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The official scheduled time for the Brin chat is Wednesday
at 3 PM Eastern/2 PM Central time in the US, or 7 PM
Greenwich time, but people can show up any time they want.
Setup Help
To access the Brin-L MUD, use a telnet or MUD/MUSH
client program to log on at mud.sloansteady.com, at
port 2102. There have been three other servers: gibbs.ruph.cornell.edu,
at port 2102; einstein.ruph.cornell.edu,
at port 2102; and islsol.mach.uni-karlsruhe.de,
at port 80. If you don't see anybody in one server, try another.
I've added some tips to help Brin-L users log onto the MUD.
I wrote UNIX/Linux and Windows 95/NT tips, and Gord Sellar wrote Mac
tips. I don't know anything about Macs, but luckily, Gord does, so he
contributed that section. I'd like to thank other people who have helped
by pointing out factual errors in this page over the years, and giving
me new tips, including Marco Maisenhelder, Terry Johnson, and Jeroen
van Baardwijk.
UNIX/Linux
It's absurdly easy to do it on UNIX machines. Just type
telnet mud.sloansteady.com 2102
on the command line
Windows 95/NT
There are now three different client programs I recommend:
zMUD, MuckClient, or
TeraTerm. None of them cost any money.
(Woo-hoo! ;-) )
zMUD is the better program for MUDding, but Windows NT 4.0
cannot run it (at least, mine can't...), so I recommend that NT users use
MuckClient instead. By the way, if anybody knows of a way to run zMUD in
NT, please tell me!
zMUD
The best free MUD client I've found for Windows is
zMUD 3.62. (download)
Installing zMUD:
- Download the zip file, then unzip it to c:\Program Files\zMUD
- zMUD.exe is in c:\Program Files\zMUD Create a shortcut to zMUD.exe
wherever you want it -- in the Start menu, or on the
desktop
zMUD Setup:
- In the menu, select File|Another Char
- "New" button
- Type a user ID in the user ID field (different for each combination
of character and server you use -- I use "steve1", "steve2", etc...)
- Type a title (I like "Brin-L 1", "Brin-L 2", etc. -- different name
for each server)
- Type "mud.sloansteady.com" in the host field
- Port (2102 for the main server and gibbs, 80 for islsol)
- Delete whatever's in the IP Address field
- In the pull-down box, choose LPMUD
- Character field: your character name in the MUD (mine's "steve")
- Password field: the password you normally type in
- Hit the "Connect" button, and you should get right into the MUD.
- Repeat steps 1 - 10 for any other servers you might want to add.
Using zMUD:
- Double-click your zMUD shortcut
- In the menu, select File|Another Char
- In the table of names and hosts, double-click the server you want to
use, and you should get connected right into the MUD...
- Don't Panic! (tm) In zMUD, you type your commands into a seperate
text box on the bottom of the screen, not into the MUD window itself
like TeraTerm...
If this doesn't work, email
me or Marco
Maisenhelder, and we'll try to help.
MuckClient
MuckClient is also pretty good, plus it will run on
Windows NT as well as 95 and 98.
Installing MuckClient:
- Download the MuckClient exe file, then run it.
- Just choose all the defaults when it asks.
- MuckClient's shortcut should show up in your Windows Start Menu,
under "Software Internationals."
MuckClient Setup:
- Run MuckClient
- Go to Tools|Options
- Select the "Muck Sessions" tab
- Type "Brin-L Main" in the Session Name field
- Type "mud.sloansteady.com" in the Host Name/IP Address field
- Type "2102" for your port
- Type your character name in the Name field (I entered "steve")
- Type your password into the Password field
- Hit the "Add" button
- Repeat steps 4-9 to add any other servers to the list
- Click OK to finish
Using MuckClient:
- Choose MuckClient from the Start menu
- Go to Session|New Connection
- Click on the chat server you want (usually "Brin-L Main")
- Click OK
- MuckClient should automatically log you in, but if it gripes
"Sorry, that name's too long", log in normally, with your character
name and password. I don't know why the automatic login only works
some of the time.
- Any time you want to switch servers, or go to another MUD, click
Session|New Connection, and repeat steps 2-5.
If this doesn't work, email
me or Marco
Maisenhelder, and we'll try to help.
TeraTerm
There is another free telnet program called TeraTerm. (download)
If you know how to set it up (I'm going to tell you how in a little
while!), it will support those neat color effects of the MUD, and you
can even set it to show you what you're typing -- while you're
typing!
I've written a batch file and an
ini file that let you start up directly into the
MUD from a shortcut. (BTW, if you've already set up your MUD client
for Windows, please download the batch file telnet.bat again, and copy
it over the old version, because I've changed that file to reflect the
new Brin MUD address.)
I've even created a nice little icon
you can use for the shortcut: .
How to use these weird gibberish files:
- Install TerraTerm in c:\Program Files\Telnet\Ttermpro (Just download the
zip file, unzip it to a temporary directory, and run
Setup.exe)
- Put the batch file in c:\Program Files\Telnet
- Put the ini file in c:\Program Files\Telnet\Ttermpro
- Create a shortcut wherever you want it -- in the Start menu, or on the
desktop -- and make it a shortcut to the batch file (that is, make the
shortcut point to C:\Program Files\Telnet\telnet.bat)
- Follow the rest of the shortcut-creation process, and choose all the
defaults. If you want to change the shortcut's icon to mine, place the
icon in a convenient place -- I like c:\icons
- Right-click the new shortcut, and choose Properties from the pull-down
menu.
