I was on Usenet starting in 1984 when I was working at JPL/NASA. The modern 
hypertext-based internet and "world wide web" dates from around 1993 when the 
first web browsers started to appear. That's about when I stopped looking at 
Usenet and other archaic-isms from the 1980s. Email lists became popular a 
little earlier than the web browsers, and many of the groups I still 
participate in are still on email services that were first defined in 1990 and 
1991. 

G

> On Jan 10, 2023, at 7:02 PM, Comcast <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I don’t mean to disparage Usenet. Just pointing out that it’s old and now 
> somewhat obscure. Email, by the way has benefited from its universality and 
> consequently, the continuous refinement of email apps.
> 
> Paul
> 
>> On Jan 10, 2023, at 8:28 PM, Larry Colen <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jan 10, 2023, at 2:07 PM, Comcast <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Usenet is a relatively ancient system for posting information, messages and 
>>> the like. It was originally phone based relying on dial up modems. It’s now 
>>> internet based. It’s very basic and straightforward. Although you need an 
>>> access app, you don’t have to subscribe to a service like Facebook. It’s 
>>> rather inelegant but old timers embrace it as a computer geek badge of 
>>> honor.
>> 
>> I resemble that.
>> 
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet
>> 
>> I looked up RFC 850, and it dates to 1983, so the transition from UUCP to 
>> the internet is about 40 years old, so it’s not like it’s recent.  One could 
>> also say a lot of the same things about email (and yes red4est used to get 
>> its email via dial up uucp and bang path) but it’s not like people tend to 
>> disparage email as something that people used to do over their phones.
>> 
>> Hmm, the more things change…
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