WWW Server Facilities Available.
Tony Barry
tony@info.anu.edu.au
Fri, 3 Mar 1995 16:02:58 +1000
Hi
The Tasmanian government seems to be offering to be a publisher to all
sectors of Australia Government!
Tony
>Date: Fri, 3 Mar 1995 11:57:01 +1000
>Reply-To: cirg-l@nla.gov.au
>Originator: cirg-l@nla.gov.au
>Sender: cirg-l@nla.gov.au
>Precedence: bulk
>From: sdd@ccd.tas.gov.au (Scott Donovan)
>To: tony@info.anu.edu.au
>Subject: WWW Server Facilities Available.
>
>
>The Communications and Computing Division (CCD) of the Department of
>Premier and
>Cabinet(DPAC), Tasmania, is pleased to provide access to a WWW site for
>Government (Local, State and Commonwealth).
>
>This in practical terms means, any agency who wishes to trial or can't
>resource having web pages available, can utilise an existing server in
>Tasmania.
>
>The machine is called ANFI, or is better known as www.tas.gov.au and
>Ftp.tas.gov.au. It currently supports sites for a number of schools, government
>departments, and acts as a "central" web link site for the state government.
>
>For further information please do not hesitate to contact me.
>
>Cheers,
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>Scott Donovan, Computing Systems Officer, Projects, Networks Tasmania
>Communications and Computing Division, Department of Premier and Cabinet
>
>Internet: sdd@ccd.tas.gov.au Finger: sdonovan@info.tas.gov.au
>Phone Wk: (002) 33 7677 http://www.tas.gov.au/admins/sdonovan.html
>Phone Hm: (002) 28 3562 Mob: 018 127 253
>Work Fax: (002) 33 3311
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>The view expressed Here, are mine, and NOT that of CCD.
>
___________________________________________________________________
<A HREF="http://snazzy.anu.edu.au/People/TonyB.html">Tony Barry</A><PRE>
Centre for Networked Information and Publishing & also
Centre for Networked Access to Scholarly Information fone +61 6 249 4632
Australian National University Library phax +61 6 279 8120
Canberra A.C.T. 0200, AUSTRALIA tony@info.anu.edu.au
The main use of woodchips is to make paper
</PRE>