the word INTERNET and press
ENTER. TMIS Mail will respond with a screen which looks like
this:
Enter INTERNET Addressee
Username and Host:
_______________________________________
Example: smith(a)anyhost.on.the.internet
For Host Name Internet Symbol: Substitute:
@ --> (A)
! --> (B)
% --> (P)
_ --> (U)
Enter Username and Host Name with the appropriate substitutions
made for
the special characters to complete the INTERNET address. Once
the address
is completed, press RETURN.
Type the SMTP address of your recipient, but substitute the
letters in parenthesis for any special characters in the address.
For example, from TMIS Mail, my modified SMTP address is:
kjenks(a)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
Note the "(a)" instead of the '@' character.
21.2. To America On-line, AOL
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
stevecase(a)aol.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
21.3. To BIX
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
rcampbell(a)bix.com
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
davejone(a)bix.com
21.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So to send e-mail from TMIS Mail to CompuServe, follow procedure
6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<xxxx>.<xxxx>(a)compuserve.com
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
21.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<first name>.<last name>(a)f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James.Jenks(a)f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
21.6. To GEnie
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<GEnie mail name>(a)genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
21.7. To MCI Mail
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user number>(a)mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his modified
SMTP address is:
4261818(a)mcimail.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
21.8. To Prodigy
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)prodigy.com
21.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
21.10. To BITNET
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(p)<host>.BITNET(a)CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
21.11. To CSNET
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(p)<host>.CSNET(a)RELAY.CS.NET
21.12. To ESNET/DECnet
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
21.13. To SPAN
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
21.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX.GSFC(a)POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send to my office fax, use this modified SMTP
address:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC(a)POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
21.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
In the "TO:" or "CC:" field, type the word INTERNET and press
ENTER. TMIS Mail will respond with a screen which looks like
this:
Enter Nasamail Addressee
Username:
OR
Last Name:
First Name:
MI:
Enter Username or specify fullname to complete NASAMAIL Address.
Use the
TAB key to move between fields. Once the address is completed
press RETURN.
Follow the directions.
21.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
To send to ARC QuickMail users by SMTP, follow procedure 6.1
above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user ID>(a)hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWilliam(a)hqops.hq.nasa.gov
21.17. To ARC QuickMail
To send to ARC QuickMail users by SMTP, follow procedure 6.1
above. The modified SMTP address is:
<first name>_<last name>(a)qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Michael_Hom(a)qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
21.18. To GSFC Mail
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
21.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
21.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
METHOD 1: All JSC PROFS users should be in the synchronized TMIS
Mail directory, so you should be able to follow the usual
procedure (6.6) to send e-mail to JSC PROFS users.
METHOD 2: In the "TO:" or "CC:" field, type the word PROFS and
press ENTER. TMIS Mail will respond with a screen which looks
like this:
Adding PROFS Addressee
PROFS Username:
PROFS Node Name:
Use the TAB key to move between fields and press RETURN when
address is
completed.
Type the recipient's PROFS ID, then TAB down to "PROFS Node
Name:" field and type VMSPFHOU and press ENTER.
(Tested 11/19/93. The message went through, but the return
address did not work.)
21.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
In the "TO:" or "CC:" field, type the recipient's last name. If
more than one user is known with that last name, or (in my case)
if TMIS Mail knows more than one e-mail address for that user,
TMIS Mail will present you with a numbered list. Type the number
of the correct user and press ENTER.
21.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
In the "TO:" or "CC:" field, type the recipient's last name. If
more than one user is known with that last name, or (in my case)
if TMIS Mail knows more than one e-mail address for that user,
TMIS Mail will present you with a numbered list. Type the number
of the correct user and press ENTER. You can recognize SED users
by the tag "@A1@sed".
For example, to send a note from TMIS Mail ALL-IN-ONE to Alice
Aman's SED ALL-IN-ONE account, in the "TO:" field type "aman"
then choose AMAN_ALICE@A1@a1sed from the list.
21.23. To JSC SE Mail
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<last name>,<first name>(a)SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,will(a)SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
21.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
21.25. To JESNET VMSMail
21.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<VMS user name>(a)CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example, my CISV account would be:
jenks(a)CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
21.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<VMS user name>(a)MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
21.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<first name>-<last name>(a)KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne-obryan(a)ksc.nasa.gov
21.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address
is:
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
21.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address
is:
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
21.31. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address
is:
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
21.32. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address
is:
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV
21.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
Follow procedure 6.1 above. The modified SMTP address is:
<user>(a)rsochou.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
<user>(a)yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
kcjenks(a)yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
22. From JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
The SED VAX is connected to JESNET, the JSC Engineering and
Science Network. See section 26.
ALL-IN-ONE uses X.400 as its native addressing mode, so most of
the procedures here are the same as for sending e-mail from any
other X.400 e-mail system, like NASAMail. However, since SED
ALL-IN-ONE is in the same Country, Administrative Domain and
Program Domain (/C=US/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL) as many other
NASA X.400 systems, some X.400 parameters may be omitted. X.400
parameters may be entered in any order, in either UPPER or lower
case.
When sending from SED ALL-IN-ONE to SMTP addresses, SED provides
a unique SMTP ("Internet") gateway. This simplifies many of the
procedures which use SMTP addressing.
22.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
METHOD 1: In the "TO:" field, enter:
<user>@<host>.<domain>@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail from SED VAX ALL-IN-ONE to my SMTP
address, send it to:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
METHOD 2: In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)<host>.<domain>>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name, the <host> and the <domain> as described
in section 1 above. For example, my e-mail address is:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<kjenks(a)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov>)
In this case, you really do need to type some of the <angle
braces>. The "(a)" construct is necessary because the X.400
addressing scheme cannot include the '@' character.
NOTE: Some special characters are not compliant with the
X.400
standards and you must use the following substitutions when
addressing
the envelope:
Internet Symbol X.400 Equivalent
--------------- ----------------
@ (a)
% (p)
! (b)
- (u)
" (q)
22.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>@aol.com@SMTP
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
stev...@aol.com@SMTP
22.3. To BIX
<user>@bix.com@SMTP
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
rcam...@bix.com@SMTP
22.4. To CompuServe
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send e-mail to CompuServe
users using procedures 2.1 and 1.15. In the "TO:" field, enter:
<nnnn>.<nnnn>@compuserve.com@SMTP
Where <nnnn>,<nnnn> is the recipient's CompuServe number. (Note
the change from a comma ',' to a period '.' in this number.)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
For example:
1234...@compuserve.com@SMTP
22.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org@SMTP
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org@SMTP
Note that you can't send things to people who put periods in
their names! Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long
messages (more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit
ASCII.
22.6. To GEnie
<user>@genie.geis.com@SMTP
22.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>@mcimail.com@SMTP
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
426...@mcimail.com@SMTP
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
22.8. To Prodigy
<user>@prodigy.com@SMTP
22.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
22.10. To BITNET
<user>%<host>.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU@SMTP
22.11. To CSNET
<user>%<host>.CSNET@RELAY.CS.NET@SMTP
22.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.13. To SPAN
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send a fax using procedures
7.1 and 1.19:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the desired
FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from SED ALL-IN-ONE direct to
the NASA Science Internet User Support Office (NSIUSO), you would
address it to POSTMAN, then type:
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
Or to send to my office fax, address the note to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the first line of text:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
In the "TO:" field, type the recipient's first name, then a
space, then last name, then "@nasamail" like this:
<first name> <last name>@NASAMAIL
For example, my NASA Mail address would be:
kenneth jenks@NASAMAIL
22.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTP
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTP
22.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTP
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTP
22.18. To GSFC Mail
GSFC Mail uses a native X.400 addressing scheme. In the "TO:"
field, enter:
(FN:<first name>,SN:<last name>,O:GSFCMail, PRMD:GSFC)
22.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
22.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
Type the recipient's last name in the "TO:" field and press
ENTER. ALL-IN-ONE will bring up a list of people with that last
name. Choose the recipient from the list by typing the
corresponding number and pressing ENTER.
22.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SN:<user>,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
(SN:kejenks,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
22.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
Type the recipient's last name in the "TO:" field and press
ENTER. ALL-IN-ONE will bring up a list of people with that last
name. Choose the recipient from the list by typing the
corresponding number and pressing ENTER.
22.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>@semail.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
22.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
22.25. To JESNET VMSMail
22.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
METHOD 1:
<user>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example:
JE...@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
METHOD 2:
CISV::<user>
For example:
CISV::JENKS
22.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<user>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov@SMTP
22.29. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.30. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
22.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>@RSOCHOU.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
or, sometimes...
<user>@YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
KCJ...@YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
23. From JSC SE Mail
24. From JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
In the VAX/VMS environment, a basic mail system called VMSMail is
installed on (almost?) all VAX computers. This product is used
by the MEDICS system. Most of the rest of JESNET has ALL-IN-ONE,
a separate Digital product, which has its own mail interface. In
Digital terminology, VMSMail and ALL-IN-ONE both have their own
user agent that interfaces with Message Router. A JESNET user
has both an ALL-IN-ONE ID and a VMS ID, which are usually not the
same. For example, Clyde Mehornay, a local e-mail guru, has a
VMS user ID of MEHORNAY, and an ALL-IN-ONE user ID of
MEHORNAY_CLYDE.
This section tells you how to send e-mail from an ALL-IN-ONE
account on JESNET to other e-mail systems.
When sending from JESNET ALL-IN-ONE to SMTP addresses, JESNET
provides a unique SMTP ("Internet") gateway. This simplifies
many of the procedures which use SMTP addressing.
24.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
METHOD 1: In the "TO:" field, enter:
<user>@<host>.<domain>@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail from a JESNET ALL-IN-ONE account to
my SMTP address, send it to:
kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
METHOD 2: In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<<user>(a)<host>.<domain>>)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
Fill in the <user> name, the <host> and the <domain> as described
in section 1 above. For example, my e-mail address is:
(SITE:INTERNET,ID:<kjenks(a)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov>)
In this case, you really do need to type some of the <angle
braces>. The "(a)" construct is necessary because the X.400
addressing scheme cannot include the '@' character.
NOTE: Some special characters are not compliant with the
X.400
standards and you must use the following substitutions when
addressing
the envelope:
Internet Symbol X.400 Equivalent
--------------- ----------------
@ (a)
% (p)
! (b)
- (u)
" (q)
METHOD 3:
1=US@*ID\<user>(a)<host>.<domain>@ISMTP
For example:
1=US@*ID\kjenks(A)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov@ismtp
24.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>@aol.com@SMTP
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
stev...@aol.com@SMTP
24.3. To BIX
<user>@bix.com@SMTP
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
rcam...@bix.com@SMTP
24.4. To CompuServe
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send e-mail to CompuServe
users using procedures 2.1 and 1.15. In the "TO:" field, enter:
<nnnn>.<nnnn>@compuserve.com@SMTP
Where <nnnn>,<nnnn> is the recipient's CompuServe number. (Note
the change from a comma ',' to a period '.' in this number.)
This is a strange e-mail address, because it actually does
contain the <angle brace> characters around the SMTP address.
For example:
1234...@compuserve.com@SMTP
24.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org@SMTP
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org@SMTP
Note that you can't send things to people who put periods in
their names! Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long
messages (more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit
ASCII.
24.6. To GEnie
<user>@genie.geis.com@SMTP
24.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>@mcimail.com@SMTP
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
426...@mcimail.com@SMTP
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
24.8. To Prodigy
<user>@prodigy.com@SMTP
24.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
24.10. To BITNET
<user>%<host>.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU@SMTP
24.11. To CSNET
<user>%<host>.CSNET@RELAY.CS.NET@SMTP
24.12. To ESNET/DECnet
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.13. To SPAN
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
Using the X.400/SMTP gateway, you can send a fax using procedures
7.1 and 1.19:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the desired
FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send a text message from JESNET ALL-IN-ONE direct
to the NASA Science Internet User Support Office (NSIUSO), you
would address it to POSTMAN, then type:
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
Or to send to my office fax, address the note to POSTMAN, then
type the following on the first line of text:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
In the "TO:" field, type the recipient's first name, then a
space, then last name, then "@nasamail" like this:
<first name> <last name>@NASAMAIL
For example, my NASA Mail address would be:
kenneth jenks@NASAMAIL
24.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTP
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTP
24.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTP
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTP
24.18. To GSFC Mail
GSFC Mail uses a native X.400 addressing scheme. In the "TO:"
field, enter:
(FN:<first name>,SN:<last name>,O:GSFCMail, PRMD:GSFC)
24.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
24.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
Type the recipient's last name in the "TO:" field and press
ENTER. ALL-IN-ONE will bring up a list of people with that last
name. Choose the recipient from the list by typing the
corresponding number and pressing ENTER.
24.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
In the "TO:" field, enter:
(SN:<user>,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
(SN:kejenks,PRMD:jscprofs,O:tmismail)
24.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
Type the recipient's last name in the "TO:" field and press
ENTER. ALL-IN-ONE will bring up a list of people with that last
name. Choose the recipient from the list by typing the
corresponding number and pressing ENTER.
24.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>@semail.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTP
24.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
<user ID>@A1@<node>
This is greatly simplified for ALL-IN-1 users if the name is in
the ALL-IN-1 indexes. To use these, when creating a message,
simply enter all (or part) of the recipient's surname and ALL-IN-
1 will display a menu of all the matching addressees.
For example, from another JESNET ALL-IN-ONE account, Clyde
Mehornay's address on the SED VAX ALL-IN-ONE is:
MEHORNAY_CLYDE@A1@a1sed
24.25. To JESNET VMSMail
<user ID>@MRGATE@<node>
For example, from a JESNET ALL-IN-ONE account, Clyde Mehornay's
VMSMail address on the SED VAX is:
MEHORNAY@MRGATE@a1sed
24.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
METHOD 1:
<user>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example:
JE...@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
METHOD 2:
CISV::<user>
For example:
CISV::JENKS
24.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<user>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov@SMTP
24.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
24.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>@RSOCHOU.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
or, sometimes...
<user>@YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
KCJ...@YJ0090C.REMNET.AB.COM@SMTP
25. From JESNET VMSMail
In the VAX/VMS environment, a basic mail system called VMSMail is
installed on (almost?) all VAX computers. This product is used
by the MEDICS system. Most of the rest of JESNET has ALL-IN-1, a
separate Digital product, which has its own mail interface. In
Digital terminology, VMSMail and ALL-IN-1 both have their own
user agent that interfaces with Message Router. A JESNET user
has both an ALL-IN-1 ID and a VMS ID, which are usually not the
same. For example, Clyde Mehornay, a local e-mail guru, has a
VMS user ID of MEHORNAY, and an ALL-IN-1 user ID of
MEHORNAY_CLYDE.
This section tells you how to send e-mail from a VMSMail account
on JESNET to other e-mail systems.
25.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail from a JESNET VMSMail account to my
SMTP address, send it to:
SMTP%"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
25.2. To America On-line, AOL
SMTP%"<user>@aol.com"
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
SMTP%"stev...@aol.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
25.3. To BIX
SMTP%"<user>@bix.com"
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
SMTP%"rcam...@bix.com"
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
SMTP%"dave...@bix.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
25.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So, from a JESNET VMSMail account, you would use:
SMTP%"<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com"
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
25.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org"
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
SMTP%"James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org"
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
25.6. To GEnie
SMTP%"<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
25.7. To MCI Mail
SMTP%"<user number>@mcimail.com"
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
SMTP%"426...@mcimail.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
25.8. To Prodigy
SMTP%"<user>@prodigy.com"
25.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
25.10. To BITNET
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.BITNET"
25.11. To CSNET
SMTP%"<user>%<host>@RELAY.CS.NET"
25.12. To ESNET/DECnet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV"
25.13. To SPAN
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV"
25.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
SMTP%"{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, from a SPAN computer, my fax "address" is:
SMTP%"{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
25.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
SMTP%"<user>@nasamail.nasa.gov"
For example, from a JESNET VMSMail account, my e-mail address
would be:
SMTP%"kcj...@nasamail.nasa.gov"
25.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
SMTP%"<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
SMTP%"DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
25.17. To ARC QuickMail
SMTP%"<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
SMTP%"Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
25.18. To GSFC Mail
SMTP%"<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"
25.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
SMTP%"<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov"
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
25.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
SMTP%"<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV"
For example, from a JESNET VMSMail account, my PROFS address
would be:
SMTP%"kje...@JSCPROFS.nasa.gov"
25.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
SMTP%"/SN=<last name>/FN=<first
name>/I=<initial>/C=US/ADMD=telemail/P=JSC/@sprint.com"
For example, from a JESNET VMSMail account, my TMIS Mail address
is:
SMTP%"/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=tele
mail/C=US/@sprint.com"
Note that my "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes the JSC
Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account, which may
not be the same as my current mail code.
25.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
SMTP%"<user>@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, from a JESNET VMSMail account, Alice Aman's e-mail
address would be:
SMTP%"am...@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
25.23. To JSC SE Mail
SMTP%"<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, to reach Will Gore from a JESNET VMSMail account:
SMTP%"gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
25.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
MRGATE::"<node>::A1::<user ID>"
For example, to send e-mail from JESNET VMSMail to JESNET ALL-
IN1, Clyde Mehornay's address on the SED VAX is:
MRGATE::"SED::A1::MEHORNAY_CLYDE"
25.25. To JESNET VMSMail
MRGATE::"<node>::<user ID>"
For example, from another JESNET VMSMail account, Clyde
Mehornay's VMSMail address on the SED VAX is:
MRGATE::"SED::MEHORNAY"
25.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
CISV::<user>
For example, my CISV address is:
CISV::JENKS
25.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
MEDICS::<user>
25.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV"
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
SMTP%"jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov"
25.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
25.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. From JESNET VMSMail, address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
25.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. From JESNET VMSMail, address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
25.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. From JESNET VMSMail, address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
25.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
SMTP%"<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com"
or, sometimes...
SMTP%"<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
For example, from a JESNET VMSMail account, my SSP cc:Mail
address would be:
SMTP%"kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
26. From JSC VAX: CISV
CISV is a VAX running the VMS operating system. It uses VMS Mail
and the Message Router software.
26.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail from CISV to my SMTP address, send it
to:
SMTP%"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
(Tested 11/22/93.)
26.2. To America On-line, AOL
SMTP%"<user>@aol.com"
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
SMTP%"stev...@aol.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
26.3. To BIX
SMTP%"<user>@bix.com"
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
SMTP%"rcam...@bix.com"
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
SMTP%"dave...@bix.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
26.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So, from CISV, you would use:
SMTP%"<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com"
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
26.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org"
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
SMTP%"James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org"
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
26.6. To GEnie
SMTP%"<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
26.7. To MCI Mail
SMTP%"<user number>@mcimail.com"
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
SMTP%"426...@mcimail.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
26.8. To Prodigy
SMTP%"<user>@prodigy.com"
26.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
26.10. To BITNET
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.BITNET"
26.11. To CSNET
SMTP%"<user>%<host>@RELAY.CS.NET"
26.12. To ESNET/DECnet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV"
26.13. To SPAN
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV"
26.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
SMTP%"{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, from a SPAN computer, my fax "address" is:
SMTP%"{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
26.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
SMTP%"<user>@nasamail.nasa.gov"
For example, from a SPAN computer, my e-mail address would be:
SMTP%"kcj...@nasamail.nasa.gov"
26.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
SMTP%"<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
SMTP%"DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
26.17. To ARC QuickMail
SMTP%"<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
SMTP%"Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
26.18. To GSFC Mail
SMTP%"<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"
26.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
SMTP%"<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov"
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
26.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
SMTP%"<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV"
For example, from CISV, my PROFS address would be:
SMTP%"kje...@JSCPROFS.nasa.gov"
26.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
SMTP%"/SN=<last name>/FN=<first
name>/I=<initial>/C=US/ADMD=telemail/P=JSC/@sprint.com"
For example, from CISV, my TMIS Mail address is:
SMTP%"/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=tele
mail/C=US/@sprint.com"
Note that my "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes the JSC
Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account, which may
not be the same as my current mail code.
26.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
SMTP%"<user>@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, from CISV, Alice Aman's e-mail address would be:
SMTP%"am...@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
26.23. To JSC SE Mail
SMTP%"<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, to reach Will Gore from CISV:
SMTP%"gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
26.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
26.25. To JESNET VMSMail
26.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<user>
For example, my CISV address is:
JENKS
26.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
MEDICS::<user>
26.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV"
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
SMTP%"jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov"
26.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
26.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
26.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
26.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
26.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
SMTP%"<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com"
or, sometimes...
SMTP%"<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
For example, from CISV, my SSP cc:Mail address would be:
SMTP%"kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
27. From JSC VAX: MEDICS
MEDICS is a VAX running the VMS operating system. It uses
VMSMail and the Message Router software. See section 27.
27.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, to send e-mail from MEDICS to my SMTP address, send
it to:
SMTP%"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
27.2. To America On-line, AOL
SMTP%"<user>@aol.com"
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
SMTP%"stev...@aol.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
27.3. To BIX
SMTP%"<user>@bix.com"
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
SMTP%"rcam...@bix.com"
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
SMTP%"dave...@bix.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
27.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So, from MEDICS, you would use:
SMTP%"<xxxx>.<xxxx>@compuserve.com"
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
27.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
The suggested syntax is:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org"
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
SMTP%"James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org"
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
27.6. To GEnie
SMTP%"<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
27.7. To MCI Mail
SMTP%"<user number>@mcimail.com"
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
SMTP%"426...@mcimail.com"
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
27.8. To Prodigy
SMTP%"<user>@prodigy.com"
27.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
27.10. To BITNET
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.BITNET"
27.11. To CSNET
SMTP%"<user>%<host>@RELAY.CS.NET"
27.12. To ESNET/DECnet
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV"
27.13. To SPAN
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV"
27.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
SMTP%"{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, from a SPAN computer, my fax "address" is:
SMTP%"{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV"
27.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
SMTP%"<user>@<host>.<domain>"
For example, from a MEDICS, my e-mail address would be:
SMTP%"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov"
27.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
SMTP%"<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
SMTP%"DWil...@hqops.hq.nasa.gov"
27.17. To ARC QuickMail
SMTP%"<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
SMTP%"Micha...@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov"
27.18. To GSFC Mail
SMTP%"<user>@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"
27.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
SMTP%"<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov"
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
27.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
SMTP%"<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV"
For example, from MEDICS, my PROFS address would be:
SMTP%"kje...@JSCPROFS.nasa.gov"
27.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
SMTP%"/SN=<last name>/FN=<first
name>/I=<initial>/C=US/ADMD=telemail/P=JSC/@sprint.com"
For example, from MEDICS, my TMIS Mail address is:
SMTP%"/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=tele
mail/C=US/@sprint.com"
Note that my "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes the JSC
Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account, which may
not be the same as my current mail code.
27.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
SMTP%"<user>@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, from MEDICS, Alice Aman's e-mail address would be:
SMTP%"am...@a1sed.jsc.nasa.gov"
27.23. To JSC SE Mail
SMTP%"<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
For example, to reach Will Gore from MEDICS:
SMTP%"gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov"
27.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
27.25. To JESNET VMSMail
27.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
CISV::<user>
For example, my CISV address is:
CISV::JENKS
27.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<user>
27.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV"
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
SMTP%"jeanne...@ksc.nasa.gov"
27.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
27.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
27.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
27.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
SMTP%"<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
SMTP%"brent....@MSFC.NASA.GOV"
27.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
SMTP%"<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com"
or, sometimes...
SMTP%"<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
For example, from MEDICS, my SSP cc:Mail address would be:
SMTP%"kcj...@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com"
28. From KSC MS-Mail
28.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
28.2. To America On-line, AOL
28.3. To BIX
28.4. To CompuServe
28.5. To Fido Net
28.6. To GEnie
28.7. To MCI Mail
28.8. To Prodigy
28.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
28.10. To BITNET
28.11. To CSNET
28.12. To ESNET/DECnet
28.13. To SPAN
28.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
<username>/<XXX-XXX-XXXX>@fax
Where:
<username> contains no spaces
<XXX-XXX-XXXX> contains the dashes
For example:
JeanneOBryan/407-867-3552@fax
28.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
<user>@nasamail
For example, my NASAMail address is:
KCJENKS@nasamail
28.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
28.17. To ARC QuickMail
28.18. To GSFC Mail
<user>@gsfc
28.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
28.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
<user>/o=<organ>@jscprofs
Where <organ> is the recipient's organization identifier
For example:
jobryan/o=kscmail@jscprofs
28.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
<user ID>@restonssfp
28.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
28.23. To JSC SE Mail
28.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
28.25. To JESNET VMSMail
28.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
28.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
28.28. To KSC MS-Mail
METHOD 1: To send to other KSC MS-Mail users:
1. Click the Compose button, or from the Mail menu, choose
Compose Note (ALT,M,N). Microsoft Mail will display a
Send Note form.
2. Choose the Address button (ALT+D)...Microsoft Mail displays
the Global Address Book, which contains the names of users on
your post office.
3. Type the first few characters of the recipient's name. The
address list scrolls to the first name in the list with those
characters and selects it. There are two other ways to locate
user names in the address list. You can use the mouse to
click the scroll arrows in the scroll bar, or you can press
the arrow keys to scroll through the list. However, typing
the first few characters of the recipient's name is the
fastest way to find a user's name.
4. Press ENTER or choose the To button (ALT+T). The recipient's
name is added to the To box.
5. Press ENTER or choose the OK button.
METHOD 2: To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user
by SMTP, address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>@ksc
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne-obryan@ksc
If you do not know if the user has a K-Mail address or how the
name appears in K-Mail, you may query the K-Mail list by using
the K-Mail Look-Up request. To send a K-Mail Look-Up Request:
knames@ksc
In the "Subject:" field, type the name of your intended recipient
then send the message. (You can leave the body of the message
blank.) For example:
To: knames@ksc
Subject: smith
Returned the following
Possible matches for --smith--
{maynette-smith@ksc}:postman (PAYLOADS 3MAIL)
{alice-smith@ksc}:postman (OAS)
{eric-smith@ksc}:postman (EDL MAC MAIL)
{donald-smith@ksc}:postman (DE VAX VMS MAIL)
{diane-s-smith@ksc}:postman (EG&G IBM PROFS)
{wade-smith@ksc}:postman (SPDMS2 IBM PROFS)
{bob-smith@ksc}:postman (HARRIS)
28.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
28.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
28.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
28.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
28.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
29. From MSFC cc:Mail
Almost all MSFC e-mail users will be switching to cc:Mail in the
near future.
29.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Use the following SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
29.2. To America On-line, AOL
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
29.3. To BIX
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
29.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself. So to send e-mail from MSFC cc:Mail to CompuServe:
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<nnnn>.<nnnn>@compuserve.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
29.5. To Fido Net
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
29.6. To GEnie
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
29.7. To MCI Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
29.8. To Prodigy
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@prodigy.com
29.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
29.10. To BITNET
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
29.11. To CSNET
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
29.12. To ESNET/DECnet
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
For example:
29.13. To SPAN
To send e-mail to the Space Physics and Astronomy Network (SPAN):
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
29.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the following SMTP address:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
Where <user> is any text that identifies the person to whom the
FAX is being sent. It is important to remember that this text is
the only way the people at the FAX end of the link will know who
the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the desired
FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
4. Send text items only. This fax gateway cannot interpret
binary attachments.
For example, to send a text message from MSFC cc:Mail direct to
the NSIUSO, you would address it to
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
To send to my office fax, use this:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
29.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
METHOD 1:
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV
For example, my NASAMail address is:
METHOD 2: Alternatively, you can use the SMTP/X.400 gateway,
wherein my NASAMail address is:
/PN=Kenneth.C.Jenks/O=NASA/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/@spri
nt.com
29.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
29.17. To ARC QuickMail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
29.18. To GSFC Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
29.19. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
METHOD 1:
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example, my PROFS address is:
METHOD 2: An alternate syntax is:
/PN=<user>/O=vmspfhou/PRMD=jscprofs/ADMD=telemail/C=us/@x400.msfc
nasa.gov
For example:
/PN=kjenks/O=vmspfhou/PRMD=jscprofs/ADMD=telemail/C=us/@x400.msfc
nasa.gov
Note: this method should not add as many lines of header
information to your message as method 1, but the address is
longer to type.
29.20. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
There is no direct SMTP path to the TMIS VAX, so you'll have to
use X.400 addressing. The suggested syntax is:
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/AD
MD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com
For example, my TMIS Mail address is:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/OU=JSC#s#GM2/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/ADMD=telemail/C
=US/@sprint.com
Note that my (optional) "/OU" (Organizational Unit) code includes
the JSC Mail Code I had when I first received the TMIS account,
which may not be the same as my current mail code. In
desperation, you might try using JSC PROFS as a gateway:
/SN:<TMIS user
ID>/C:us/ADMD:telemail/PRMD:jscprofs/O:tmismail/@sprint.com
For example, I can sometimes be reached at:
/SN:kejenks/C:us/ADMD:telemail/PRMD:jscprofs/O:tmismail/@sprint.c
om
29.21. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
You can also try the X.400 gateway:
/PN=ALICE.L.AMAN/OU=SED/O=NASA/PRMD=JSC/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/@x400.
msfc.nasa.gov
29.22. To JSC SE Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
29.23. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
29.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
29.25. To JESNET VMSMail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
29.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
29.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
29.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP:
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
29.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended recipient. If the
name of the person appears in the cc:Mail directory, just select
the name and complete the message.
29.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
29.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
29.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient.
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Address your message to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
29.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
METHOD 1: Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message.
METHOD 2:
1. Click on the "Prepare" button.
2. From the "Address Message" dialog box, select "SMTP" from the
list and either click on OK or press ENTER.
3. In the small dialog box, type the SMTP address of the
recipient:
<user>@rsochou.remnet.ab.com
or, sometimes...
<user>@yj0090c.remnet.ab.com
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
You can send binary attachments to SSP cc:Mail recipients using
UUENCODE. (If you don't know how to use this, ask your system
administrator. He'll confuse you thoroughly.) However, the
REMNET gateway strips off the file name of the incoming
UUENCODE'd file (it comes in as a "memo" icon which looks like a
floppy disk). The procedural work-around is to send the file
name in the text portion of the message. The recipient will then
select the memo icon and perform a "File/Save As" operation from
the cc:Mail menu. This is clumsy, but it works. One caveat: the
REMNET gateway can't handle multiple attachments; only the first
UUENCODE'd file is passed through to cc:Mail.
30. From MSFC Data General CEO
30.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
<user>(a)<host>.<domain>@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, my e-mail address would be:
kjenks(a)gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
NOTE: Some special characters are not compliant with the
X.400
standards and you must use the following substitutions when
addressing
the envelope:
Internet Symbol X.400 Equivalent
--------------- ----------------
@ (a)
% (p)
! (b)
- (u)
" (q)
30.2. To America On-line, AOL
<user>(a)aol.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
stevecase(a)aol.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
30.3. To BIX
<user>(a)bix.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
rcampbell(a)bix.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
davejone(a)bix.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.4. To CompuServe
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
So to send e-mail from MSFC Data General CEO to CompuServe, the
modified SMTP address is:
<xxxx>.<xxxx>(a)compuserve.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
30.5. To Fido Net
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
<first name>.<last name>(a)f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org@SMTPMAIL:X400
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James.Jenks(a)f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org@SMTPMAIL:X400
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
30.6. To GEnie
<GEnie mail
name>(p)genie.dbk.uucp(a)Broadcast.Sony.Com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
30.7. To MCI Mail
<user number>(a)mcimail.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
4261818(a)mcimail.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
30.8. To Prodigy
<user>(a)prodigy.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
30.10. To BITNET
<user>(p)<host>.BITNET(a)CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.11. To CSNET
<user>(p)<host>.CSNET(a)RELAY.CS.NET@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.12. To ESNET/DECnet
30.13. To SPAN
<user>(a)<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX.GSFC(a)POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X
400
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
For example, to send to my office fax, use this modified SMTP
address:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC(a)POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTP
MAIL:X400
30.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
<first name > <last name>@NASAMAIL:X400
There is a space between the first name and the last name. For
example, my NASAMail address would be:
kenneth jenks@NASAMAIL:X400
30.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
<user ID>(a)hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
DWilliam(a)hqops.hq.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.17. To ARC QuickMail
<first name>_<last name>(a)qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
Michael_Hom(a)qmgate.arc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.18. To GSFC Mail
METHOD 1:
<user>(a)GSFCMail.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
METHOD 2: This one may or may not work
<last name> <first name>@GSFCMail:X400
METHOD 3: This one may or may not work
<last name> <first name>@GSFC:X400
30.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
<user>(a)<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
30.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
<user>@JSCPROFS:X400
For example, my PROFS address would be:
kjenks@JSCPROFS:X400
30.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
30.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
<user>(a)a1sed.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
aaman(a)a1sed.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.23. To JSC SE Mail
<last name>,<first name>(a)SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,will(a)SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
30.25. To JESNET VMSMail
30.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
<VMS user name>(a)CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, my CISV account would be:
jenks(a)CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
<VMS user name>(a)MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
address your message to:
<first name>-<last name>(a)KSC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, address it to:
jeanne-obryan(a)ksc.nasa.gov@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
30.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP.
<first name>.<last name>(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
brent.sherman(a)MSFC.NASA.GOV@SMTPMAIL:X400
30.33. To Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
<user>(a)rsochou.remnet.ab.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
or, sometimes...
<user>(a)yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
For example, my cc:Mail account is:
kcjenks(a)yj0090c.remnet.ab.com@SMTPMAIL:X400
Strangely, not everybody who has a cc:Mail account in the Space
Shuttle Program Office system is allowed to receive SMTP e-mail.
Ask the recipient if he has been set up for this.
31. From MSFC MS-Mail
32. From MSFC Quick Mail
33. From Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
33.1. To SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
METHOD 1: Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message as
usual.
METHOD 2: The SSP cc:Mail bulletin board contained the following
procedure:
1. Address the cc:Mail message to the REMNET Post Office (see
example). This may be done by selecting REMNET from the mail
directory or by typing REMNET in the To: field.
2. When prompted, address the message to ABSSW.OAS (see below).
This will send the message to the Open Addressing Service
connected to the REMNET Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
(SMTP/Internet) gateway.
3. Fill in the subject line of the message.
4. Starting in the first column of the first line of the message,
type this message header:
ADDR:
TO NN=<user>@<host>.<domain>
ADDR:
For example, to send from cc:Mail to my SMTP address:
ADDR:
TO NN=kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
ADDR:
Be sure to type the Internet address without any spaces
between the fields.
5. Skip a line after the message header and type the text of the
message. When finished send the message.
Contact the person you are sending mail to or their Network
Coordinator to find out what their Internet address is.
Addresses from various mail systems often differ based on the
parameters used to construct the address.
The REMNET SMTP/Internet gateway will support binary file
attachments, however the user should verify that the recipient's
e-mail system can handle attachments and that the necessary
software applications to process the attachments are available.
(Tested 11/19/93.)
METHOD 3: Address your cc:Mail message to the SMTPCCM gateway.
cc:Mail will prompt you to enter the SMTP address in the "Post
Office Addressing" pop-up window:
Type the SMTP address and either click on OK or press ENTER.
(Tested 11/19/93, but method 3 failed to deliver messages.)
33.2. To America On-line, AOL
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@aol.com
For example, the address for the screen name "Steve Case" would
be:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of America On-line.
33.3. To BIX
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@bix.com
For example, Rob Campbell of Stanford University can be reached
at:
Or Dave Jones (d...@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com) of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, NY:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of BIX.
33.4. To CompuServe
Follow procedure 10.1 above.
In the Usenet/Internet newsgroup "alt.bbs.internet" on 5 Sep
1991, John Sonderman (JSO...@auvm.american.edu) of The American
University - University Computing Center wrote:
You should be able to e-mail CompuServe customers with the
following address. First take their user ID say xxxx,xxx
and
replace the ',' with a '.' then type '@compuserve.com' and
it
should look like:
You must ask the CompuServe user for his user ID; there is no way
to query CompuServe for the ID without logging into CompuServe
itself.
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of CompuServe Information
Services (CIS).
33.5. To Fido Net
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@f<Fido number>.n<net
number>.z<zone>.fidonet.org
Warning: Fido Net is an amateur computer network, and is very
unreliable. Your mail may not go through, or it may take weeks.
Fido Net uses a "four-D" addressing system in the form "#:#/#.#"
where the first # is the zone (1 = North America, 2 = Europe,
etc., 3 = Australia, New Zealand, etc., 4 = Latin America, 5 =
Africa, 6 = Asia). The second # is the "net," like a telephone
area code. The third # identifies the particular BBS. The last
# is the optional user number; the SysOp is always 0.
You will need to contact the SysOp of the Fido Net BBS to ask for
his numbers. For example, my brother, James Jenks, on his world-
famous Hermes BBS (phone number 309-827-2433), can be reached at:
James...@f310.n232.z1.fidonet.org
You can't send things to people who put periods in their names!
Some software in the Fido Net chain can't pass long messages
(more that a few kbytes) or messages containing 8-bit ASCII.
Since these messages are passed over commercial phone lines,
please remember that every BBS operator between the Internet and
your recipient's BBS must pay the phone bill to transmit your
message.
33.6. To GEnie
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<GEnie mail name>@genie.geis.com
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of General Electric.
33.7. To MCI Mail
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user number>@mcimail.com
Do not type the hyphen in the <user number>. For example, David
W. Tamkin (dat...@vpnet.chi.il.us) once posted some information
about MCI Mail in the Internet/Usenet newsgroup alt.bbs.internet.
David lists his MCI Mail address as 426-1818, so his SMTP address
is:
Note that the recipient will be charged for messages you send to
him, subject to the billing practices of MCI.
33.8. To Prodigy
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@prodigy.com
33.9. To SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
33.10. To BITNET
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>%<host>.BIT...@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU
33.11. To CSNET
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>%<host>.CS...@RELAY.CS.NET
33.12. To ESNET/DECnet
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@<host>.DNET.NASA.GOV
33.13. To SPAN
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@<host>.SPAN.NASA.GOV
33.14. To Fax, facsimile, datafax
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
{<user>/FAX:<number>}.FAX....@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
...where <user> is any text that identifies the person to
whom
the FAX is being sent; it is important to remember that
this text is the only way the people at the FAX end of the
link will know who the message is for!
The <number> entry is the actual telephone number for the
desired FAX machine. Typical numbers are:
6YYYY (Goddard On-Base),
9XXXYYYY (Local Calls),
8XXXYYYY (FTS),
8AAAXXXYYYY (Long Distance Via FTS).
To send to my office fax, use this SMTP address:
{Ken_Jenks/FAX:87134833047}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
33.15. To NASAMail/TELEMAIL
METHOD 1: Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message as
usual.
METHOD 2: The SSP cc:Mail bulletin board contained the following
procedure for sending to X.400 addresses:
1. Address the cc:Mail message to the REMNET Post Office (see
example). This may be done by selecting REMNET from the mail
directory or by typing REMNET in the To: field.
2. When prompted address the message to CREMS.ADDR (see example).
This will send the message to the Open Addressing Systems
connected to the REMNET X.400 gateway.
3. Fill in the subject line of the message.
4. Starting in the first column of the first line of the message
type this message header:
ADDR:
TO: <X.400 address>
ADDR:
For example, you can send from cc:Mail to my NASAMail address:
ADDR:
TO: PN:KENNETH.C.JENKS,O:NASA,PRMD:NASAMAIL,ADMD:TELEMAIL,C:US
ADDR:
Be sure to type the X.400 address without any spaces between
the fields. Note that there are several ways of typing the
X.400 address. The REMNET gateway seems to be expecting
colons and commas instead of equal signs and slashes. You'll
have to substitute if you have an X.400 address like:
/PN=KENNETH.C.JENKS/O=NASA/PRMD=NASAMAIL/ADMD=TELEMAIL/C=US/
5. Skip a line after the message header and type the text of the
message. When finished send the message.
Contact the person you are sending mail to or their Network
Coordinator to determine his X.400 address.
The REMNET X.400 gateway will support binary file attachments,
however the user should verify that the recipient's e-mail system
can handle attachments and that the necessary software
applications to process the attachments are available.
NOTE: The JSC PROFS X.400 gateway does not support attachments.
(Tested 11/22/93. Return address works.)
