Well, the problem is precisely that it's *not* easy to mix and match. 
There's a lot of overlap in subject matter.  For example, imagine some
non-developer posts a feature request to bugzilla.  Now, that might want
to trigger a discussion on -talk, then once some agreement on wanting
the feature has been reached, it might migrate to -devel for discussion
on how to be implemented.

In practice, conversations evolve, and become of interest to people not
on the original distribution list.  When (if) those people get dropped
into the conversation half way through, it can be really hard to figure
out what's going on.

I've added -devel for now, and we'll see how things go.  If there's a
lot of crossovers going on, or a lot of stuff which should be crossing
over but which doesn't, then I'll revert to just -talk

C

On Tue, 2002-03-26 at 03:32, Charlie Watts wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Mar 2002, Matthew Cline wrote:
> 
> > Seems like most of the traffic on this list is for developers and advanced
> > users, especially now that Bugzilla comments are geetting CC'd to it.  Maybe
> > the list should be split into two, user and developer, so that ordinary users
> > of SA won't have to wade through all the messages that are only of interest
> > to developers.
> 
> I don't mind the user+developer mix, but I think spamassassin-bugzilla
> would be a better place to send Bugzilla comments.
> 
> But heck - if it's going to split, why not make three? Easy enough for
> users to mix'n'match then.
> 
> -- 
> Charlie Watts
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Frontier Internet, Inc.
> http://www.frontier.net/
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Spamassassin-talk mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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> 
> 


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