- 
FidoNews 38:20 [00/09]: The Front Page
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
The  F I D O N E W S      Volume 38, Number 20             17 May 2021  +--------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
 | |The newsletter of the | |                                         |
 | |  FidoNet community.  | | Netmail attach to (POTS):               |
 | |                      | |          Editor @ 2:2/2 (+46-31-960447) |
 | |          ____________| |                                         |
 | |         /  __          | Netmail attach to (BinkP):              |
 | |        /  /  \         |          Editor @ 2:203/0               |
 | | WOOF! (  /|oo \        |                                         |
 |  \_______\(_|  /_)       | Email attach to:                        |
 |            _ @/_ \    _  |          b @ felten dot se              |
 |           |     | \   \\ |                                         |
 |           | (*) |  \   ))|                                         |
 |           |__U__| /  \// |         Editor: Bj”rn Felten            |
 |   ______   _//|| _\   /  |                                         |
 |  / Fido \ (_/(_|(____/   |   Newspapers should have no friends.    |
 | (________)       (jm)    |                    -- JOSEPH PULITZER   | +--------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
 
 
 Table of Contents
 1. FOOD FOR THOUGHT  .........................................  1
 2. GENERAL ARTICLES  .........................................  2
 100 IPv6 nodes  ...........................................  2
 BBS curation and community building  ......................  3
 3. ADAM'S COLUMN - ADAM PARK  ................................  5
 Land of Devastation Grind Guide Pt1  ......................  5
 4. LIST OF FIDONET IPV6 NODES  ...............................  7
 List of IPv6 nodes  .......................................  7
 5. JAMNNTPD SERVERS LIST  .................................... 10
 The Johan Billing JamNNTPd project  ....................... 10
 6. FIDONEWS'S FIDONET SOFTWARE LISTING  ...................... 11
 7. SPECIAL INTEREST  ......................................... 18
 Statistics from the Fidoweb  .............................. 18
 Nodelist Stats  ........................................... 19
 8. FIDONEWS INFORMATION  ..................................... 21
 How to Submit an Article  ................................. 21
 Credits, Legal Infomation, Availability  .................. 23
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)
 
 
- 
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
=================================================================
 FOOD FOR THOUGHT =================================================================
 
 Consider, when you are enraged at any one, what you would probably
 think if he should die during the dispute.
 
 -- Lucius Annaeus Seneca
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)
 
 
- 
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
=================================================================
 GENERAL ARTICLES =================================================================
 
 100 IPv6 nodes
 By Michiel van der Vlist, 2:280/5555
 
 
 This week's list of IPv6 nodes is special. It has been a decade
 ago that the first Binkp IPv6 connect was made and in the beginning
 the growth of IPv6 nodes was exponential. About 5 years ago the
 growth became linear ad 2 years ago the growth leveled of. It seemed
 that the growth of IPv6 no longer compensated for the shrink of
 Fidonet and I had already come to terms with the idea that we may
 never reach 100.
 
 This year we had some influx of returnees and also some new nodes.
 A significant fraction of them entered Fidonet full dual stack.
 That gave a boost to the number of IPv6 capabable nodes and now all
 of a sudden we passed the 100 mark.
 
 And the winner is:....  <sound of drums>
 
 100  1:134/102    Shelley Petersen       Native  Hurricane El. f
 
 Congratulations to Shelley.
 
 Actually Shelley is not the 100st sysop to run an IPv6 node. She is
 now #100 on the list. Over the years some of the IPv6 nodes have
 left Fidonet or stopped supporting IPv6, but I have not kept records
 of that. The list is a record of currently active IPv6 nodes.
 
 So now what? Up to 200 of course!
 
 
 
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 BBS curation and community building
 Kostie Muirhed - 1:134/101
 
 Partially to celebrate the return of net 134, and partially inspired
 by Steve Weinert's recent article recounting his experiences returning
 to the scene, I figured I might try my hand at submit my first
 Fidonews article. Before getting into the meat of things, I'd like to
 offer a quick plea that you do not take any of the following in a
 critical or negative manner, as it's meant to offer a positive outlook
 and one opinion at looking forward to the future.
 
