View Full Version : No geek here
GrannyGrump
June 18th 04, 04:28 PM
>Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any sort
>of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web address
No admin here...wide open to the world... research the post header,
copy the full post (headers too) and send to te abuse department
listed in the post.
>and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this is
>different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
None at all.
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 04:34 PM
Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any sort
of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web address
and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this is
different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 04:44 PM
As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
Bill
"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
...
> Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any sort
> of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web address
> and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this is
> different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
> Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
>
>
joe
June 18th 04, 04:53 PM
On 6/18/04 8:34 AM, "Newbie Bill" wrote:
> Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any sort
> of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web address
> and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this is
> different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
> Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
I believe we are an unchaparoned group, left to govern ourselves.
Joe
-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----
George
June 18th 04, 04:58 PM
"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
m...
> As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
> for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
> little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
> engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
> Bill
You and I pay for it. Yes there is. Yes is does. Yes it is.
Ka30P
June 18th 04, 05:24 PM
Nope, nobody here to look after ourselves but us.
We don't get that much spam, surprisingly.
A troll once in a while, some porno here and there.
Maybe we're considered too boring to mess with ;-)
kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 05:37 PM
I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all this
info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link to
their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc. I know(I think) that a
website is essentially on A computer (or server) and everyone is accessing
it. If that is the case with usenet does my server pay a 'subscription' or
download fee. After about 6 years I am still fascinated by the whole thing -
the way the net connects us all almost as if we were neighbors. In fact I
have neighbors just 3 houses away that I still dont know (after 7 months)
but I 'know' people in PA because of the net and our common interest. Darn
right amazin.
Bill
" George" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
> m...
> > As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
> > for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
> > little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
> > engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
> > Bill
>
>
> You and I pay for it. Yes there is. Yes is does. Yes it is.
>
>
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 05:42 PM
I cant help myself. I assume a troll is someone who just wanders in without
any particular interest in the group, but just to stir up things a bit.
What is a flamer? I think thats the term. Someone once told me - I never
go to that group because its all trolls and flamers.
Bill
"Ka30P" > wrote in message
...
>
> Nope, nobody here to look after ourselves but us.
> We don't get that much spam, surprisingly.
> A troll once in a while, some porno here and there.
> Maybe we're considered too boring to mess with ;-)
>
>
> kathy :-)
> algae primer
> http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Ka30P
June 18th 04, 05:46 PM
Bill wrote >>Darn
right amazin.<<
You can say that again!
I'm not sure it all works, luckily I have a computer geek teenager in residence
to take
care of me.
kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Ka30P
June 18th 04, 05:53 PM
You tempt me! (see below)
(And the I promise I will go back to wading through
the pile on my desk...)
Basically a troll likes to post things like
'your pond is ugly and you are infecting us with West Nile' and then stands
back to see what he has stirred up.
A flamer likes to attack someone he disagrees with 'You are an idiot for
recommending that, or you are going to kill your fish and everyone else's.'
They don't have much tolerance for differing opinions.
I love trolls as I get to ignore my deskwork and come up with troll remedies
such as:
Troll! We have a troll in the pond!
Quick, break out the emergency kit!
First isolate the troll to the filter,
get your fish net and your cattle prod.
Gently prod the troll in his nether
regions (for some reason pond trolls
are always male and the nether region
prod is always effective).
Apply the maximum electrical charge
to the prod.
The troll will then obligingly hop into
the net.
Ignore the howls that accompany the
electrical prod administration, (he deserves it).
Remove the troll, in the net, to an
isolation tank. Deposit in tank.
Remedies vary at this point. You
may choose the one that you feel
best fits your particular pond troll's
crimes:
1. Apply 100 pounds of pond salt and shrivel
the pond troll out of existence.
2. Apply triple the maximum dose of
potassium permanganate effectively nuking
the pond troll to the next dimension.
3. Apply several dozen leeches to the pond
troll thus depriving him of vital fluids. You will
have to dispose of empty pond troll skin but
it does well in the compost heap.
Good luck and good hunting!
kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 06:04 PM
Toooo funny! btw - Since we are virtually neighbors, (but better) ----------
could I borrow a cup of sugar?
Bill :)
"Ka30P" > wrote in message
...
> You tempt me! (see below)
> (And the I promise I will go back to wading through
> the pile on my desk...)
>
> Basically a troll likes to post things like
> 'your pond is ugly and you are infecting us with West Nile' and then
stands
> back to see what he has stirred up.
>
> A flamer likes to attack someone he disagrees with 'You are an idiot for
> recommending that, or you are going to kill your fish and everyone
else's.'
> They don't have much tolerance for differing opinions.
>
> I love trolls as I get to ignore my deskwork and come up with troll
remedies
> such as:
>
> Troll! We have a troll in the pond!
> Quick, break out the emergency kit!
>
> First isolate the troll to the filter,
> get your fish net and your cattle prod.
> Gently prod the troll in his nether
> regions (for some reason pond trolls
> are always male and the nether region
> prod is always effective).
> Apply the maximum electrical charge
> to the prod.
> The troll will then obligingly hop into
> the net.
> Ignore the howls that accompany the
> electrical prod administration, (he deserves it).
>
> Remove the troll, in the net, to an
> isolation tank. Deposit in tank.
> Remedies vary at this point. You
> may choose the one that you feel
> best fits your particular pond troll's
> crimes:
>
> 1. Apply 100 pounds of pond salt and shrivel
> the pond troll out of existence.
> 2. Apply triple the maximum dose of
> potassium permanganate effectively nuking
> the pond troll to the next dimension.
> 3. Apply several dozen leeches to the pond
> troll thus depriving him of vital fluids. You will
> have to dispose of empty pond troll skin but
> it does well in the compost heap.
>
> Good luck and good hunting!
>
>
> kathy :-)
> algae primer
> http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
George
June 18th 04, 07:01 PM
"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
...
>I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
> from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all this
> info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link to
> their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
> accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc. I know(I think) that a
> website is essentially on A computer (or server) and everyone is accessing
> it. If that is the case with usenet does my server pay a 'subscription' or
> download fee. After about 6 years I am still fascinated by the whole thing -
> the way the net connects us all almost as if we were neighbors. In fact I
> have neighbors just 3 houses away that I still dont know (after 7 months)
> but I 'know' people in PA because of the net and our common interest. Darn
> right amazin.
> Bill
I suggest you spend less time thinking about things you cannot control, then go
down the street and meet your neighbors.
George
June 18th 04, 07:03 PM
"Ka30P" > wrote in message
...
> You tempt me! (see below)
> (And the I promise I will go back to wading through
> the pile on my desk...)
>
> Basically a troll likes to post things like
> 'your pond is ugly and you are infecting us with West Nile' and then stands
> back to see what he has stirred up.
>
> A flamer likes to attack someone he disagrees with 'You are an idiot for
> recommending that, or you are going to kill your fish and everyone else's.'
> They don't have much tolerance for differing opinions.
>
> I love trolls as I get to ignore my deskwork and come up with troll remedies
> such as:
>
> Troll! We have a troll in the pond!
> Quick, break out the emergency kit!
>
> First isolate the troll to the filter,
> get your fish net and your cattle prod.
> Gently prod the troll in his nether
> regions (for some reason pond trolls
> are always male and the nether region
> prod is always effective).
> Apply the maximum electrical charge
> to the prod.
> The troll will then obligingly hop into
> the net.
> Ignore the howls that accompany the
> electrical prod administration, (he deserves it).
>
> Remove the troll, in the net, to an
> isolation tank. Deposit in tank.
> Remedies vary at this point. You
> may choose the one that you feel
> best fits your particular pond troll's
> crimes:
>
> 1. Apply 100 pounds of pond salt and shrivel
> the pond troll out of existence.
> 2. Apply triple the maximum dose of
> potassium permanganate effectively nuking
> the pond troll to the next dimension.
> 3. Apply several dozen leeches to the pond
> troll thus depriving him of vital fluids. You will
> have to dispose of empty pond troll skin but
> it does well in the compost heap.
>
> Good luck and good hunting!
>
>
> kathy :-)
> algae primer
> http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Here is my favorite troll remedy:
o
.:\:/:.
+-----------------------+ .:\:\:/:/:.
| PLEASE DO NOT | :.:\:\:/:/:.:
| FEED THE TROLLS | :=.' - - '.=:
| | '=(\ 9 9 /)='
| Thank you, | ( (_) )
| Management | /`-vvv-'\
+-----------------------+ / \
| | @@@ / /|,,,,,|\ \
| | @@@ /_// /^\ \\_\
@x@@x@ | | |/ WW( ( ) )WW
\||||/ | | \| __\,,\ /,,/__
\||/ | | | jgs(______Y______)
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
Heather
June 18th 04, 07:06 PM
Kathy -
You sure come up with some good ones. Are you saving these to put in a
book?
--
Heather
SW Ontario (Zone 5)
"Ka30P" > wrote in message
...
> You tempt me! (see below)
> (And the I promise I will go back to wading through
> the pile on my desk...)
>
> Basically a troll likes to post things like
> 'your pond is ugly and you are infecting us with West Nile' and then
stands
> back to see what he has stirred up.
>
> A flamer likes to attack someone he disagrees with 'You are an idiot for
> recommending that, or you are going to kill your fish and everyone
else's.'
> They don't have much tolerance for differing opinions.
>
> I love trolls as I get to ignore my deskwork and come up with troll
remedies
> such as:
>
> Troll! We have a troll in the pond!
> Quick, break out the emergency kit!
>
> First isolate the troll to the filter,
> get your fish net and your cattle prod.
> Gently prod the troll in his nether
> regions (for some reason pond trolls
> are always male and the nether region
> prod is always effective).
> Apply the maximum electrical charge
> to the prod.
> The troll will then obligingly hop into
> the net.
> Ignore the howls that accompany the
> electrical prod administration, (he deserves it).
>
> Remove the troll, in the net, to an
> isolation tank. Deposit in tank.
> Remedies vary at this point. You
> may choose the one that you feel
> best fits your particular pond troll's
> crimes:
>
> 1. Apply 100 pounds of pond salt and shrivel
> the pond troll out of existence.
> 2. Apply triple the maximum dose of
> potassium permanganate effectively nuking
> the pond troll to the next dimension.
> 3. Apply several dozen leeches to the pond
> troll thus depriving him of vital fluids. You will
> have to dispose of empty pond troll skin but
> it does well in the compost heap.
>
> Good luck and good hunting!
>
>
> kathy :-)
> algae primer
> http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Ka30P
June 18th 04, 07:07 PM
Virtual sugar I got lots of!
kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
joe
June 18th 04, 07:53 PM
On 6/18/04 9:37 AM, "Newbie Bill" wrote:
> I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
> from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all this
> info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link to
> their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
> accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc. I know(I think) that a
> website is essentially on A computer (or server) and everyone is accessing
> it. If that is the case with usenet does my server pay a 'subscription' or
> download fee. After about 6 years I am still fascinated by the whole thing -
> the way the net connects us all almost as if we were neighbors. In fact I
> have neighbors just 3 houses away that I still dont know (after 7 months)
> but I 'know' people in PA because of the net and our common interest. Darn
> right amazin.
> Bill
> " George" > wrote in message
> ...
>>
>> "Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
>> m...
>>> As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
>>> for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
>>> little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
>>> engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
>>> Bill
>>
>>
>> You and I pay for it. Yes there is. Yes is does. Yes it is.
>>
>>
You might be interested in this:
http://www.usenet.com/
Joe
>
-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----
Susan H. Simko
June 18th 04, 08:08 PM
Do I really have to don the computer geek beanie? Really? Can't I just
go sit by the pond, feed the fish and drink a nice glass of Merlot?
(Maureen, you're welcome to share.)
Okay. *pout*
Usenet is a really big "thing" that has been around for many years,
predating the internet and the web. It originally, from my
understanding, started out as a communications medium for serious stuff
like science, research, etc. This is the reason for the prefixes such
as sci., bionet., it., etc. Over time, other things started up as us
geeks decided to branch out into other things that struck our fancy -
recreational stuff (rec.), alternative stuff (alt.) and so on and so
forth.
Data from usenet is gotten by feeds. Most systems have a usenet feed
because of it's multiple uses. It's actually not quite the whopping
space hog that email is in that it only stores one copy of each post
that everyone can go out "there" to read. Unlike email, where if I send
one email to fifty of my colleagues in the university where I work,
there will be an identical complete copy of that email stored in each of
those fifty people's mailboxes.
As to the cost, well, because it is often used for research purposes, it
can be a genuine need so the feed must be carried. There are also
people who look at it as a must have when shopping for an ISP. In
addition, it's also just part of the general cost of being part of the
world. You might as well ask why each computer on the internet also
relays mail to other nodes, playing a giant game of "pass it on". (This
can take *lots* of disk space especially if a node up the line goes down
and your forced to hold mail until the node comes back up. Think sink
with stopper closed versus open.) This is just all part of the "rules"
one agrees to when one becomes part of this world. Isn't it nice that
they do? *grin*
Yeesh. *smile* Is it time to go home yet? I'm jonesin' for a pondfix.
Susan
shsimko[@]duke[.]edu
Ka30P
June 18th 04, 08:52 PM
Heather wrote >>Are you saving these to put in a
book?<<
:-)
Ponding in CyberSpace?
kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 09:06 PM
Apparently you arent married. I sure as h*** cant control my wife but I
want to know everything I can about how she works.
