Re: Who needs X.500 or Whois++?
Martin Hamilton <martin@mrrl.lut.ac.uk> Fri, 05 July 1996 05:59 UTC
Received: from ietf.cnri.reston.va.us by IETF.CNRI.Reston.VA.US id aa06157; 5 Jul 96 1:59 EDT
Received: from CNRI.Reston.VA.US by IETF.CNRI.Reston.VA.US id aa06153; 5 Jul 96 1:59 EDT
Received: from haig.cs.ucl.ac.uk by CNRI.Reston.VA.US id aa02407; 5 Jul 96 1:59 EDT
Received: from bells.cs.ucl.ac.uk by haig.cs.ucl.ac.uk with local SMTP id <g.01389-0@haig.cs.ucl.ac.uk>; Fri, 5 Jul 1996 06:14:33 +0100
Received: from gizmo.lut.ac.uk by bells.cs.ucl.ac.uk with UK SMTP id <g.10878-0@bells.cs.ucl.ac.uk>; Fri, 5 Jul 1996 06:14:22 +0100
Received: from mrrl.lut.ac.uk (localhost.lut.ac.uk [127.0.0.1]) by gizmo.lut.ac.uk (8.7.5/8.6.9) with ESMTP id GAA05046; Fri, 5 Jul 1996 06:14:15 +0100 (BST)
Message-Id: <199607050514.GAA05046@gizmo.lut.ac.uk>
To: Leslie Daigle <leslie@bunyip.com>
cc: D.W.Chadwick@iti.salford.ac.uk, ietf-ids@umich.edu, bsi-ds@nexor.co.uk, osi-ds@cs.ucl.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Who needs X.500 or Whois++?
X-URI: <URL:http://www.net.lut.ac.uk/~martin>
In-reply-to: Your message of "Thu, 04 Jul 1996 17:14:37 EDT." <199607042114.RAA05103@beethoven.bunyip.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Date: Fri, 05 Jul 1996 06:14:14 +0100
Sender: ietf-archive-request@IETF.CNRI.Reston.VA.US
From: Martin Hamilton <martin@mrrl.lut.ac.uk>
Yep, truly great! "Whether you're looking for sales leads, full mailing lists, and telemarketing information, or the clean-up of your database and innovative data processing solutions, Database America is the company to call. We've got detailed information on 11 million businesses and 165 million consumers" But no email address search. Shame! Still, there's always <URL:http://www.four11.com/> or <URL:http://www.whowhere.com/> for those. Now, about that in-lined advertisments extension to LDAP ... :-)
- Re: Who needs X.500 or Whois++? Leslie Daigle
- Re: Who needs X.500 or Whois++? Martin Hamilton
- Who needs X.500 or Whois++? D.W.Chadwick
- Re: Who needs X.500 or Whois++? Rik Drummond