Path: utzoo!utgpu!utstat!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!csd4.milw.wisc.edu!srcsip!ucbvax!HP-SDE.SDE.HP.COM!wunder From: wunder@HP-SDE.SDE.HP.COM (Walter Underwood) Newsgroups: comp.protocols.tcp-ip Subject: Re: vendor implementations Message-ID: <8905012314.AA07021@hp-ses.sde.hp.com> Date: 1 May 89 23:14:00 GMT References: <8904282324.AA05931@SALT.ACC.COM> Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 41 I'm looking around for TCP/IP implementations for the following system and was wondering if anyone would care to share knowledge and/or experiences. The systems are H/P 1000, ... Hewlett-Packard now sells FTP and Telnet for the HP 1000. It is a separate product from the NS Services (HP-proprietary stuff). I think that the plan is to include Telnet and FTP in the NS product for all customers as part of release 5.2 in late 1989. Supported systems will get that update. If you need it *now*, you can order ARPA/1000. Here are the basics, from a information sheet that I have. I'll mail the whole thing to Chris VandenBerg, these are just the highlights for any other HP 1000 users out there. ARPA/1000 provides basic multi-vendor networking for the HP1000, for users who don't need all the power of NS/1000 or who need additional services or links not currently in NS. It provides file transfer (FTP) and virtual terminal (TELNET), using TCP/IP over Ethernet and 802.3 LANs. Address resolution using ARP and PROBE is provided. It does NOT include SMTP, UDP, Berkeley Sockets, or Berkeley Services. It also does NOT work over X.25 or point-to-point links. The only required software will be release 5.1 of RTE-A, VC+, and LAN/1000 Link. You will need at least 1.5 Mb of RAM. The product manager is Mike Cohen (Mike_Cohen%1b%hp6600@hp-sde.sde.hp.com). If you need more info than your local field office can give you, contact Mike. Walter Underwood PS: It has been great to see HP come around to TCP/IP during the last four years. When I started work here, HP had a TCP/IP transport with proprietary services, and no (zero) products with the normal ARPA services (Telnet, FTP, and SMTP). Pretty grim. Now we have products or commitments for every computer we make (except for the HP-41 calulator). The transport guys are implementing VJ TCP, we'll be shipping a supported nameserver, sendmail/MX, and so on. There is more work to do, but it is really a tremendous turnaround in four years.