Bill
" George" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
> ...
> >I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
> > from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all
this
> > info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link
to
> > their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
> > accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc. I know(I think) that a
> > website is essentially on A computer (or server) and everyone is
accessing
> > it. If that is the case with usenet does my server pay a 'subscription'
or
> > download fee. After about 6 years I am still fascinated by the whole
thing -
> > the way the net connects us all almost as if we were neighbors. In fact
I
> > have neighbors just 3 houses away that I still dont know (after 7
months)
> > but I 'know' people in PA because of the net and our common interest.
Darn
> > right amazin.
> > Bill
>
> I suggest you spend less time thinking about things you cannot control,
then go
> down the street and meet your neighbors.
>
>
gerry
June 18th 04, 09:25 PM
[original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 15:34:15 GMT, "Newbie Bill"
> wrote:
>Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any sort
>of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web address
>and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this is
>different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
>Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
>
Note the status - unmoderated
gerry
{
From Tue Nov 8 23:47:50 EST 1994
Article: 47227 of rec.gardens
Path:
bigblue.oit.unc.edu!concert!hearst.acc.Virginia.ED U!caen!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!gatech!newsfeed.pitt .edu!uunet!bounce-back
From: (Janette Wallis)
Newsgroups:
news.announce.newgroups,news.groups,rec.gardens,re c.aquaria,rec.pets.herp
Subject: RFD: rec.ponds
Followup-To: news.groups
Date: 1 Nov 1994 17:54:41 -0500
Organization: Health Sciences Center, University of Oklahoma
Lines: 139
Sender:
Approved:
Message-ID: >
NNTP-Posting-Host: rodan.uu.net
Xref: bigblue.oit.unc.edu news.announce.newgroups:5059 news.groups:98259
rec.gardens:47227 rec.aquaria:44085 rec.pets.herp:23519
REQUEST FOR DISCUSSION
Name: REC.PONDS
Status: unmoderated
Distribution: worldwide
Summary: Discussions related to the development and
maintenance of water gardens or ponds.
Proposed by:
This is a formal Request For Discussion (RFD) on the creation of an
unmoderated newsgroup, rec.ponds.
PROPOSED CHARTER OF REC.PONDS
Preamble
Rec.ponds is an unmoderated newsgroup to provide a forum for the
discussion of all aspects of ponds or water gardens.
This Request For Discussion puts forth the suggested name of
"rec.ponds", after a straw poll was conducted during previous discussion
of a "rec.gardens.ponds" group. The results indicated that "rec.ponds"
was
preferred by the majority of the voters.
The Rec.ponds newsgroup will appeal to a wide range of people
involved in both the recreational and professional aspects of establishing
and maintaining a pond or water garden. We'll have novices to water
gardening as well as experts, the hobbyist as well as genuine botanists
and ichthyologists. Even students wishing to find help with science
projects may decide to read Rec.ponds. All of these people will be
welcomed to share ideas, ask questions, or simply lurk and learn.
Sphere of Interests
Rec.ponds is dedicated to the development and maintenance of
water gardens. Examples of discussion topics might include:
*Building a pond/water garden: Details will be shared regarding best
materials to use, procedures for making the pond secure, and appropriate
placement of the pond. Or, in the case of a naturally occurring pond,
what can be done to make it more "user friendly"? We'll have tips on
building a waterfall, installing a fountain, whether to use a filter,
and how to install a biological filter. Also, we may give information
on lighting and how to safely run electrical lines to the pool area.
*Establishing a perfect ecosystem:
Where else can you create your own ecosystem and watch it evolve?
We'll have discussions on water quality; ratio of plant life to animal
life;
plant/animal interactions, etc.
*Plant life:
We'll discuss which plants are best suited for our water gardens. Which
plants need a lot of sunlight, which will survive in the pond over
winter, which need to be taken indoors, etc? The Rec.ponds
newsgroup will serve as a forum for discussing plant diseases and cures,
when to divide, and how to propagate our plants. We'll also share
information on establishing an area for bog plants.
*Fish:
We'll share information on fish behavior, biology, and health. For
example: Which fish are compatible? What's the maximum number of fish
for the size of a pond? What conditions should exist in the pond so
the fish will breed? How do we protect the fry from danger and see that
they grow into healthy adults? Which diseases are likely to effect
pond fish? How much should we feed the fish, and how often?
*Amphibians and Reptiles:
We'll discuss the biology, health, and behavior of frogs, newts,
salamanders, turtles, etc. that either come naturally to the pond or are
placed there by us. Which ones get along?
* Other Environmental Concerns:
In Rec.ponds, we'll discuss how to make certain the pond is
not a safety hazard for small children or pets. How can we attract
butterflies? Should we attract snails? Also, how do we guard against
unwanted visitors (raccoons, cats, snakes, herons) that may prey on the
fish and/or plants in a pond? What about the use of fertilizers or
insecticides near the pond? Rec.ponds can be a place to
exchange information on (non-political) conservation issues.
* Miscellaneous: Students can use rec.ponds as a place for learning
more about plant and animal life in and around water. We may exchange
information regarding suppliers of equipment, literature regarding water
garden techniques, location of other electronic resources, etc.
(However, Rec.ponds is *not* intended as a forum for commercial
transactions with respect to sale of plants, fish, or pond equipment.)
* In the future, rec.ponds may develop FAQ's that address each of
the above topics.
RATIONALE
Because most water gardeners have both plant and animal life in their
pond, discussions on development and care of ponds has previously been
split between rec.gardens, rec.aquaria, and rec.pets.herp. There is no
newsgroup dedicated only to the interests of water gardeners.
CROSS POSTINGS
This RFD is being posted to news.announce.newgroups, news.groups,
rec.gardens, rec.aquaria, rec.pets.herp. All discussion will take
place in the group "news.groups."
DISCUSSION
This is the second posting of the Charter for a newsgroup for ponds. The
first posting proposed the name "rec.gardens.ponds", but with the same
charter described above. That posting occurred on 6 October 1994. The
only issue raised during the discussion period was that of the newsgroup's
name. Because the discussion grew quite heated, a Straw Poll was
conducted by Wayne Powell ). Straw Poll results were
posted on 25 October 1994. The majority of votes (50.4%) were for
"rec.ponds", with "rec.gardens.ponds" a distant 33.1%. (Please contact
Wayne for straw poll questions/details.)
This second posting of the RFD reflects the newly agreed upon name
"rec.ponds." It is being posted to news.announce.newgroups on 27 October
1994 and continued discussion regarding the contents of the proposal will
last for approximately one more week.
If no major changes are required to the proposed charter, then a Call for
Votes (CFV) will then be issued. An independent third party, from the
Usenet Volunteer Votetakers will be asked to conduct the vote.
This RFD is being posted according to the guidelines set forth in "How
to Create a New Usenet Newsgroup." Please refer to this document if
you have questions about the newsgroup creation process.
To pass, the proposal must receive 100 more "Yes" votes than "No" votes
and at least two thirds of the votes must be positive. Therefore, if
you have an interest in this newsgroup please make it known through
discussion on news.groups (and please remember to vote when the time
comes).
}
--
Personal home page - http://gogood.com
gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 09:31 PM
Thanxx - Thats as technical as I need to know. Enjoy your weekend.
Bill
"Susan H. Simko" > wrote in message
...
> Do I really have to don the computer geek beanie? Really? Can't I just
> go sit by the pond, feed the fish and drink a nice glass of Merlot?
> (Maureen, you're welcome to share.)
>
> Okay. *pout*
>
> Usenet is a really big "thing" that has been around for many years,
> predating the internet and the web. It originally, from my
> understanding, started out as a communications medium for serious stuff
> like science, research, etc. This is the reason for the prefixes such
> as sci., bionet., it., etc. Over time, other things started up as us
> geeks decided to branch out into other things that struck our fancy -
> recreational stuff (rec.), alternative stuff (alt.) and so on and so
> forth.
>
> Data from usenet is gotten by feeds. Most systems have a usenet feed
> because of it's multiple uses. It's actually not quite the whopping
> space hog that email is in that it only stores one copy of each post
> that everyone can go out "there" to read. Unlike email, where if I send
> one email to fifty of my colleagues in the university where I work,
> there will be an identical complete copy of that email stored in each of
> those fifty people's mailboxes.
>
> As to the cost, well, because it is often used for research purposes, it
> can be a genuine need so the feed must be carried. There are also
> people who look at it as a must have when shopping for an ISP. In
> addition, it's also just part of the general cost of being part of the
> world. You might as well ask why each computer on the internet also
> relays mail to other nodes, playing a giant game of "pass it on". (This
> can take *lots* of disk space especially if a node up the line goes down
> and your forced to hold mail until the node comes back up. Think sink
> with stopper closed versus open.) This is just all part of the "rules"
> one agrees to when one becomes part of this world. Isn't it nice that
> they do? *grin*
>
> Yeesh. *smile* Is it time to go home yet? I'm jonesin' for a pondfix.
>
> Susan
> shsimko[@]duke[.]edu
>
>
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 10:03 PM
Weeeell, I told Susan that was about as technical as I needed to know, but
that is very interesting. So it sounds like Janette Wallis and possibly
Wayne Powell are the Mother and Father of our newsgroup founded in 1994. I
am very surprised it is so formal. I guess I thought you just went to the
right place and pushed the "Post Newsgroup" button or something. Anyone
have any idea if these people are still around? How about any of the charter
members who were involved in the straw poll? Who are they petitioning to?
And to think. OU is one of the biggest rivals of UT. And apparently we owe
it all to them. All you Texans quit reading right now. Go Sooners!
Thanxx
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
"gerry" > wrote in message
...
> [original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
> On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 15:34:15 GMT, "Newbie Bill"
> > wrote:
>
> >Just curious. I know virtually nothing about usenet. Do we have any
sort
> >of administrator here. Our local bulletin board has a regular web
address
> >and the web master routinely goes in and removes all spam. I know this
is
> >different but wasnt sure if anyone had any 'big brother' powers.
> >Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
> >
>
> Note the status - unmoderated
>
> gerry
>
> {
> From Tue Nov 8 23:47:50 EST 1994
> Article: 47227 of rec.gardens
> Path:
>
bigblue.oit.unc.edu!concert!hearst.acc.Virginia.ED U!caen!newsxfer.itd.umich.
edu!gatech!newsfeed.pitt.edu!uunet!bounce-back
> From: (Janette Wallis)
> Newsgroups:
> news.announce.newgroups,news.groups,rec.gardens,re c.aquaria,rec.pets.herp
> Subject: RFD: rec.ponds
> Followup-To: news.groups
> Date: 1 Nov 1994 17:54:41 -0500
> Organization: Health Sciences Center, University of Oklahoma
> Lines: 139
> Sender:
> Approved:
> Message-ID: >
> NNTP-Posting-Host: rodan.uu.net
> Xref: bigblue.oit.unc.edu news.announce.newgroups:5059 news.groups:98259
> rec.gardens:47227 rec.aquaria:44085 rec.pets.herp:23519
>
> REQUEST FOR DISCUSSION
>
>
> Name: REC.PONDS
> Status: unmoderated
> Distribution: worldwide
> Summary: Discussions related to the development and
> maintenance of water gardens or ponds.
> Proposed by:
>
> This is a formal Request For Discussion (RFD) on the creation of an
> unmoderated newsgroup, rec.ponds.
>
>
> PROPOSED CHARTER OF REC.PONDS
>
> Preamble
>
> Rec.ponds is an unmoderated newsgroup to provide a forum for the
> discussion of all aspects of ponds or water gardens.
>
> This Request For Discussion puts forth the suggested name of
> "rec.ponds", after a straw poll was conducted during previous discussion
> of a "rec.gardens.ponds" group. The results indicated that "rec.ponds"
> was
> preferred by the majority of the voters.
>
> The Rec.ponds newsgroup will appeal to a wide range of people
> involved in both the recreational and professional aspects of establishing
> and maintaining a pond or water garden. We'll have novices to water
> gardening as well as experts, the hobbyist as well as genuine botanists
> and ichthyologists. Even students wishing to find help with science
> projects may decide to read Rec.ponds. All of these people will be
> welcomed to share ideas, ask questions, or simply lurk and learn.
>
>
> Sphere of Interests
>
> Rec.ponds is dedicated to the development and maintenance of
> water gardens. Examples of discussion topics might include:
>
> *Building a pond/water garden: Details will be shared regarding best
> materials to use, procedures for making the pond secure, and appropriate
> placement of the pond. Or, in the case of a naturally occurring pond,
> what can be done to make it more "user friendly"? We'll have tips on
> building a waterfall, installing a fountain, whether to use a filter,
> and how to install a biological filter. Also, we may give information
> on lighting and how to safely run electrical lines to the pool area.
>
> *Establishing a perfect ecosystem:
> Where else can you create your own ecosystem and watch it evolve?
> We'll have discussions on water quality; ratio of plant life to animal
> life;
> plant/animal interactions, etc.
>
> *Plant life:
> We'll discuss which plants are best suited for our water gardens. Which
> plants need a lot of sunlight, which will survive in the pond over
> winter, which need to be taken indoors, etc? The Rec.ponds
> newsgroup will serve as a forum for discussing plant diseases and cures,
> when to divide, and how to propagate our plants. We'll also share
> information on establishing an area for bog plants.
