MFJ-1278B MULTI-MODE ADVANCED OPERATION
The Mailbox will respond with:
Send msg; Control-Z or /EX to end:
_
The remote user will then enter the message at the cursor prompt. If you are using a 512K or
128K Mailbox then users can upload disk files into the Mailbox. The 32K version has the
same capability, but with 32K RAM capacity. At the end of the message press a Control-Z
and the ENTER key. The message will be sent.
The users message will be seen on your mailbox station's screen, then the mailbox will
respond with the mailbox command prompt:
nn free {n} Mailbox (B, E, H(elp), J, K, L, M, R, S, T)>
Where nn is the "bytes free" indicator. This tells the user how much ram space is available in
your Mailbox. Also {n} is the indicator of the current memory bank in use by the Mailbox.
4. There are two (2) different ways to kill messages. The first is given in the example
below:
A. To kill a message in a particular slot type:
K## <CR>
Where the ## is the message number you want to kill. The message must be one that is
addressed to the remote user. If the message is not addressed to the remote user, then Easy
Mail™ will respond with:
Cannot, not yours
If the message is addressed to the remote user, then the Mailbox will respond with:
Message ## deleted;
nn free {n} Mailbox (B, E, H(elp), J, K, L, M, R, S, T)>
This is whether or not the message has an N or a Y flag attached to it. Note that the remote
users may only kill messages that are addressed them. The originator can also kill the
message. The local SYSOP can kill any or all messages in the Mailbox.