Usenet is a very loosely-organized distributed discussion system. Usenet discussions are organized into
groups, also known as
newsgroups.
A
Usenet moderated group is a group in which one or more human or software agents which must approve a posting before others see them. A
Usenet gateway group is a way to mirror a mailing list discussion into the Usenet medium.
At times, people ask where to read USENET newsgroups. There is no
one place to read USENET. USENET, as mentioned above, is a broadcast medium. So what one has to do is to find some place that either provides
NNTP access to some subset of newsgroups, or one finds a web site with such access which provides
http access to the data. Here on the
Wiki one can find a
simple news posting program and you may very well locate a news reading program as well.
LV: There were nntp readers and posting programs in Netscape [
1] and probably other browsers. There is a relatively crude news reader and poster in
http://lynx.browser.org/. I myself prefer
http://trn.sf.net/.
For example, Google now provides a level of access to USENET (both current and historical postings) via
http://groups.google.com/.
Resources edit
- Usenet Resources, by Marco d'Itri
- Net.Legends.FAQ
- Net.Legends mini FAQs
Etiquette edit
Someone commented:
It is a matter of good manners to either check first with the original author or at least let them know afterwards. Some people prefer anonimity ... RS: Posting to
Usenet is like "going public" - Google doesn't ask you either whether you want your posting archived...
Ah, but Google allows one to add a header that says "Do not archive this posting".
The bottom line is that while there is no requirement to check with the author, it is good manners. And one seldom goes wrong with observing good manners.
RS: OK, point taken.
- eternal-september.org
- free access to text-only usenet news
- news.individual.net
- 10 EUR per year
- cis.dfn.de
- LINKS AND F.A.Q ABOUT OPEN NNTP SERVERS
- alt.free.newsservers
- readreenews.net
- 404
- news.aioe.org
- free access without registration
DejaNews was a WWW site that provided web access to usenet newsgroups; it used to have comp.lang.tcl as the URL
http://www.deja.com/group/comp.lang.tcl - but Google came along, bought the database, and now has that information up at:
http://groups.google.com/. One has access to a large number of years - maybe all years! - of comp.lang.tcl* archives by using the advanced searching function of google. It appears to
LV that, during November 2001, the lag time between posting and articles appearing on google, is about 6-8 hours.