>
> *Fish:
> We'll share information on fish behavior, biology, and health. For
> example: Which fish are compatible? What's the maximum number of fish
> for the size of a pond? What conditions should exist in the pond so
> the fish will breed? How do we protect the fry from danger and see that
> they grow into healthy adults? Which diseases are likely to effect
> pond fish? How much should we feed the fish, and how often?
>
> *Amphibians and Reptiles:
> We'll discuss the biology, health, and behavior of frogs, newts,
> salamanders, turtles, etc. that either come naturally to the pond or are
> placed there by us. Which ones get along?
>
> * Other Environmental Concerns:
> In Rec.ponds, we'll discuss how to make certain the pond is
> not a safety hazard for small children or pets. How can we attract
> butterflies? Should we attract snails? Also, how do we guard against
> unwanted visitors (raccoons, cats, snakes, herons) that may prey on the
> fish and/or plants in a pond? What about the use of fertilizers or
> insecticides near the pond? Rec.ponds can be a place to
> exchange information on (non-political) conservation issues.
>
> * Miscellaneous: Students can use rec.ponds as a place for learning
> more about plant and animal life in and around water. We may exchange
> information regarding suppliers of equipment, literature regarding water
> garden techniques, location of other electronic resources, etc.
> (However, Rec.ponds is *not* intended as a forum for commercial
> transactions with respect to sale of plants, fish, or pond equipment.)
>
> * In the future, rec.ponds may develop FAQ's that address each of
> the above topics.
>
>
> RATIONALE
>
> Because most water gardeners have both plant and animal life in their
> pond, discussions on development and care of ponds has previously been
> split between rec.gardens, rec.aquaria, and rec.pets.herp. There is no
> newsgroup dedicated only to the interests of water gardeners.
>
>
> CROSS POSTINGS
>
> This RFD is being posted to news.announce.newgroups, news.groups,
> rec.gardens, rec.aquaria, rec.pets.herp. All discussion will take
> place in the group "news.groups."
>
>
> DISCUSSION
>
> This is the second posting of the Charter for a newsgroup for ponds. The
> first posting proposed the name "rec.gardens.ponds", but with the same
> charter described above. That posting occurred on 6 October 1994. The
> only issue raised during the discussion period was that of the newsgroup's
> name. Because the discussion grew quite heated, a Straw Poll was
> conducted by Wayne Powell ). Straw Poll results were
> posted on 25 October 1994. The majority of votes (50.4%) were for
> "rec.ponds", with "rec.gardens.ponds" a distant 33.1%. (Please contact
> Wayne for straw poll questions/details.)
>
> This second posting of the RFD reflects the newly agreed upon name
> "rec.ponds." It is being posted to news.announce.newgroups on 27 October
> 1994 and continued discussion regarding the contents of the proposal will
> last for approximately one more week.
>
> If no major changes are required to the proposed charter, then a Call for
> Votes (CFV) will then be issued. An independent third party, from the
> Usenet Volunteer Votetakers will be asked to conduct the vote.
>
> This RFD is being posted according to the guidelines set forth in "How
> to Create a New Usenet Newsgroup." Please refer to this document if
> you have questions about the newsgroup creation process.
>
> To pass, the proposal must receive 100 more "Yes" votes than "No" votes
> and at least two thirds of the votes must be positive. Therefore, if
> you have an interest in this newsgroup please make it known through
> discussion on news.groups (and please remember to vote when the time
> comes).
> }
>
> --
>
> Personal home page - http://gogood.com
>
> gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots
Newbie Bill
June 18th 04, 10:23 PM
While I am in my empty minds want to know mode, what does OT in the subject
line mean.
Thanxx
Bill
"Ka30P" > wrote in message
...
>
> Nope, nobody here to look after ourselves but us.
> We don't get that much spam, surprisingly.
> A troll once in a while, some porno here and there.
> Maybe we're considered too boring to mess with ;-)
>
>
> kathy :-)
> algae primer
> http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
Default User
June 18th 04, 11:18 PM
Newbie Bill wrote:
>
> I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
> from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all this
> info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link to
> their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
> accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc.
http://www.smr-usenet.com/tech/how.shtml
Brian Rodenborn
Cichlidiot
June 18th 04, 11:49 PM
Newbie Bill > wrote:
> While I am in my empty minds want to know mode, what does OT in the subject
> line mean.
> Thanxx
> Bill
OT = Off Topic
It's a courtesy tag to include in the subject line to let people know the
thread is not on the chartered topic of the newsgroup. There's other tags
too which may or may not be acceptable in a given group such as ADV for
advertisement or WTB for wanted to buy (such marketing tags are not
accepted in most fish groups except rec.aquaria.marketplace which is for
such purposes). Usually in this group, OT is the most commonly seen tag.