 I, like many, was first baptized into the world of BBSes and the
 futuristic feel of worldwide echo discourse during the height of
 popularity of both in the 90s. While I was among the ranks that
 started splitting their phone usage between the BBS world and the
 Internet, I never found a replacement for the intimate and curated
 experience found on a well maintained BBS and was saddened every time
 another local board dropped off. Around that time, as many will
 recall, there was a major rush of boards onto the Telnet scene. I was
 like a kid in a candy store "calling" into boards from all over the
 continent without concern about long distance rates, always curious to
 see what experience the sysop had carefully and proudly put together
 for their users. The expanse of different ANSI and RIP artwork used
 for answer screens and menus, and the changing out of screens and
 artwork for holidays and special occasions was purely magical. Every
 board had a slightly different feel to the community as well, and you
 could quickly get a feel for the types of users you'd encounter during
 your visits to a particular board by the types of message areas they
 had, and the message counts in each.
 
 Somewhere along the line we've lost a lot of what made this hobby such
 a unique experience for newcomers. Note that I'm not saying we've lost
 what made this hobby great, as there's still a great deal to
 differentiate the experiences from the wider internet in a positive
 manner, and there's certainly opportunity for positive change. What I
 am saying is that as a whole, as a community, we seem to have moved
 away from creating an inviting and memorable space and experience for
 newcomers and returning faces, and more towards setting up our own
 personal utility portal to access the message groups. If I pick a
 random listing from the telnet BBS list, I can almost guarantee I'll
 be met with the stock Synchronet menus, 200+ fidonet and othernet
 echoes thrown into a message group, the same couple pre-installed
 doors, and more often than not these days it'll be hosted off in the
 cloud on some cheap vps.
 
 I know I've been guilty of hoarding echoes too, but nobody wants to
 wade through 200+ message groups to try and find one they might be
 interested in reading or posting in. Nobody is going to use the new
 message scan if the default is ALL those groups either. The default
 menu set for most board software is either objectively bad, or so
 common that it quickly gets very samey for anyone calling more than a
 couple boards.
 
 If what attracts you personally to the hobby is just having your own
 personal portal but you just want to feel like someone else *could*
 use it, more power to you and you'll hear no further criticism from
 me. For the rest of us who enjoy putting things together for external consumption or community development though, we're missing some
 opportunities. I don't want to try to dictate the best or right way to
 get the curation experience back, but here are some ideas for
 starters:
 
 1) If you run your board in the cloud, try setting a terminal up
 to monitor it remotely. I had a caller the other day who was born
 after the scene had died down, but had heard about telnet
 accessible boards through a semi popular youtube channel. I broke
 into chat with him and his mind was BLOWN. Remember that feeling
 the first time it happened to you? I'd hazard a guess that that
 moment started many of us down the path to becoming sysops.
 
 2) Toy with the idea of curating a selection of echoes that fit
 the interests of a community you can picture building. Maybe that
 community is centered around where you are physically, or maybe it
 centers around an interest or subject that you find interesting.
 I'm not saying you need to remove everything else, but maybe at
 least put that curated selection in a group of it's own and make
 sure the rest are off for scan by default, or whatever the
 equivalent is for your software package.
 
 3) Try finding a unique door game that you enjoy or enjoyed.
 
 4) Update or customize your menus. Either fully, or just adding
 some art or ANSI/RIP into the mix.
 
 5) Change out your art. Be it your answer screen, your logon
 screen, a bulletin, or logoff. Change something.
 
 You don't have to do all of the above, or necessarily any of them if
 you have other ideas. But my challenge to everyone this week is to
 change or update ONE thing on your board this week, and then tell
 someone about it and get feedback. I won't promise it will bring new
 users screaming and hollering to your door, but I CAN guarantee that
 it will remind you of the joy of building something unique to put out
 into the world. I know I'll be trying to take my own advice; I hope
 you'll join me.
 
