rohrpost

A commandline mail client to change the world as we see it.
git clone git://r-36.net/rohrpost
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+8cEaTDO0M2YtQH61ko (18071B)


      1 Return-Path: <NED@AM.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
      2 Received: from thumper.bellcore.com (thumper.ARPA) by greenbush.bellcore.com (4.12/4.7)
      3 	id <AA04697> for nsb; Mon, 27 May 91 17:05:39 edt
      4 Received: from SIGURD.CLAREMONT.EDU (SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM) by thumper.bellcore.com (4.1/4.7)
      5 	id <AA06014> for nsb@greenbush; Mon, 27 May 91 17:01:43 EDT
      6 Return-Receipt-To: NED@AM.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
      7 Received: from MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM by SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM (PMDF #11000) id
      8  <01G6B0XZIUBC8WVZ93@SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>; Mon, 27 May 1991 14:01 PDT
      9 Received: with PMDF-MR; Mon, 27 May 1991 14:00 PDT
     10 Date: Mon, 27 May 1991 14:01 PDT
     11 From: NED <NED@AM.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
     12 Subject: Simple multipart test message created with A1MAIL
     13 To: ned@SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
     14 Cc: nsb@thumper.bellcore.com
     15 Message-Id: 
     16  <2751001427051991/A03173/SIGURD/1155DB802A00*@MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
     17 X-Envelope-To: nsb@thumper.bellcore.com
     18 Autoforwarded: false
     19 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
     20 Content-type: MULTIPART/mixed; boundary="IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC=="
     21 Importance: normal
     22 Priority: non-urgent
     23 Sensitivity: Company-Confidential
     24 Ua-Content-Id: 1155DB802A00
     25 X-Hop-Count: 1
     26 Date-Warning: Date header was inserted by MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
     27 
     28 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
     29 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
     30 Content-type: TEXT/plain
     31 
     32 This is just a simple test message -- I've used various ones of these from
     33 time to time. I can receive and interpret this stuff on this address:
     34 
     35     ned@am.sigurd.innosoft.com
     36 
     37 				Ned
     38 
     39 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
     40 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
     41 Content-type: TEXT/plain
     42 
     43 The Hearse Song
     44 
     45 Version 1, from World War I
     46 
     47   Did you ever think as the hearse rolls by
     48   That some of these days you must surely die?
     49   They'll take you away in a big black hack;
     50   They'll take you away but they won't bring you back.
     51 
     52   ...And your eyes drop out and your teeth fall in
     53   And the worms crawl over your mouth and chin;
     54   And the worms crawl out and the worms crawl in
     55   And your limbs drop off limb by limb.
     56 
     57 Version 2, current...?
     58 
     59   Don't you ever laugh as the hearse goes by,
     60   For you may be the next to die.
     61 
     62   They wrap you up in a big white sheet
     63   From your head down to your feet.
     64 
     65   They put you in a big black box
     66   And cover you up with dirt and rocks.
     67 
     68   All goes well for about a week,
     69   Then your coffin begins to leak.
     70 
     71   The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out,
     72   The worms play pinochle on your snout.
     73 
     74   They eat your eyes, they eat your nose,
     75   They eat the jelly between your toes.
     76 
     77   A big green worm with rolling eyes
     78   Crawls in your stomach and out your eyes.
     79 
     80   Your stomach turns a slimy green,
     81   And pus pours out like whipping cream.
     82 
     83   You spread it on a slice of bread,
     84   And that's what you eat when you are dead.
     85 
     86 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
     87 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
     88 Content-type: TEXT/plain
     89 
     90  +-------------------------------+         +----------------------+
     91  | ANALYSIS BY PERCEPTION EXPERT |>---v---<| COMPARATIVE ANALYSES |
     92  +-------------------------------+    |    +----------------------+
     93                                       v
     94  +-----------------+    +---------------------------+    +---------------+
     95  | MODEL SELECTION |>-->| DECISION-MAKING PERSONNEL |>-->| ACQUISITION   |
     96  +-----------------+    +---------------------------+    | AUTHORIZATION |
     97                                                          +---------------+
     98  +------------+    +-------------------+                         v    ^
     99  | PURCHASING |<--<| TRANSPORTATION TO |    +---------+          |    |
    100  +------------+    | POINT OF PURCHASE |<--<| FUNDING |<---------*    |
    101        v           +-------------------+    +---------+               v
    102        |                                            ^        +-----------+
    103        v         +---------+    +-------------+     |        | FINANCIAL |
    104  +----------+    | FIXTURE |<--<| ON-SITE     |     *-------<| ADVISOR   |
    105  | ON-SITE  |>-->| ACCESS  |    | PREPARATION |              +-----------+
    106  | DELIVERY |    | SETUP   |    +-------------+                 ^
    107  +----------+    +---------+            v  v                    |         
    108                     v                   |  *---------*          v         
    109  +----------+       |                   v            |   +---------------+
    110  | TESTING  |       v                +-----------+   *-->| ENVIRONMENTAL |
    111  | AND      |    +--------------+    | OFFICIAL  |       | IMPACT        |
    112  | APPROVAL |<--<| INSTALLATION |<--<| LIGHTBULB |       | EVALUATION    |
    113  +----------+    | OF NEW BULB  |    | CHANGER   |       +---------------+
    114                  +--------------+    +-----------+          ^             
    115                     v                   v                   |             
    116                     |                   |                   ^             
    117                     v                   v                +---------------+
    118                  +--------------------------+            | OBSOLETE ITEM |
    119                  | REMOVAL OF OBSOLETE ITEM |>---------->| DISPOSAL      |
    120                  +--------------------------+            +---------------+
    121 
    122 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
    123 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
    124 Content-type: TEXT/plain
    125 
    126 Why Is Wednesday November 17, 1858 The Base Time For VAX/VMS?
    127  
    128 COPYRIGHT (c) 1988 by Digital Equipment Corporation.
    129 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No distribution except as provided under contract.
    130 
    131 
    132 COMPONENT:  SYSTEM TIME                   OP/SYS:  VMS, Version 4.n
    133 
    134 LAST TECHNICAL REVIEW:  06-APR-1988
    135 
    136 SOURCE: Customer Support Center/Colorado Springs
    137 
    138 QUESTION:
    139 
    140 Why is Wednesday, November 17, 1858 the base time for VAX/VMS?
    141 
    142 
    143 ANSWER:
    144 
    145 November 17, 1858 is the base of the Modified Julian Day system.
    146 
    147 The original Julian Day (JD) is used by astronomers and expressed in days
    148 since noon January 1, 4713 B.C.  This measure of time was introduced by
    149 Joseph Scaliger in the 16th century.  It is named in honor of his father,
    150 Julius Caesar Scaliger (note that this Julian Day is different from the
    151 Julian calendar named for the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar!).
    152 
    153 Why 4713 BC?  Scaliger traced three time cycles and found that they were
    154 all in the first year of their cyle in 4713 B.C.  The three cycles are 15,
    155 19, and 28 years long.  By multiplying these three numbers (15 * 19 * 28
    156 = 7980), he was able to represent any date from 4713 B.C. through 3267 A.D.
    157 The starting year was before any historical event known to him.  In fact,
    158 the Jewish calendar marks the start of the world as 3761 B.C.  Today his
    159 numbering scheme is still used by astronomers to avoid the difficulties of
    160 converting the months of different calendars in use during different eras.
    161 
    162 So why 1858?  The Julian Day 2,400,000 just happens to be November 17, 1858.
    163 The Modified Julian Day uses the following formula:
    164 
    165    MJD = JD - 2,400,000.5
    166 
    167 The .5 changed when the day starts.  Astronomers had considered it more
    168 convenient to have their day start at noon so that nighttime observation times
    169 fall in the middle.  But they changed to conform to the commercial day.
    170 
    171 The Modified Julian Day was adopted by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Obser-
    172 vatory (SAO) in 1957 for satellite tracking.  SAO started tracking satellites
    173 with an 8K (non-virtual) 36-bit IBM 704 computer in 1957, when Sputnik was
    174 launched.  The Julian day was 2,435,839 on January 1, 1957.  This is
    175 11,225,377 in octal notation, which was too big to fit into an 18-bit field
    176 (half of its standard 36-bit word).  And, with only 8K of memory, no one
    177 wanted to waste the 14 bits left over by keeping the Julian Day in its own
    178 36-bit word.  However, they also needed to track hours and minutes, for which
    179 18 bits gave enough accuracy.  So, they decided to keep the number of days in
    180 the left 18 bits and the hours and minutes in the right 18 bits of a word.
    181 
    182 Eighteen bits would allow the Modified Julian Day (the SAO day) to grow as
    183 large as 262,143 ((2 ** 18) - 1).  From Nov. 17, 1858, this allowed for seven
    184 centuries.  Using only 17 bits, the date could possibly grow only as large as
    185 131,071, but this still covers 3 centuries, as well as leaving the possibility
    186 of representing negative time.  The year 1858 preceded the oldest star catalog
    187 in use at SAO, which also avoided having to use negative time in any of the
    188 satellite tracking calculations.
    189 
    190 This base time of Nov. 17, 1858 has since been used by TOPS-10, TOPS-20, and
    191 VAX/VMS.  Given this base date, the 100 nanosecond granularity implemented
    192 within VAX/VMS, and the 63-bit absolute time representation (the sign bit must
    193 be clear), VMS should have no trouble with time until:
    194 
    195    31-JUL-31086 02:48:05.47
    196 
    197 At this time, all clocks and time-keeping operations within VMS will suddenly
    198 stop, as system time values go negative.
    199 
    200 Note that all time display and manipulation routines within VMS allow for
    201 only 4 digits within the 'YEAR' field.  We expect this to be corrected in
    202 a future release of VAX/VMS sometime prior to 31-DEC-9999.
    203 
    204 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
    205 Subject: Nesting of multipart messages
    206 To: ned@sigurd.innosoft.com
    207 Cc: kvc@thor.innosoft.com
    208 Message-id: <01G6B0XSEZAC8WVZ93*@MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
    209 Autoforwarded: false
    210 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
    211 Content-type: MULTIPART/mixed; boundary="ALLFQYSvfSJWcx21A5VXXB=="
    212 Importance: normal
    213 Sensitivity: Company-Confidential
    214 
    215 --ALLFQYSvfSJWcx21A5VXXB==
    216 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
    217 Content-type: TEXT/plain
    218 
    219 One of the things that's particularly easy to do in this X.400 user agent
    220 I'm using (I have not, properly speaking, written a multimedia multipart
    221 user agent -- instead I've written a gateway to an existing user agent that
    222 does these things) is create very complex nesting structure. Indeed, anyone
    223 who thinks that nesting is not a heavily used feature of X.400 hasn't used
    224 the commercial offerings in this area very much.
    225 
    226 The flip side is that my support for various types of data is, well,
    227 limited. Text I can do, of course. I've worked out how to do VMS binary
    228 files, but you probably don't care about that. (I'll include one just for
    229 grins, however.) I can deal with compound documents in DEC's CDA format,
    230 and I probably can get ODA to work pretty easily too, but I don't have
    231 it now since I have not installed the ODA converters on my system yet.
    232 I don't have any image or audio support, unfortunately. PostScript I can
    233 do, but not directly.
    234 
    235 I plan to support G3FAX and other image formats by simply converting them
    236 to CDA, and I can probably convert CDA back to those formats as well. I have
    237 the significant problem that my gateway needs to know what to convert for
    238 whom, and that's pretty hard to know!
    239 
    240 Anyway, I'll wrap this up by attaching a binary file to this and sending it.
    241 Enjoy.
    242 
    243 				Ned
    244 
    245 --ALLFQYSvfSJWcx21A5VXXB==
    246 Content-type: application/VMS-RMS; versin="1.0"
    247 Content-Transfer-Encoding: BASE64
    248 VMS-FDL: IDENT "27-MAY-1991 14:01:47 VAX/VMS FDL$GENERATE Routine"; ; SYSTEM;
    249  SOURCE VAX/VMS; ; FILE; ALLOCATION 8; BEST_TRY_CONTIGUOUS no; BUCKET_SIZE 2;
    250  CONTIGUOUS no; DEFERRED_WRITE no; EXTENSION 0; GLOBAL_BUFFER_COUNT 0;
    251  MT_BLOCK_SIZE 0; MAX_RECORD_NUMBER 0; MAXIMIZE_VERSION no; ORGANIZATION
    252  indexed; READ_CHECK no; SUPERSEDE no; WRITE_CHECK no; ; RECORD; BLOCK_SPAN
    253  yes; CARRIAGE_CONTROL none; CONTROL_FIELD_SIZE 0; FORMAT fixed; SIZE 334; ;
    254  AREA 0; ALLOCATION 8; BEST_TRY_CONTIGUOUS no; BUCKET_SIZE 2; CONTIGUOUS no;
    255  EXACT_POSITIONING no; EXTENSION 0; POSITION none; VOLUME 0;
    256 
    257 AAAAAAAAAAAABIgAFAAAAgMABAAUAAFAAQAAEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUAAAA
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    343 
    344 --ALLFQYSvfSJWcx21A5VXXB==--
    345 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==
    346 Subject: Delivery report
    347 Sender: postmaster@SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
    348 To: NED@am.sigurd.innosoft.com
    349 Message-id: <01G6B0XX2FG68WVZ93*@MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
    350 Autoforwarded: false
    351 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
    352 Content-type: TEXT/plain
    353 Delivery-date: Mon, 27 May 1991 13:59 PDT
    354 Importance: normal
    355 
    356 Your message was successfully delivered to:                                   
    357 
    358     NED
    359 
    360 ----------------------------------------
    361 
    362 Delivery-receipt-to: NED@AM.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
    363 Received: from MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM by SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM (PMDF #11000) id
    364  <01G6B0DFALW68WVZ93@SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>; Mon, 27 May 1991 13:45 PDT
    365 Received: with PMDF-MR; Mon, 27 May 1991 13:44 PDT
    366 Date: Mon, 27 May 1991 13:45 PDT
    367 From: NED <NED@AM.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
    368 Subject: Test jacket for message
    369 To: NED@SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
    370 Message-id: 
    371  <5613441327051991/A03167/SIGURD/1155DB6C0600*@MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM>
    372 X-Envelope-to: NED
    373 Autoforwarded: false
    374 MIME-Version: RFC-XXXX
    375 Content-type: MULTIPART/mixed; boundary="24s7SDdzczYl7mm2MVz3TC=="
    376 Importance: normal
    377 Priority: non-urgent
    378 Sensitivity: Company-Confidential
    379 UA-content-id: 1155DB6C0600
    380 X-Hop-count: 1
    381 Date-warning: Date header was inserted by MR.SIGURD.INNOSOFT.COM
    382 
    383 
    384 --IwL6Iwc4KN0nH7HEdZzrYC==--
    385