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ashmount/general #1, from ashmount, 218 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 19:53
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TITLE: Welcome to PowWow.

What is PowWow?

PowWow is Ashmount Research Ltd's Multi-User and Multi-Service Off Line 
Reader and Email and Conferencing system

Press the spacebar now to move to the next message.

ashmount

 
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ashmount/general #3, from ashmount, 1504 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:25
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TITLE: Parts of The Screen
OK, as you look at the screen it's split into 2 main sections, an upper 
section (the thread pane) and a lower section (the message pane).

The Message pane shows the text of the currently highlit message (one of 
the messages should be highlit, hopefully message number 3 right now).  
pressing page up/down will scroll this message text up and down, you 
will need to do that to read all of this message.  Please don't press 
the arrow keys as yet, as they will confuse you

The Thread pane shows how the messages are linked together by the little 
lines joining them, it also shows the message number (far left), the 
author of the message (in this case ashmount) and the title line of the 
message.  There is also a symbol to the far left of the message, that is 
an unread marker, after you have read the message that little symbol 
will vanish.  

OK we've briefly covered the most important bits of the screen, but 
there are also other screeen elements, such as the toolbar (top) and the 
status bar (bottom), if you are using a mouse wave it over the icons at 
the top and look at the status bar, it displays some text about the 
function the icon the mouse is over, PLEASE don't click on anything yet 

if you look on the VIEW menu you will see that there are plenty of bits 
and pieces that you can twiddle with fonts, colours, turning things on 
and off, all that sort of stuff, feel free to change these things as you 
wish.

OK time to move on to the next message

ashmount
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ashmount/general #4, from ashmount, 412 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:28
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TITLE: Conference Structure
PowWow stuctures the messages it keeps according to this hierarchy. 

Service  ->  Conference ->  Topic   ->  Thread  ->  Message.
Service  ->  Forum      ->  Section ->  Thread  ->  Message

(a Forum is the same as a Conference, and a Topic is the same as a 
Section)

The comments to this message explain what these are.

Press the Enter key to see the first of these comments.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #5, from ashmount, 693 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:32
Comment to 4
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Services

PowWow can carry messages from public conferencing systems such as 
CompuServe, CIX, UseNet as well as local conferences (and email as 
well).

The conferences from each of these public conferencing systems are 
grouped into a Service: thus the CIX conferences appear in the 'cix' 
Service.  Those from CompuServe appear as the cis: service and those 
from UseNet as cixnews:

The conferences which are only on the network are part of what we call 
the "local" service.  PowWow prefixes remote conference names by the 
Service name, e.g. cix:jokes/tasteless.

Each service can carry many conferences on different subjects.

Press the Enter key now to find out about conferences.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #6, from ashmount, 1458 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:39
Comment to 5
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Conferences (or Forums)

A conference is a discussion area where participants interested in a 
particular subject can exchange electronic messages. PowWow manages the 
message exchange so that all participants can read all messages, and 
presents the messages in a way that makes it easy to see how the 
messages relate to each other. Each conference has a name, which 
expresses the purpose of the conference. Examples might include Quality, 
Design, Jokes, Windows, Food_and_Drink (note that spaces are replaced 
with underscores in the last example).

There are a number of conferences in which you can participate. If you 
wish to participate in a conference, you must first 'join'. Most 
conferences (local or remote) are open to all PowWow users, and you can 
register in the ones of interest yourself. In fact, we have set up 
PowWow so you start off already registered in all open conferences.
 
Some local conferences can be 'closed' so that only people who should 
have access to that information should in those conferences, this allows 
you to set up many autonomous groups non overlaping groups so that you 
can structuire things.  Some remote conferences can also be closed as 
well, and you cannot join them until a moderator or sysop on the remote 
system lets you in.   

If you want to setup more local conferences then just get the system 
administrator to do it using the menu command Admin, Create Conference, 
it's dead easy to do.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #7, from ashmount, 1188 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:43
Comment to 6
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Topics (or Sections)

A conference is made up of one or more topics. Topics subdivide the 
subject material of the conference to make it easier for you to pick and 
choose the areas of particular interest, find the message that 
you remember reading last week, and so on. for instance the 
Food_and_Drink conference might have the following topics takeouts, 
macdonalds, high_cuisine and beans.

Some topics may be set aside for special purposes. For example, a 
conference may be divided into a free-for-all discussion topic 
(typically called chatter or general), and an announcement topic to 
which messages can only be added by the Moderator of that topic.

A conference can have as many as fifty topics. In practice, most 
conferences will have two or three, with the busiest having perhaps as 
many as ten. Topics can be created and deleted during the lifetime of 
the conference, as the interests and activities of the participants 
dictate.

In the pull-down list of topics on the toolbar, and in various other 
places in PowWow, the conference and topic names are written with a / 
separator, for example 'Food_and_Drink/beans' or 'ashmount/general' or 
'cix:jokes/clean'.  

ashmount
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ashmount/general #8, from ashmount, 833 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:46
Comment to 7
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Threads

A thread is a set of messages which indirectly or directly comment on
a head message.

When someone has something new to say in a topic (e.g. a new problem
in telepathy/problems, or a new advert in adverts/for_sale) the Say 
(or Compose) command from the Actions menu is used to post this as a new 
message at the start of a thread.

Then when someone comments on this message (using the Comment (or Reply) 
command from the Actions menu or Comment icon), the comment message is 
linked to the first one in the thread. Further comments can be linked to 
the root or branches of the growing thread, wherever the comment best 
fits the discussion.

So threads keep together the flow of discussion on the original
message. The indentation and lines in the Thread pane show how the 
messages fit together in the discussion.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #9, from ashmount, 760 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:48
Comment to 8
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Messages

A message is a single posting by one person. It may be a new message 
(also called a root message or say), or a comment to another message 
(also called a reply). If the latter, it is linked with the other 
messages in a thread, as shown by the lines.

All messages are identified by the conference/topic, message number,
the ID of the poster, and the date and time.

To recap on the structure, you are now reading message #9,
in the 'Conference structure' thread,
of the general topic,
in the ashmount conference,
on the local service.

To go on with the tutorial, do NOT press Enter or spacebar. Instead, 
press the left arrow key (<-) to get back to the head of the thread, 
then the down arrow key to get to the next message in the tutorial.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #10, from ashmount, 2079 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:49
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TITLE: Collapsing and expanding threads
Where did all the messages go when you hit the <- key? Instead of seeing 
the first lines of all the messages in the 'Conference structure' 
thread, we can now only see the original message subject.

Look at the left of the line. There there is a folder icon (it looks 
like a tabbed separator for the 3x5 cards people used to use before 
computers). This shows that there are several messages folded into this 
one line on the display. We say that the thread has been collapsed.

Try pressing the up arrow key until it the Conference structure thread 
is highlighted, then expanding and collapsing the thread a few times 
with the -> and <- keys. Look at what happens to the folder icon. Then 
return here (with the down arrow key).

The folder icon changed to look like a cross between a file card 
separator and an open filing wallet taken out of a filing cabinet.
- The open version shows that this is the original message of the thread 
  which we can see in its entirity.
- The closed version shows that there is a collapsed thread we can 
  expand.
- Three dots (...) shows that we have lost the original to the thread.  
- While no icon at the left, like the one headed 'Tutorial for PowWow' 
  shows that there have been no comments to the message.

Expanding the threads helps you read every message in a topic. Collapse 
the threads if you wish to skim a conference, dipping in to occasional 
threads of interest. You can set the way threads appear when you start 
reading a topic, from the Options menu. If 'View Threads' is ticked, all 
threads are expanded; if 'View Roots only' is ticked, then all the 
threads are collapsed, showing only the original subjects, until you 
expand one of them. If you try changing this default now, make sure you 
end up on 'View Roots only' before continuing with the rest of the 
tutorial.

You can collapse or expand a thread by double clicking on the folder 
icon. This is an alternative to using the left and right arrow keys.

Now press the down arrow key to read the next message.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #11, from ashmount, 3146 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:52
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TITLE: Read and unread messages
PowWow keeps track of which messages you have read and which are still 
unread. This is quite useful (in fact essential) in topics you read 
every day.

If you look at the thread pane, you will see some messages have an 
icon next to them which looks something like a letter half-way into a 
letter box. This is not an invitation for burglars - it's merely 
PowWow's way of saying that it thinks you haven't read the message.

So if this is the first time you have done the tutorial, all the 
messages below this one should have the unread message icon next to 
them. Whereas the 'Welcome to PowWow' message has no icon next to it. 
You've already read it.

So why do some of the messages you've read have the letterbox icon next 
to them? Well PowWow cannot follow your eyes, or tell the difference 
between a message you have passed over and one you have finished with. 
You have to tell it you have read a message. One way is by hitting the 
Enter key. So when you hit the Enter key after reading the 'Tutorial for 
PowWow' message, PowWow marked it as read, and then jumped to the next 
unread message.

There are other ways to tell PowWow you have read a message. Try this. 
With the up arrow key, move to the 'Collapsing and expanding threads' 
message. Press the space bar. Then down arrow back to this message.

Pressing the space bar marks a message or thread as read. PowWow then 
jumps to the next thread containing an unread message. The 'Conference 
Structure' thread contains an unread message. Use the arrow keys to go 
up, expand the thread, find the message, collapse the thread and come 
back here.

Back at last! You see it was the message about 'Messages' that is still 
unread. Since you left it using the arrow keys, you haven't told PowWow 
you have finished with it. Do that now. Use the up arrow key to 
highlight the 'Conference structure' thread, then press the space bar. 
You should end up reading this message again.

In general, you use the Enter and space bar keys to systematically work 
through a topic, reading new messages. When you just want to get a quick 
look at a few messages in a topic you don't normally read, it is usually 
easier to use the arrow keys, and not bother about marking messages as 
read. You also use the arrow keys to look again at messages you have 
already read.

Occasionally, you mark as read a message you really want to go back and 
look at again. You can mark it as unread again by highlighting the 
message and pressing U. Do that now to the 'Collapsing and expanding 
threads' message, then press the space bar to mark it as read again.

Don't worry if you forget these keystrokes, most of them have menu 
equivalents (on the Actions menu), or icons (move the cursor over the 
icons on the toolbar/toolbox, and look at the explanations in the status 
bar at the bottom left). There are even menu items and actions to mark 
every message in a topic as read, or even, every message on PowWow as 
read. These are useful if you have been away for a while, and don't want 
to read through a lot of messages.

Now press the Enter key to continue.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #12, from ashmount, 1304 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 20:56
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TITLE: Browsing Messages
You've seen how to systematically work through a topic. Now spend 10-15 
minutes browsing around the many conferences and topics available on our 
PowWow installation, The rest of this message tells you how to get 
there.

There are a variety of navigating around the services, conferences and 
topics on PowWow. One is to use the drop-down list on the toolbar or the 
other is to press the j key or finally to click the RIGHT mouse button 
on either the message or thread window.

1. First select the service. Either click on a service (using the mouse) 
or select it from the keyboard (you can move the highlight using the up 
and down arrow keys, or by pressing the first letter of the service 
name).

2. Then select a conference in that service. Make the conference list 
active either by clicking in it, or pressing the tab key. Once it is 
active, you can use any of the above mouse or keyboard techniques to 
select a conference.

3. Finally select a topic in the conference (tab into the topic list 
first). When you are happy with your selection, click on the OK button. 
After a brief while, PowWow will show you the messages in that topic.

When you have finished browsing around, come back to this topic
Local service, ashmount/general and press Enter to go on.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #13, from ashmount, 2368 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 21:00
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TITLE: Saying something New
Suppose you want to say something new in a topic. Then you should start 
a new thread. This is what the Say tool (the one that looks a bit like a 
speech baloon) does when you click on it.

This message is a "Say".

Say posts a message into the current topic as the start of a new thread. 
You should use Say instead of Comment when you wish to start a 
conversation on a new subject, as opposed to 'joining in' to an existing 
discussion. If you use say when you meant to comment, the discussion 
will go all over the place, and it will be hard for others to follow it.

You should be able to say something here and now, click on either the 
Say Icon or press S (or C if you are in CIS Mode).  Up will pop the 
message editor.

