Subject: Introduction to the *.answers newsgroups
Supersedes: <news-answers/introduction_825699299@rtfm.mit.edu>
Date: 13 Apr 1996 19:38:05 GMT

Version: $Id: Introduction,v 1.109 1996/03/27 19:40:03 pgreene Exp $
Posting-Frequency: monthly

[The most recent version of this document is posted periodically in
the *.answers newsgroups, including news.answers, and in
news.announce.newusers.  It can also obtained by anonymous FTP as
ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/news-answers/introduction.  If
you do not have access to anonymous FTP, you can retrieve it by
sending email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the command "send
usenet/news.answers/news-answers/introduction" in the message.]

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Introduction

  This is the introductory posting for the moderated newsgroups
alt.answers, comp.answers, de.answers, humanities.answers, misc.answers, 
news.answers, rec.answers, sci.answers, soc.answers, and talk.answers 
(hereafter collectively referred to as "*.answers").  It explains the 
purpose of the newsgroups, what kinds of postings can be found in them, 
how to submit new postings for them, how to participate in the mailing 
list for periodic posting maintainers, and where to find archives of
*.answers postings.

  Comments about, suggestions about or corrections to this posting are
welcomed.  If you would like to ask us to change this posting in some
way, the method we appreciate most is for you to actually make the
desired modifications to a copy of the posting, and then to send us
the modified posting, or a context diff between the posted version and
your modified version (if you do the latter, make sure to include in
your mail the "Version:" line from the posted version).  Submitting
changes in this way makes dealing with them easier for us and helps to
avoid misunderstandings about what you are suggesting.

------------------------------

Subject: What is news.answers?

  The news.answers newsgroup serves as a repository for periodic
informational postings (many of which are called "Frequently Asked
Questions", or "FAQ's") from other Usenet newsgroups.  It's a place to
collect answers, not to ask the questions themselves.

  Although it's difficult to say exactly what qualifies as a posting
that belongs in news.answers, the basic description is, "any article
which answers common questions and is meant to be read by human
beings."  Furthermore, postings cross-posted in news.answers should
have subject lines that describe their content.  For example, an FAQ
posting for rec.chess should have a subject line saying something like
"chess Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)," rather than just "Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQ)."

  For example, the comp.unix.questions "Unix - Frequently Asked
Questions...." postings and the news.announce.newusers "Emily Postnews
Answers Your Questions on Netiquette" belong in news.answers, as does
the README file from comp.mail.maps.  However, the comp.mail.maps map
postings and the readership statistics from news.lists do not, since
they are not primarily intended for human perusal.

  Periodic informational postings from any hierarchy that travels
using "Usenet mechanisms" may be appropriate for cross-posting to
news.answers (i.e., news.answers is not limited to postings from the
comp, sci, misc, soc, talk, news and rec hierarchies).  Where there is
any ambiguity, the *.answers moderators will decide whether or not a
posting belongs in the newsgroup.

  There are several reasons why this newsgroup exists.  They include:

   * It is easier for site administrators to keep periodic
     informational postings around for a long time if they are all
     cross-posted to one newsgroup.  Administrators can make the
     maximum expire time for news.answers very long, instead of making
     every newsgroup with periodic informational postings in it have a
     long maximum expire time.

   * It is easier for sites to archive periodic informational
     postings, since they will need to watch just one newsgroup rather
     than scanning the entire news spool.

   * It provides a "quick reference" for users, in several different
     respects.  Users who want to browse through the various periodic
     informational postings that the Usenet has to offer can do so in
     just one newsgroup.  Or, users who want to find an FAQ from a
     particular newsgroup but don't know its subject can search for
     that newsgroup in the headers of the postings in news.answers.

   * Software for retrieving periodic informational postings can also
     be simplified to use news.answers as the basis for searches.

------------------------------

Subject: What are the other *.answers newsgroups?

