MDFS::Archive.BBCMicro.help Search

BBC Micro Mailing List Archive - Help and Information

Archives Home     Search mailing list archive with Google:

  

Help and Information Index



What is the BBC Micro Mailing List?

The BBC Micro mailing list is a list is for discussion of all aspects of the BBC Microcomputer and related machines such as the Acorn Electron and BBC Master Series.

In the past there was a seperate mailing list called BeebEmul8 for discussion of all aspects of emulation and emulators of the BBC Microcomputer and related machines such as the Acorn Electron and BBC Master Series. The BBCEmul8 mailing list has been integrated into the main BBC Micro mailing list. Questions and discussions relating to emulation and emulators of Acorn 8-bit machines are welcome on the BBC Micro mailing list.

The BBC Micro mailing list is hosted by James Fidell. This archive is wholly unofficial and James has no involvement with it.

At the time of writing the BBC Micro mailing list has over 300 members.


How do I subscribe?

To subscribe to the BBC Micro mailing list you should fill out the subscription request form at the official home of the list at http://lists.cloud9.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/bbc-micro. You will recieve an authorisation request via email where you will need to confirm your wish to subscribe, once you follow the instructions in this message you will be a fully fledged member of the list.

A digest of the BBC Micro mailing list is available if you do not wish to receive individual messages. To subscribe to receive the digest you should ensure the 'Digest' option is selected when you submit the subscription form.

One you have subscribed you may wish to review the archives here to find out if your question has already been asked and answered and to generally get to know the general tone of the list.


How do I unsubscribe?

To unsubscribe from the BBC Micro mailing list fill out the unsubscription request form at the official home of the list at http://lists.cloud9.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/bbc-micro.


How do I post a message to the list?

Before you can post new messages to the BBC Micro mailing list you need to ensure that you subscribe.

Whether you are subscribed to receive individual emails or to receive digests, all new postings should be submitted to bbc-micro@lists.cloud9.co.uk.

To respond to a post on the list you should send your reply to the same address, many email applications will by default try to reply privately to the original poster, you should take care to check if your email application does this.

When you respond to the list it may be tempting to send a carbon copy (CC) of the message to the original poster, please try not to do this as the original poster will always receive two copies of your message.

Emails sent to the BBC Micro mailing list should always be made in plain text and not base64, RTF or HTML as many modern email applications will do by default. Information on how to configure your email application to post plain text messages should be simple to find, either on the web site of that application or via an internet search engine such as Google.

Posting attachments to the list is also frowned upon and should not be done. If you have additional files, documents or images that you wish to share with members or the list or which are important references to your message then you should try to upload them to a web site and provide a link in your message.


What is the BBC Micro Mailing List Archive?

The BBC Micro Mailing List Archive is intended to be as complete as possible archive of posts to the BBC Micro mailing list from the very beginning to the present day and beyond. A previous archive by Mark Cooke was lost when the host server was stolen.

Messages have been recovered from various sources including bbc.nvg.org, James Fidells' MajorDomo mailing list server and from our personal archives of posts to the list. The archive is manually updated during the first week of each month when all messages from the previous month are added. More frequent updates are made occasionally.

This archive is wholly unofficial and has no connection to the BBC Micro mailing list or James Fidell other than to provide a useful web resource for both members of the list and the general public. We are happy to answer any support enquiries relating to this archive and subscribing to and unsubscribing from the BBC Micro mailing list.

This archive and all related software was developed by and is maintained by Jon Ripley and J.G.Harston.


Future Improvements

This mailing list archive is a work in progress and the structure, presentation and quality of the archive will improve as our custom mailing list searching and indexing software develops.

Presentation

The messages have been converted into web pages. This has allowed improved presentation and browser compatibility as well as better obscuring of email addresses from the visible content, and has allowed links between messages and between threads, and made the searching better. All the messages are held in their original raw form in offline backups.

Indexes

The main archive hosted on Nelson IT has index pages listing all messages for a specific month, the archive at mdfs.net has index pages listing 25 messages at a time. Support for fully threaded indexes, and a variety of other index types is present but they are currently disabled.

Requests for new features should be addressed to Jon Ripley.


Mirrors

The official home page of the BBC Micro Mailing List Archive is at http://nelsonit.net/~jon/BBCMicro/.

This archive is mirrored at the mdfs.net archives at: http://mdfs.net/Archive/BBCMicro/.

Please do not contact us regarding mirroring this site since rejection often causes offence. Unauthorised copies of this mirror are not tolerated.


Copyright

As with any message posted to a mailing list or newsgroup, the copyright of a message remains with the author of the message. By posting to such a listing, the author gives permission for their work to be redistributed, as long as attribution to the author remains. In this case, the "From:" header line has to correctly attribute the author. All correctly specified email addresses have been obscured to protect members against spam harvesting, this was introduced after discussion on the mailing list. This does mean that it may be difficult to distinguish between multiple members who share the same name.

It is the policy of the archive maintainers to deny without exception all requests to retrospectively alter or amend any messages which have been posted to the mailing list.


If you have any messages missing from this archive, please let us know so we can include them.