33.16. To Headquarters MS-Mail
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user ID>@hqops.hq.nasa.gov
Where <user ID> is usually the first letter of the first name
plus the last name, limited to eight characters. For example,
Debbie Williams' account on Headquarters MS-Mail is:
33.17. To ARC QuickMail
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<first name>_<last name>@qmgate.arc.nasa.gov
For example, Michael Hom can be reached at:
33.18. To GSFC Mail
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@GSFCMail.NASA.GOV
33.19. To JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
METHOD 1: Check the SSP cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message as
usual. You can send binary attachments as usual. You can
recognize MS-Mail addresses in the cc:Mail directory because they
are written in UPPER CASE and have no comment in the comment
field. For example, there are two entries for Ken Jenks in the
cc:Mail directory:
The first one is my MS-Mail account. The second one is my
cc:Mail account.
(Tested 11/19/93, but method 1 did not work. I tried to send to
Tom Harmon's MS-Mail account. Error message said, "Returned -
Unknown Recipient: TOM (HARMNT) HARMON at ALISAMAIL.")
METHOD 2: If the name is not in the directory, you can send e-
mail from SSP cc:Mail to JSC MS-Mail users via SMTP. Follow
procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@<post office>.jsc.nasa.gov
Where <post office> is related to the name of the file server
your recipient uses. See procedure 1.19 above.
(Tested 11/19/93.)
33.20. To JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
METHOD 1: Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message as
usual. You can recognize PROFS ID's in the cc:Mail directory by
looking for the following text in the comment field:
"VMSPFHOU.<user> X400.<user>"
METHOD 2: Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP
address:
<user>@JSCPROFS.NASA.GOV
For example, my PROFS address is:
33.21. To JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
Follow procedure 10.2 above. Use the following X.400 address:
/PN=<first name>.<middle initial>.<last name>/PRMD=Reston.SSFP/AD
MD=telemail/C=US/@sprint.com
33.22. To JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<user>@a1sed.nasa.gov
For example, Alice Aman, our local X.400 expert, can be reached
at:
33.23. To JSC SE Mail
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<last name>,<first name>@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
For example, to reach Will Gore:
gore,wi...@SEMAIL.jsc.nasa.gov
33.24. To JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
33.25. To JESNET VMSMail
33.26. To JSC VAX: CISV
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<VMS user name>@CISV.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
33.27. To JSC VAX: MEDICS
Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<VMS user name>@MEDICS.JSC.NASA.GOV
For example:
33.28. To KSC MS-Mail
To send to any Kennedy Space Center (KSC) e-mail user by SMTP,
follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP address:
<first name>-<last name>@KSC.NASA.GOV
This routes your mail via the K-Mail system. For example, to
send e-mail to Jeanne O'Bryan at KSC, send it to:
33.29. To MSFC cc:Mail
METHOD 1: First, check the cc:Mail directory for your intended
recipient. If the name of the person appears in the cc:Mail
directory, just select the name and complete the message as
usual.
METHOD 2: As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC
e-mail user by SMTP. Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the
following SMTP address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
33.30. To MSFC Data General CEO
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP
address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
33.31. To MSFC MS-Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP
address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
33.32. To MSFC Quick Mail
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any MSFC e-mail user
by SMTP. Follow procedure 10.1 above. Use the following SMTP
address:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
For example, to send e-mail to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it
to:
33.33. Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
Check the cc:Mail directory for your intended recipient. If the
name of the person appears in the cc:Mail directory, just select
the name and complete the message. You can send binary
attachments to other cc:Mail users.
Appendix A Miscellaneous E-mail Systems
This appendix gives SMTP addresses for minor e-mail systems. Use
the SMTP address procedure from your e-mail system, but
substitute in the SMTP address below.
A.1. To Easylink
Michael Polak (p00...@psilink.com) wrote in the Usenet newsgroup
alt.internet.services on 11/25/93:
To send mail to an Easylink customer:
"<account number>"@eln.attmail.com
A.2. To AT&T
The command:
finger @att.att.com
returns the following information:
[att.att.com]
------------------------------------------------------------
There are no user accounts on the AT&T Internet gateway.
To send email to an AT&T employee, send email to their name
separated by periods at att.com. If the employee has an email
address registered in the employee database, they will receive
email - otherwise, you'll receive a non-delivery notice.
For example: John.Q...@att.com
Appendix B Finding E-mail Addresses
To send e-mail from one e-mail account to another, you need to
know (1) which e-mail system your intended recipient uses, (2)
the other user's preferred e-mail address, and (3) how to send e-
mail from your system to his. The rest of this document attempts
to answer question (3). This appendix attempts to help you
answer questions (1) and (2).
Almost every e-mail system includes a mechanism for users of that
system to find the user ID of other users on that system.
However, most systems do not allow this capability to be used by
users outside the system to find e-mail addresses on that system.
Clear as mud, right? As an example, the JSC PROFS e-mail system
has a command, user, which allows PROFS users to find the PROFS
ID's of other PROFS users. But PROFS doesn't allow SMTP-based e-
mail systems (like UNIX "Mail") to find the user ID's of PROFS
users.
B.1. Ask the recipient
Many people at NASA have multiple e-mail addresses, but they
prefer to receive e-mail on their favorite systems. Even when
you know your recipient's preferred e-mail system, you won't
necessarilly know the recipient's user ID, user number or name
combination which can be used to address your message. Today,
the easiest way is to find this information is to call your
intended recipient on the telephone and ask. Even if the person
doesn't know this data, his system administrator or Help Desk
usually will. To find the recipient's e-mail system
administrator, either ask the recipient or consult Appendix C.
If this doesn't work, you could ask the user to send a message to
your SMTP account then look at the return address. Note,
however, that not all e-mail systems can issue or pass through
valid return addresses.
B.2. NASA Headquarters
There are various mechanisms available on the Internet for
finding e-mail addresses. At NASA, you can use the "finger"
command to send a query to the X.500 servers at several NASA
installations. (Not everyone has access to the "finger" command.
Try it, or ask your system administrator. See Appendix F for
"finger via e-mail" instructions.) To access the X.500 server at
Headquarters:
finger "<last name>,<NASA field center>"@x500.nasa.gov
For example, to find my e-mail address, try:
finger "jenks,jsc"@x500.nasa.gov
And the output from the X.500 server is:
[x500.nasa.gov]
NASA X.500 Service.
Looking outside at c=US@o=National Aeronautics and Space
Administration@ou=Johnson Space Center
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-------------
Kenneth Jenks, Johnson Space Center
commonName - Kenneth Jenks
commonName - Ken Jenks
postalAddress - NASA Johnson Space Center
Houston, TX 77058
telephoneNumber - +1 713-483-4368
rfc822Mailbox - kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-------------
The entry called "rfc822Mailbox" gives my SMTP address,
"kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov".
You can also use this information to build an X.400 address,
using the information at the top of the output, c=US/o=National
Aeronautics and Space Administration/ou=Johnson Space Center.
From this and the way my "commonName" is listed, you should be
able to build an X.400 address:
/c=US/o=NASA/ou=Johnson Space Center/sn=Jenks/gn=Kenneth/
Where "sn" marks the "surname" field, "gn" marks the "given name"
field, and "NASA" is one of the abbreviations X.400 "knows" about
for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Sadly, not all NASA e-mail users are listed in the NASA
Headquarters X.500 server.
B.3. AT&T X.500
AT&T also has an X.500 server available on the Internet. You can
telnet to ds.internic.net and login as guest. (Tested 12/03/93.)
B.4. Kennedy Space Center (KSC)
Kennedy Space Center has a unique way to avoid requiring you to
include the host name in your SMTP address. Almost all users at
KSC can be reached via SMTP mail by sending to:
<first name>-<last name>@ksc.nasa.gov
(That's a hyphen between the names, not an underscore character.)
For example, Darwin Brown at KSC can be reached at:
A computer at KSC named K-Mail will route your e-mail to the
correct host. In the future, all NASA installations may have
this feature.
B.5. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)
As of 12/13/93, you will be able to send to any Marshall Space
Flight Center (MSFC) e-mail user by SMTP. Address your message
to:
<first name>.<last name>@MSFC.NASA.GOV
(That's a period between the names.) For example, to send e-mail
to Brent Sherman at MSFC, address it to:
B.6. Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)
At the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), an e-mail address
directory for JPL is now operational on blacks.jpl.nasa.gov. It
lets you look up someone's e-mail address given their name or
part thereof. The directory now covers about 650 e-mail users.
To use the service from a Unix machine, type
whois -h blacks <search_key>
To use this service from a VMS machine running MultiNet, type
whois/host=blacks <search_key>
The <search_key> can be a whole name, or just a fragment of a
name. If there are no matches, nothing will be printed; try a
shorter fragment. To use the service from a Macintosh, run
MacFinger, click on the 'whois' box, type in 'blacks' as the
server, and type a search key.
A Macintosh MacTCP version of whois and finger is available at
the following FTP sites (and perhaps others):
akiu.gw.tohoku.ac.jp:/pub/mac/comm/MacTCP/internet-finger-
client.hqx
ifi.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de:/pub/mnt/mac/com/internet-
finger-client.hqx
For example, from my UNIX account on spa1.jpl.nasa.gov, the
command:
whois -h blacks jenks
returned the following listing:
------ bacchus.jpl.nasa.gov Default Host ------
kje...@spa1.jpl.nasa.gov Ken Jenks Fri
Dec 3 1993
The third column is the date the user last logged in or checked
mail. If the person you're trying to reach uses several
computers, choose the most recently used address.
For security reasons, only queries from JPL sites are currently
allowed.
B.7. Johnson Space Center (JSC)
To determine the e-mail address of JSC recipients, you can try
using the X.400 gateway. Warning: this is not for the meek at
heart. X.400 is always the hard way to address e-mail. There
are two incomplete lists of X.400 e-mail addresses available via
anonymous FTP from:
ftp.jsc.nasa.gov:/email/jscx400.lis
and
ftp.jsc.nasa.gov:/email/jscprofsx400.lis
See the instructions:
ftp.jsc.nasa.gov:/email/READMEjsx400.doc
The JSC.X400 bulletin board directory files are alphabetical by
Surname, Firstname, Middle Initial, and Organizational Unit and
are in the following format:
/<surname>/<first name>/<middle initial>/<organizational
unit>
All the user entries in these files have the following in
common.
COUNTRY = USA
ADMD = TELEMAIL
PRMD = JSC
ORGANIZATION = NASA
The field after the user's middle initial corresponds to a VAX
node name where the account of the user resides. This Node can be
entered in an X.400 address as an Org Unit (OU:).
Example listing:
/JENKS/KENNETH/C/TM3/
That shows my account on the TMIS All-In-One VAX, TM0003,
/ou=TM3.
The Organizational Unit (OU) (the fourth field) corresponds to a
VAX node name and can often be helpful in determining the
recipient's e-mail address. A complete list of OU's or VAX nodes
with X.400 connectivity
thru the JSC PRMD follows:
Node name (OU) JSC/NASA Organization
______________ _____________________________________
TM3 TMIS or JSC Space Station Program Ofc
SSDVAX MDSSC (McDonnell Douglas Space System
Co.)
SSDHOU MDSSC (McDonnell Douglas Space System
Co.)
LOCK Lockheed
TTB JSC Engineering Directorate
PPD JSC Engineering Directorate
ASD JSC Engineering Directorate
CTSD2 JSC Engineering Directorate
TCD JSC Engineering Directorate
SED JSC Engineering Directorate
SN JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
SMSD JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
MEDICS JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
MEDOPS JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
PLATO JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
LIFE JSC Space and Life Sciences Directorate
VF JSC Orbiter and GFE Proj, Flight Data and
Eval
But unless you're a real e-mail guru already, this probably won't
help you much.
Please address any questions you may have about these listings to
the Master E-mail Directory Service (MEDS) account via X.400 at:
(C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIL,PRMD:JSC,SN:MEDS,FN:VAX)
or, using the SMTP/X.400 gateway:
/C=USA/ADMD=TELEMAIL/PRMD=JSC/SN=MEDS/FN=VAX/@sprint.com
B.8. Ames Research Center (ARC)
ARC has an X.500 system similar to the one at NASA Headquarters.
You can find SMTP addresses of ARC e-mail users with the "finger"
command. (If you don't have the "finger" command, see Appendix
F.) I tried:
finger @x500.arc.nasa.gov
(I didn't put a name before the @ sign.) The X.500 server at ARC
sent back the following instructions:
[x500.arc.nasa.gov]
NASA Ames X.500 Service.
No login information available.
You can ask for information on local (NASA Ames) people by
specifying the
following:
Search Type | Example
---------------------------------------------
full name | John Doe
last name | surname=Doe
first name | cn=John
E-Mail Address | mail=Doe
Phone | phone=4-5678
Organization | org=EDC
To search for information about people outside NASA Ames, use the
same
syntax and add ',' followed by the organization name
For Example: surname=Doe,GSFC would find all the people with
the last name Doe at GSFC.
Current search algorithm:
If argument is a single word, look for e-mail and last name.
If argument is more than one word, look for match on Full Name.
For above searches, substring match is tried first, then
approximate.
Note that you may have to put quotation marks (") around the name
if it includes a space. (Tested 12/10/93.)
Appendix C E-mail Administrators and their phone numbers
1. SMTP, UNIX, Internet, Pegasus, NASA Science Internet
There is no one administrator for these e-mail systems. Each
system has its own administrator.
2. America On-line, AOL
(800) 227-6364.
3. BIX
BYTE Information Exchange
(800) 227-2983.
4. CompuServe
(800) 848-8990.
5. Fido Net
There is no one administrator for these scattered bulletin board
systems. Each system has its own administrator. However, for
inter-network e-mail issues, you might try contacting:
hostm...@f31.n1.z1.fidonet.org
6. GEnie
(800) 638-9636.
7. MCI Mail
MCI Mail Customer Support is (800) 444-MAIL, or (800) 444-6245.
8. Prodigy
9. SPRINT Mail/TELEMAIL
(800) 827-4685.
10. BITNET
11. CSNET
12. ESNET/DECnet
There is no one administrator for these e-mail systems. Each
system has its own administrator.
13. SPAN
14. Fax, facsimile, datafax
The NASA Science Internet User Support Office (NSI USO) fax
number is (301) 286-5152. You can reach their fax machine via e-
mail (using SMPT addressing) at:
{NSIUSO/FAX:13012865152}.FAX.GSFC@POSTMAN.GSFC.NASA.GOV
15. NASAMail/TELEMAIL
ARC L. COMPTON (415) 694-4180
M. HOM (415) 694-4181
DFRF J. HOLZMAN (805) 258-3841
HQ B. SMITH (202) 453-3524
Code R/HQ P. WRIGHT (202) 453-2721
JPL G. ANDERSON (818) 354-5186
I. ESQUIVEL (818) 354-5186
JSC D. KEITH (713) 483-7568
C. HARRISON (713) 483-2889
KSC S. SOWARDS (407) 867-4756
C. BARTLEY (407) 867-4756
LARC J. YATES (804) 865-3253
LERC K. CUNNINGHAM (216) 433-9064
MSFC K. WICKER (205) 544-5251
SSC B. SMITH (601) 688-1660
J. HOFFMAN (601) 688-2522
16. Headquarters MS-Mail
17. ARC QuickMail
18. GSFC Mail
R. Kemp, (301) 286-7535
H. Prado, (301) 286-7392
L. Tigner, (301) 286-6986
19. JSC ISD MS-Mail, Microsoft Mail
The Johnson Space Center (JSC) Information Systems Directorate
(ISD) administers PROFS. The ISD Help Desk can be reached at
(713) 483-4800. MS-Mail has not been released yet as an official
ISD product, so you might do better to address questions to Jerry
King at (713) 483-3053.
20. JSC PROFS, VMSPFHOU
(713) 483-4800.
21. JSC TMIS Mail, ALL-IN-ONE, TM0003
(713) 244-7589.
22. JSC SED VAX, ALL-IN-ONE
(713) 483-6633.
23. JSC SE Mail
24. JESNET ALL-IN-ONE
(713) 483-4800.
25. JESNET VMSMail
(713) 483-4800.
26. JSC VAX: CISV
27. JSC VAX: MEDICS
28. KSC MS-Mail
At NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Payload Operations
Network Help Desk is (407) 867-3731.
29. MSFC cc:Mail
(205) 544-2121.
30. MSFC Data General CEO
31. MSFC MS-Mail
32. MSFC Quick Mail
33. Space Shuttle Program cc:Mail
(713) 282-4001.