  Each of the other *.answers newsgroups (alt.answers, comp.answers,
de.answers, humanities.answers, misc.answers, rec.answers, sci.answers, 
soc.answers, talk.answers) is meant to serve as a repository for postings 
that are relevant to its hierarchy.  Postings are cross-posted to these
*.answers newsgroups IN ADDITION to, rather than instead of,
news.answers.  For example, postings for newsgroups in the "rec"
hierarchy are cross-posted to both rec.answers and news.answers.
There shouldn't be any postings in these *.answers newsgroups that
don't appear in news.answers as well.

  Obviously, since all postings in these newsgroups are cross-posted
to news.answers, postings in these newsgroups must conform to the same
guidelines as postings to news.answers.

  These *.answers newsgroups have a few additional purposes:

   * Site administrators can select which hierarchies' postings their
     sites receive with greater granularity than just "receive
     everything in news.answers" or "receive nothing in news.answers."
     They can receive postings for some newsgroups they don't receive,
     without receiving postings for all newsgroups.

   * Similarly, people who wish to archive some but not all periodic
     informational postings at their sites can choose which postings
     to archive with greater granularity, in a simple fashion.

   * Users who wish to read the periodic informational postings for
     certain hierarchies can read just the *.answers newsgroups for
     those hierarchies, rather than having to read news.answers and
     skip over the postings they don't want to see.

------------------------------

Subject: How does it work?

  A periodic posting maintainer who wants his or her posting(s) to
appear in news.answers (and other *.answers newsgroups) submits it to
the moderators, following the guidelines in the "*.answers submission
guidelines" article for proper submission and format of the posting's
headers.  The guidelines article is periodically posted to news.answers; 
it can also be retrieved from rtfm.mit.edu archives with anonymous FTP 
as ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/news-answers/guidelines.
[If someone does not have access to anonymous FTP, they can retrieve
it by sending email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the command "send
usenet/news.answers/news-answers/guidelines" in the message.]

  The moderators may accept the posting as-is, ask the submitter to
make modifications to the headers, or reject it completely.  If header
modifications are requested, the submitter makes the modifications and 
resubmits the posting.  Once a posting has been approved for *.answers, 
the moderators will explain how to indicate in the header of the message
that it was approved by the *.answers moderators, and the maintainer
can then post it directly to the group(s) him- or herself thereafter.

  This needs to be emphasized, as it marks a very important difference
between how the *.answers moderated newsgroups work and how most
moderated Usenet newsgroups work: we will not actually post copies of
postings which appear in *.answers.  Instead, our job is to approve
such postings (which are then cross-posted by their maintainers
directly into the *.answers newsgroups) and to watch over the
*.answers groups for problem postings.  We are happy to render
assistance to maintainers who have problems figuring out to go about
posting a periodic informational posting as painlessly as possible,
however.  (For example, the "*.answers submission guidelines" points
at several software packages available to simplify posting articles on
a regular basis; we also maintain a specialized server which can
periodically post articles, for people who cannot install additional
software packages to help them manage their postings.)

------------------------------

Subject: Where are postings to *.answers archived?

  All of the *.answers newsgroups are archived in the periodic posting
archive on rtfm.mit.edu [18.181.0.24].  (Please always reference the
hostname rtfm.mit.edu, as IP addresses and canonical names will change
in the future, but rtfm.mit.edu will remain correct.)

  Postings are located in the anonymous FTP directories
/pub/usenet/alt.answers, /pub/usenet/comp.answers, etc., and are saved
by the "Archive-name" lines contained within the postings.  Other
subdirectories of /pub/usenet archive postings by the normal (i.e.,
non-*.answers) newsgroup(s) they are posted to; the postings are saved
by Subject line instead of "Archive-name".  These other directories
contain many periodic informational postings not cross-posted to
*.answers, but which are listed in the List of Periodic Informational
Postings (itself periodically posted to the news.lists and
news.answers newsgroups).

  For example, a posting with the subject "Bar Frequently Asked
Questions", cross-posted to the newsgroups comp.bar, comp.answers, and
news.answers, with archive name "bar/general-faq", can be retrieved
via anonymous FTP as

      ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/bar/general-faq
        or as
      ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/comp.bar/Bar_Frequently_Asked_Questions

  If you do not have access to anonymous FTP, you can access the
archives using the rtfm.mit.edu mail server.  The above example
posting could be retrieved with the mail server command "send
usenet/news.answers/bar/general-faq".  For more information, send
email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "help" and "index" in the body
on separate lines.

