This remnant will be replaced soon. The FAQ is back, with a new design!
What
is (and what's in) the Phish.net archive?
How has the archive changed?
The Phish.Net Archives was started as a computer on the Internet
to hold everything you might want that pertains to Phish, most culled
from (or direct records of) the Phish.Net.
But the Phish.Net Archives have changed a bit, and the online resources
now available to PhishHeads have been
reorganized:
- Some resources have always been, and remain, available through
email.
- Some resources (especially the Frequently Asked Questions file
and the Helping Phriendly Book) have blossomed into gargantuan
resources on the World Wide Web.
- Additional resources have been developed, such as the Newbie
site to welcome newcomers.
- Official information (esp. tour
dates and ticket information) are
now handled, appropriately, over by Phish and Dionysian, via phish.com.
- Speculative information (particularly other
bands suggested and rumors)
have found a full life on other parts of the Web.
- Some resources are available only through ftp
until they are transfered into web resources.
- Some resources that were part of the Archive (e.g. chords
and lyrics) have been removed for legal reasons.
What's available on the Archives?
- FAQ
Phile: The file you're reading right now. In various formats,
in addition to the Web-based version. Send FAQ changes/additions
via email.
- Helping
Phriendly Book: A collection of setlists and song titles.
Current version is Web-only, but other formats will be updated
as time allows. Send setlists & corrections to Dan Hantman at
<dan@www.phish.net>.
- Netiquette
File: Contains some basic pointers about how people should conduct
themselves on the net. Very useful for those new to email, networks,
etc.
- Stories
File: Many interesting Phish-
or Phish.Net-related
stories that have been posted to the net. Highlights include the
Ness Story (a must!), & tales from shows (eg Townsend 91).
- Interviews
file: Transcripts of interviews with the band, plus reviews
of albums (e.g. two of PON
from the Boston Phoenix
- Official
Tour Dates: Contains current verified tour dates &
phone numbers for venues. Usually a transcript of the hotline
message. (NOTE: Reliable information regarding confirmed
dates is available from, and only from, the
official Phish site - other sources
are suspect and dubious.)
- Articles about Phish
- The digests
(every
one!) are stored in unix-compressed format (accessible via
using
FTP); both a Mac program and an IBM program are provided to
uncompress them.
- Send any other submissions for the archives to webmaster@www.phish.net
and we'll figure out what to do with it and how to do it.
- The Venues File is no longer current; when
current, it contains information on hotels, gathering, directions,
etc. Meanwhile (and since summer 1995)...
- Phish has distributed hotel, camping, and other travel
(e.g. restaurants, 24-hour gas and convenience, etcetera) info
at ticket outlets, in the mail with tickets,
and at venues' lot entrances; check them out! This is an amazing
service they're doing, and they're bound to have great information.
How do i get files via email, ftp, gopher, & WWW?
At the beginning of 1994, the rec.music.phish community raised over
$2000 to put towards a dedicated archive site. That money went towards
the founding of the Brown University NetSpace project, which currently
houses the Phish archive site, amoung a number of other projects.
The idea of the server is to make information available to Phish fans
as easily and in as useful a form as possible. In order to make that
possible, we have a number of ways to get information from the archives.
EMAIL:
The text files mentioned above are available on request. There is
an automated server running on the archive that responds to email
requests for files. To find out how the server works (not detailed
here because it's constantly changing) send mail to phish-archives@phish.net
with the word "help" in the subject.
It used to be that email requests for files were handled by a person
(Lee). When the number of requests got above about 30 per day, Lee
couldn't handle it anymore and wrote a script to deal with it. Thus,
as soon as your email reaches the archive, a reply is sent out to
you. Some of the files that the archive will send you are quite large
and might take a while to get to you. Some networks are faster than
others. If it's not there in 12 hours, assume there's some problem.
WWW:
The World Wide Web is probably the best way to access information
over the internet. If you already understand the web and have a web
browser, the URL for the archive is http://www.phish.net/
(which is currently http://www.netspace.org/phish/).
The WWW is a collection of servers, distributed around the world that
serve documents written in HyperText Markup Language (HTML). This
language is a standard way to present multimedia information to clients
running on machines across the 'Net. HyperText is quite similar to
Apple's HyperCard, except that it's free, and clients run on a variety
of machines, including UNIX workstations, MacIntoshes, PC's, etc.
You can navigate through HTML pages, which often contain pointers
to other pages, as well as pointers to ftp and gopher sites.
