BULLETIN V2.12 (From Mark London) The BULLETIN utility is a utility to display messages to users when logging in. Users are notified of messages only once. They're not forced into reading them every time they log in. Submitting and reading messages is easy to do via a utility similar to the VMS MAIL utility. Privileged users can create messages which are displayed in full. (known as SYSTEM messages). Non-privileged users may be able to create non-SYSTEM messages (unless your system manager has disabled the feature), but only topics are displayed at login. Folders can be created so that messages pertaining to a single topic can be placed together. Folders can be made private so that reading and writing is limited to only users or groups who are granted access. Alternatively, folders can be made semi-private in that everyone is allowed to read them but write access is limited. When new non-system messages are displayed, an optional feature which a user may enable will cause BULLETIN to ask whether the user wishes to read the new bulletins. The user can then read the messages (with the ability to write any of the messages to a file). A user can enable the notification and prompting of new messages feature on a folder per folder basis. However, the exception is messages submitted to the default GENERAL folder. Users are always notified at login of new bulletins in this folder, but can disable the prompting. This is to give non-privileged users some ability to force a notification of an important message. Messages have expiration dates and times, and are deleted automatically. Expiration dates and times can be specified in absolute or delta notation. Privileged users can specify "SHUTDOWN" messages, i.e. messages that get deleted after a system shutdown has occurred. "PERMANENT" messages can also be created which never expire. Privileged users can broadcast their message (to either all users or all terminals). A user can select, on a folder per folder basis, to have a message broadcast to their terminal immediately notifying them when a new message has been added. An optional "Bulletin Board" feature allows messages to be created by users of other systems connected via networks. A username can be assigned to a folder, and any mail sent to that user is converted to messages and stored in that folder. This feature originally was designed to duplicate the message board feature that exists on some Arpanet sites. However, with the addition of folders, another possible use is to assign an Arpanet mailing list to a folder. For example, one could have an INFOVAX folder associated with an INFOVAX username, and have INFO-VAX mail sent to INFOVAX. Users could then read the mailing list in that folder, rather than having INFO-VAX sent to each user. Optionally, the input for the bulletin board can be directed to be taken from any source other than VMS MAIL. This might be useful if incoming mail is stored in a different place other than VMS MAIL. Messages can be either sent to a file, to a print queue, or mailed to another user. BULLETIN can also act a USENET NEWS reader if the appropriate network software is available to interact with. See the installation notes for more detail.