Click in the Subject panel and type in a subject (e.g. what you want to 
sell). Then click in the message space below, and start typing in the 
message. 

If you make a mistake, you can correct it using any of the standard 
Windows editing techniques. As well as deleting one character at a time 
in the usual way (the Del key to delete forward, the <- key above Return 
to delete the previous character), you can use the mouse to select some 
text. Click at the beginning of the text you want to select, hold down 
the left mouse button, and move the mouse to the other end. Let go - the 
region will be highlighted in another colour.

You can then delete the region (pres <-), copy it (Ctrl-C, or select 
Edit/Copy), or cut it (Ctrl-X, or select Edit/Cut). If you have cut or 
copied some text, it is in the clipboard, ready to paste somewhere else. 
Move the cursor to where you want to paste it, and press Ctrl-V (or 
select Edit/Paste) to insert the text there. You can use these methods 
to move text between different Windows applications, such as Write and 
Notepad, not just in PowWow.

When you have finished editing your message to your satisfaction, click 
on the OK button to add it if you are happy with it. If you are not, 
click on Cancel to abandon the message, or Defer if you want some time 
to think about it. If you defer a message, it will pop up into the 
message editor the next time you use it (until you log out of the PC, 
when everything is lost from your temporary network directory).

Next we will cover how to comment (or Reply) to a message.  Time to 
press the enter key.  

ashmount
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ashmount/general #14, from ashmount, 936 chars, Thu, 24 Mar 94 21:04
Comment to 13
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Commenting (Replying) on a message

This is a comment (or in CIS speak, a Reply)

Comment posts a message into a topic as a reply to an existing message. 
Use this to keep continuing discussion on a subject in one place. Use 
say to start new threads.

Making a comment is easy. Browse the messages until you are looking at 
the message you want to comment on. Click on the Comment tool (it looks 
like a pair of single quotation marks) or Press the C key (or in CIS 
Mode the R key). Up will pop the message editor, into which you can type 
your comment, when you are happy with ytour comment then press OK

If you cannot see the message you are commenting on, drag the message 
editor window out of the way by pointing the cursor at its title bar 
(MsgEd - MSG.ED), holding down the left mouse button and moving the 
mouse.

Try commenting to this message, and type in anything you feel like.  
("test comment" seems very common)

ashmount
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ashmount/general #15, from ashmount, 1522 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:26
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TITLE: Electronic Mail
There are two sorts of Electronic Mail supported by PowWow, there is 
internal mail, and external mail.  Internal mail is local mail and is 
held only locally.  External mail must be sent via an external 
service (such as CIX or CIS), and can reach anyone accessable to that 
external service.  Both CIX and CIS are connected to the internet, ans 
so you can send email via those to many millions of users.  


Mail provides a way of sending messages to other PowWow users. These 
messages are private: they are sent directly to the recipient and do not 
appear in conferences, so they will not be read by other users. They 
will reach the recipient's mailbox in a few seconds. So this can be a 
very quick way of sending messages - always assuming that the recipient 
frequently checks his/her PowWow mail.

Computer conferencing is the electronic analogue of the noticeboard, 
meeting, seminar, magazine and the newspaper letters column. Most things 
we do in groups are better supported in conferences - either general 
conferences open to all interested in the subject, or closed conferences 
for a group.

Electronic mail is analogous to individual letters, telephone calls, 
memos or FAXes. Use it when you want to contact named individuals. The 
electronic form is quicker, automatically identified and dated, and can 
be processed in a computer after you receive it.

For now we will concentrate on internal mail. Read the comments to this 
message to find out more (hint: press Enter).

ashmount
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ashmount/general #16, from ashmount, 805 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:33
Comment to 15
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Sending mail - replying to messages

A common use of mail is to send personal replies to conference messages. 
just view the message you want to send mail to and then click on the 
mail tool in the icon bar (the mail tool looks like an envelope), the 
messsage editor will appear, then click on the Originate button on the 
message editor (ctrl+R) and the nickname of the recipient will be placed 
in the To: field. So you just need to click in each of the other fields 
(or Tab into them) and type in a subject, a message, and who the message 
is to be copied to (the Cc: field). IMPORTANT - if you want to keep a 
copy of the mail message, you must type in your nickname in the Cc: 
field.

