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User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 5]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


2.  ARTICLES

   Bell, Gordon, "Gordon Bell Calls for a U.S. Research Network," IEEE
   Spectrum, vol. 25, no. 2, pa. 54-57, IEEE Spectrum, New York, NY, Feb
   1988.

      This article is written by Gordon Bell, the former Chair of the
      FCCSET subcommittee on computer networking, infrastructure and
      digital communications.  It discusses the merits of a national
      network and the potential of such a network to trigger significant
      advances in computing and communications research.  The most
      viable solution is a national research network organized and
      maintained by the Federal government.  However, the success of
      such a venture is tied to the need for effective leadership in
      communications and a coordinated Federal science and technology
      policy.

   Catlett, Charles E., "The NSFNET: Beginnings of a National Research
   Internet," Academic Computing, vol. 3, no. 5, pp. 18-21, Academic
   Computing Publications, Inc., McKinney, TX, January 1989.

      This article explains the various layers of the NSFNET.  It is one
      of several articles in this issue of Academic Computing which is
      devoted to the subject of networking.

   Horwitt, Elisabeth, "Science to Take the High-Speed Route,"
   ComputerWorld, vol. 23, no. 33, p. 1, CW Publishing, Framingham, MA,
   August 14, 1989.

      This article describes the philosophy behind NREN and the
      motivational factors why a 3 Gigabit network is needed.  Among
      those quoted are Senator Albert Gore, Jr., Steve Wolff (NSF) and
      Ken King (EDUCOM).

   Jacobsen, Ole J., "Information on TCP/IP," ConneXions, The
   Interoperability Report, vol. 2, no. 7, pp. 14-15, Interop, Inc.,
   Mountain View, CA, July 1988.

      This article is a reference guide on where to find more
      information on TCP/IP and networks in the Internet.

   Jacobsen, Ole J., "Information Sources," ConneXions, The
   Interoperability Report, vol. 3, no. 12, pp. 16-19, Interop, Inc.,
   Mountain View, CA, December 1989.

      This article is an update of the July 1988 article and provides
      information on TCP/IP, OSI, and other networking topics.




User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 6]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


   LaQuey, Tracy L., "Networks for Academics," Academic Computing, vol.
   4, no. 3, pp. 32-39, Academic Computing Publications, Inc., McKinney,
   TX, November 1989.

      A variety of computer networks serve academic needs at the
      nation's campuses.  Their thrusts differ significantly, and it is
      not uncommon to find campuses subscribing to multiple networks.
      This article is an overview of the major players.  This November
      1989 issue of Academic Computing also contains other interesting
      articles on networking.

   Markoff, John, "A Supercomputer in Every Pot," New York Times, p. 1,
   New York, NY, December 29, 1988.

      This article discusses the need for a gigabit national network to
      provide researchers with high speed access to remote resources and
      to develop other useful network applications.

   Quarterman, John S. and Josiah C. Hoskins, "Notable Computer
   Networks," Communications of the ACM, vol. 29, no. 10, pp. 932-971,
   Association from Computing Machinery, Inc., New York, NY, October
   1986.

      This is a summary of the state of the world of networks as of late
      1986.  Although influential in its time and still of historical
      interest, it has since been superseded by Quarterman's Book, The
      Matrix, published in October 1989.

   Quarterman, John S., "Etiquette and Ethics," ConneXions - The
   Interoperability Report, vol. 3, no. 4, pp. 12-16, Advanced Computing
   Environments, Mountain View, CA, March 1989.

      Learning how to use a computer system properly takes much longer
      than simply learning the mechanics of making it do things.
      Learning to use a system without offending other users and to
      maximum benefit involves etiquette. Learning to use a system
      without causing harm to others involves ethics.  These are not
      completely separable subjects, and the former tends to blend into
      the latter as the seriousness of the situation increases.  This
      article presents a discussion of these subjects, and some
      suggested guidelines for appropriate behavior.

   Quarterman, John S., "Mail through the Matrix," ConneXions - The
   Interoperability Report, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 10-15, Advanced Computing
   Environments, Mountain View, CA, February 1989.

      There is a worldwide metanetwork of computer networks that use
      dissimilar protocols at the network or internet layer, but that



User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 7]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


      communicate at the application layer.  The set of such networks
      that are non-commercial, e.g., academic, research, or military, is
      sometimes called Worldnet.  There are also some commercial
      networks and conferencing systems connected, and the metanetwork
      that includes all of these is what is called the Matrix.  This
      article describes some problems associated with electronic mail
      correspondence through the Matrix.

   Schneidewind, Norman F., "Interconnecting Local Networks to Long-
   distance Networks," IEEE Computer Magazine, vol. 16, no. No. 9, pp.
   15-24, IEEE Computer Society, Los Alamitos, CA 90720, 10662 Los
   Vaqueros, (714) 821-8380, September 1983.

      This article emphasizes how approaches to interconnection, network
      access, network services, and protocol functions are related and
      overlap.  Decisions on which approach to undertake are based on
      user requirements and existing specifications.  Applications to
      TCP/IP and the DDN Internet are provided.

































