Subject: World Wide Web Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), Part 2/2 From: boutell@netcom.com (Thomas Boutell) Date: 27 Sep 1994 08:05:46 GMT
How the Web Was Won
Subject: World Wide Web Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), Part 2/2 From: boutell@netcom.com (Thomas Boutell) Date: 27 Sep 1994 08:05:46 GMT
Supersedes: 
Followup-To: comp.infosystems.www.misc
Organization: Nerdsholm
Lines: 642
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Distribution: world
Expires: 18 Oct 1994 08:03:17 GMT
Message-ID: 
References: 
NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
Summary: beginner & advanced world wide web questions-read before posting to comp.infosystems.www.[...] newsgroups
X-Last-Updated: 1994/09/26
Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
Xref: news1.digex.net comp.infosystems.www.misc:4935 comp.infosystems.www.users:5073 comp.infosystems.www.providers:5279 comp.infosystems.wais:3563 comp.infosystems.gopher:14586 comp.infosystems:3605 alt.hypertext:4189 comp.answers:7476 alt.answers:4184 news.answers:28447

Archive-name: www/faq/part2
Last-modified: 1994/09/26

                   WORLD WIDE WEB FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

                      This is part 2 of a 2-part posting.
                   Part 2 begins with section 5 (providing
                information to the web). Part 1 should be the
                      previous posting in this thread.

                5.1: HOW CAN I PROVIDE INFORMATION TO THE WEB?
   
   Information providers run programs that the browsers can obtain
   hypertext from. These programs can either be WWW servers that
   understand the HyperText Transfer Protocol HTTP (best if you are
   creating your information database from scratch), "gateway" programs
   that convert an existing information format to hypertext, or a
   non-HTTP server that WWW browsers can access -- anonymous FTP or
   gopher, for example.
   
   To learn more about World Wide Web servers, you can consult a www
   server primer by Nathan Torkington, available at the URL
   http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-servers.html.
   
   If you only want to provide information to local users, placing your
   information in local files is also an option. This means, however,
   that there can be no off-machine access.
   
5.2: Obtaining Servers

   Servers are available for Unix, Macintosh, MS Windows, and VMS
   systems. If you know of a server for another operating system, please
   contact me.
   
   See http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/Overview.html for more
   information on writing servers and gateways in general.
   
  5.2.1: UNIX SERVERS
  
   NCSA httpd
          NCSA has released a server, known as the NCSA httpd; it is
          available at the URL ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/ncsa_httpd.
          
   CERN httpd
          CERN's server is available for anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch
          (URL is http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/Status.html)
          and many other places. Use your local copy of archie to search
          for "www" in order to find a nearby site.
          
   GN Gopher/HTTP server
          The GN server is unique in that it can serve both WWW and
          Gopher clients (in their native modes). This is a good server
          for those migrating from Gopher to WWW, although it does not
          have the server-side-script capabilities of the NCSA and CERN
          servers. See the URL http://hopf.math.nwu.edu/.
          
   Perl server
          There is also a server written in the Perl scripting language,
          called Plexus, for which documentation is available at the URL
          http://bsdi.com/server/doc/plexus.html.
          
  5.2.2: MACINTOSH SERVERS
  
   There is a server for the Macintosh, MacHTTP, available at the URL
   http://www.uth.tmc.edu/mac_info/machttp_info.html.
   
  5.2.3: MS WINDOWS AND WINDOWS NT SERVERS
  
   HTTPS (Windows NT)
          HTTPS is a server for Windows NT systems, both Intel and Alpha
          -- based. It is available via anonymous FTP from emwac.ed.ac.uk
          in the directory pub/https (URL is
          ftp://emwac.ed.ac.uk/pub/https). (Be sure to download the
          version appropriate to your processor.) You can read a detailed
          announcement at the FTP site, or by using the URL
          ftp://emwac.ed.ac.uk/pub/https/https.txt.
          
   NCSA httpd for Windows
          The NCSA httpd for Windows has most of the features of the Unix
          version, including scripts (which generate pages on the fly
          based on user input). It is available by anonymous FTP from
          ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the Web/ncsa_httpd/contrib directory as
          the file whtp11a6.zip, or at the URL
          ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/ncsa_httpd/contrib/whtp11a6.zip.
          
   SerWeb
          A simple, effective server for Windows writtten by Gustavo
          Estrella. Available by anonymous ftp from
          winftp.cica.indiana.edu (or one of its mirror sites, such as
          nic.switch.ch), as the file serweb03.zip, in the directory
          /pub/pc/win3/winsock.
          