In order to navigate the Web, you need a Web Browser, such as Netscape,
Mosaic, MacWeb, WinWeb, or Lynx. Mosaic and Netscape both have a mouse
driven graphical user interface (GUI) that make surfing the net as
easy as pointing and clicking. If you don't have a web browser, you
can get one via ftp from the archive site. Use your favorite FTP method
(see the above section on FTP) to connect to www.phish.net and go
to /pub/Software/. If you're on a Mac or a DOS (PC Compatible) machine,
you'll want to download a program called "NetScape". The Mac version
should run as-is if you download it using Fetch. The PC version is
compressed using PKZip, so you need to get the pkz204g package to
decompress the program. Mosaic is available for free from the NCSA:
ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu, as are the Mosaic FAQ, and other WWW pages with
useful information. Netscape is available free from a number of ftp
sites, eg ftp.princeton.edu.
Once you have a Web Browser, you can get to the Phish Archive by going
to the File menu and selecting "open URL" or "Open Location", and
entering the URL given above.
Folks have been asking how to access files that are in the anonymous
ftp space from web pages. One way is to use an ftp:// URL, but that's
going to be slow for the user, and it's going to bog the machine
down very quickly. What'll be better is a gopher:// URL. The only
problem with gopher is that you need to specify the type of the
image in the URL.
- gopher://gopher.netspace.org/00/filename gets a text
file
- gopher://gopher.netspace.org/11/filename gets a directory
- gopher://gopher.netspace.org/I9/filename.gif gets an
image
FTP:
For those who already understand ftp: the host is www.phish.net; log
in as anonymous, send your ID as password, cd to /pub/phish and enjoy!
A good ftp tool is CuteFTP (thanks
Matt Barclay <MBarclay@lodanelec.com>).
Ftp is a protocol for transferring files accross the internet - the
file you ask for is (exactly) recreated on (a floppy or hard drive
on) your machine. Ftp allows you to get single or multiple files;
if you wanted, you could "get" a copy of every digest from 1993. I
can't imagine anyone wanting to do that.
Ftp can be done from ANY networked computer. I am only familiar with
Mac & Unix (& maybe a little DOS), so the only programs I can suggest
are "ftp" for Unix & "Fetch" for the Mac. If you have a networked
mac & you don't have Fetch or something like it, ask around; someone
at your site should have a copy. IBMs, VAXen, CRAYs, even Apple IIe's
are examples of other computers that can use ftp if they're on a network.
The explanation of ftp here is based on Unix, because that's where
ftp started, and because it's the simplest way to describe things.
First, you need to connect to the archive site. The archive site is
really a machine, called www.phish.net, so when you connect to it
on a Unix machine, simply type "ftp www.phish.net" It will tell you
when you have connected, & it will ask you for a name. You should
enter the name "anonymous". It will then ask for a password; enter
your userid or your name. You will then be presented with an ftp prompt.
On a Mac running Fetch, all of this information is entered beforehand
in the appropriate fields, and Fetch uses the information you have
provided to go through the same steps when you click "Open connection".
Next you want to change to the Phish subdirectory. If you are on a
Unix machine, you are doubtless aware of the cd & ls commands; use
them in the same way in ftp. cd lets you change directories; ls gives
you a listing of the contents of the directory. On a mac, you need
not worry about these commands; Fetch does it for you. Fetch displays
directories as folders, files as pieces of paper; to change into a
directory, double-click on it & fetch will present you with a listing
of what's in that directory. Get to the Phish subdirectory by first
changing into the "pub" directory, then the "phish" directory. Take
a look into any of the folders that you see in the Phish directory.
In Unix you can move back a folder level by typing "cd ..", in Fetch
you can simply hold down the mouse-button on the directory name above
the fetch window & see a listing of previous directories. To get a
file in Unix, type "get "
The filename on your machine can be a complete path, for example "get
/pub/phish/digests/digests.001-024/digest-10.gz ~/phish/dig-1.gz"
is perfectly valid if you have a subdirectory called phish. On the
Mac this is much easier, simply click on folders until you get to
the file you want, & double-click it. You may have to manually choose
binary or text data; the server isn't perfect yet!
All the digests and many of the files on the archive are stored using
the GNU compression utility. A decompressor for these files that runs
on Macintoshs or IBMs can be found in the /pub/Software directory.
Thanks also: to Phillip Zerbo, who submitted over a dozen
corrections to this page 6/98! :)
This page last updated February 03, 2007. All contents © 1992-2007 Ellis Godard. All rights reserved.
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