From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: web@loomcom.com (Seth Morabito) Date: Tue, 08 May 2018 10:53:36 -0700 Subject: [TUHS] Old Usenet newsreader source code? In-Reply-To: References: <1525796737.680198.1365037152.60B79FDC@webmail.messagingengine.com> <20180508163643.GA16384@mcvoy.com> <201805081706.w48H62gd027214@freefriends.org> Message-ID: <1525802016.2020176.1365125208.2706032F@webmail.messagingengine.com> On Tue, May 8, 2018, at 10:27 AM, Dan Cross wrote: > I was lamenting the (asymptotic) death of usenet to a colleague the > other day and asked, "where are all the cool kids these days?" I was > only half joking: back when news was the main nexus of interaction for > technical communities, it really was where you'd go to find things out > and where you could reasonably expect to interact with experts. For > example, occasionally the likes of Dennis Ritchie would even post in > comp.lang.c; Ken Thompson's MiG-29 flight story posted to rec.aviation > is a classic. But those days are long gone, so where do technical > communities communicate electronically? I'm told Reddit is the new > hotness, but it's just not the same (if for no other reason than that > it's totally centralized under the control of a single corporate > organization). I think a lot about the death of Usenet, the reasons for it, and what we've learned. I don't know if I've come to any insightful conclusions, but I do greatly miss it. In so many ways we've gone backward. We lost a truly decentralized message board system where one log-in allowed you to read anything about any topic, and replaced it with a mess of incompatible systems. On one hand we've got phpBB forums scattered all over the web that don't talk to each other, each of which requires its own login and password. On the other hand we have walled gardens like Reddit and Facebook that offer much of what Usenet did, but with clumsy user interfaces and centralized control and massive privacy concerns. There's just nothing like Usenet. I find more and more communities moving to Facebook, which worries me greatly. I'm not a fan. Other than that, mailing lists seem to continue to cling to life as the gold standard of technical communication. > - Dan C. -Seth -- Seth Morabito web at loomcom.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: