Xref: utzoo comp.sys.att:2315 unix-pc.general:256 Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!uunet!zorch!scott From: scott@zorch.UU.NET (Scott Hazen Mueller) Newsgroups: comp.sys.att,unix-pc.general Subject: Re: Mailing list announcement Message-ID: <406@zorch.UU.NET> Date: 1 Feb 88 15:15:51 GMT References: <403@zorch.UU.NET> <1061@bakerst.UUCP> Reply-To: scott@zorch.UU.NET (Scott Hazen Mueller) Organization: At Home; Sunnyvale, CA Lines: 35 In article <1061@bakerst.UUCP> kathy@bakerst.UUCP (Kathy Vincent) writes: >sending news as mail to people who couldn't otherwise get directly >connected ... In other words, that's always been a possibility. Of course it has been possible. I'm doing it, aren't I? *You* never mentioned, even though you were obviously aware of it. >What further purpose does "gatewaying" (that nasty nonverb again) >the groups into comp.sys.att serve? *If* the readership is high enough, it is less costly to the transport links (read "the Usenet backbone") to send news than to send a mailing list. >And I have yet to understand what gatewaying (...) does that cross-posting >doesn't. Someone, please explain that to me. In public - maybe I'm not >the only one who doesn't understand it. 1) A gateway does not require all sites that generate material receive boths groups. Unless there's something in the News software that I'm not familiar with, it's not possible to cross-post into a group that your site does not receive. That applies to unix-pc-only sites as well as Usenet-only sites. 2) A gateway is *automatic*. It puts no requirements on posters to make intelligent choices. And it has been shown time and again through the experience of the Usenet that posters by and large *don't* make intelligent choices; hence, the large numbers of article followups that appear in inappropriate groups because the topic changed but the Newsgroups line didn't. >Kathy Vincent ------> {ihnp4|mtune|codas|ptsfa}!bakerst!kathy > ------> {ihnp4|mtune|burl}!wrcola!kathy > ------> { favourite AT&T gateway }!wruxe!unix -- Scott Hazen Mueller scott@zorch.UU.NET (408) 245-9461 (pyramid|tolerant|uunet)!zorch!scott