Yes, what you're saying makes sense. From my perspective, being quite active
with ant-user (and ant-dev), but mostly only lurking on apache-general,
commons-users, turbine-maven with occasional posts, I'd say that mailing
lists are better for active involvement, but news is better for lurking and
the occasional question to a list. This is why I thought Gmane would be
ideal for the latter; unfortunately it doesn't allow posting on non-public
lists, like Apache lists requiring registration. Once Gmane implements this
feature, lurking with occasional post will be easy (as I find using news and
mail together inconvenient). My $.02, --DD

-----Original Message-----
From: Kief Morris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Friday, January 24, 2003 3:47 AM
To: Jakarta General List
Subject: Re: Forum Software.

Robert Simmons typed the following on 03:20 24/01/2003 +0100
>I say that forum software would be useful because I am in three mailing 
>lists at apache that I use in order to ask questions.
>Tomcat, Cocoon and this one. as a result i get an enormous amount of mail. 
>Aout 95% of it is irrelevant to me. Im having to filter
>hundreds of messages per day and that is annyoing.

So, read the archive. The great thing about mailing lists is ithey're open -
anyone
who wants to can put whatever interface they like onto it - web, news,
whatever.
Don't like the search engine? What search engine would you use if it was a
forum? Why not use that on an archive? Do you prefer the threading in your
favorite forum package to that in an archive? Implement it.

A forum is a closed system, it limits access to a single point, and
eliminates
choice. Rather than stripping functionality away from people who use it just
because you don't like it, ignore those features and implement whatever you
do want.

Kief

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