 Peace, long life, and happy trails to you all.
 Kostie Muirhead (1:134/101)
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)
 
 
- 
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
=================================================================
 ADAM'S COLUMN - ADAM PARK =================================================================
 
 Land of Devastation Grind Guide Pt 1
 Adam Park 1:134/302
 
 
 Foreword by Kostie Muirhead:
 Many of you are likely at least familiar with the existence of the
 door game Land of Devastation (LOD). For those that aren't, it is
 probably one of if not the most in depth door games produced. It was a
 joy hosting Adam before his board went live, and his walkthrough is
 second to none (literally, I looked and couldn't find any others).
 - Kostie
 
 ****
 
 Watch this space over the next several weeks for an article series
 meant to chronicle the most effective builds and grind order for this
 epic old game. This week serves mostly as an introduction, and
 overview of what to expect out of this guide series.
 
 ****
 
 Coming sections/Table of Contents:
 
 1) About
 
 2) General Gameplay Guidelines
 
 3) Shopping Recommendations
 
 4) Stat Points
 4a) Overview of Sources of Stat Points
 4b) How to Distribute Stat Points for this Build
 
 5) Combat Strategy
 
 6) Tables
 6a) Leveling Order
 6b) Key Purchase Order
 
 7) Grind Guide
 7a) Zone 1
 7b) Zone 2
 7c) Drugs: Everything in Moderation
 7d) Zone 3
 7e) Zone 4
 7f) Zone 5
 7g) Shrine of Hercules
 7h) Zone 6
 7i) Endgame content
 
 8) Supplemental Information
 
 1) About
 
 This is meant to be an experience, money, build and equipment guide,
 not a full do-everything-for-you walkthrough; this guide also assumes
 a basic familiarity with the game and controls, which are reasonably
 easy to figure out, and there are instructions for them elsewhere
 online. I a believe that people should play through games mostly for themselves, however, this game is pretty harsh, and, other than some
 basic "Here's a list of the game's quests, enemies and items" there's
 very little information currently available on the mechanics of the
 game and how to build up a good character.
 
 Compared to a modern RPG, this game is fairly harsh on a couple of
 fronts. Stat point assignment is permanent (without suggestions or
 much explanation) and there are a couple of ways to permanently lose
 (or prevent yourself from gaining) stat points throughout the game. Furthermore, itemization is not entirely straightforward and, because
 a fair bit of money and experience grinding is necessary, a trial and
 error method can be very frustrating and time-consuming, especially if
 you end up messing your character up and wanting to start over. My aim
 here, then, is to make a guide that puts you on the right path of a
 good build while still maintaining the basic exploration and quest
 challenges of the game.
 
 I have structured this guide to be a way through the game "as it was
 intended to be played", so I have not included a couple of exploits
 that essentially break the game. These were likely oversights never
 updated out, rather than intended parts of gameplay. (Unlike regular
 released games, BBS games were commonly "works in progress" that were
 always being updated and tinkered with, that said, other than a couple
 of loose ends, this game feels complete).
 
 This is also a very "vanilla" guide without a lot of extra fancy
 tricks that you can employ. For instance, every day every SSSS store
 on the map gets a different 40% off a random item special; these
 specials can allow you to get some strong items you might not be able
 to afford yet, or items that are not normally purchasable at all.
 Though this is something you can do, and I recommend checking the SSSS
 stores regularly, I haven't included this point as part of the guide
 because my aim is to make more of a "consistent" guide that you can
 follow regardless of what happens to be on sale on particular day.
 
 
 Note: Other than the most minor hints as to the general progression of
 the game, this guide is essentially spoiler-free as far as quests and
 the storyline of the world goes. I'm one of those people who really
 doesn't like spoilers, so I've done my best to focus on the mechanics
 of gameplay, and generally don't talk about quests at all unless they
 pertain directly to your build.
 
 *****************************************************
 Stay tuned next week for general gameplay guidelines!
 ***************************************************** -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)
 
 
- 
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
=================================================================
 LIST OF FIDONET IPV6 NODES =================================================================
 
 List of IPv6 nodes
 By Michiel van der Vlist, 2:280/5555
 
 Updated 16 May 2021
 
 
 Node Nr.     Sysop                  Type    Provider      Remark
 
 1  2:280/464    Wilfred van Velzen     Native  Xs4All        f
 2  2:280/5003   Kees van Eeten         Native  Xs4All        f
 3  2:5019/40    Konstantin Kuzov       T-6in4  he.net        f
 4  2:280/5555   Michiel van der Vlist  Native  Ziggo         f
 5  1:320/219    Andrew Leary           Native  Comcast       f
 6  2:221/1      Tommi Koivula          Native  Hetzner       f
 7  2:221/6      Tommi Koivula          Native  OVH
 8  2:5053/54    Denis Mikhlevich       Native  TTK-Volga
 9  2:5030/257   Vova Uralsky           Native  PCextreme
 10  1:154/10     Nicholas Bo‰l          Native  Spectrum      f
 11  2:203/0      Bj”rn Felten           T-6in4  he.net
 12  2:280/5006   Kees van Eeten         Native  Xs4All        f INO4
 13  3:712/848    Scott Little           T-6in4  he.net        f
 14  2:5020/545   Alexey Vissarionov     Native  Hetzner       f
 15  1:103/17     Stephen Hurd           T-6in4  he.net
 16  2:5020/9696  Alexander Skovpen      T-6in4  TUNNELBROKER-0
 17  2:421/790    Viktor Cizek           T-6in4  he.net
 18  2:222/2      Kim Heino              Native  TeliaSonera
 19  3:633/280    Stephen Walsh          Native  AusNetServers f
 20  2:463/877    Alex Shuman            Native  Nline         f IO
 21  1:19/10      Matt Bedynek           T-6in4  he.net
 22  3:770/1      Paul Hayton            T-6in4  he.net
 23  2:5053/58    Alexander Kruglikov    Native  TTK-Volga     f
 24  1:103/1      Stephen Hurd           Native  Choopa
 25  3:633/281    Stephen Walsh          Native  Internode
 26  2:310/31     Richard Menedetter     Native  DE-NETCUP     f
 27  3:633/410    Tony Langdon           Native  IINET
 28  2:5020/329   Oleg Lukashin          Native  Comfortel     f
 29  2:246/1305   Emil Schuster          Native  TAL.DE
 30  2:2448/4000  Tobias Burchhardt      Native  DTAG          IO
 31  2:331/51     Marco d'Itri           Native  BOFH-IT
 32  1:154/30     Mike Miller            Native  LINODE
 33  2:5001/100   Dmitry Protasoff       Native  OVH
 34  2:5059/38    Andrey Mundirov        T-6in4  he.net
 35  2:240/5853   Philipp Giebel         Native  Hetzner
 36  2:5083/444   Peter Khanin           Native  OVH
 37  2:2452/413   Ingo Juergensmann      Native  RRBONE-COLO   f
 38  1:123/10     Wayne Smith            T-6in4  he.net
 39  2:4500/1     Eugene Kozhuhovsky     Native  DATAHATA6
 40  1:135/300    Eric Renfro            Native  Amazon.com
 41  1:103/13     Stephen Hurd           Native  Choopa
 42  2:5020/1042  Michael Dukelsky       Native  FORPSI Ktis   f
 43  2:5095/0     Sergey V. Efimoff      T-6in4  he.net
 44  2:5095/20    Sergey V. Efimoff      T-6in4  he.net
 45  4:902/26     Fernando Toledo        T-6in4  he.net
 46  2:5019/400   Konstantin Kuzov       Native  LT-LT
