Xref: utzoo news.groups:2187 comp.sys.mac:10799 comp.sys.amiga:12893 Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!clyde!cbosgd!ucbvax!hoser.berkeley.edu!bryce From: bryce@hoser.berkeley.edu (Bryce Nesbitt) Newsgroups: news.groups,comp.sys.mac,comp.sys.amiga Subject: An alternate method of splitting high volume groups Message-ID: <22603@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU> Date: 16 Jan 88 04:18:18 GMT Sender: usenet@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: bryce@hoser.berkeley.edu (Bryce Nesbitt) Followup-To: news.groups Lines: 84 [Background: There is ongoing discussion about splitting both the Mac and Amiga groups. A vote is underway on the Amiga proposal. This posting should be of interest to the readers of any high volume group considering a split.] Among the responses received so far on the split comp.sys.amiga vote, there has been a remarkable number of "write-in" votes for a much more radical approach. The exact details vary, but they are all quite close in principle. Basically they are saying: "I'd like to see it split MORE ways". Since so may people are already indicating interest in this, I'll toss it out for all to see. It was summed up best by one person who wrote: -------------- I've been mulling over a more drastic solution. Actually, I've been contemplating a different way of looking at netnoise, with [comp.sys.amiga] as the testbed: The idea is to not view newsgroups as "barriers" between discussions, but as "keywords" to indicate topics of interest. The general idea is to think of what groups you're interested in a posting being read by, then post to the most specific newsgroup that will reach part of that group. So the split for c.s.a would be something like: comp.sys.amiga - no postings, just a root for the keywords ".hardware - postings that somehow discuss hardware ".software - ditto software ".misc - nothing else applices ".A2000 - Amiga 2000 specific ".A1000 - " 1000 ".A500 - " 500 ".tech ".novice ".applications ".programming ".audio ".video ".religious [".reviews ".marketing ".questions ".games] Etc, etc, etc. The more the merrier. Cross-posting is to be *encouraged*. An article looking for hardware & software for building video tapes on an A2000 should be crossposted to hardware, software, A2000, video and applications. An answer that discussed the technical merits/demerits of various products would add .tech to the list. Someone looking for an editor for programming with would probably post to .programming, .applications, .software and maybe .tech. Somone wanting to know how to build a virus would post to .hardware, .software, .tech and .programming. If you wanted to talk about whether such was good or bad, you'd probably post to .software and .religious. Those wanting to avoid certain subjects would filter incoming news on the Newsgroups: line. Of course, to actually work, this would require some effort on the part of the posters, and (more importantly) those doing followups. But it can't be worse than the current monolithic system, and can't be much worse than a two-way split. -------------- There you have it. Let's discuss the merits of this for both comp.sys.amiga AND all the other high volume groups on the net. The comp.sys.mac group should be especially interested. One thing I would like an AUTHORATATIVE answer on is cost: Assuming the exact same number of raw bytes/day, will a large number of splinter groups cause sites extra cost or hassle? (Will a proposal like this result in more volume is another question) |\ /| . Ack! (NAK, SOH, EOT) {o O} . bryce@hoser.berkeley.EDU -or- ucbvax!hoser!bryce (or try "cogsci") (") U "Your theory is crazy... but not crazy enought to be true." -Niels Bohr