- Click the Program tab. Make sure the little "Close on exit" checkbox is
checked.
- Click the "Change Icon" button. Click the Browse button. Choose the place
you stuck the icon -- if you followed my example, you should browse over
to c:\icons, and double-click brinmud.ico. Click OK. Click OK again.
Now, you should be able to double-click on the shortcut, and
the MUD will start right up! If it doesn't work,
email me or
Marco Maisenhelder, and
we'll try to help.
Macs (by Gord Sellar)
I think Mac people mainly use telnet to connect to MUDs...
NCSA Telnet is available all over, probably at the
info-mac archives, but I found it at ZDNet too... the download page for that specific
application is http://hotfiles.zdnet.com/cgi-bin/texis/swlib/mac/infomac.html?fcode=MC12577
Once you've installed it, and have a Net connection, all
you do is select "open connection", and then in the dialogue box, type
(or paste) the following into the "host name" field:
mud.sloansteady.com 2102
and you'll connect.
If you want to get fancier, and have the address of the
MUD under a pre-set connection that you can just select, open up the
Edit Menu; go to Preferences, and select "Sessions". Then, under
hostname paste mud.sloansteady.com, and under
port type 2102. Name the Alias for this Session something recognizable
like "Brin-L_MUD" or something like that.
Then when you want to connect there, just use the "Open"
option under the File Menu. Beside the "host" field, is an arrow button
-- selecting it will open a menu from which you can select the Brin-L
Mud alias. Telnet should connect there directly. Then you just give it
your name (the same name you will always use to log in there) and a
password which you'll need to remember, for next time you try log in.
The rest should be pretty much the same as with the PC instructions.
If you still can't get connected to the MUD from a Mac,
email Gord Sellar, and
he'll try to help.
General MUD Tips
Here are some tips to make your stay on Jijo (the Brin-L
"MUD-ball") a little more pleasant:
- Like most things related to UNIX and C, the MUD is case-sensitive. All
commands must be in all lowercase letters, and to use a command on a
character or object, you must type the character/object's name in all
lowercase letters too.
- The most important: type "say" before every line of conversation
you type, or nobody will see it! Luckily, there is a shortcut you can
use for say: the single quote '. So, typing
'This is something to say!
gets the same results as typing
say This is something to say!
- If you want to avoid typing "say" all the time, you can type "converse",
then a carriage-return. Every line you type after that will be
displayed, like in an ordinary chatroom. You can emote from inside
converse mode if you start it with a '!'. For example, you could type
"!grin" to grin. This is very useful, because there are some cool and
funny built-in emotes! To exit converse mode, type '.' or '**' at the
beginning of a line, and hit the carriage return.
- If you want to write a fancier emote than the ones like grin, smile,
laugh, etc that are built into the MUD, you must write them yourself.
For example, if you wanted your character to be bad, bad Leroy Brown ;-),
you could type
emote is badder than old King Kong, meaner than a junkyard dog!
You could also use the shortcut for emote, the ':' character, like this:
: is badder than old King Kong, meaner than a junkyard dog!
- To see the names of everybody currently in the MUD, just type "who"
If you're in converse mode, you can type "!who"
- If you want to tell something to only one character, use "tell." For
example, if you want to tell Dolphin something, you type
tell dolphin Cool pictures!
- The command "menu" provides an easy way to navigate the MUD for beginners.
- Most characters get a title, like Steve "the Pixelsmith". How do you
get one? Simply type:
title the Pixelsmith
Some characters get really fancy titles, with part of the title
in front of the name. If you wanted the title "Studious Steve, the
Pixelsmith", you could type:
title Studious $N, the Pixelsmith
The $N substitutes for the character name.
MUD Wizard Tips
Follow these tips, and with any luck, you'll be another
"Gan-dork"! ;-)
- It might help you to think of the MUD as a UNIX shell with a weird
medieval style. Of course, that only helps if you know something
about UNIX... ;-)
- Wizards must master the ugly incantations of the ed text editor to make
changes to the MUD and its rooms and races. Here is some
information on ed.
- The races need more work. You can find files specifying them in /std/race
- You can use "makeroom" to build a room, without resorting to ed.
Simply type "makeroom" in your directory, and the program tells you
what to do from there.
- If you've gotten lost wandering around in the MUD, you'll have to go to
a room with people in it before you can talk to them. The "goto" command
is an easy way to get to people. For example, if a character named Marco
is in the "who" listing, you can type "goto marco" (note the all-lowercase
words) and you'll be moved to the room where he is, and you will be able
to talk to him, and anybody else in the room. You can also use "goto
start" to get back to the start room.
Other Resources
Marco has added a Web
Server that allows wizards to edit room files using an easy interface,
create wizard home pages for themselves, and use various utilities.
A must-have!
You can also use FTP to move files to and from the MUD.
Just point your FTP program at mud.sloansteady.com,
using port 2106, and log in with your MUD character name and password.
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