COLUMBIA MM VERSSION 0.91 Sat Oct 5 13:49:26 2002 Columbia MM is a reincarnation of the DECSYSTEM-20 MM (Mail Manager) program. The original was written in PDP-10 assembler by Stuart McLure Cracraft, Mike McMahon, and Mark Crispin (among others) in the late 1970s to mid 1980s. Columbia MM was written at Columbia University in C for Unix but with an eye to portability. In times past, it was built on lots of Unix platforms as well as on non-Unix platforms including DOS and possibly VMS. The original work was done as part of the Hermit Project under a grant from Digital Equipment Corporation, 1984-87. The programmers were Chris Maio, Andy Lowry, Melissa Metz, Fuat Baran, Howie Kaye; others may have included Delores Ng, Bill Catchings, Bill Schilit, maybe even me, who remembers. The principal investigator for the DEC grant was Frank da Cruz (me). More about Hermit here: http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/hermit.html Work on MM by approximately the same crew continued after Hermit was terminated because it had become Columbia's primary email client. Version 0.90 (1990) added various user-friendliness features designed by a committee of bigwigs ("novice" mode, ?-help categorized by topic, etc), and saw heavy service for some years but was gradually overtaken by Pine, and then later by PC- and Web-based mail. Y2K and Y2K1 patches were added in 1999-2001. MM is now used mainly by touch-typing menu-hating die-hards (like me), for reasons such as those elaborated here: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/safe.html Columbia MM 0.91 (September 2002) incorporates all patches to 0.90, fixes some other problems, and adds a couple new features (downloading, handling of 8-bit message text). It is distributed together with Columbia CCMD (a TOPS-20 COMND JSYS simulator, also a Hermit Project product), upon which MM depends. Both are in source-code form, and must be built from source. The distribution consists of the following files: mm-ccmd-0.91.tar (also available in .Z and .gz format) - Source code. Several binaries are collected in the binaries subdirectory of this directory with names like: mm-0.91-hardware-os-osversion for example: binaries/mm-0.91-i386-linux-rh7.1 for Red Hat Linux 7.1 on the PC. Other files are docs from 0.90 not included in the tar archive: mm-in-2-pages.hqx MacWrite II format 2-page quick reference. mm-in-2-pages.txt Plain text file version of above, not quite in two pages, and crudely formatted. mm-intro.txt Introductory document to MM. mm-manual-mss.tar.Z Scribe sources to MM manual (mm-manual.ps) (Only grab this if you have Scribe). mm-manual-palatino.ps.Z Postscript format MM manual (Palatino font). mm-manual-times.ps.Z Postscript format MM manual (TimesRoman). mm-manual.txt.Z Text file format of MM manual (with some amount of lossage where figures did not format correctly due to line length). release-0.91.txt Latest release notes. When unpacked, the mm-0.91.tar archive yields a directory tree containing: work: README.TXT (file) This file release-0.91.txt (file) Version 0.91 user documentation release-0.xx.txt (file) User documentation for 0.90, 0.88, etc. notes-fdc.txt (file) Edit history of my changes notes-klh.txt (file) Edit history of Ken Harrenstein's changes ccmd (directory) CCMD source code, makefile, etc. mm (directory) MM source code, makefile, etc. mm/sysh (directory) System-dependent header files for MM. mm/help (directory) Tree of help-text files. mm/INSTALL (file) Installation instructions. To build MM, first cd to ccmd and type "make xxx", where xxx is "solaris", "linux" or other platform name (see the Makefile for possibilities). Then cd to the mm directory and type "make xxx" (see the Makefile for xxx's). This should produce an "mm" executable, ready to run, and a "movemail" executable, which should be installed in (or linked to from) /usr/local/lib/mm/. See the mm/INSTALL file for details. Builds known to work in version 0.91: Solaris (2.5.1 and later); SunOS 4.1; Linux (e.g. RH7.1); FreeBSD 4.4; OpenBSD 3.0, NetBSD 1.5.2. Builds known not to work in version 0.91: HP-UX 10.20 The rest are unknown. If you can verify a working build or fix a nonworking build, please let us know via email to: bug-mm@columbia.edu (End)