File: FAQ

package info (click to toggle)
picon-weather 1999.09.05-1
  • links: PTS
  • area: non-free
  • in suites: potato
  • size: 1,424 kB
  • ctags: 5
  • sloc: makefile: 50; sh: 17
file content (453 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 21,858 bytes parent folder | download | duplicates (6)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453

                       Picons Frequently Asked Questions

   Steve Kinzler <kinzler@cs.indiana.edu>
   5 Sep 1999
   An HTML version of this document is available at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/picons/ftp/faq.html>.

    1. What are picons?
    2. Where can I get the picons databases and how are they licensed?
    3. What is the structure of the picons databases?
    4. What are the constraints on individual picons?
    5. How are picons looked up in the databases?
    6. What software and services are available that use picons?
    7. What software is available to help create picons?
    8. How can I submit picons to the databases?
    9. Is there a mailing list about picons?
   10. Who has contributed to picons?
     _________________________________________________________________

1. What are picons?

   "picons" is short for "personal icons". They're small, constrained
   images used to represent users and domains on the net, organized into
   databases so that the appropriate image for a given e-mail address can
   be found. Besides users and domains, there are picons databases for
   Usenet newsgroups and weather forecasts. The picons are in either
   monochrome XBM format or color XPM and GIF formats.

   These databases have been compiled in hopes of helping make cyberspace
   a more personable place. With them, software and services can be
   developed to identify persons on the net by face (or, at least, by
   institution logo) instead of by a cryptic e-mail address. Although
   this software is still more potential than actual, much already exists
   (see 6.). The picons databases themselves, of course, are only a first
   step toward this goal.

   The picons databases have been built from the submissions of hundreds
   of contributors across the net, and, as such, their accuracy and
   appropriateness has not been extensively verified. Contributions and
   corrections are welcome and encouraged (see 8.).

   The picons databases that currently are available are:

     * domains, logos for Internet domains
     * misc, picons for common accounts and miscellany
     * news, icons for Usenet newsgroups
     * unknown, default picons for very high-level Internet domains
     * usenix, face images of Usenix conference attendees
     * users, picons for individual accounts (often face images)
     * weather, icons for displaying weather forecasts

   The picons databases have previously been referred to as "faces"
   collections or databases, because they were originally compiled for
   use with the "faces" software. Since they're now used for more than
   this and include more than actual face images, they're referred to as
   the picons databases to make the distinction and to avoid overloading
   the term "faces".
     _________________________________________________________________

2. Where can I get the picons databases and how are they licensed?

   The picons databases are available via WWW in the Picons Archive at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/picons/ftp/index.html> or via FTP in
   ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/faces/picons/. This archive also includes
   sources for picons application scripts and icon utilities and a set of
   demo window dumps of some picons applications. An interactive random
   picons sampler and a picons database search facility are also
   available via WWW here.

   The databases are also mirrored in the UUNET archives in
   ftp.uu.net:/published/usenix/faces/bundled/picons/, where they're
   available via FTP or UUCP.

   The databases are updated in these archives each day they change so
   the most current version is always available. Since many of the
   databases are constantly growing, you may want to update your local
   copy of them periodically.

   The databases are also available as packages for Debian GNU/Linux at
   ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/distributions/debian/, though these
   are updated much less frequently.

   Most of the databases have a license that places some conditions on
   their use and distribution. Generally, this is just to ensure that the
   volunteer efforts put into the databases are recognized and protected.
   Otherwise, they're essentially freely usable, but see the LICENSE
   section of the README file in the top directory of each database for
   details.
     _________________________________________________________________

3. What is the structure of the picons databases?

   Each database is structured as a directory tree. Each directory deeper
   into a database more specifically references a picon. The databases
   for users and domains are organized by reversed Internet domainname
   components followed by the username. For example, my XPM picon is
   located in the "users" database under my most general e-mail address,
   kinzler@indiana.edu, in the file
        users/edu/indiana/kinzler/face.xpm

   The picon files themselves are always named face.xbm, face.xpm or
   face.gif. If a face.xpm file exists, then an equivalent face.gif file
   will also exist, and vice versa. If the picon applies to the domain as
   a whole and no user in particular, the username "unknown" is used.
   These picons are typically in the "domains" or "unknown" databases,
   for example
        domains/edu/indiana/cs/unknown/face.xpm

   If the picon applies to a specific user in any domain (usually
   standard system accounts), the domain "MISC" is used. These picons are
   typically in the "misc" or "unknown" databases, for example
        misc/MISC/postmaster/face.xpm

   Note that, with the exception of the special MISC domain, all parts of
   the path are in lower-case.

   The "news" database is organized by Usenet newsgroup name components
   with an "unknown" username. For example, the XPM picon for
   rec.humor.oracle is in
        news/rec/humor/oracle/unknown/face.xpm
     _________________________________________________________________

4. What are the constraints on individual picons?

   Each final directory in a database may contain one or both of a
   face.xbm file and a face.xpm/face.gif file set. Picons in all formats
   are constrained to be 48 by 48 pixels in size. (An exception is the
   weather database which has picons 64 by 64 pixels). Furthermore, XPM
   picons are in the version 3 format of XPM and must use only colors in
   one of two limited subsets of common colors. This restriction
   minimizes the competition for colormap space for many users and
   usually allows applications displaying picons to do so with the
   standard colormap. GIF picons are equivalent to their XPM counterparts
   with the XPM "none" color converted to "grey75" (rgb:BF/BF/BF) and
   marked as transparent.

   The first color set is that used in the AIcons collection, version
   1.6. See <URL:http://www.cit.gu.edu.au/~anthony/icons/docs/> for more
   about the history and rationale of this color set. The colors in the
   set are (by hexadecimal RGB triplets and X11 color names)
    00 00 00 black              EE 82 EE violet
    2F 4F 4F dark slate grey    FF 00 FF magenta
    70 80 90 slate grey         A0 20 F0 purple
    BE BE BE grey               00 FF FF cyan
    DC DC DC gainsboro          A0 52 2D sienna
    FF FF FF white              CD 85 3F peru
    00 00 80 navy               FF A5 00 orange
    00 00 FF blue               FF D7 00 gold
    1E 90 FF dodger blue        FF FF 00 yellow
    87 CE EB sky blue           D2 B4 8C tan
    E6 E6 FA lavender           F5 DE B3 wheat
    2E 8B 57 sea green          FF FA CD lemon chiffon
    32 CD 32 lime green         B2 22 22 firebrick
    00 FF 00 green              FF 00 00 red
    98 FB 98 pale green         FF 63 47 tomato

     [Colors Image]

   The second color set is a greyscale set for use with photographic-type
   icons when the first color set isn't satisfactory. Its colors by
   hexadecimal RGB triplets and X11 color names are
    00 00 00 black              87 87 87 grey53
    12 12 12 grey7              99 99 99 grey60
    21 21 21 grey13             AB AB AB grey67
    33 33 33 grey20             BA BA BA grey73
    45 45 45 grey27             CC CC CC grey80
    54 54 54 grey33             DE DE DE grey87
    66 66 66 grey40             ED ED ED grey93
    78 78 78 grey47             FF FF FF white

     [Greys Image]

   The transparent or "none" color can be used with both color sets. In
   fact, its use is encouraged as the background color.
     _________________________________________________________________

5. How are picons looked up in the databases?

   With most applications, databases are searched sequentially according
   to an order specified by a search path. The definition of this path
   will vary from application to application depending on the nature of
   the application and the databases available and desired.

   The recommended order of the picons databases for a search path for
   Internet e-mail addresses is:

    1. your personal database, if any
    2. your local site database, if any
    3. users
    4. usenix
    5. misc (MISC default picons)
    6. domains
    7. unknown ("smoking spy" catch-all default picons)

   Any of these databases are optional, of course, and may be excluded
   for efficiency or because of lack of usefulness. As special purpose
   databases, the news and weather databases are usually used alone or
   with just personal and local additions.

   Each database is searched for a matching picon from most specific to
   least specific. The search typically stops with the first match. Each
   database is searched entirely before continuing with the next one. For
   example, a lookup for the picon for kinzler@cs.indiana.edu would
   proceed with this sequence of checks occuring within each database in
   the search path. The picon used would be in the first of these
   directories containing a suitable one:

    1. edu/indiana/cs/kinzler
    2. edu/indiana/kinzler
    3. edu/kinzler
    4. MISC/kinzler
    5. edu/indiana/cs/unknown
    6. edu/indiana/unknown
    7. edu/unknown
    8. MISC/unknown
     _________________________________________________________________

6. What software and services are available that use picons?

   There's a number of programs available that use picons to monitor
   incoming e-mail or represent an e-mail message. Applications are also
   available to monitor print queues, unread news, system mail queues,
   weather forecasts, given addresses and newsgroups, and so on.

   All such software can be found in the Faces Archive available via WWW
   at <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/ftp/faces/index.html> or via FTP in
   ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/faces/.

   The Faces Archive is also mirrored in the UUNET archives in
   ftp.uu.net:/published/usenix/faces/bundled/, where they're available
   via FTP or UUCP.

   The Picons Search engine at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/picons/search.html> searches the picons
   databases for requested picon sets and displays the found picons. As
   such, it can serve as an icon lookup service for Internet users and
   domains and Usenet newsgroups.

   The Picons Memory Game at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/cgi-bin/picons-memory> lets you play
   the Memory card game in JavaScript with any number of players, any
   number of cards, and any set of Web images, including many pre-defined
   subsets of picons to randomly select from. It's a fun and challenging
   game for all ages.

   The Picons Sonification page at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/picons/javoice/index.html> uses the
   vOICe Java applet to compute and play auditory representations of
   images, including GIF picons, intended as a step towards a vision
   substitution device for the blind.

   The WWW-Finger Gateway with Faces at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/finger/gateway> displays picon
   sequences for the users and hosts it fingers.

   Anthony's Icon Library (AIcons) at
   <URL:http://www.sct.gu.edu.au/~anthony/icons/> includes some picons
   among its various icon sections, which are organized for programming,
   application and Web usage. In particular, the library highlights the
   country flag domain picons and the Olympic event logo picons.

   The Indiana University Computer Science Personnel Directory at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/people/index.html> uses picons of users
   in indices of its personnel information pages.

   The Bloomington Weather page at
   <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/weather/bmg.html> displays a table of
   picons to summarize the current weather and forecast. Similar pages
   may be set up at other sites for other city's weather.
     _________________________________________________________________

7. What software is available to help create picons?

   There's a cornucopia of software available on all computing platforms
   for creating and manipulating images which can be useful towards
   creating picons. Images can be created by hand or scanned in with a
   scanner. Also, one can scrounge around existing image collections or
   browse the World-Wide Web for images that can be converted and scaled
   to a picon.

   The MailFaces documentation at
   <URL:http://gate.cruzio.com/~jthomas/mailfaces/picons.html> provides
   advice on creating picons under Windows 95 and OS/2 environments. If
   you can put your image on the Web, then you can use the PIconCreate
   service at
   <URL:http://gate.cruzio.com/~jthomas/mailfaces/picons.html#piconcreate
   > to process and submit it as a picon.

   Below are some software packages I commonly use for creating picons
   under a Unix/X11 environment. The Iconolog site at
   <URL:http://www.ozemail.com.au/~afactor/tools/iconTools.html>
   references many icon tools for other environments.

   XPM, koala.inria.fr:/pub/xpm/
          A library needed by most other software with XPM support.
   NetPBM
          A very broad suite of image filters and tools, particularly
          useful for format conversions.
   picons bits, ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/faces/picons/
          Special supplements to NetPBM for picons.
   xbmbrowser, ftp.x.org:/contrib/utilities/
          Great for viewing and managing picons databases and working on
          sets of picons.
   AIcons support environment, ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/AIcons/
          This greatly extends xbmbrowser and other software listed here
          as picons support tools.
   bitmap, X11 archives
          A standard X11 tool for editting XBM bitmaps; the X11R5 and
          later versions are recommended.
   pixmap, avahi.inria.fr:/pub/pixmap/
          An X11 tool for editting XPM pixmaps.
   xv, ftp.cis.upenn.edu:/pub/xv/
          A powerful image processing and conversion tool; shareware
          versions 3 and later support XPM.
   xpaint, <URL:http://www.danbbs.dk/~torsten/xpaint/index.html>
          A paint program for X11.
   xgrabsc/xgrab, ftp.x.org:/contrib/applications/
          Handy tools for grabbing an image from your display.
   xfontsel, X11 archives
          A standard X11 tool for displaying a text string in various
          fonts.
   xmag, X11 archives
          A standard X11 tool for magnifying a portion of your display.
     _________________________________________________________________

8. How can I submit picons to the databases?

   If you use the PIconCreate service at
   <URL:http://gate.cruzio.com/~jthomas/mailfaces/picons.html#piconcreate
   > to process your Web image into a picon, then you can submit it to
   the databases with the service, too. Otherwise, you can use e-mail or
   FTP to submit your picons. Large sets of picons can be packaged and
   uploaded via FTP to ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/faces/picons/incoming/.
   For individual picons or small sets of picons, it's preferable to
   submit them (or their URLs) via e-mail.

   To submit a new or revised picon to a database, mail its XBM, XPM or
   ASCII PNM (ASCII PBM, ASCII PGM or ASCII PPM) file to one of these
   addresses

     * picons-users@cs.indiana.edu
     * picons-domains@cs.indiana.edu
     * picons-news@cs.indiana.edu

   as appropriate. Alternately, you may mail in, alone in the body of the
   message, a URL referencing the image file.

   In any case, the subject line should contain only the e-mail address
   (in user@dom.ain format) the users picon is for (eg,
   "kinzler@indiana.edu"), the domain address or hierarchy the domains
   picon is for (eg, "sei.cmu.edu" or "cmu.edu"), or the newsgroup or
   newsgroup hierarchy the news picon is for (eg, "comp.unix.shell" or
   "comp"). Please submit each picon in a separate mailing.

   For picons contributed to the users database, the domain specified in
   the subject should be the most general at which the given username is
   uniquely applicable, even if such a domain isn't valid as a mailing
   address. For example, if "kinzler" is the same user in every subdomain
   of "indiana.edu", his picon would be submitted as
   "kinzler@indiana.edu" even if that's not a valid mailing address.

   The body of mailed files should contain only the picon, preferably
   already within the standard picons constraints (see 4.) and preferably
   as an XBM, XPM or ASCII PNM picon unpackaged in plain text. A GIF
   version of a picon need not be mailed in if its corresponding XPM or
   ASCII PNM version is submitted. But, if you do mail in a GIF, or other
   non-ASCII format image, you'll need to package it somehow for mail
   transfer. You may mail in images (or URLs for images) with other
   sizes, formats and color sets, but they may not be able to be
   successfully processed and added to the databases.

   See 7. for pointers to software and advice to aid in creating picons.
   Any extra comments about the submitted picons can be mailed separately
   to picons-admin@cs.indiana.edu.

   After being processed, submissions are deleted from the FTP picons
   incoming directory. They will then appear in the distributed databases
   within the next 24 hours.
     _________________________________________________________________

9. Is there a mailing list about picons?

   A mailing list is available for announcements and discussion related
   to the faces and xfaces software and the picons databases. See 6.
   about accessing the Faces Archives for these, as well as archives of
   the mailing list.

   Mail sent to faces@cs.indiana.edu is mailed to everyone on the mailing
   list. Mail faces-request@cs.indiana.edu with your requests to
   subscribe to or unsubsribe from the mailing list.
     _________________________________________________________________

10. Who has contributed to picons?

   Steve Kinzler <kinzler@cs.indiana.edu> is the creator and primary
   developer of the picons databases, application scripts, and online
   services. He began around 1990 after installing faces and finding its
   potential limited by the lack of a substantial collection of domain
   icons. He's created or adapted a good share of the picons and
   reviewed, installed and tweaked most all the rest.

   Daniel Glazman <Daniel.Glazman@der.edf.fr>, Iain Sinclair
   <axolotl@socs.uts.edu.au>, Dirk Craeynest
   <Dirk.Craeynest@cs.kuleuven.ac.be>, Dougal Scott <dwagon@aaii.oz.au>,
   Yuval Kfir <ykfir@geocities.com>, Johan Fredriksson <e93_jof@e.kth.se>
   and Juhapekka Tolvanen <juhtolv@st.jyu.fi> have contributed a
   substantial number of picons themselves and some of the picons have
   been adapted from Jeff Poskanzer's <jef@netcom.com> bitmap collection.
   Rich Burridge <Richard.Burridge@eng.sun.com> compiled early versions
   of a combined users and misc database. Hundreds of others around the
   net have contributed some number of picons to the databases. Under the
   Usenix FaceSaver project, Dave Yost, Lou Katz, Barb Dijker
   <barb.dijker@labyrinth.com> and David C Lawrence <tale@uunet.uu.net>
   have compiled and made available thousands of face images of Usenix
   conference attendees which form the basis for the usenix picons
   database.

   John Thomas <jthomas@cruzio.com> developed and supports the
   PIconCreate service for the processing and submission of Web images as
   picons. Hakan Ardo <hakan@debian.org> prepares Debian package versions
   of the picons databases. Daniel V Klein <dvk@lonewolf.com> included
   the Picons and Faces Archives on the 1997 Usenix Technical Conference
   CD-ROM.

   These fine folks are acknowledged for their development work with
   applications which use picons: Rich Burridge
   <Richard.Burridge@eng.sun.com> (faces), Chris Liebman
   <liebman@zod.clark.net> (xfaces), John Thomas <jthomas@cruzio.com>
   (MailFaces), Daniel Glazman <Daniel.Glazman@der.edf.fr> (MEUF), Brent
   Welch <welch@acm.org> and John LoVerso <loverso@osf.org> (exmh), Ido
   Hardonag <ido@netmanage.co.il> (Chameleon), Marc VanHeyningen
   <mvanheyn@cs.indiana.edu> (WWW-Finger Gateway with Faces), James
   Ashton <James.Ashton@anu.edu.au> (compface), Rob Kooper
   <kooper@cc.gatech.edu> (libfaces), and Axel Belinfante
   <Axel.Belinfante@cs.utwente.nl> (ircfaces). faces, the software which
   started it all, was itself inspired by seminal work by Rob Pike
   <rob@bell-labs.com> and Dave Presotto <presotto@plan9.att.com> with
   their vismon program for Bell Labs Version 8 Unix described in Face
   the Nation.

   And these folks are acknowledged for developing software which has
   been especially important in the creation of the picons databases:
   Davor Matic (bitmap), Lionel Mallet (pixmap), Anthony Thyssens
   <anthony@cit.gu.edu.au> and Ashley Roll <ash@cit.gu.edu.au> (AIcons &
   xbmbrowser), and Jeff Poskanzer <jef@netcom.com> and the NetPBM
   developers (PBMPlus/NetPBM).

   Plus others I'm sure I've neglected to mention.
     _________________________________________________________________


    <kinzler@cs.indiana.edu>