2 The Alpine Message System
6 Alpine, is a tool for reading, sending, and managing electronic
7 messages built upon the venerable Pine Message System. It was
8 designed specifically with novice computer users in mind, but can be
9 tailored to accommodate the needs of "power users" as well. Alpine
10 uses Internet message protocols (e.g. RFC-822, SMTP, MIME, IMAP, NNTP)
11 and runs on Unix and PCs.
13 The guiding principles for Alpine's user-interface were: careful
14 limitation of features, one-character mnemonic commands,
15 always-present command menus, immediate user feedback, and high
16 tolerance for user mistakes. It is intended that Alpine can be learned
17 by exploration rather than by reading manuals. At the same time, Alpine
18 is highly customizable and provides numerous advanced features
19 intended to help the most experienced users manage large mail
22 Alpine's message composition editor (Pico) and its file browser (Pilot) are
23 also available as separate stand-alone programs. Pico is a very simple
24 and easy-to-use text editor offering paragraph justification, cut/paste,
25 and a spelling checker.
29 - Online help specific to each screen and context.
31 - Message index showing a message summary which includes the status,
32 sender, size, date and subject of messages.
34 - Commands to view and process messages: Forward, Reply, Save,
35 Export, Print, Delete, capture address, and search.
37 - Message composer with easy-to-use editor and spelling checker.
38 The message composer also assists entering and formatting
39 addresses and provides direct access to the address book.
41 - Address book for saving long complex addresses and personal
42 distribution lists under a nickname.
44 - Message attachments via the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions
45 (MIME) specification. MIME allows sending/receiving non-text
46 objects, such as binary files, spreadsheets, graphics, and sound.
48 - Folder management commands for creating, deleting, listing, or
49 renaming message folders. Folders may be local or on remote hosts.
51 - Access to remote message folders and archives via the Internet
52 Message Access Protocol version 4.1 (IMAP) as defined in RFC-2060.
54 - Internet news support via either NNTP or IMAP.
56 - Aggregate operations, e.g. saving a selected set of messages at once.
60 Alpine, Web Alpine, PC-Alpine, Pico, and UW's IMAP server are made
61 freely available under the Apache License, Version 2.0. The latest
62 version, including source code, can be found on the Internet host
63 "ftp.cac.washington.edu" in the file "alpine/alpine.tar.Z" (accessible
66 For further information, visit the Alpine Information Center at
67 http://www.washington.edu/alpine/
69 Alpine is brought to you by the Office of Computing & Communications at the
70 University of Washington.