Aditya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Uh, I think this is a bit of an exaggeration -- gmane isn't tied to any > sort of usenet feed and hasn't leaked into "regular ol" usenet.
This is, unfortunately, a matter of time, given how many people use suck or similar software to pull down any newsgroup they're interested in reading from its private servers and end up reinjecting it into the regular flow of news. newsfeed:~/log> grep ' gmane' unwanted.log 2 gmane.comp.openoffice.announce.features 2 gmane.mail.ezmlm 1 gmane.test 1 gmane.network.openssh.announce It's already starting. > gmane isn't the only or the first entity to funnel mailing lists into an > NNTP spool/server, it's just the most public. There are *tons* of people doing this, many of whom are tossing the results out to the world. Hierarchies like mailing.*, mail.*, muc.lists.*, fa.*, and the like abound. In case anyone thinks that people are not already doing this with this mailing list: newsfeed:~/log> grep 'list-managers' unwanted.log 3 clinet.list.list-managers 1 info.list-managers 1 mentorg.list.list-managers > There are several advantages to reading mailing lists via NNTP (note > that I am saying nothing about usenet) even beyond sucky MUAs. This is why people do it. When lots of people are doing something, it's generally for a reason. To add to and support your reasons, one of those reasons is that news reading software is massively better at reading large, threaded discussions than all but the very best mailing list software. Another reason is that news searching is significantly better. A third reason is that lurking is much easier and much more convenient. A fourth reason is that being able to review the recent postings to a mailing list is a very valuable thing to be able to do, and web archives for mailing lists are essentially without exception completely unmitigated disasters. -- Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>