When you are happy with the message, click on the OK button. Then come 
back here to read the next comment.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #17, from ashmount, 397 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:35
Comment to 16
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Sending mail - new messages

You can send messages to anyone whose nickname you know - you don't have 
to wait until they post or mail you a message you can reply to. Just 
click on the Mail tool (or if using the menus Mail, Send Mail, or press 
the M key) and wait for the Message Editor to appear. You can type in 
the subject, message and Ccs as before (don't forget to copy to 
yourself).

ashmount
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ashmount/general #18, from ashmount, 682 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:39
Comment to 15
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Receiving Mail Messages

Your incoming mail messages are posted to a 'dummy' conference called 
Mail. The topic name is the same as your PowWow nickname. This topic is 
private to you: no other user (other than System Administrators) can 
access it.

There is no need to join to the Mail conference: you will be joined 
to it automatically as soon as mail is sent to you.

You can reply to mail, mark mail as read or unread, and also delete 
mail. To delete a mail message, just highlight it and press to D key (or 
click on the delete tool, the dustbin icon). A dustbin will appear on 
the line. The message will be deleted the next time an administrator 
prunes old messages.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #19, from ashmount, 147 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:40
Comment to 15
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Mailing multiple recipients

Simply put all their nicknames in the To: field, separated by 
semicolons.  You can do the same in the Cc: field.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #20, from ashmount, 1063 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:46
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TITLE: Filing and printing
When reading message under PowWow, you sometimes come accross ones you 
want to keep for later use. You can copy them to a file, or even print 
them to paper (if you hate trees).

Either click on the File or Print tool (they look like a filing cabinet 
and a printer), or select File or Print from the File menu.

You get a choice of filing/printing the current message, the whole 
thread, or a range of message numbers. Click the appropriate button, 
then click OK. Up will pop the Windows file save or print dialogs, from 
which you can specify the file destination and name, or the printer it 
should go to.

For small amounts of text, remember you can copy, cut and paste between 
Windows applications. So you could copy something from PowWow and 
paste it into an essay you are writing in Windows Write. The PowWow 
message editor also allows you to read in text files and save selections 
as text files (not word processing files, as produced by Write or 
Word or WordPerfect).

Press Enter to read about Bookmarking Messages

ashmount
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ashmount/general #21, from ashmount, 1127 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 07:56
Comment to 20
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Bookmarking Messages

Rather than filing or printing messages you can Bookmark them (by 
pressing the B key or selecting Edit, Bookmark).  When you bookmark a 
message a little book icon appears next to it in the thread pane.  

What are Bookmarks?  
Well each user has 10 sets of bookmarks, and each set of bookmarks can 
be named as you wish and can contain a vast number of messages (32,000 
approximatly).  Bookmarks are a way for you to track and mark across 
topics, conferences and services different but related pieces of 
information.  

you may define a set called "interesting info" and when you come across 
anything that appears to be interesting and that you will want to refer 
to later just bookmark that message.  

What can you do with Bookmarks?
Well you can mark all the messages in a bookmark set as read, unread, 
keep delete or ignore using the command on the Actions Menu Mark 
Bookmarks.  You can also browse through the unread bookmarks using 
Shift+Enter rather than Enter which takes you to the next message.

And talking about enter it's time to press it again and move onto the 
next message.

ashmount
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ashmount/general #22, from ashmount, 1274 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:07
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TITLE: Searching for Messages
PowWow contains two commands which you can use to locate messages or 
text within messages.  

on the Edit Menu there are the Find (Find Again) and Search commands

Find:
Searches messages in the CURRENT topic. If the specified text is found, 
the highlight bar moves to the appropriate message in the thread pane 
and the found text is shown highlighted in the message pane.  
(there is also a Find Again command [shortcut F3] which will search 
the current topic for the same thing again from this point onwards.  

Search:
This is a much more powerful feature and works in conjunction with the 
current Bookmark set.  The best way to use this is to have a search 
bookmark set (eg mentally assign set 10 for this purpose) and switch to 
that (using View, Bookmark Set) before doing the search.  Don't be 
bothered about the name, PowWow will reassign the name of the Bookmark 
Set to be the text of the search. 
Searches is across all conferences and topics or any given Conference or 
Topic, your choice, obviously a search across a smaller range will be 
faster. Any 'hits' are automatically Bookmarked.  If you then mark these 
bookmarked messages unread (Actions, Mark Bookmark, Unread) you can 
easily browse them using Shitf+Enter

ashmount
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ashmount/general #23, from ashmount, 1349 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:16
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TITLE: Joining and resigning from conferences
We have set up PowWow to join you automatically to all available local 
conferences, you should also be joined to any new conferneces created 
(unless those new conferences are closed). If you encounter any that you 
are not interested in, you can resign from them. Once you resign, PowWow 
will stop showing you new messages from that conference. You can also 
resign from particular topics, while continuing to read new messages in 
the remaining ones.

To Resign from a conference:
1. From the conference menu select Resign, Selected Conference 
2. Highlight the desired conference name (click on the appropriate
   service to obtain a list of conferences in that Service). Avoid
   clicking on any topic name, to ensure that no topic name is
   highlighted.
3. Click OK.

To resign from a topic, follow the instructions above but explicitly 
select a topic.

If you do not wish to be joined to new conferences and topics, you can 
turn off the autojoin behaviour. With autojoin off, you can still join 
conferences manually, by selecting  Join local  from the conference 
menu.

To turn Autojoin off:
1. Select 'User Options' from the Admin menu
2. Uncheck the Join checkbox (clicking on it will toggle it on/off)
3. Click OK 

For Autojoin changes to take effect, quit PowWow and log in again.

ashmount
==========
ashmount/general #24, from ashmount, 1051 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:22
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TITLE: Joining remote conferences
PowWow can also join Conferences and Forums on external services (CIX 
and CompuServe), and they appear just like the local Conferences.  
Obviously you can only do this if you are a member of the service.  You 
can use them just like normal conferences, except that actions that you 
perform (commenst and says and such like) don't actully happen until 
after the System Administrator next connects to that service (called 
Blinking).

If you start reading a conference in the CIX or CIS service, you can 
view a list of all the conferences available on that service. Select 
'View Service Conferences...' from the conferences menu. After a while, 
up will pop a window listing the conferences. You can scroll and search 
through this list. If you find a conference that is worth downloading, 
highlight the line with the conference name, and click on the Join 
button. The next time the System Administrator connects to CIX or CIS, 
PowWow will join the conference and download a few messages from each 
topic.

ashmount
==========
ashmount/general #25, from ashmount, 43 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:46
Comment to 10
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This is a sample for thread collapsing

ashmount
==========
ashmount/general #26, from ashmount, 49 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:47
Comment to 25
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This is another sample for thread collapsing

ashmount
==========
ashmount/general #27, from ashmount, 640 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 09:05
Comment to 4
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PowWow has alternate terminology and keystrokes for some things, and 
this can be confusing for some users.  This terminology is changed by 
selecting (or deselecting) CIS Mode in the User Options dialog (accessed 
from the Admin menu).  If you are a CIS user and used to the CIS 
terminology you probably want to check this option.

CIS Mode = Unchecked          CIS Mode = Checked
Conference                    Forum
Topic                         Section
Say                           Compose
Comment                       Reply
S key (does a Say)            C key (does a compose)
C key (does a Comment)        R key (does a Reply)


ashmount
==========
ashmount/general #28, from ashmount, 576 chars, Fri, 25 Mar 94 09:11
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TITLE: Who Are Ashmount?

Basically they are the guys who make PowWow (this great piece of 
software you are using/looking at right now) and a whole host of  
other conferencing and offline software.

They can be contacted at any of the following addresses:

Telephone : 071 935 7712
 
Mail      : 26 Baker Street
            London
            W1M 1DF

CIS       : 70007,5437

CIX       : ashmount

BIX       : ashmount

Internet  : ashmount@cix.compulink.co.uk

OK enough of this stuff, on with the real demo/information, press the 
Enter key to move to the next message

ashmount