Cichlidiot
June 18th 04, 11:56 PM
Newbie Bill > wrote:
> Weeeell, I told Susan that was about as technical as I needed to know, but
> that is very interesting. So it sounds like Janette Wallis and possibly
> Wayne Powell are the Mother and Father of our newsgroup founded in 1994. I
> am very surprised it is so formal. I guess I thought you just went to the
> right place and pushed the "Post Newsgroup" button or something. Anyone
> have any idea if these people are still around? How about any of the charter
> members who were involved in the straw poll? Who are they petitioning to?
> And to think. OU is one of the biggest rivals of UT. And apparently we owe
> it all to them. All you Texans quit reading right now. Go Sooners!
> Thanxx
> Bill Brister - Austin, Texas
There is a process rec.* groups have to go through before they are
accepted on major news feeds. This process involves creating a charter for
the proposed group, posting that charter in news.* for a Request for
Discussion (RFD), having a discussion (sometimes long and protracted)
about the charter, perhaps having addition RFDs with changes to the
charter based off earlier discussion and having a Call for Votes (CFV).
The results of that vote then determine if the group is approved or not.
This process can be started by anyone, but usually a group will chose one
or two people to spearhead the effort. That's not to say those are the
only people involved in the effort, just that they are the main volunteers
for the process. Usually in order for a CFV to pass, there needs to be
strong community support for the idea.
bluegill phil
June 19th 04, 12:01 AM
here is a page on how to start new group and kind of explains the
usenet
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 11:58:45 -0400, " George" >
wrote:
>
>"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
m...
>> As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
>> for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
>> little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
>> engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
>> Bill
>
>
>You and I pay for it. Yes there is. Yes is does. Yes it is.
>
bluegill phil
June 19th 04, 12:02 AM
sorry here it is
http://www.gweep.ca/~edmonds/usenet/good-newgroup.html
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 11:58:45 -0400, " George" >
wrote:
>
>"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
m...
>> As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
>> for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
>> little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
>> engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
>> Bill
>
>
>You and I pay for it. Yes there is. Yes is does. Yes it is.
>
gerry
June 21st 04, 03:09 PM
[original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 21:03:50 GMT, "Newbie Bill"
> wrote:
>Weeeell, I told Susan that was about as technical as I needed to know, but
>that is very interesting.
In general, only alt groups lack a formal charter process. They are
created mostly by convincing the "alt gods". Of course, just because ANY
group is created, it doesn't mean your news server will carry it.
gerry
--
Personal home page - http://gogood.com
gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots
Benign Vanilla
June 21st 04, 03:40 PM
"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
m...
> As Calumbo sez "just one more thing sir". Who or what pays
> for/houses/supports/posts/etc usenet? Somewhere there is a pretty good
> little chuck of hard drive to house 7+ years of threads and the search
> engine. Does it ever go down? And this is just one of thousands.
<snip>
Usenet is essentially a bunch of news "servers" that house the messages, and
share them on the web. How long the messages stay on your server depends on
your ISP. This is one of the oldest applications running on the Internet.
BV.
Mary kate
June 21st 04, 05:11 PM
LMAO....love it....your imagination..LOL
George
June 26th 04, 09:20 PM
"Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
m...
> Apparently you arent married. I sure as h*** cant control my wife but I
> want to know everything I can about how she works.
> Bill
Actually, I am "very" married. And I gave up trying to figure her out a long
time ago. We get along better that way.
> " George" > wrote in message
> ...
>>
>> "Newbie Bill" > wrote in message
>> ...
>> >I notice every message in this thread (as best as I can interpret) comes
>> > from a different news server. Does that mean that each server has all
> this
>> > info, my server just houses my info and each post is essentially a link
> to
>> > their respective news server, is there a 'mothership' that my server is
>> > accessing and downloading as 'requested', etc. I know(I think) that a
>> > website is essentially on A computer (or server) and everyone is
> accessing
>> > it. If that is the case with usenet does my server pay a 'subscription'
> or
>> > download fee. After about 6 years I am still fascinated by the whole
> thing -
>> > the way the net connects us all almost as if we were neighbors. In fact
> I
>> > have neighbors just 3 houses away that I still dont know (after 7
> months)
>> > but I 'know' people in PA because of the net and our common interest.
> Darn
>> > right amazin.
>> > Bill
>>
>> I suggest you spend less time thinking about things you cannot control,
> then go
>> down the street and meet your neighbors.
>>
>>
>
>
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