-.TH SIC 1 sic-0.0
+.TH SIC 1 sic-VERSION
.SH NAME
sic \- simple irc client
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B sic
-.RB \-a
-.IR address
-.RB [ \-n
-.IR nick ]
-.RB [ \-f
-.IR fullname ]
-.RB [ \-p
-.IR password ]
+.RB [ \-h " <host>"]
+.RB [ \-p " <port>"]
+.RB [ \-n " <nick>"]
+.RB [ \-k " <keyword>"]
.RB [ \-v ]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B sic
different channel buffers, that's actually a feature.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
-.BI \-a " address "
-Lets you specify the address which
-.B sic
-uses to listen for connections. The syntax for
-.I address
-is taken (along with many other profound ideas) from the Plan 9 operating
-system and has the form
-.B tcp!hostname!port
-for tcp sockets.
+.B \-h <host>
+Overrides the default host (irc.oftc.net)
+.TP
+.B \-p <port>
+Overrides the default port (6667)
.TP
-.BI \-p " password"
-Specifies the password to authenticate the nick on the server.
+.B \-n <nickname>
+Override the default nick ($USER)
.TP
-.BI \-n " nick "
-Specifies the nick name (default: $USER).
+.B \-k <keyword>
+Specifies the keyword to authenticate your nick on the host
.TP
-.BI \-f " fullname "
-Specifies the full name.
.BI \-v
Prints version information to standard output, then exits.
.SH COMMANDS
.TP
-.BI /j " #channel/user "
-join/query a channel/user
+.B :j #channel
+Join a channel
+.TP
+.B :l #channel
+Leave a channel
.TP
-.BI /l " #channel "
-leave a channel/query
+.B :m #channel/user msg
+Write a message to #channel/user
.TP
-.BI /m " #channel/user msg "
-write a message to #channel/user
-.BI /t " topic"
-set the channel topic
+.B :s #channel/user
+Set default channel/user
.TP
-Everything which is not a command will simply be posted into the channel or to
-the server.
+Everything which is not a command is simply send the server.