This was (not quite) how bits of sub-saharan Africa got netnews in the early days. Store-and-forward, UUCP links over dial-ups, and the occasional mag tape couriered over.
paul > On Dec 29, 2019, at 9:11 AM, Rich Kulawiec <r...@gsp.org> wrote: > > > And this is why, despite all the disdainful remarks labeling such > things as "antiquated", mailing lists and Usenet newsgroups are vastly > superior to web sites/message boards/et.al. when it comes to facilitating > many-to-many communications between people. Why? Well, there are many > reasons, but one of the applicable ones in this use case is that their > queues can be written to media, physically transported in/out, and then > injected either into an internal or external network seamlessly modulo the > time delay. And because the computing resources required to handle this > are in any laptop or desktop made in the last decade, probably earlier. > > If you're trying to get information in/out of a society that is raising > network barriers to realtime communication, then you need methods that > don't rely on a network and aren't realtime. > > ---rsk >