User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 8]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


3.  BIBLIOGRAPHIES

   Granrose, Jon, List of Anonymous FTP Sites.

      This is a list of Internet sites accepting anonymous ftp.  This
      list is available on host pilot.njin.net, directory pub/ftp-list,
      see the files index, help and README for more information.  This
      list is also regularly posted to the USENET newsgroups comp.misc
      and comp.sources.wanted.  For more information, send electronic
      mail to odin@pilot.njin.net.

   Mogul, Jeffrey C., The Experimental Literature of The Internet: An
   Annotated Bibliography, 11 pgs., Digital Equipment Corporation, Palo
   Alto, CA, 1988.

      This annotated bibliography attempts to sift out the literature of
      the Internet as an experiment and reveal those publications which
      convey the experience acquired by the experimenters.  This
      technical note was first published as WRL Research Report 88/3.
      For more information, contact: Digital Western Laboratory, 100
      Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto, California 94301.

   Partridge, C. ed., SIGCOMM Bibliographies, Computer Communication
   Review, ACM, New York, NY, Quarterly.

      SIGCOMM generates a quarterly bibliography of recent publications
      in computer networking and publishes it in Computer Communication
      Review and puts it on-line on nnsc.nsf.net.

   Sethi, Adarshpal S., Bibliography of Network Management, Computer
   Communication Review, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 58-75, ACM SIGCOMM, New
   York, NY, July 1989.

      This bibliography contains nearly 200 articles on Network
      Management.  Some of the major topics are Performance Monitoring
      and Management, Fault Management and Diagnosis, LAN Management,
      Management of Telecommunication Networks, and AI Applications in
      Network Management.  Also available on-line on host nnsc.nsf.net,
      directory CCR/jul89, filename sethi.ps (postscript format).

   Spurgeon, Charles, List of University of Texas Network System (UTnet)
   Guides and Documents, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX,
   May 17, 1990.

      This is a list of documents relating to the University of Texas at
      Austin network system (UTnet).  These documents are intended for
      UTnet users, system administrators and others dealing with
      departmental networks and hosts attached to the UTnet system.  The



User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 9]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


      list includes documents that deal with usage guidelines, TCP/IP
      host configuration, IP addresses and routing, UNIX security,
      networking terms, subnet policy, subnet gateway installation,
      broadcast storms and packet avalanches.  Although these documents
      are specific to the UTnet system, they do provide information that
      may be useful to another site.  This list, which describes the
      documents and how to get them, is available on-line on host
      emx.utexas.edu, directory pub/netinfo/utnet, filename README.

   Spurgeon, Charles, Network Reading List, 27 pgs., The University of
   Texas at Austin Computation Center, Austin, TX, April 1990.

      This is an annotated list of books and other resources of use to
      network managers who are using TCP/IP, UNIX, and Ethernet
      technologies.  These three technologies share the same major
      attribute: network managers can use them to build interoperable
      network systems across a wide range of vendor equipment. This list
      is intended for campus network managers at the University of Texas
      at Austin, or anywhere TCP/IP, UNIX, and Ethernet are used to
      provide computer communications.  Available on-line on host
      emx.utexas.edu, directory pub/netinfo/docs, filenames network-
      reading-list.txt or network-reading-list.ps (.txt is in ascii
      format and .ps is in postscript format).

   SRI International, Network Information Systems Center, Bibliography
   About Network Protocols: A List for Background Reading, 7 pgs., SRI
   International, Network Information Systems Center, Menlo Park, CA,
   October 1989.

      A bibliography of recent articles and books pertaining to TCP and
      IP, X.25, the Transport Protocol (TP-4), OSI and other standards.
      Compiled by the DDN Network Information Center as a background
      reading list for vendors, this bibliography cites articles, mostly
      from open literature, representing a variety of viewpoints.  This
      list does not contain references to the Requests for Comments
      (RFCs).  Available on-line on host nic.ddn.mil, directory
      netinfo:, file protocols-dod.bib.

   Wobus, John M., Syracuse University Network Bibliography, Syracuse
   University Computing & Network Services, Syracuse, NY, April 9, 1990.

      This is a bibliography of publications on various kinds of
      networking.  It is intended for use at Syracuse University and
      includes publications specific to Syracuse University as well as
      publications of more general interest. It is available online via
      anonymous ftp to host icarus.cns.syr.edu, directory info, filename
      netbib.txt.




User Documents Working Group                                   [Page 10]

RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990


4.  BOOKS

   Anderson, Bart, Bryan Costales, Harry Henderson, and The Waite Group,
   UNIX Communications, 542 pgs., Howard W. Sams & Company,
   Indianapolis, IN, 1987.

      UNIX Communications provides a good overview and comprehensive
      introduction on UNIX mail, the USENET News and UUCP with clear
      examples.

   Arms, Caroline, Campus Networking Strategies, 321 pgs., Digital
   Press, Bedford, MA, 1988.

      This book contains a survey of ten colleges and universities that
      have made or implemented grand plans for networking.  The case
      studies cover the planning process, technical issues, and
      financing and management of an ongoing service organization.
      Chapters on protocols and standards, wiring, and national networks
      provide valuable technical background.  A glossary defines

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