          There is also a Windows NT version of SerWeb, available by
          anonymous FTP from emwac.ed.ac.uk as /pub/serweb/serweb_i.zip.
          
   WEB4HAM
          Another Windows-based server, available by anonymous FTP from
          ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de as /pub/net/winsock/web4ham.zip.
          
   OS2HTTPD
          An OS/2 server, written by Frankie Fan. See the home page (URL
          is ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/kfan/overview.html) for details, or
          fetch the package by anonymous FTP from ftp.netcom.com in the
          directory pub/kfan.
          
  5.2.4: MSDOS SERVERS
  
   KA9Q NOS (nos11c.exe) is a internet server package for DOS that
   includes HTTP and Gopher servers. It can be obtained via anonymous FTP
   from one of the following sites:
   

inorganic5.chem.ufl.edu
biochemistry.cwru.edu

   
   
  5.2.5: VMS SERVERS
  
   CERN HTTP for VMS
          A port of the CERN server to VMS. Available at the URL
          http://delonline.cern.ch/disk$user/duns/doc/vms/distribution.ht
          ml.
          
   Region 6 Threaded HTTP Server
          A native VMS server which uses DECthreads(tm). This is a
          potentially major performance advantage because VMS has a high
          overhead for each process, which is a problem for the
          frequently-forking NCSA and CERN servers that began life under
          Unix. A multithreaded server avoids this overhead. Available at
          the URL
          http://kcgl1.eng.ohio-state.edu/www/doc/serverinfo.html.
          
   
   
  5.2.6: AMIGA SERVERS
  
   NCSA's Unix server has been ported to the Amiga, and is bundled with
   the AMosaic browser. See the URL
   http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/AMosaic/home.html for details.
   
5.3: Producing HTML documents

   HTML is the simple markup system used to create hypertext documents.
   There are three ways to produce HTML documents: writing them yourself,
   which is not a very difficult skill to acquire, using an HTML editor,
   which assists in doing the above, and converting documents in other
   formats to HTML. The following three sections cover these
   possibilities in sequence.
   
  5.3.1: WRITING HTML DOCUMENTS YOURSELF
  
   You can write an HTML document with any text editor. Try the "source"
   button of your browser (or "save as" HTML) to look at the HTML for a
   page you find particularly interesting. The odds are that it will be a
   great deal simpler than you would expect. If you're used to marking up
   text in any way (even red-pencilling it), HTML should be rather
   intuitive.
   
   A beginner's guide to HTML is available at the URL
   http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimer.html. You can
   also find a plain text version (at the URL
   ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.txt) and a compressed
   Postscript version (at the URL
   ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.ps.Z). (Since the
   latter two are FTP URLs, you can fetch them by hand using FTP if you
   do not yet have a web browser.)
   
   There is also a good set of HTML documentation available at the URL
   http://www.ucc.ie/info/net/htmldoc.html.
   
   There is also an HTML primer by Nathan Torkington at the URL
   http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-html.html.
   
  5.3.2: HTML EDITORS
  
   Of course, most folks would still prefer to use a friendlier,
   graphical editor. Some editors are WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You
   Get), or close to it; others simply assist you in writing HTML by
   plugging in the desired markup tags for you from a menu.
   
   Fans of the EMACS editor can use EMACS and html-helper-mode , an EMACS
   "mode" for HTML editing (URL is http://www.reed.edu/~nelson/tools/).
   
   There is also another Emacs HTML mode, html-mode.el (URL is
   ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/elisp/html-mode.el).
   
   For Microsoft Windows users, there is an editor called HTML Assistant
   with features to assist in the creation of HTML documents. It can be
   had by anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.dal.ca in the directory /htmlasst/.
   Read the README.1ST file in this directory for information on which
   files to download.
   
   A WYSIWYG editor for the Web, SoftQuad HoTMetaL, is available for
   downloading at NCSA and other Mosaic server sites. Many mirror sites
   exist; if you can't get through to one, try another, don't give up!
   That's what mirror sites are for. (Also be sure to use the copy
   closest to you geographically if possible.) Hotmetal is available for
   both Sun Sparc systems and Windows systems; note that Windows users
   need at least 6 megabytes of free memory. (A 2-megabyte swap file
   should just barely do the trick on a 4MB machine.)
   
