[net.news.config] impending newsgroup cuts

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/11/85)

Effective one week from today, i.e. Friday 18 Oct 1985, barring radical
changes of mind, utzoo will cease to accept or forward the following
newsgroups and their subgroups:

	net.philosophy
	net.politics
	net.religion
	net.bizarre
	net.flame

In addition, there is a significant probability that some or all of the
following will also get the axe shortly:

	net.music
	net.audio
	net.abortion
	net.auto
	net.movies
	net.women
	net.sf-lovers

This will affect most of Eastern Canada, since we are the central feed
for the region.

The reason for all this is simple:  our phone bills are reaching the
danger point.  That first list of newsgroups, with their subgroups,
constitutes 25% of recent traffic.  The second list adds another 15-20%.

Our expenditures on the network are justified in terms of the technical
information flow.  None of the above groups can be defended in this way.
Note that I have picked only the indisputably non-technical groups with
heavy traffic.  I regard things like net.sources.mac with a very jaundiced
eye, and their day may come, but right now I'm willing to consider them
legitimate.

I deeply regret having to do this, but I see no other solution.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/20/85)

The utzoo cuts have been postponed a few days due to my illness.
Tentative date is now Wed the 23rd.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

peter@graffiti.UUCP (Peter da Silva) (10/23/85)

> In article <6081@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
> >I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
> >since it's now #1 in volume...
> 
> net.peace as there would be little question of liability. But the
> volume is very high, the utility is very low, and I would love to get
> rid of it.

You know, if net.sources.mac contained sources it'd sure be less likely to
generate this sort of reaction. I think I've seen a total of one peice
of source code in it. Fine, binhex up the resources fork, but if you're
going to post to a sources group, post sources.
-- 
Name: Peter da Silva
Graphic: `-_-'
UUCP: ...!shell!{graffiti,baylor}!peter
IAEF: ...!kitty!baylor!peter

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/24/85)

I have requested our Long-Distance news feeds to shut off transmission
of:
	net.religion
	net.flame
	net.bizarre
	net.philosophy
	net.politics

and all subgroups thereof, as prophesied earlier.  The folks at lsuc have
arranged an alternate Toronto-area feed for net.religion.jewish and
net.politics; the other groups are effectively dead hereabouts.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/25/85)

The slightly-revised list of further potential cuts in newsgroups at
utzoo is as follows:

	net.music	except net.music.synth
	net.audio
	net.abortion
	net.movies
	net.women
	net.sf-lovers
	net.origins

The changes are the addition of net.origins, the stay of execution on
net.auto (which has dropped off seismo's top-25 chart), and the exception
for net.music.synth (which can be argued to have technical relevance to
the computer-music people).  Together these groups approach 20% of the
network traffic.  Unless coherent arguments are advanced as to why we
should continue paying for them, utzoo will cease transmitting these
groups Long Distance on Friday 1 Nov 1985.  We are willing to continue
redistributing them locally, but this will depend on somebody else
bringing them up from the US.

I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
since it's now #1 in volume, but there have been enough anguished screams
about the possibility of losing it that I'm not going to act on my feelings
about it... yet.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

phil@amdcad.UUCP (Phil Ngai) (10/26/85)

In article <6081@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
>I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
>since it's now #1 in volume...

I would second that. The shareware postings are of course irritating
but even the non-commercial stuff bothers me. The way I see it,
there's a small group of mac users who have discovered this "free" way
of distributing software, namely USENET. It reminds me of the
proposals to form net.peace on the basis that USENET was a good way
for them to keep in touch. The common problem that I have with this is
that both these interests have nothing to do with the nature of the
network or its intended use, namely to support unix users. If the
volume were low net.sources.mac would be much more acceptable than
net.peace as there would be little question of liability. But the
volume is very high, the utility is very low, and I would love to get
rid of it.

Anyone else agree?
-- 
 I'm glad I left the lEast Coast.

 Phil Ngai +1 408 749-5720
 UUCP: {ucbvax,decwrl,ihnp4,allegra}!amdcad!phil
 ARPA: amdcad!phil@decwrl.dec.com

peter@yetti.UUCP (10/27/85)

In article <5356@amdcad.UUCP> phil@amdcad.UUCP (Phil Ngai) writes:
>In article <6081@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
>>I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
>>since it's now #1 in volume...
>
>I would second that. The shareware postings are of course irritating
>but even the non-commercial stuff bothers me. 

I can see how positive expressions of interest in news groups or topics
(such as the recent support for net.internat) help sustain 
the net both in concept and in practice, but how does the  expression
of personal dislikes achieve anything except increase net traffic volume?
Why should I care what Ngai likes or dislikes? (and if I do care, shouldn't
net.flame be the place to get the latest bulletin on the state of his spleen?
 -- of course, I can't actually read net.flame here, but that's another
issue.)

>  ... these interests have nothing to do with the nature of the
>network or its intended use, namely to support unix users. 

