On 4/4/2010 10:37, Jim Mercer wrote:
On Sun, Apr 04, 2010 at 09:57:12AM -0500, Jorge Amodio wrote:
You should revise some of the history behind it. It was a descriptor for a very large network, it was even a TLD in the mid eighties when the transition to DNS was taking place, the old bang style addresses like mine original seismo!atina!pete transitioned for a while to pete@atina.UUCP and later to pete@atina.ar.
i don't recall .uucp making it into the actual DNS, but i remember our mail system used it as a trigger to do a uucp-maps lookup.
I thought it was a sendmail hack, along with .bitnet and others.
i'm sure its an open debate as to if being in the UUCP maps also meant that you were "on the Internet", but many people seemed or seem to think this way.
My problem is that the UUCP maps (and the host-host communications) existed before, during and apart from anything properly labeled "The Internet". That the UUCP world developed links to "The Internet" (and FIDONet, and BITNET and ....) goes without saying. But landing you Piper Cherokee at LAX doesn't make you part of the Commercial Airline Industry. -- Democracy: Three wolves and a sheep voting on the dinner menu. Requiescas in pace o email Ex turpi causa non oritur actio Eppure si rinfresca ICBM Targeting Information: http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml