The license agreement, at least last time I read it, made it very difficult
for me sitting at a .com site to play with this stuff. I will assume for
the sake of argument that anyone anywhere can run a dumb ascii client
against these things to see what they are without needing any licensing.
There is a real gap in the gopher / wais / world wide web paradigm of
network tools that none of them deal well at all with numbers. If you
have an Oracle db full of stuff that you want to publish, this looks like
quite a reasonable approach.
--Ed
------- Forwarded Message
id AA11023; Tue, 3 Nov 92 09:50:44 EST
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 92 09:50:44 EST
From: [email protected] (bill menke)
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: current list of view servers, project overview, etc
Status: RO
X-Status:
The XGB manual is available by anonymous ftp to lamont.ldgo.columbia.edu
files
pub/gb_instv3.1.part1.ps.Z and pub/gb_instv3.1.part2.ps.Z
The currect list of view servers is the view view_servers on chaos.ldgo.columbia.edu
and also the file
pub/view_servers.asc.Z
The XGB system itself is also available by anonymous ftp, as described by
the EOS article.
No mailing lists are available.
View servers are now available for sybase, unify, db_vista and oracle
commercial database managers, plus two binary DBM's that I wrote, plus
ascii files.
The new version of XGB also supports raster servers, that is 'image'
as contrasted to 'parametric' data. Three raster servers are available,
supporting three different image formats.
Columbia U. is willing to discuss licensing of XGB for commercial purposes.
Good Luck. Menke.
------- End of Forwarded Message