Appendix D FTP via E-mail
It is possible to retrieve files which are available on Internet
FTP (File Transport Protocol) servers using your local e-mail
system. Send a message containing the word "help" in the Subject
field to one of the following addresses:
SMTP users: DEC ftpmail ftp...@decwrl.dec.com
BITNET users: BITFTP bit...@pucc.princeton.edu
Europe: ftp...@grasp1.univ-lyon1.fr
Other ftpmail servers exist in Europe as well as in NA, but it is
up to their system administrators to advertise them.
This information is based on data from Larry W. Virden
(lvi...@cas.org) and Christophe Wolfhugel
(Christophe...@grasp.insa-lyon.fr).
For example, I wrote a program which allows you to retrieve
things more easily via anonymous FTP. That program, getit, is
itself available for anonymous FTP as:
export.lcs.mit.edu:/contrib/getit/tar.Z
Where "export.lcs.mit.edu" is the host, "/contrib" is the
directory, and "getit/tar.Z" is the file name. To retrieve it
via e-mail, I sent the following to ftp...@decwrl.dec.com:
reply kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
connect export.lcs.mit.edu
binary
chdir contrib
uuencode
get getit.tar.Z
quit
I later received the file in my mail box. Since the file I
requested was a data file (a "binary" file), it was sent to me
using UUENCODE, which encodes binary files as text files for
transmission via e-mail. If you don't have access to UUENCODE or
UUDECODE, ask your system administrator. (The ".Z" extension
also indicates that this is a compressed file, and the ".tar"
part indicates that this is a UNIX archive file. It gets
complicated fast.)
When I sent a "help" message to ftp...@decwrl.dec.com this
spring, this is what I received:
From nob...@ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com Fri Apr 16 10:51:26 1993
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 93 08:51:23 -0700
From: "ftpmail service on ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com"
<nob...@pa.dec.com>
To: kje...@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov
Subject: your ftpmail request has been received [HELP]
X-Complaints-To: ftpmai...@ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com
X-Service-Address: ftp...@ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com
X-Job-Number: none
Precedence: bulk
Reply-To: <nob...@ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com>
Status: RO
-- Help --
>>> $Id: help-text,v 1.6 1993/02/16 14:55:03 vixie Exp vixie $
>>>
>>> commands are:
reply <MAILADDR> set reply addr, since headers are
usually wrong
connect [HOST [USER [PASS [ACCT]]]]
defaults to gatekeeper.dec.com, anonymous
ascii files grabbed are printable ascii
binary files grabbed are compressed or tar or
both
chdir PLACE "get" and "ls" commands are relative to
PLACE
(only one CHDIR per ftpmail session,
and it executes before any LS/DIR/GETs)
compress compress binaries using Lempel-Ziv encoding
compact compress binaries using Huffman encoding
uuencode binary files will be mailed in uuencode
format
btoa binary files will be mailed in btoa format
chunksize SIZE split files into SIZE-byte chunks (def:
64000)
ls (or dir) PLACE short (long) directory listing
index THING search for THING in ftp server's index
get FILE get a file and have it mailed to you
(max 10 GET's per ftpmail session)
quit terminate script, ignore rest of mail message
(use if you have a .signature or
are a VMSMAIL user)
>>> notes:
-> you should send complaints to the ftpmail-admin address.
our
postmaster does not handle ftpmail problems and you can
save her
the trouble of forwarding your complaints by just mailing
them to
the right address. the "ftpmail-request" address is
gone; don't
use it.
-> the "index" command depends on the "SITE EXEC INDEX"
feature of
some ftp servers. Gatekeeper.dec.com originated this
feature,
and ftp.uu.net duplicated it (with a format change to the
output,
naturally). Wuarchive.wustl.edu also has this feature,
though
their index seems to be empty. The source for an ftpd
that
supports this feature is on Gatekeeper.DEC.COM in
/pub/DEC/gwtools.
-> a password of "" or '' will be sent as a null string. if
you need
this you will know it, if you don't, you won't.
-> the "Subject:" of your request will be contained in the
"Subject:"
of all of ftpmail's responses to you regarding that
request. You
can therefore use it to "tag" different requests if you
have more
than one outstanding at any given time.
-> you must give a "connect" command, default host is
gatekeeper.dec.com, default user is anonymous, default
password is your mail address with a hyphen prepended.
-> binary files will not be compressed unless 'compress' or
'compact'
command is given; use this if at all possible, it helps a
lot.
note that many files are already compressed. if you use
any of
the binary-file qualifiers (compress, compact, uuencode,
btoa)
without setting 'binary' first, your session will abort
in error.
-> binary files will always be formatted into printable
ASCII
with "btoa" or "uuencode" (default is "btoa"). if you
don't
use the "binary" command, ftpmail will cheerfully try to
mail
you the binary data, which will absolutely, positively
fail.
-> all retrieved files will be split into chunks and mailed.
the
size of the chunk is 64000 characters unless you change
it with
the "chunksize" command. CompuServe users will need to
set this
to 49000. there is no way to set it higher than 100000,
so please
don't ask.
-> if you ask for more than 10 files in a session, you will
receive
an error message and your entire request will be
rejected.
-> VMS/DOS/Mac versions of uudecode, atob, compress and
compact
are available, ask your LOCAL wizard about them if you
can't
locate them (but try gatekeeper.dec.com in
/archive/pub/VMS
if you're still using a VMS system.)
-> several mail unsplitters are hiding on gatekeeper.dec.com
in
/pub/mail/ua/misc/unsplit. there is one in c, one in
perl,
and one in VMS DCL.
-> there is no way to request only certain parts of a file
and we
do not plan to add one in the near future, so please
don't ask.
-> there is no way to delete things from the queue or to
find out
the status of things in the queue, and we do not plan to
add
either feature in the near future, so please don't ask.
>>> examples:
-> connect to gatekeeper.dec.com and get a root directory
listing:
connect
ls
quit
-> connect to gatekeeper.dec.com and get the README.ftp
file:
connect
get README.ftp
quit
-> connect to gatekeeper.dec.com and get the gnuemacs
sources:
connect
binary
uuencode
chdir /pub/GNU
get emacs-18.58.tar.Z
quit
-> connect to ftp.uu.net as anonymous and get a root
directory list:
connect ftp.uu.net
binary
chdir /index/master
get by-name.Z
quit
Ftpmail was written by Paul Vixie at the DEC Western Research
Laboratory
and at the DEC Network Systems Laboratory, from 1989-1993.
-- End of Help --
Appendix E Posting to Internet/Usenet Newsgroups via E-mail
It is possible to post messages to the Internet/Usenet newsgroups
(the international Internet bulletin board system) from your
local e-mail system. To do this, send your message through the
e-mail-to-Usenet gateway, cs.utexas.edu. Use SMTP to address
your message to:
<newsgroup>@cs.utexas.edu
Where <newsgroup> is the name of the Internet/Usenet newsgroup
with hyphens in place of the periods. For example, to post a
message to newsgroup alt.bbs, you would address your message to:
You should post any test messages to newsgroup alt.test. There
are several machines on the Internet which "watch" alt.test and
will send you e-mail to let you know that they have "read" your
message.
This service allows you to post messages in the newsgroups, but
not to read them. This is good for making announcements to the
whole world, but not a good way to interact with the Internet
community. Contact your local system administrator for access to
newsgroups sci.space, sci.space.news, sci.space.shuttle,
talk.politics.space, alt.sci.planetary and thousands of other
interesting topics.
Appendix F "Finger" via E-mail
It is possible to use the "finger" command, which retrieves
information from a computer out on the Internet, using your local
e-mail system. To do this, send your message through the e-mail-
to-finger gateway, ic.ac.uk. Use SMTP to address your message
to:
Fill in the "Subject:" with #finger <user>@<host>.<domain>
For example, to use the NASA x.500 gateway to find my e-mail
address, try sending e-mail to
..and filling in the "Subject:" field with #finger
je...@x500.nasa.gov
The output of the "finger" command, in this case my X.500 entry,
will be mailed back to you.
The e-mail-to-finger gateway will look at your Subject, perform
the "finger" command, and e-mail the results back to your return
address. This may not work for everybody, because your computer
may not set up its return addresses correctly.
Warning: When I tried finger "jenks,jsc"@x500.nasa.gov using this
method, the quotation marks were lost somewhere along the line
and the NASA Headquarters X.500 server needed them.
NASA/JSC E-Mail Procedures Version 1.0 12/20/93