Приклади вживання Uucp Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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The UUCP Mapping Project was formally shut down late in 2000.
If you do not have access to a TCP/IP network or a SLIP or PPP server, you canconfigure your system to send and receive files and electronic mail using UUCP.
UUCP was originally written at AT&T Bell Laboratories by Mike Lesk.
BBS to connect to the UUCP network and exchange email and Usenet traffic.
UUCPNET was the name for the totality of the network of computers connected through UUCP.
Often, particularly in the private sector, UUCP links were established without official approval from the companies' upper management.
UUCP was also implemented for non-UNIX operating systems, most-notably DOS systems.
The rewrite is referred to as HDB or HoneyDanBer uucp, which was later enhanced, bug fixed, and repackaged as BNU UUCP("Basic Network Utilities").
UUCP was first developed by Bell Laboratories in 1977 for communication between their Unix-development sites.
In July 2012,Dutch Internet provider XS4ALL closed down its UUCP service, claiming it was"probably one of the last providers in the world that still offered it";
Today, UUCP is rarely used over dial-up links, but is occasionally used over TCP/IP.
Despite these limitations, there are still many UUCP networks operating all over the world, run mainly by hobbyists, which offer private users network access at reasonable prices.
The UUCP network was constantly changing as new systems and dial-up links were added, others were removed.
Each system in a UUCP network has a list of neighbor systems, with phone numbers, login names and passwords, etc.
The UUCP protocol has now mostly been replaced by the Internet TCP/IP based protocols SMTP for mail and NNTP for Usenet news.
A user at a system with UUCP connections could thereby exchange mail with Internet users, and the Internet links could be used to bypass large portions of the slow UUCP network.
UUCP can use several different types of physical connections and link layer protocols, but was most commonly used over dial-up connections.
In July 2012,Dutch Internet provider XS4ALL closed down its UUCP service, claiming it was"probably one of the last providers in the world that still offered it"; it had only 13 users at that time(however prior to its shut-down it had refused requests from new users for several years).
UUCP was in use over special-purpose high cost links(e.g. marine satellite links) long after its disappearance elsewhere, and still remains in legacy use.
I never used UUCP, though occasionally I sent emails to addresses that involved transmission via UUCP.
The UUCP maps also listed contact information for the sites, and so gave sites seeking to join UUCPNET an easy way to find prospective neighbors.
The UUCP Mapping Project was a volunteer, largely successful effort to build a map of the connections between machines that were open mail relays and establish a managed namespace.
The UUCP map files could then be used by software such as"pathalias" to compute the best route path from one machine to another for mail, and to supply this route automatically.
Many UUCP hosts, particularly those at universities, were also connected to the Internet in its early years, and e-mail gateways between Internet SMTP-based mail and UUCP mail were developed.
Taylor UUCP also incorporated features of all previous versions of UUCP, allowing it to communicate with any other version and even use similar config file formats from other versions.
In the mid 2000s, UUCP over TCP/IP(often encrypted, using the SSH protocol) was proposed for use when a computer does not have any fixed IP addresses but is still willing to run a standard mail transfer agent(MTA) like Sendmail or Postfix.
Each system in a UUCP network has a list of neighbor systems, with phone numbers, login names and passwords, etc. When work(file transfer or command execution requests) is queued for a neighbor system, the uucico program typically calls that system to process the work.