I would like some bibliographic information and any other, about a
higrohemangioma of the face in a girl three years old. She started a
tratment with corticosteroids but had no significant improvement. Can
somebody please, send me places where I can found information on the
net? I would also appreciate the adress of a listserv on this subject.
Thank you very much.
ju…@ax.ibase.org.br
========
Newsgroups: news.admin.misc,news.announce.newusers,news.answers
Subject: How to Get Information about Networks
From: netannou…@deshaw.com (Mark Moraes)
Date: Thu, 28 Sep 1995 08:00:38 GMT
Archive-name: internet/network-info/part1
Last-change: 11 May 1995 by netannou…@deshaw.com (Mark Moraes)
Changes-posted-to: news.admin.misc,news.misc,news.answers
——————————
Subject: Introduction.
This is a periodic posting on how to get information about the Internet and
how to get information about connecting to the (US) National Science
Foundation’s NSFNET through an NSF-affiliated regional network, or to get
commercial Internet service through a commercial service provider.
Because the contents of the documents referred to in this posting are
constantly being updated, this posting only describes how to obtain a
current copy rather than providing the data directly.
In this document, electronic mail addresses, commands that you should use
and other such references are indented by a single TAB character
(may appear on your screen as some number of spaces, typically
When you use the reference, do not include the TAB.
——————————
Subject: Table of Contents.
1. Introduction.
2. Table of Contents.
3. The Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC).
4. Internet documents and specifications.
5. Commercial networks.
6. Contributors.
——————————
Subject: The Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC).
The Internet Network Information Center (InterNIC) makes current
documentation on the NSFNET available via a mail server, by anonymous ftp,
gopher, WAIS and the World-Wide Web. If all else fails, you can contact
them by phone. The InterNIC has a wealth of documents on the Internet; by
the time you finish reading the introductory ones, you probably won’t need
this posting any more!
+ Getting information via electronic mail. (some sort of E-mail access needed)
If you’re on some sort of network that can send and receive electronic
mail from the Internet, you can get various documents from the InterNIC’s
automated mail server. Send mail to
mails…@is.internic.net
and leave the "Subject" line blank. Here’s a suggested initial message:
begin
help
index
send about-infoguide/about-infoguide
end
Be sure your mailer puts out a valid "From:" line that the server can
respond to! If you have problems with the reply (eg. you don’t get
a reply within a few days), try sending the same message with the line
reply YOUR-EMAIL-ADDRESS
after the begin line. Make sure YOUR-EMAIL-ADDRESS is one that can
be replied to from the Internet. Ask your site’s postmaster for
help, if you need to.
+ Using Gopher (Internet access needed)
Use your "gopher" client program to connect to
gopher.internic.net
eg. on a typical Unix machine, try
gopher gopher.internic.net
or, if you do not have a gopher client installed, you can use a
"telnet" client program to connect to
gopher.internic.net
eg.
telnet gopher.internic.net
When you get the login: prompt, reply
gopher
+ Using the anonymous File Transfer Protocol (FTP) (Internet access needed)
Use your FTP client program to connect to
is.internic.net
eg.
ftp is.internic.net
When you get the login: prompt, reply
anonymous
and follow the instructions on your screen.
+ Using Wide Area Information Services (WAIS) (Internet access needed)
source name: internic-infoguide
server name: is.internic.net
+ World-Wide Web (WWW) (Internet access needed)
With your WWW client (eg. Lynx, Mosaic or WWW), give the reference
http://www.internic.net/
——————————
Subject: Internet documents and specifications.
General Internet information documents are available from the
DDN Network Information Center (which is part of the Internet).
There are several "For Your Infor