  Other *.answers and periodic informational postings "mirror"
archives (which make available some or all of the postings in the
rtfm.mit.edu archive) are listed here, sorted by country.  It is
usually faster and less wasteful of network resources to use an
archive located in your country, or on your continent.  [If you decide
to archive *.answers and make them available to people for anonymous
FTP, mail archive server, or something else, please let us know so we
can mention your archive in this posting.]

  Where applicable, the listings below are given as URLs, so that it
is easier to jump directly to the site named, for those using
URL-aware software.  The access method is given first, followed by a
colon and two slashes (://), the machine name, and the directory path.
Other necessary information may be given on the same line.

Austria
-----
anonymous FTP   ftp://gd.tuwien.ac.at:/pub/newfaqs/
World Wide Web  http://gd.tuwien.ac.at/newfaqs/

Belgium
-------
anonymous FTP   ftp://cc1.kuleuven.ac.be/anonymous.202
gopher          gopher://cc1.kuleuven.ac.be:70/
mail server     listserv@cc1.kuleuven.ac.be; command "get avail faqs"

Canada
------
gopher          gopher://jupiter.sun.csd.unb.ca:70/

Finland
-------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/doc/rtfm

France
------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.univ-lyon1.fr/pub/faq
                ftp://ftp.pasteur.fr/pub/FAQ
gopher          gopher://gopher.insa-lyon.fr:70/
mail server     listserver@grasp1.univ-lyon1.fr

Germany
-------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.Germany.EU.net/pub/newsarchive/news.answers
                ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-muenchen.de/pub/comp/usenet/news.answers
                ftp://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/doc/FAQ
                ftp://ftp.saar.de/pub/usenet/news.answers (local access only)
FSP             ftp.Germany.EU.net, port 2001
gopher          gopher://gopher.Germany.EU.net:70/
                gopher://gopher.uni-paderborn.de/
gopher index    gopher://gopher.Germany.EU.net:70/1.archive
                gopher://gopher.uni-paderborn.de:70/0/Service/FTP
mail server     archive-server@Germany.EU.net
                ftp-mailer@informatik.tu-muenchen.de
                ftp-mail@uni-paderborn.de
World Wide Web  http://www.Germany.EU.net:80/

Hong Kong
---------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/mirror/faqs

Korea
-----
anonymous FTP   ftp://hwarang.postech.ac.kr/pub/usenet/news.answers

Mexico
------
anonymous FTP   ftp://mtecv2.mty.itesm.mx/pub/usenet/news.answers

The Netherlands
---------------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.cs.ruu.nl/pub/NEWS.ANSWERS
gopher          gopher://gopher.win.tue.nl, port 70
mail server     mail-server@cs.ruu.nl
World Wide Web  http://www.cs.ruu.nl/cgi-bin/faqwais

South Africa
------------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.is.co.za/usenet/news.answers/

Sweden
------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/usenet

Switzerland
-----------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.switch.ch/info_service/Netnews/periodic-postings
anonymous UUCP  chx400:ftp/info_service/Usenet/periodic-postings
mail server     archiver-server@nic.switch.ch
telnet          nic.switch.ch, log in as "info"

Taiwan
------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.edu.tw/USENET/FAQ
mail server     ftpmail@ftp.edu.tw

United Kingdom
--------------
anonymous FTP   ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/usenet/news-faqs/
FSP             src.doc.ic.ac.uk port 21
gopher          gopher://src.doc.ic.ac.uk port 70.
mail server     ftpmail@doc.ic.ac.uk
telnet          src.doc.ic.ac.uk login as sources
World Wide Web  http://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/usenet/news-faqs/

United States
-------------
anonymous FTP   ftp://ftp.uu.net/usenet
                ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet
                ftp://ftp.seas.gwu.edu/pub/rtfm
gopher          gopher://gopher.seas.gwu.edu, /pub/rtfm
World Wide Web  http://www.smartpages.com/faqs/

Please note that nearly all of these periodic informational postings
are copyrighted by their respective maintainers.  (Even postings
without explicit copyright notices are copyrighted under the
international Berne Convention, in effect in most countries.)  Some of
the postings, although certainly not all, prohibit redistribution for
any commercial purposes without prior approval; other kinds of
restrictions may also be imposed by the maintainers.