   Known mirrors:
     *
       ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Mosaic/contrib/SoftQuad/sqhotmetal-1.0.tar.
       gz
     * ftp://ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/SGML/HoTMetaL
     * ftp://sgml1.ex.ac.uk/SoftQuad
     * ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/WWW/ncsa/html/hotmetal/
     *
       ftp://askhp.ask.uni-karlsruhe.de/pub/infosystems/mosaic/contrib/Sof
       tQuad
     * ftp://ftp.cs.concordia.ca/pub/www
       
   You need a Sun SPARC or Microsoft Windows system and 6MB of disk (6MB
   of RAM minimum for MS Windows; swap files count). Because it is
   context-sensitive, HoTMetaL guides users in creating new HTML
   documents and in cleaning up old ones. A Publish command changes
   appropriate SRC and HREF attributes from local paths to http
   locations. For more information, FTP the README file from the same
   directory, or send email to hotmetal@sq.com. A HoTMetaL Pro
   commercially supported version is available for purchase from SoftQuad
   and its resellers.
   
   An editor for all X users: TkWWW (listed above under X browsers)
   supports WYSIWYG HTML editing; and since it's a browser, you can try
   out links immediately after creating them.
   
   Also for X users, there is a package called htmltext which supports
   WYSIWYG HTML editing. More information is available at the URL
   http://web.cs.city.ac.uk/homes/njw/htmltext/htmltext.html.
   
   For Macintosh users, there is evidently a near-WYSIWYG package called
   HTML Editor (URL is http://dragon.acadiau.ca:1667/~giles/HTML_Editor).
   
   
   Also for Macintosh users, the BBEdit HTML extensions allow the BBEdit
   and BBEdit Lite text editors for the Macintosh to conveniently edit
   HTML documents. (URL is
   http://www.uji.es/bbedit-html-extensions.html.) You can also obtain
   the extensions package by anonymous ftp from sumex-aim.stanford.edu as
   info-mac/bbedit-html-ext-b3.hqx.
   
   There is an alternative BBEdit extension package available as well
   (URL is http://www.york.ac.uk/~ld11/BBEditTools.html). it is available
   by FTP from ftp.york.ac.uk in the directory
   /pub/users/ld11/BBEdit_HTML_Tools.sea.hqx.
   
   NCSA's List of Filters and Editors, for which the URL is
   http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/faq-software.html#ed
   itors, mentions several editors, including two for MS Windows. In some
   cases, the "editor" amounts to a set of macros for an existing word
   processor, which can provide a near-WYSIWYG environment.
   
   Note that this URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain
   operating systems won't allow mixed case on the command line, or will
   only allow it if it is quoted (VMS), so if you are launching Lynx or
   another client and specifying a URL at the command line, try quoting
   the URL in double-quotes ("URL").
   
   Another option, if you have an SGML editor, is to use it with the HTML
   DTD .
   
  5.3.3: CONVERTING OTHER FORMATS TO HTML
  
   There is a collection of filters for converting your existing
   documents (in TeX and other non-HTML formats) into HTML automatically,
   including filters that can allow more or less WYSIWYG editing using
   various word processors:
   
   Rich Brandwein and Mike Sendall's List at CERN. The URL is
   http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Tools/Filters.html.
   
   (Note that this URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain
   operating systems such as VMS require you to quote mixed-case URLs
   when launching a borwser from the command line. This is NOT a bug in
   the browser.)
   
   There is also a Word for Windows template for writing HTML documents,
   available at the URL http://www.gatech.edu/word_html/release.htm.
   
  5.3.3: CHECKING YOUR HTML FOR ERRORS
  
   Tools to validate your HTML documents (check them for errors) are
   available. There is a form at the URL
   http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-test/service/validation-form.html
   which will check HTML documents for errors according to the latest
   specification; note that you are encouraged to set up the program on
   your own system if you make heavy use of the form. There is also a
   tool which will check the links in your documents for links to
   nonexistent resources, such as pages that have moved (URL is
   http://wsk.eit.com/wsk/dist/doc/admin/webtest/verify_links.html).
   
5.4: How do I publicize my work?

   There are several things you can do to publicize your new HTML server
   or other offering:
     * Submit it to the NCSA What's New Page at the URL
       http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/whats-new.html
       (see the page for details on how to submit your listing!).
     * Post it to the newsgroup comp.infosystems.announce. Please read
       the group first to get a feel for the contents. You should not
       post to comp.infosystems.www.users,.misc,.providers, etc., but if
       you feel compelled to do so, please choose .misc as announcements
       are of interest to both providers and users (and those who wear
       both hats).
     * Submit it to the maintainers of various catalogs, such as the WWW
       Virtual Library (at the URL
       http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/DataSources/bySubject/Overview.html)
       and the ALIWEB index (at the URL
       http://web.nexor.co.uk/aliweb/doc/aliweb.html).
     * Read Gareth Rees' guide to publishing on the World Wide Web. (URL
       is http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/gdr11/publish.html).
       
5.5: Can I buy space on an existing server?

   Yes, you can. A list of sites offering WWW space for lease is
   available (at the URL http://union.ncsa.uiuc.edu/www/leasing.html ).
   
  5.6.1: HOW DO I SET UP A CLICKABLE IMAGE MAP?
  
   
   
   There are really two issues here: how to indicate in HTML that you
   want an image to be clickable, and how to configure your server to do
   something with the clicks returned by Mosaic, Chimera, and other
   clients capable of delivering them.
   
   You can read about image maps and the NCSA server at the URL
   http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs/setup/admin/Imagemap.html.
   
   Using imagemaps requires that you create a map file; you can do this
   by hand or with a WYSIWYG tool. I wrote Mapedit (URL is:
   http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/mapedit/mapedit.html ), which is such a
   tool for Microsoft Windows and the X Window System. Other tools are
   available. (URLs, anyone?)
   
   _Important Note:_ Creating imagemaps requires a cooperative server
   administrator and a real web server. Don't waste time making maps
   before making sure you have the necessary tools to deliver them.
   
  5.6.2: HOW DO I MAKE A "LINK" THAT DOESN'T LOAD A NEW PAGE?
  
   
   
   Such links are useful when a form is intended to perform some action
   on the server machine without sending new information to the client,
   or when a user has clicked in an undefined area in an image map; these
   are just two possibilities.
   
   Rob McCool of NCSA provided the following wisdom on the subject:
   

Yechezkal-Shimon Gutfreund (sg04@gte.com) wrote:
: Ok, here is another bizzare request from me:

: I am currently running scripts which I "DO NOT" want to return
: any visible result. That is, not text/plain, not text/HTML, not
: image/gif. The entire results are the side effects of the
: script and nothing should be returned to the viewer.

: It would be nice to have an internally supported null viewer
: so that I could do this, more "cleanly" (ok, ok, I hear your groans).

   
   
   HTTP now supports a response code of 204, which is no operation. Some
   browsers such as Mosaic/X 2.* support it. To use it, make your script
   a nph script and output an HTTP/1.0 204 header. Something like:
   
   HTTP/1.0 204 No response Server: Myscript/NCSA httpd 1.1
   
   (You can learn more about nph scripts from the NCSA server
   documentation at the URL http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs.)
   Essentially they are scripts that handle their own HTTP response
   codes.
   
  5.6.3: WHERE CAN I LEARN HOW TO CREATE FILL-OUT FORMS?
  
   You can read about the Common Gateway Interface (at the URL
   http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu:80/cgi/). In addition to documenting the
   standard interface for which scripts can now be written for both NCSA
   and CERN-derived servers, these pages also cover HTML forms and how to
   handle the results on the server side. See the section on email forms
   for a simple solution to the most commonly desired form.
   
    5.6.3.1: How can I create hidden fields in forms (keeping state)?
    
   Use INPUT TYPE=hidden. An example:
   



   By now, most if not all browsers can handle the hidden type. Note that
   "hidden" doesn't mean "secret"; the user can always click on "view
   source".
   
    5.6.3.2: How can users send me email through their browsers?
    
   If you have access to the server's configuration files, or if your
   server administrator permits users to create their own CGI scripts,
   you can arrange it. I've written a simple email forms package (URL is:
   http://siva.cshl.org/email/index.html), which does it in ANSI C. There
   is also a package floating around in Perl (URL, anyone?).
   
  5.6.4: HOW DO I COMMENT AN HTML DOCUMENT?
  
   
   
   Use the  tag. Note that comments do not nest,
   and the sequence "--" may not appear inside a comment except as part
   of the closing --> tag.
   
   You should _not_ try to use this to "comment out" HTML that would
   otherwise be shown to the user, since some browsers (notably Mosaic)
   will still pay attention to tags inside the comment and close it
   prematurely.
   
