[Coco] [OT] What newsreader do you use?
Gene Heskett
gene.heskett at verizon.net
Tue Oct 31 21:33:28 EST 2006
On Tuesday 31 October 2006 16:54, KnudsenMJ at aol.com wrote:
>In a message dated 10/31/06 4:46:39 PM Eastern Standard Time,
>
>gene.heskett at verizon.net writes:
>>So do I Mike, but one has to consider that a newsserver big enough to
>> be called one in today's world needs several terrabytes of storage, and
>> the last time I checked, 3.5 T1 lines fully occupied.
>
>Even with the alleged decline in netnews usage these days? At least,
> the claim has been made that "nobody" (as in "nobody uses DOS or
> floppies or ...") uses Netnews any more.
>
Obviously somebody is using it. I'm told that large amounts of it these
days is multipart porn movies, where you have to collect all 17 chapters
or some such before you have the whole thing.
>>Only vz and such can
>>afford that for what's expected to be a free service.
>
>Funny that even AOL"could not" afford it. Never heard of vz, what sort
> of outfit is that?
Short for verizon.net, my local and only ISP that can supply a DSL
connection.
>> Even vz has pretty
>>well emasculated theirs to the point I've given up trying to make
>> anything useful out of knode, the kde linux newsreader. Not knodes
>> fault, its just that only 25% of a given thread actually gets to it.
>
>ISTR that certain high-volume newsgroups never worked on AOL either.
>Claimed to, you could subscribe (enable) them, but nothing was received
> on them.
>
>So Netnews is dying under its own weight? Like the girl nobody asks out
> cuz she's too popular? --Mike K.
Something along those lines I think. :) Its the traffic levels that are
killing the bandwidth back to the backbone that are being throttled
because most smaller ISP's, like iolinc.net in Clarksburg, simply cannot
afford to support, so the zero-income newsserver gets its bandwidth
throttled to either control the bandwidth costs, or to hit a tolerable
level in terms of slowing up the rest of the services the customer wants.
--
Cheers, Gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
Yahoo.com and AOL/TW attorneys please note, additions to the above
message by Gene Heskett are:
Copyright 2006 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.
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