MicroMechanics Information Clearinghouse Announcement Dear MEMS Researchers, Designers, and Developers, The ISI MEMS Clearinghouse is now operational. This Clearinghouse will provide three services to the MEMS community: an archive for material on the MEMS field, a discussion group to be conducted by electronic mailing, and a newsletter to be published quarterly. The MEMS archive is accessible over the Internet by FTP (File Transfer Program), World Wide Web, Gopher, and Prospero. Within the next six weeks it will also be accessible by electronic mail. At present the archive is rather vacant; so, we are looking for help in gathering useful information for the archive. Any and all information that you think would be of value to the MEMS community is welcome. In particular, we wish to solicit information about laboratory and fabrication facilities, process schedules and descriptions, newly developed and sharable CAD software, technical notes for distribution, conference announcements, and bibliographies. If you can help us with the archive then please send us e-mail at "info-mems@isi.edu". If you received this e-mail message directly from us then you are already on the discussion group mailing list. This list will be moderated. We will be linking our list to the Bay Area MEMS Club and to the LA Robotics group. We are also planning to link our archive with the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina MEMS Fabrication Information System and the National Nanofabrication Network. We would like to look into linking to other MEMS related archives and discussion groups; if you know of any, please let us know. Attached are some notes on how to access the archives. Please share them with your colleagues and students. If you have any suggestions on how we could improve the Clearinghouse then please send you comments to "info-mems@isi.edu". The ISI MEMS Clearinghouse is staffed by Peter Will (project leader), Sridhar Gullapalli, Bill Athas, Cliff Neuman, Steven Augart, Carole Sumler, and Jeanine Yamazaki. We wish to welcome you to the MEMS Clearinghouse and hope that you find it to be a useful resource in your MEMS activities. Instructions for Using the MicroMechanics Information Clearinghouse The MEMS Information Clearing House was established at ISI by the Advanced Research Projects Agency to provide a repository for and periodic updates to information about micromechanics. The intended audience is those interested in micromechanics, including: researchers; developers of micromechanical devices and systems; users of such devices for EE, ME, CS, chemistry, physics, and medicine; companies and universities offering services in the field; and newcomers to the field. The service consists of a discussion group supported by electronic mail (e-mail), an archive of messages sent to the discussion group, a newsletter to be distributed by electronic mail, back issues of the newsletter, and an archive of available information related to micromechanics. The archive will include bibliographies and, where possible, on-line databases, data sets, articles, and pictures. Access to this information will be supported by electronic mail, file transfer, menu browsers, and hypertext browsers. These instructions explain several ways to access the Clearinghouse. It is not expected that you will use all of these approaches. Instead, you should choose the method that is most comfortable for you. 1.0 The MEMS Discussion Group We are hosting a discussion group to be used for discussing any topic of interest to the MEMS community. Special interest discussion groups may be created in the future if demand exists. To become a regular reader of the discussion group, send e-mail to MEMS-REQUEST@ISI.EDU. To send messages to the readers of the group, send e-mail to MEMS@ISI.EDU. The message will be reviewed by the moderator and forwarded to the members of the discussion group if appropriate. The discussion of the group will be archived. Readers may obtain copies of past messages using one of the methods described later for accessing information that has been stored in the Clearinghouse archives. 2.0 The MEMS Newsletter and Announcement List If you want to receive a newsletter and occasional announcements but don't want to receive messages from other members of the discussion group, you can ask to be added to the list for announcements only. To do this, send e-mail to MEMS-ANNOUNCE-REQUEST@ISI.EDU asking to be placed on the MEMS announcement list. Please note that if you are in the discussion group you will automatically receive the newsletter and announcements. 3.0 The MEMS Archive 3.1 Contributing materials to the archive If you have something to contribute to the archive, send e-mail to INFO-MEMS@ISI.EDU asking for further instructions. We will then contact you about how to submit the information. 3.2 Retrieving materials from the archive Information to be retrieved from the archive can be accessed by any of the methods listed below. Instructions on using several of these services can be found in books such as "Zen and the Art of the Internet" by Brendan Kehoe or "The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog", by Ed Krol, published by O'Reilly and Associates (1992). 3.2.1 File Transfer Program (FTP) The program called "ftp" has been implemented on many types of computers. If you currently access your e-mail by logging onto a computer running Unix(tm) then you will very likely be able to access ftp in a similar fashion. If you are a personal computer user and have telecommunications software such as TCP then you may be able to use ftp directly from your computer. For example, if you are a Apple Macintosh user and have MacTCP installed then you can use a program such as VersaTerm(tm) or Fetch to access the archives from ftp. When using ftp there are four pieces of information that you must provide: the name of the host computer, the user ID, a password, and a directory. For accessing the Clearinghouse archives the host computer name is "mems.isi.edu", the user ID is "anonymous", and the directory is "mems". For the password use your e-mail address. If you don't know what your e-mail address is then just type "guest". Below is a sample dialog exchange for accessing ftp from a Unix(tm) computer. In this example the "mems" directory is connected to by using the "cd" command. The file named "README" is then retrieved. If you need more help with using ftp we suggest that you consult a PC or Mac guru or contact your system's user consulting staff. % ftp mems.isi.edu Connected to gum.ISI.EDU. 220 gum.isi.edu FTP server (Version 2.0WU(10) Sat Apr 10 11:08:20 PDT 1993) ready. Name (mems.isi.edu:will): anonymous 331 Guest login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password. Password:bubba@isi.edu 230- 230-Welcome to the Prospero and MEMS FTP server. 230-The Prospero Resource Manager is in /pub/prm. 230-The Prospero Directory Service is in /pub/prospero. 230-The Micromechanics Clearinghouse is in /mems. 230-General papers are in /pub/papers. 230- 230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply. ftp> cd /mems 250 CWD command successful. ftp> get README 200 PORT command successful. 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for README (1437 bytes). 226 Transfer complete. local: README remote: README 1466 bytes received in 0.0081 seconds (1.8e+02 Kbytes/s) ftp> quit 221 Goodbye. 3.2.2 World-Wide Web You can use a World-Wide-Web client such as Mosaic to look at information in the archive. To do so direct your World-Wide-Web client to look at the document with URL "http://mems.isi.edu/mems". You may have to ask the World-Wide-Web administrator at your local site how to do this. 3.2.3 Gopher If you have access to a gopher client, direct it to the gopher server on MEMS.ISI.EDU. If you need to specify a port number, specify port 70. You may have to ask the Gopher administrator at your local site how to direct your Gopher client at MEMS.ISI.EDU. The first menu you retrieve from MEMS.ISI.EDU will include a menu item at the top named 'MEMS Information Clearinghouse.' Select that item. 3.2.4 Prospero If you are using the Prospero menu browser, type: menu #/INET/EDU/ISI/mems:/mems The first menu you retrieve will include a menu item at the top named 'The MEMS Information Clearinghouse'. Select that item. 3.2.5 Using electronic mail to access the MEMS archive Unlike the other services discussed above, this service will not be available until mid-March. The Electronic Mail retrieval system "MEMS-ARCHIVE" will send text documents in response to e-mail queries. This service is provided for users who do not have direct connections to the Internet, but who can exchange electronic mail with Internet users. Details and help for this service may be obtained by sending an e-mail message to "MEMS-ARCHIVE@ISI.EDU" with the message body "help: ways_to_get_info". For example: To: MEMS-ARCHIVE@ISI.EDU Subject: getting info help: ways_to_get_info