   _Thanks to Joe English for clearing up this issue._
   
  5.6.5: HOW CAN I CREATE DECENT-LOOKING TABLES AND STOP USING 
... 
Tables are a standard feature in HTML Level 3, a new version of HTML. Unfortunately, they are at present implemented only by the Viola and Emacs-W3 browsers, to my knowledge. _However_, there is a way to use HTML Level 3 tables now and convert them automatically to HTML, allowing you to design proper tables and install those pages directly when table support arrives in the majority of clients. You can do this using the html+tables package, by Brooks Cutter (bcutter@paradyne.com), which is available for anonymous ftp from sunsite.unc.edu in the directory pub/packages/infosystems/WWW/tools/html+tables.shar. This package requires the shell language Perl, which is primarily used on Unix systems but is also available for other systems (such as MSDOS machines). html+tables accepts HTML Level 3 and outputs html using the
...
construct to represent tables, allowing you to write HTML Level 3 now, knowing that it will look better when clients are ready for it. 5.6.6: WHAT IS HTML LEVEL 3 AND WHERE CAN I LEARN MORE ABOUT IT? HTML Level 3, also known as HTML+, is an enhanced version of HTML designed to address some of the limitations of HTML. HTML Level 3 supports true tables, right-justified text, centered text, line breaks that do not double space, and many other desired features. However, most clients support only a handful of HTML Level 3 features (such as forms in Mosaic) at this time. You can access information about new developments in HTML at the CERN server (at the URL http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Markup/Markup.html ). (HTML Level 1 is the original version. HTML Level 2 is essentially the same, but with the addition of forms.) 5.6.7: HOW CAN I MAKE TRANSPARENT GIFS? Transparent GIFs are useful because they appear to blend in smoothly with the user's display, even if the user has set a background color that differs from that the developer expected. There is a document explaining transparent GIFs available at the URL http://melmac.corp.harris.com/transparent_images.html. You can fetch the program giftrans by anonymous ftp from ftp.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de at the path /pub/net/www/tools/giftrans.c. There is also a utility for the Macintosh, Transparency (URL is: http://www.med.cornell.edu/~giles/projects.html#transparency). 5.6.8: HOW COME MAILTO: URLS DON'T WORK? The mailto: URL is an innovation found in Lynx and a few other browsers. It is not yet found in Mosaic, the most popular browser. Hopefully it will be present in future versions. In the meantime, you can set up forms which send mail to you; there is documentation on this at the URL http://siva.cshl.org/email/index.html. 5.6.9: HOW CAN I RESTRICT AND CONTROL ACCESS TO MY SERVER? All major servers have features that allow you to limit access to particular sites, and many clients have authentication features that allow you to identify specific users. There is a tutorial on security and user authentication with the NCSA server and Mosaic available, written by Marc Andreessen (URL is http://wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu:8080/auth-tutorial/tutorial.html). See your server documentation for further information. 5.6.10: WHICH FORMAT IS BETTER FOR WWW IMAGE PURPOSES, JPEG OR GIF? JPEG does a better job with realistic images such as scanned photographs. Most browsers cannot handle inline JPEGs, however, so you must link to them as external images (using a regular <A HREF...> instead of . GIF does a better job with crisp, sharp images, such as those typically used to construct buttons, graphs and the like. All browsers that can display graphics at all can display GIFs inline. 5.6.11: HOW CAN I MIRROR PART OF ANOTHER SERVER? Scripts are available to do this, but at this time they are not very friendly to the server you are attempting to mirror; their behavior resembles that of the more poorly written WWW robots. If you are trying to improve access times to a distant server, you will likely find the "proxy" capabilities of CERN's WWW server to be a more effective and general solution to your problem. 5.6.12: HOW CAN I KEEP ROBOTS OFF MY SERVER? Programs that automatically traverse the web can be quite useful, but have the potential to make a serious mess of things. Every so often someone will write a "depth-first" searching robot that brings servers to their knees. See the section on writing robots (4.10) for details. Fortunately, most robots on the web follow a simple protocol by which you can keep them off your server if you wish, or keep them out of portions of your server which are robot traps (ie, they contain an infinite number of possible links). Read the document World Wide Web Robots, Wanderers and Spiders (URL is: http://web.nexor.co.uk/mak/doc/robots/robots.html) and learn about the emerging standards for exclusion of robots from areas in which they are not wanted. You can also read about existing robots there, including useful cataloging robots you probably do _not_ want to keep off your server. 5.6.13: HOW CAN I KEEP STATISTICS ABOUT MY WEB SERVER? There are several tools which can generate statistics about your web server: getstats getstats is a versatile log analyzer, also written in C, which provides reports for various time periods with a high degree of flexibility. Add-on packages have been written to generate reports in HTML and also to generate graphs. You can access the getstats home page for more information (URL is http://www.eit.com/software/getstats/getstats.html), or obtain the package by anonymous FTP from ftp.eit.com in the directory /pub/web.software/getstats. WebStat WebStat is a package written in the language Python which supplies statistics on usage by domain, country, etc., with daily, weekly, monthly and annual reports available. You will need Python in order to use it. See the WebStat home page (URL is http://www.pegasus.esprit.ec.org/people/sijben/statistics/adver tisment.html ) for details, or obtain Python from ftp.cwi.nl in the directory /pub/python and WebStat from ftp.pegasus.esprit.ec.org in the directory /pub/misc. Wusage Wusage, which I wrote, is a C program which generates simple weekly reports in HTML, with inline image graphs displaying server growth and the distribution of accesses by continent. You can also exclude irrelevant accesses (inline images, local machines, etc.) from the results. Read the Wusage home page (URL is http://siva.cshl.org/wusage.html) for more information, or obtain Wusage by anonymous FTP from isis.cshl.org in the directory pub/wusage. wwwstat wwwstat is a full-featured log analyzer written in the language Perl. (See the newsgroup comp.lang.perl for more information about the language.) See the wwwstat home page (URL is http://www.ics.uci.edu/WebSoft/wwwstat/) for more information, or obtain the package by anonymous FTP from liege.ics.uci.edu in the directory /pub/arcadia/wwwstat. _Additional entries for this section are solicited._ 6: WHAT NEWSGROUPS DISCUSS THE WEB? You can find discussion of World Wide Web topics in three newsgroups, and one newsgroup which will soon be removed: comp.infosystems.www.users A forum for the discussion of WWW client software and its use in contacting various Internet information sources. New user questions, client setup questions, client bug reports, resource-discovery questions on how to locate information on the web that can't be found by the means detailed in the FAQ and comparison between various client packages are among the acceptable topics for this group. Please specify what browser and what system type (Windows, Mac, Unix, etc.) your post is about if you are asking questions about a specific program. comp.infosystems.www.providers A forum for the discussion of WWW server software and the use of said software to present information to users. General server design, setup questions, server bug reports, security issues, HTML page design and other concerns of information providers are among the likely topics for this group. comp.infosystems.www.misc A forum for general discussion of WWW (World Wide Web)- related topics that are NOT covered by the other newsgroups in the hierarchy. This will likely include discussions of the Web's future, politicking regarding changes in the structure and protocols of the web that affect both clients and servers, et cetera. comp.infosystems.www (DEFUNCT) The old catch-all newsgroup, which may still exist on your system but was officially removed on September 7th, according to David Lawrence, moderator of news.announce.newgroups. If your system still carries this group, ask your administrator to remove it. 7: I WANT TO KNOW MORE To find out more, use the web. This FAQ hopefully provides enough information for you to locate and install a browser on your system. If you have system specific questions regarding FTP, networking and the like, please consult newsgroups relevant to your particular hardware and operating system! Once you're up and running, you may wish to consult the World Wide Web Primer by Nathan Torkington. It is available at the URL http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-primer.html. Later you may return to this FAQ for answers to some of the more advanced questions. I encourage you to check out the changes listed early in the document each time the FAQ appears. 8: CREDITS * Thomas Boutell _boutell@netcom.com_ * Nathan Torkington _Nathan.Torkington@vuw.ac.nz_ * Marc Andreessen _marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu_ * Tony Johnson From owner-online-news@marketplace.com Thu Jun 8 16:46:46 1995 Received: from svcs1.digex.net (svcs1.digex.net [204.91.197.224]) by cnj.digex.net (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id QAA19795 ; for ; Thu, 8 Jun 1995 16:46:43 -0400 Received: from marketplace.com (majordom@marketplace.com [199.45.128.10]) by svcs1.digex.net (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id QAA05819 for ; Thu, 8 Jun 1995 16:46:35 -0400 Received: (from majordom@localhost) by marketplace.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) id LAA12419 for online-news-outgoing; Thu, 8 Jun 1995 11:00:39 -0600 Received: from gatekeeper.mcimail.com (gatekeeper.mcimail.com [192.147.45.5]) by marketplace.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id LAA12410 for ; Thu, 8 Jun 1995 11:00:36 -0600 Received: from mailgate2.mcimail.com (mailgate2.mcimail.com [166.38.40.100]) by gatekeeper.mcimail.com (8.6.12/8.6.10) with SMTP id RAA01212; Thu, 8 Jun 1995 17:02:27 GMT Received: from mcimail.com by mailgate2.mcimail.com id ac13783; 8 Jun 95 17:08 WET