Assignment 1 is due Friday, February 1, 2008 at 9:00 pm.
- Read:
- Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Electronic Mail
Appendix B: Text Editing
Appendix C: Pine Mail Program
- Visit:
- blackboard.unh.edu and
login. Follow the link for UNH E-mail in the Tool menu on the
left side to access cisunix WebMail.
22 Points
This homework assignment involves sending two email messages. Please
use either Pine or Webmail from your UNH email account.The emails that you send should
contain plain text only (no Word documents or attachments). This is true
for any correspondance you send us. Also, if you have a question, please
do not embed it the homework assignment - it will not be read until we go
to grade the assignment (which will probably be too late...). For
questions, address an email with a Subject of CS403_01 Question (if you are in
section 01, otherwise substitute your section for the 01).
Login to your account, change your
password from the default (if necessary), and experiment
with the Pine mail program and WebMail. Practice by emailing messages
to yourself and
reading them. Refer to Appendix B: Text Editing and
Appendix C: Pine Mail Program in the text for help with Pine.
Experiment with WebMail at webmail.unh.edu. Be sure to check out the
CIS Unix WebMail Tips at pubpages.unh.edu/notes/imp_tips.html.
- (12 points)
Send an e-mail to our grader, Chaoyi (cqs5@cisunix.unh.edu),
with a subject of:
CS403_01 Assignment 1A followed by your name if you are in section
01 (TR 11:10 - 12:30
section) or
CS403_03 Assignment 1A followed by your name if you are in section
03 (TR 3:40 - 5:00
section) or
CS403_04 Assignment 1A followed by your name if you are in section
04 (TR 5:10 - 6:30 section)
Enter your own userid in the Cc field so that a copy of the email will be
sent to you as well. You should save a copy of all homework
submissions until the end of the semester. It would make sense to set
up a folder to hold all of the homework copies as the semester
progresses. This e-mail should
contain the following:
- (1 point) Your code so that we can post your homework grades
on-line. The code is just a word or string of characters that
you select so your homework grades can be posted confidentially
on-line. Choose a code that is 6 characters or less and
easy for you to remember. Do not use your password for your
code!
- (3 points) Your signature (as described in class and the book). Your
signature is automatically added by your mail program to
every email that you compose so you need to go through the set-up process
before you compose your email for this assignment.
It should include contact information, and/or a quote, and/or some ascii
art. (Here are links to two ascii generators:
www.network-science.de/ascii and
www.schnoggo.com/figlet.html.)
The signature
that you
create should be more that just your name for the purpose of the assignment... Be sure to set up your signature
*before* you compose your email message for this assignment. The other email you send as part of this assignment should also
include the signature so do this part of the assignment first!
The email should also contain the answers to the following questions. This information was discussed the
first day of class and the answers can also be found in our class site.
- (2 points) What is my policy about plagiarism and cheating?
- (2 points) What are the dates of our three exams?
- (2 points) How many homework assignments will there be and how
is homework calculated into the final grade?
- (2 points) What is my policy about late homework?
- (10 points)
Answer the questions below. Then do two things with the essays that
you wrote:
- E-mail the essays in plain text (no attachments, please) to our
TA, Santosh
(shr6@cisunix.unh.edu).
You should send this email only after you have successfully set up your
signature in part IA above.
The Subject field of this email should contain:
CS403_01 Assignment 1B followed by your name or
CS403_03 Assignment 1B followed by your name or
CS403_04 Assignment 1B followed by your name
(depending on your section of CS403).
Don't forget to Cc a copy to yourself (that is, put your userid in the Cc
field).
- Print off a hard-copy of the essays with your name on it and submit to
Ellen during class on Thursday, January 31 (note that this is
before the rest of the assignment is due).
Here are the questions:
- (5 points)
Ellen Goodman, a columnist for the Boston Globe, wrote an opinion piece
about email and the Internet that was published on August 14, 2005. Please
refer to the FAQs page of our class site and follow the link provided to A
Snail Mail Tale. After reading the article, summarize what the author's
opinion is AND what your opinion is about the topic.
- (5 points)
Refer to the FAQs page and follow the link provided to the article by Martha
Irvine, E-mail Too Sluggish for the IM Generation. After reading the article, do
you feel that e-mail is the new snail mail? Tell us why (or why not).
- (no right or wrong answer for this one!)
For our informal survey, tell us which one of the following is your preference
when it comes to communicating with your peers (even though you might use more than
one method, select the one that you use the most):
- Phone
- Instant Messaging
- Text Messaging
- E-mail
- In Person
- Other - tell us what it is
© McGraw-Hill 2007.
All rights reserved.
This presentation accompanies the book "In-line/On-line:
Fundamentals of the Internet and World Wide Web" (ISBN 0-07-236755-5)
written by Raymond Greenlaw and Ellen Hepp.