 47  2:467/239    Mykhailo Kapitanov     Native  Vultr         f
 48  2:463/1331   Andrei Dzedolik        Native  DIGITALOCEAN
 49  2:5010/275   Evgeny Chevtaev        T-6in4  TUNNELBROKER-0 f
 50  2:5020/736   Egor Glukhov           Native  RUWEB         f
 51  2:280/2000   Michael Trip           Native  Xs4All
 52  2:230/38     Benny Pedersen         Native  Linode
 53  2:460/58     Stas Mishchenkov       T-6in4  he.net        f
 54  1:135/367    Antonio Rivera         Native  RRSW-V6
 55  2:5020/2123  Anton Samsonov         T-6in4  he.net
 56  2:5020/2332  Andrey Ignatov         Native  ru.rtk
 57  2:5005/49    Victor Sudakov         T-6in4  he.net        f
 58  2:5005/77    Valery Lutoshkin       T-6in4  NTS           f
 59  2:5005/106   Alexey Osiyuk          T-6in4  he.net        f
 60  2:5057/53    Ivan Kovalenko         Native  ER-Telecom    f
 61  2:5010/352   Dmitriy Smirnov        Native  EkranTV       f
 62  2:292/854    Ward Dossche           Native  Proximus      OO
 63  2:469/122    Sergey Zabolotny       T-6in4  he.net        f
 64  2:5053/400   Denis Mikhlevich       Native  TTK-Volga
 65  1:135/371    Eric Renfro            Native  Cox Cmmunctns
 66  2:421/21     Stepan Gabriel         Native  NETDATACOMM
 67  2:5030/1997  Alexey Fayans          T-6in4  he.net
 68  1:220/70     Joseph Werle           T-6in4  he.net
 69  2:5061/15    Eugene Gladchenko      Native  ARUBAUK-NET
 70  2:2452/502   Ludwig Bernhartzeder   Native  DTAG
 71  2:423/39     Karel Kral             Native  WEDOS
 72  2:5080/102   Stas Degteff           T-6to4  NOVATOR
 73  2:280/1049   Simon Voortman         Native  Solcon
 74  1:102/127    Bradley Thornton       Native  Hetzner
 75  2:335/364    Fabio Bizzi            Native  IT-ALBACOM
 76  1:124/5016   Nigel Reed             Native  DAL1-US       f
 77  2:5020/843   Peter Antonov          Native  BelCloud
 78  2:5075/37    Andrew Komardin        Native  IHC-NET
 79  1:153/146    Erich Bublitz          Native  LINODE-US
 80  1:106/633    William Williams       Native  LINODE-US     PM *1
 81  2:263/5      Martin List-Petersen   Native  TuxBox
 82  2:5030/1520  Andrey Geyko           T-6in4  he.net        f
 83  1:229/664    Jay Harris             Native  Rogers
 84  1:142/103    Brian Rogers           T-6in4  he.net
 85  1:134/101    Kostie Muirhead        Native  Hurricane El. f
 86  2:280/2030   Martien Korenblom      Native  Transip
 87  3:633/509    Deon George            Native  Telstra
 88  2:5020/4441  Yuri Myakotin          Native  SOVINTEL
 89  1:320/319    Andrew Leary           Native  Comcast       f
 90  2:240/5824   Anna Christina Nass    T-6in4  he.net        f
 91  2:460/5858   Stas Mishchenkov       T-6in4  he.net        f INO4
 92  1:105/5      Michael Pierce         Native  Comcast
 93  1:218/401    James Downs            Native  ORG-TT1
 94  2:5030/3165  Serg Podtynnyi         Native  DIGITALOCEAN
 95  2:301/812    Benoit Panizon         Native  WOODYV6
 96  1:229/616    Vasily Losev           Native  GIGEPORT
 97  2:301/113    Alisha Manuela Stutz   T-6in4  he.net
 98  2:5035/63    Vladimir Goncharov     Native  RFEIV6NET
 99  1:134/100    Kostie Muirhead        Native  Hurricane El. f
 100  1:134/102    Shelley Petersen       Native  Hurricane El. f
 101  1:134/103    Gordon Muirhead        Native  Hurricane El. f
 102  1:134/302    Adam Park              Native  Hurricane El. f
 
 
 T-6in4             Static 6in4
 T-AYIY             Dynamic AYIYA
 T-6to4             6to4
 T-6RD              6RD
 
 Remarks:
 
 f     Has a ::f1d0:<zone>:<net>:<node> style host address.
 (zone, net, node in decimal notation)
 IO    Incoming only (Node can not make outgoing IPv6 calls)
 OO    Outgoing only (Node can not accept incoming IPv6 calls).
 INO4  No IPv4 (Node can not accept incoming IPv4 calls).
 PO4   Prefers Out on 4 (Node can make outgoing IPv6 calls,
 but is configured to try IPv4 first)
 6DWN  The IPv6 connectivity of this node is temporarely down.
 NO6   The node no longer presents an IPv6 address in the nodelist
 and will soon be removed from this list.
 DOWN  This node is Down for both IPv4 and IPv6 and will be
 removed from this list if the condition pertains.
 PM    Prospective Member. The node has demonstrated IPv6
 capability but is not listed or does not advertise an
 IPv6 address in the Fidonet nodelist yet.
 
 PM *1 [2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe2b:c319]
 
 
 Notes:
 
 To make an IPv6 connection to a node connected via 6to4 tunneling
 one may have to force the mailer into IPv6 (-6 option in binkd's
 node config for binkd up to 1.1a-96, -64 option for binkd 1.1a-97
 and up when compiled with AF_FORCE=1). If the destination address
 is a 6to4 tunnel address (2002::/16) many OSs default to IPv4 if
 an IPv4 address is present.
 
 
 Submitted on day 136
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)
 
 
- 
From  FidoNews Robot@2:2/2 to  All on Mon May 17 02:28:28 2021
 
 
 
=================================================================
 SPECIAL INTEREST =================================================================
 
 Last week's statistics from the Fidoweb
 By EchoTime, 2:203/0
 
 (Some nets may have lost their last
 digit for technical reasons)
 
 pkt (toss-toss)            msg (write-toss)
 nodes        mean     dev     no        mean     dev     no
 
 154/*        3.7m    3.3m    641        0.8h    2.6h    641
 201/*        1.0m    0.4m      5        1.9h    4.4h      5
 221/*        0.7m    0.6m    610        4.0h    8.9h    610
 280/*        1.0m    3.0m    893        5.3h    9.6h    892
 292/*        5.6m    9.1m     82        3.2h    3.9h     81
 320/*        2.0m    0.8m    219        3.4h   15.8h    219
 502/*        0.6m    0.6m      2       10.9h   15.1h      2
 
 Sigma        1.9m    3.3m   2452        3.6h    9.0h   2450
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 Nodelist Stats
 
 Input nodelist  nodelist.134
 size  186.8kb
 date  2021-05-14
 
 The nodelist has   1025 nodes in it
 and a total of   1483 non-comment entries
 
 including     4 zones
 33 regions
 174 hosts
 69 hubs
 admin overhead   280 ( 27.32 %)
 
 and   110 private nodes
 32 nodes down
 36 nodes on hold
 off line overhead   178 ( 17.37 %)
 
 
 Speed summary:
 
 >9600 =     48 (  4.68 %)
 9600 =    192 ( 18.73 %)
 (HST  =    3 or   1.56 %)
 (CSP  =    0 or   0.00 %)
 (PEP  =    0 or   0.00 %)
 (MAX  =    0 or   0.00 %)
 (HAY  =    0 or   0.00 %)
 (V32  =   81 or  42.19 %)
 (V32B =   18 or   9.38 %)
 (V34  =   94 or  48.96 %)
 (V42  =   82 or  42.71 %)
 (V42B =   19 or   9.90 %)
 2400 =      1 (  0.10 %)
 1200 =      0 (  0.00 %)
 300 =    784 ( 76.49 %)
 
 ISDN =     34 (  3.32 %)
 
 -----------------------------------------------------
 IP Flags   Protocol                Number of systems -----------------------------------------------------
 IBN        Binkp                      802 ( 78.24 %) ----------------------------------
 IFC        Raw ifcico                  87 (  8.49 %) ----------------------------------
 IFT        FTP                         61 (  5.95 %) ----------------------------------
 ITN        Telnet                     164 ( 16.00 %) ----------------------------------
 IVM        Vmodem                      14 (  1.37 %) ----------------------------------
 IP         Other                        4 (  0.39 %) ----------------------------------
 INO4       IPv6 only                    2 (  0.20 %) ----------------------------------
 
 CrashMail capable =    887 ( 86.54 %)
 MailOnly nodes    =    321 ( 31.32 %)
 Listed-only nodes =     23 (  2.24 %)
 
 
 
 [Report produced by NETSTATS - A PD pgm]
 [        Revised by B Felten,   2:203/2]
 [           NetStats  3.8    2014-11-23]
 
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 --- Azure/NewsPrep 3.0
 * Origin: Home of the Fidonews (2:2/2.0)