CONTENTS: pine ppp procmail smailcfg trn pine: Pine version 3.96 pine: pine: A menu driven user mail program. Originally based on Elm (Pine Is pine: No-longer Elm), but with many additional features that make it pine: easier to use. pine: pine: pine: pine: pine: pine: ppp: PPP for Linux, versions 2.2.0f and 2.3.5 ppp: ppp: PPP for Linux -- Michael Callahan's ppp.c kernel driver and the pppd ppp: daemon (ported by Al Longyear). Linux PPP support is included as a ppp: loadable module in the modules.tgz package. This package also ppp: contains pppsetup, an easy-to-use, user-friendly utility for setting ppp: up your PPP daemon. ppp: ppp: ppp: ppp: procmail: The procmail mail processing program. (v3.10 1994/10/31) procmail: procmail: Can be used to create mail-servers, mailing lists, sort your incoming procmail: mail into separate folders/files (real convenient when subscribing to procmail: one or more mailing lists or for prioritising your mail), preprocess procmail: your mail, start any programs upon mail arrival (e.g. to generate procmail: different chimes on your workstation for different types of mail) or procmail: selectively forward certain incoming mail automatically to someone. procmail: procmail: The author of procmail is Stephen R. van den Berg. procmail: smailcfg: Configuration files for sendmail. smailcfg: smailcfg: These files are used to create sendmail.cf configuration files. The smailcfg: m4 macro processor (on the D series of disks) is also required in smailcfg: order to make use of these files. smailcfg: smailcfg: These files and the documentation in /usr/src/sendmail should make it smailcfg: possible to support virtually any mail configuration. NOTE: you smailcfg: probably won't need this package if you're planning to use one of the smailcfg: sendmail.cf samples included in the sendmail package. smailcfg: trn: A threaded news reader for reading a remote NNTP server. (v. 3.5) trn: trn: Compiled to use Overviews or mthreads, and to read news through your trn: NNTP server. Be sure to set NNTPSERVER in your /etc/profile or trn: /etc/csh.login. trn: trn: trn: trn: trn: trn: