Jump to content

NavCIS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bender the Bot (talk | contribs) at 03:52, 16 October 2016 (top: http→https for Google Books and Google News using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

NavCIS, originally known as ForCIS, is a client program which was used to automate connections to the CompuServe Information Service at a time when online use was priced by the minute. It operated largely in the fashion of an offline reader, downloading both email and new messages from selected forums, and then disconnecting. The user could then read and reply to these messages offline, and send all of their replies back in a similarly quick connection. Unlike most offline readers, NavCIS also allowed the user to select files for upload and download, and included a system for scripting the session.

Based on the host computer's interface, NavCIS was the first email or forum client to feature WYSIWYG in the early 1990s.[1] It was available for MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows as a GUI on both.[1][2] The very similar CIS Navigator was a similar system for the Macintosh.

Support for NavCIS lagged the interactive CompuServe Information Manager (CIM), which kept users online but allowed GUI access to most of CompuServe's more popular features like chat and (some) online games. NavCIS stopped working when the original CompuServe interface was shut down around 2001.

Description

The NavCIS system was based around its session files, which described the actions to be carried out during a single connection. These files contained the basic connection information for the modem and the phone number to call, as well as a series of commands that visited different areas in CIS. The script files were created by clicking on a number of buttons in a settings window, allowing the user to navigate a map of the CIS system, grouped into subject areas. For instance, one could give instructions to retrieve new email from the email button. By clicking on the buttons and selecting various actions, the user builds a script of what actions will be carried out as part of this session. Once the session file is set up and saved, the user has the software connect. It then runs through the commands in the session file one by one, completing the tasks and moving any resulting data to the local machine. Once complete, the interface offers access to that data through commands in the menu bar.

In contrast to systems used with bulletin board systems, NavCIS provided access to much of the CIS environment. There were commands to update the forums list, for instance, so the list of available message areas in the client was always up to date. Likewise, the system could be instructed to download a list of new files in a selected library, and then allow the user to select files of interest for download on the next connection. The system also included a command to pause the script and open a terminal window, allowing direct interaction with CIS until the window was closed and the script continued.[3]

Other clients

References

  1. ^ a b InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. (21 February 1994). InfoWorld, CompuServe users can work off-line, save mondey. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. pp. 22–. ISSN 0199-6649. Cite error: The named reference "Inc.1994" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Ziff Davis, Inc. (14 May 1996). PC Mag, Making the Most of Online Time. Ziff Davis, Inc. pp. 73–. ISSN 0888-8507.
  3. ^ Denise Jesus, "CompuServe Navigator", Known Users, March 1994