On Thu, 12 Jan 1995, Chris Barnes wrote: > On Wed, 11 Jan 1995 17:28:09 EST Ben Chi said: > >a WWW-compliant interface that allows a list owner to bring up a window > >full of little boxes he can click at, e.g.: > ... > Yow! I'm guessing that this would be very difficult to achive, but > my oh my, it would be nice. Actually, I doubt the implementation of the basics *would* be that hard (at least under Unix, which is all I know about here). A little script tied to your site's Web server could process the form, then send mail to LISTSERV on your behalf. If the daemon were an owner for each of the involved lists, it could even accept LISTSERV's reply message and reformat it for display at the remote Web browser (i.e. no changes to LISTSERV required for this, just a couple of local scripts). The biggest problems I see are in authentication. Of course, the current scheme used by LISTSERV and competitors is not so sophisticated (match the From: address with a password), and it *could* be done just as well using a browser. I'd still like to see something better, though, because putting list maintenance on the Web will increase its visibility to wannabe crackers. Perhaps one-time passwords (like S/Key)? Or even the Netscape proprietary schemes. People have done similar things (but not for *managing* lists, just for subscribing and so on) in other systems. Several people have written scripts to interface with Majordomo, for example -- one you can try is at <http://www.internic.net/internic/lists/majordomo.html>. Of course, for subscribing, getting archives, and so on, security isn't as important as it would be for options that change a list header. Does anyone want to try it? :-) I know *I* won't be doing it any time soon (but I would love to test someone else's attempt). Norm -- "Life's like a movie / Write your own ending" -- Kermit