1 You are logged in but your terminal is not connected to a process.  You either
 2 have disconnected processes but did not say what to do with them, or you said
 3 what to do with them but have none. In either case, you must now indicate what
 4 you want to do by means of one of the following requests. The optional process
 5 numbers, indicated by {N} after several of the requests, are to be used if you
 6 have more than one disconnected process. The list request lists them and
 7 assigns the numbers.
 8 
 9 list         lists your disconnected processes.
10 create       creates a process (note that you need permission to have more than
11              one interactive process at a time).
12 connect {N}  connects your terminal to a disconnected process. Use this request
13              to resume your work at the point where your terminal got
14              disconnected from your process.
15 new_proc {N} connects your terminal to a disconnected process after doing a
16              new_proc. Use this request to resume your work from a convenient
17              point in a new process if your old process was malfunctioning.
18 destroy {N}  connects your terminal to a disconnected process and then logs it
19              (and you) out immediately. Use this request so an unwanted
20              disconnected process will not continue to incur charges and
21              exclude other users from the system.
22 logout       logs you out without affecting any process. The -hold (-hd) and
23              -brief (-bf) arguments prevent hanging up the phone and suppress
24              logout and greeting messages respectively. Use this request if you
25              leave the terminal dialed up while logged in and not connected, to
26              avoid giving the terminal's next user your access privileges.