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TOC clients (AIM implementations)

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jeremy C Daniel)
Tue Dec 15 09:10:03 1998

To: software-announce@MIT.EDU
Cc: eniels@MIT.EDU
Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1998 09:08:18 EST
From: Jeremy C Daniel <jdaniel@MIT.EDU>

Tue Dec  8 12:11:09 EST 1998 jdaniel

AIM is AOL Instant Message software (http://www.aim.aol.com/).  The
TOC protocol is a high level abstraction of the OSCAR protocol used by
AIM.  The license on the java version of AIM did not allow it to be
installed, but the license for the TOC protocol is much less stringent.
> AOL grants you ("Licensee") a non-exclusive, royalty free, license
> to use, modify and redistribute this software in source and binary
> code form, provided that i) this copyright notice and license appear
> on all copies of the software; and ii) Licensee does not utilize the
> software in a manner which is disparaging to AOL.
Each of the three clients installed has the full message-sending
functionality of AIM, and additional features in some.  

TiK is a pure Tcl/Tk 8.0 version of AOL Instant Messenger (AIM). TiK
now has most of the features the native Windows and Macintosh clients
have, plus some extras.

    athena% add sipb; tik


Tac is a pure Tcl terminal only version of AOL Instant Messenger. Tac
doesn't require Tk or a X display, and can be run on most terminals
with no problem. However since it is put Tcl, and doesn't even use
curses, line editing is limited. Currently some features are missing
from Tac, when compared to TiK, but it will hopefully catch up at some
point.

    athena% add sipb; tac
[linux already has a program called tac so you might want to add -f sipb]


Using TNT, you can, from the comfort of your Emacs window, check
whether friends and coworkers are online, send them "instant
messages", and join them in multi-party private chat sessions. Unlike
the official AIM clients, TNT is designed to be functional rather than
pretty, easy to use rather than easy to learn. It doesn't have a
graphical user interface, fancy artwork, or other random fluff.
Instead, like other emacs extensions, it has a keyboard-driven,
text-based interface. TNT is AIM for grownups ;-).

    ;; insert this line into your .emacs file (and make sure you have 
    ;; the sipb locker attached)
    ;; docs: /mit/sipb/src/tnt/current/README
    (load "/mit/sipb/share/elisp/tnt.el")


There is also a tcl script for uploading and downloading buddy
information to the TOC server.  I didn't install this in the bin
directory, and it's not necessary for use of the clients.  

/mit/sipb/share/tik/configTool -H


The starting page for all of these is http://www.aim.aol.com/tik/ and
a fairly extensive (but I think still in progress) FAQ can be found at
http://bacon.tcs.tufts.edu/~dkap/brain/TicToc_FAQ.shtml

I intend to keep up with announcements of new releases of the above
software and will install them as they become available.



			   Jer (AOLname: jdanielmit)
[see /sipb/share/tik/README for this message and further notes.]



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