From: grady@netcom.com (1016/2EF221)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 465e2989f297a2dd4120a3fb567df9f6d8319555f5fa302bc93e729b61a865f1
Message ID: <9304191438.AA13031@netcom.netcom.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-04-19 14:38:12 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 19 Apr 93 07:38:12 PDT
From: grady@netcom.com (1016/2EF221)
Date: Mon, 19 Apr 93 07:38:12 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: more specific address for 'agrep'
Message-ID: <9304191438.AA13031@netcom.netcom.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
I've been asked to supply more specific directions
for automated fetching of the source and documentation
for "agrep," the powerful similarity pattern matching tool.
It is at
cs.arizona.edu
192.12.69.5
in directory
/agrep/README
/agrep/agrep-2.04.tar.Z
/agrep/agrep.ps.1.Z
/agrep/agrep.ps.2.Z
(The .ps suffixed files are the optional postscript docs;
a reasonably good research report with benchmarks is
included.)
Note for Macintosh MPW users: after a few hours of drudgery,
I ported the tool to MPW 3.2.3 running under System 7.1. If you
would like me to e-mail a binhexed copy of the tool suitable
for dropping in to your MPW/tools folder, please write...
I've been having lots of fun picking up the "lost"
references to things I'm interested in. For example,
starting a search like:
agrep -1 -i 'Burning Chrome' cyberpunkspool
immediately finds references like 'burning crome' that I
have always missed before. See how many times John
Gilmore's name is mentioned in the CUD archives
(and how often misspelled). How about _your_ name?
As usual, I will e-mail the uuencoded tar.Z upon request
if you cannot do anonymous FTP.
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1993-04-19 (Mon, 19 Apr 93 07:38:12 PDT) - more specific address for ‘agrep’ - grady@netcom.com (1016/2EF221)