If you have any doubts about whether you may redistribute a particular
posting for some particular purpose, contact its author.

------------------------------

Subject: Searching *.answers postings

Due to the excessive loads imposed on the machine, the ability to
access and search the Usenet archives on rtfm.mit.edu via the WAIS
protocol has been disabled indefinitely.

However, the *.answers archives on ftp.cs.ruu.nl can be searched via
the World Wide Web URL http://www.cs.ruu.nl/cgi-bin/faqwais.  Please
try not to swamp this service with excessive or frivolous searches.

------------------------------

Subject: Is there a forum to discuss issues related to FAQs?

  If you are interested in discussion about the maintenance of Usenet
periodic postings and related topics (e.g. automatic archival of such
postings), you may wish to join the "faq-maintainers" mailing list.
Maintainers of articles cross-posted into *.answers are especially
encouraged to join.  If you are not interested in discussion, but you
would still like to receive announcements directed to such
maintainers, then you may wish to join the "faq-maintainers-announce"
list instead.  Note that subscribers to faq-maintainers will
automatically receive all messages sent to faq-maintainers-announce;
hence there is no need to subscribe to both mailing lists.

  To subscribe to faq-maintainers, send email to the address
faq-maintainers-request@consensus.com with the subject line
"subscribe"; your request will be automatically handled by list
software.  To subscribe to faq-maintainers-announce, send email to the
address faq-maintainers-announce-request@mit.edu with the subject line
"subscribe"; your request will be handled by human beings.

  You can access the archives of the faq-maintainers list in 
rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/faq-maintainers via anonymous FTP.

------------------------------

Subject: Acknowledgments

  Thanks to the following people for running some of the various FAQ
archives mentioned above:

  Zoltan Fekete <fekete@bc.edu>
  Martin Berli <berli@switch.ch>
  Torsten Blum <ftpadmin@saar.de>
  Frederic Chauveau <fmc@cnam.cnam.fr>
  Ingo Dressler <archive-admin@Germany.EU.net>
  Thomas A. Fine <fine@cis.ohio-state.edu>
  J. Anthony Fitzgerald <jaf@UNB.ca>
  Armin Gruner <gruner@informatik.tu-muenchen.de>
  Henk P. Penning <henkp@cs.ruu.nl>
  Juan G Ruiz Pinto <Juan_G_Ruiz@mtecv2.mty.itesm.mx>
  James R. Revell, Jr. <revell@uunet.uu.net>
  Thomas Thissen <tici@uni-paderborn.de>
  Herman Van Uytven <systhvu@cc1.kuleuven.ac.be>
  Arjan de Vet <devet@win.tue.nl>
  <Christophe.Wolfhugel@grasp.insa-lyon.fr>
  Michael Chan <Michael.Chan@HK.Super.NET>
  Bob Hirsh <ftpadmin@aol.com>
  Sheryl Coppenger <sheryl@seas.gwu.edu>

--
        pgreene@optics.rochester.edu (Pamela Greene)
        pshuang@mit.edu (Ping Huang)
        jik@cam.ov.com (Jonathan I. Kamens)
        ig25@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de (Thomas Koenig)
        nancym@mit.edu (Nancy McGough)
        buglady@bronze.lcs.mit.edu (Aliza R. Panitz)
        schulman+@pitt.edu (Christina Schulman)
        tittle@netcom.com (Cindy Moore Tittle)

        -- the *.answers moderation team <news-answers-request@mit.edu>

------------------------------

End of "Introduction to the *.answers newsgroups" Digest
********************************************************
