On Saturday, in article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Mike Cox" wrote:
> Woodchuck Bill wrote: > > > Mike Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in > > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > > >> I cannot handle the volume of email that a mailing list would place > >> on my > >> inbox. > > > > Ever heard of a digest version? > > > > I don't care. Its too much of a hassle to dig through without being able to > google groups search it. Mike makes here a VERY valid point about the mailing list vs newsgroups controversy: often there is no means to search past articles from the mailing list unless one maintains one's own complete archive thereof. In contrast, posts of articles to *public* newsgroups (which includes the Big-8, alt.*, and thousands of national and other hierarchies, such as demon.*) are generally[1] archived by GoogleGroups, and thereby readily searchable. Private so-called newsgroups, which are carried on only one (or a handful of cooperating) server(s), and mailing lists ditto, need to make their own arrangements for archiving (which they often do) and providing a search capability (which they often don't). Newsgroups are much more flexible from the end-users' POV; however, there is a huge percentage of Internet users that are completely unaware of the existence of the concept. In contrast, they perceive using a mailing list is no different to mailing one person (as, sadly, can often be observed when mailing list participants use nasty habits picked up from using Outlook Express in inter-office memoranda). [1] Except, of course, where the poster uses X-No-Archive: Yes -- Brian {Hamilton Kelly} [EMAIL PROTECTED] "I don't use Linux. I prefer to use an OS supported by a large multi- national vendor, with a good office suite, excellent network/internet software and decent hardware support." ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend