From listmast@telegrafix.com Sun Jan 7 08:17:07 1996 Return-Path: Received: from telegrafix.com ([204.74.76.230]) by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) for /com/archive/cube-lovers id AA12286; Sun, 7 Jan 96 08:17:07 EST Received: (from majordom@localhost) by telegrafix.com (8.6.11/8.6.9) id RAA21311 for customer-outgoing; Sat, 6 Jan 1996 17:48:03 -0800 Received: (from info@localhost) by telegrafix.com (8.6.11/8.6.9) id RAA21239; Sat, 6 Jan 1996 17:41:28 -0800 Date: Sat, 6 Jan 1996 17:41:26 -0800 (PST) From: TeleGrafix Information To: customer@telegrafix.com Subject: Introducing RIP-2 Multimedia Graphics for the Internet Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-customer@telegrafix.com Precedence: first-class Reply-To: information@telegrafix.com Happy New Year from TeleGrafix: Since you are an important colleague of ours in the online media community, TeleGrafix is sending this short news release to brief you about an important new Internet technology. Following two years of development, TeleGrafix Communications is giving away free communications software that allows you to use the new RIPscrip-2 (Remote Imaging Protocol-2 scripting language) Internet online multimedia technology. We invite you to sample "RIP-2" multimedia on TeleGrafix's Vector Sector BBS at (714) 379-2133. To fully experience it, please download the "shareware" RIPterm v2.2 communications software from the BBS. RIP-2 technical data and RIPterm v2.2 also are available for download at http://www.telegrafix.com on the World Wide Web. Browser "plug-ins" to permit viewing of RIP-2 multimedia on the Web are slated for release in early 1996. RIP-2 enables you to create TV-style multimedia presentations or electronic newspapers that fly through the Internet and ordinary phone lines at dazzling speeds using regular modems. RIP-2 encodes graphics as hyper-compressed ASCII text files that are as little as one-tenth the size of other formats. It works on any computing platform or communications network that uses 7-bit or 8-bit ASCII text. We expect RIP-2 to quickly become an important Internet technical standard like HTML, Java or VRML. TeleGrafix is now accepting requests from software developers and online system operators who want copies of the RIP-2 Internet multimedia language specification when it is published in early 1996. The first generation of RIP technology, introduced in 1993, is the world's BBS graphics standard. It is used on thousands of BBS systems, and is supported by dozens of online software vendors including Delrina, Galacticomm, Hayes and Mustang. If this message has reached you in error or if you are no longer interested in RIPscrip technology, please tell us via E-mail so you won't get additional information. We look forward to helping you, and we wish you a Happy New Year. Sincerely, Pat Clawson Mark Hayton Jeff Reeder President/CEO VP/Technology Chairman & CyberWizard TeleGrafix Communications Inc. 16458 Bolsa Chica Road, Suite 15 Huntington Beach, California 92649 Voice: (714) 379-2131 Fax: (714) 379-2132 BBS: (714) 379-2133 WEB: http://www.telegrafix.com Internet: info@telegrafix.com FTP: ftp.telegrafix.com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent by the mailing list system majordomo@telegrafix.com. To remove yourself from this mailing list, send an E-Mail message to majordomo@telegrafix.com with a single command on the first line of the message reading "unsubscribe customer". -------------------------------------------------------------------------- TeleGrafix Communications, Inc. Sales: (714) 379-2141 16458 Bolsa Chica, #15 Fax: (714) 379-2132 Huntington Beach, CA 92649 BBS: (714) 379-2133 WWW: http://www.telegrafix.com FTP: ftp.telegrafix.com