It seems to me that the "nature" of the net is going to depend on what its
participants want to read and what they find valuable -- which is not going
to be a fixed quantity but is going to change with time.  At the moment,
macs and mac software are one popular topic among many; tomorrow, it may
Amigas, for all I know (:-)).  So what?

The last phrase about "intended use" is a giveaway as to what's really
going on here -- the 'original inhabitant' syndrome: we are supposed 
to be locked into some personal conception of the net creators or Mr. Ngai
as to what it's all about. Luckily that's not the way technology works (at
least in a reasonably free society).  By now a lot of people are 
getting accounts on Unix machines or buying Unix boxes just to get access to
the net. So the net  no longer exists just "to support unix users"; rather Unix 
is a (currently indispensable) tool for the net.

> Phil Ngai +1 408 749-5720
> ARPA: amdcad!phil@decwrl.dec.com
-- 

   Peter H. Roosen-Runge, Department of Computer Science, York University
                          Toronto M3J 1P3 , Ontario, Canada
_____________________________________________________________________________
	From a land where Lord Spencer rules -- No Admittance
	to Undesirable Newsgroups.
_____________________________________________________________________________

tdn@spice.cs.cmu.edu (Thomas Newton) (10/28/85)

<Note to net.micro.mac and net.sources.mac readers:  this is a reply to a
 message that appeared in net.news.group.  I'm sorry about posting a non-
 source article to a sources newsgroup, but considering that net.bizarre
 was deleted without warning (even if it was mostly trash) . . .         >

Phil Ngai writes:
>In article <6081@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
>>I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
>>since it's now #1 in volume...
>
>I would second that. The shareware postings are of course irritating
>but even the non-commercial stuff bothers me. The way I see it,
>there's a small group of mac users who have discovered this "free" way
>of distributing software, namely USENET. It reminds me of the
>proposals to form net.peace on the basis that USENET was a good way
>for them to keep in touch. The common problem that I have with this is
>that both these interests have nothing to do with the nature of the
>network or its intended use, namely to support unix users. If the
>volume were low net.sources.mac would be much more acceptable than
>net.peace as there would be little question of liability. But the
>volume is very high, the utility is very low, and I would love to get
>rid of it.
>
>Anyone else agree?

No -- I don't agree.  Shareware postings by people who stand to gain from them
financially (the author(s) of the program or even its user(s) in the case of a
"you get $X from registrations of copies with your serial number"-type deal)
shouldn't be allowed.  But leave the rest of net.sources.mac alone!!!

If your criterion for eliminating a group is that it doesn't directly 'support
unix users' but that it has a high volume, you can start by getting rid of the
mega-flamage nets such as net.flame, net.politics, and net.religion.  None of
them has anywhere near the utility of net.sources.mac.  For that matter, you
can probably also get rid of various non-unix newsgroups such as net.micro.pc,
net.auto, net.cooks, and net.consumers while you're at it.  Since there won't
be any need for anything other than net.sources.* and net.unix.*, you'll have
no reason not to go ahead and delete net.news.group.

Now there's an idea!!  Delete net.news.group.  All the discussions could be
held in net.bizarre (which seems like a much more appropriate place  :-).

                                        -- Thomas Newton
                                           Thomas.Newton@spice.cs.cmu.edu

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/29/85)

> If your criterion for eliminating a group is that it doesn't directly 'support
> unix users' but that it has a high volume, you can start by getting rid of the
> mega-flamage nets such as net.flame, net.politics, and net.religion...

That is exactly what is being done, and that is the context in which the
desirability of net.sources.mac was originally raised.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (10/29/85)

> It seems to me that the "nature" of the net is going to depend on what its
> participants want to read and what they find valuable -- which is not going
> to be a fixed quantity but is going to change with time.  At the moment,
> macs and mac software are one popular topic among many; tomorrow, it may
> Amigas, for all I know (:-)).  So what?

The nature of the net is also going to depend on who's paying the bills --
"he who pays the piper calls the tune" -- and the people paying the bills
are mostly Unix systems interested specifically (although not exclusively)
in Unix support.

> .... Luckily that's not the way technology works (at
> least in a reasonably free society)....

As the man who gets the phone bills for a backbone site, I assure you that
there is nothing "free" about Usenet!  :-)

> _____________________________________________________________________________
> 	From a land where Lord Spencer rules -- No Admittance
> 	to Undesirable Newsgroups.
> _____________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

	From a land where Lord Spencer pays the bills -- if you
	want net.flame, you can finance it yourself!
_____________________________________________________________________________

P.S.  I hear tales that some people in net.news.group don't seem to have
realized that There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch, and are criticizing
newsgroup cuts.  I got sick of net.news.group and unsubscribed long ago,
so if you want me to see it you'll have to send me mail.
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

rec@mplvax.UUCP (Richard Currier) (10/30/85)

In article <6090@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
>> If your criterion for eliminating a group is that it doesn't directly support
>> unix users' but that it has a high volume, you can start by getting rid of
>> the mega-flamage nets such as net.flame, net.politics, and net.religion...
>
>That is exactly what is being done, and that is the context in which the
>desirability of net.sources.mac was originally raised.
>-- 
>				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
>				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

Mr Spencer, I'm sure you have the best interests of the net at heart but I
must assert that net.sources.mac is used by a number of people at my organ-
ization and many others at other sites that I have been communicating with
regularly over the past year for legitimate UNIX related work. We are inves-
tigating the use of the Macintosh as a productivity tool in the UNIX environ-
ment. This group directly supports the WORK efforts of many UNIX users. If you
have not as yet gotten a large volume of response to the discussion of killing
the group it is because most users of the net probably don't monitor the ad-
ministrative groups and don't realize that a group is on the way out until it
happens. I stumbled on the fact myself. I plan, however, to take a more serious
interest in the way the net is run in the future. It seems that the net has
grown out of its adolescence into a more mature state that will need the 
support and active interest of its users if it is to be usefull in the unix
work place. There must be a way to govern the creation and especially the 
deletion of newsgroups that better serves the unix community that depends on
the net for vital information.

direction
-- 

	richard currier		marine physical lab	u.c. san diego
	{ihnp4|decvax|akgua|dcdwest|ucbvax}	!sdcsvax!mplvax!rec

phil@amdcad.UUCP (Phil Ngai) (10/31/85)

In article <269@yetti.UUCP> peter@yetti.UUCP (Peter Roosen-Runge) writes:
>the net both in concept and in practice, but how does the  expression
>of personal dislikes achieve anything except increase net traffic volume?

If enough of us admins get together and decide we don't want to pay
for groups like net.flame, then we'll stop carrying them and by reducing
the volume of traffic, postpone the day when the net breaks down.
I think this is pretty positive.

>Why should I care what Ngai likes or dislikes?

Why should I care if you care? I see you're posting from a Toronto
site.  Then you ought to care what Henry Spencer thinks. I'm just
trying to influence his decision in a way he has already indicated he
is leaning.

>It seems to me that the "nature" of the net is going to depend on what its
>participants want to read and what they find valuable

And on what the people paying the phone bills want to pay for.

>going on here -- the 'original inhabitant' syndrome: we are supposed 
>to be locked into some personal conception of the net creators or Mr. Ngai
>as to what it's all about. 

It's not a matter of being an 'original inhabitant', it's a matter of paying
THIS MONTH's phone bill.

>Luckily that's not the way technology works (at
>least in a reasonably free society). 

You are free to do what you want but not on my or Henry Spencer's machine.

>By now a lot of people are 
>getting accounts on Unix machines or buying Unix boxes just to get access to
>the net.

What makes you think Henry will give you a feed that has net.flame?

>So the net  no longer exists just "to support unix users"; rather Unix 
>is a (currently indispensable) tool for the net.

As long as Unix sites pay the bills there will be limitations on the
non-Unix material. If you want to run your own network on a PC feel
free. But don't ask us to be your relay.
-- 
 The Miami Police Department's Vice Squad has an annual budget of $1.5M.
 Each episode of the TV show "Miami Vice" costs $1.6M.

 Phil Ngai +1 408 749-5720
 UUCP: {ucbvax,decwrl,ihnp4,allegra}!amdcad!phil
 ARPA: amdcad!phil@decwrl.dec.com

david@sagan.UUCP (David Taylor) (11/01/85)

Expires:


   
I agree with previous poster to net.sources.mac that it is a highly useful 
group and should be allowed to survive.  The vast majority of material
coming over the wires is useful for one of the main reasons for the existence
of Usenet namely EDUCATION.
    A few people are using it to their own apparent financial advantage and 
should be made aware of the danger to the MAC groups this causes.
    Come on guys. This group and its associated group net.micro.mac is one of
the "Lights of my life" and I am sure that I am not alone. PLEASE don't spoil
the fun for a few measly dollars.
    Please post more source and more examples. In my own turn I hope to do
the same when I feel that it is a genuine contribution and IT WILL NOT BE 
SHAREWARE but simply shared!
-- 
david
... David W.Taylor, MicroPro Product Development
{dual,hplabs,glacier,lll-crg}!well!micropro!sagan!david

beth@sphinx.UChicago.UUCP (JB) (11/01/85)

[Hear, hear!  Here, here!]

From: david@sagan.UUCP (David Taylor), Message-ID: <170@sagan.UUCP>:
>Summary: Plea for sanity and continuance of a true learning experience
>
>I agree with previous poster to net.sources.mac that it is a highly useful 
>group and should be allowed to survive.

And I third that (e)motion.  Keep it coming, kids.

-- 

--JB         (Beth Christy, U. of Chicago, ..!ihnp4!gargoyle!sphinx!beth)

"I once heard the remainder of a colony of ants, which had been partially
 obliterated by a cow's foot, seriously discussing the intentions of the
 gods towards their civilization."   -- Archy the Cockroach

fritz@utastro.UUCP (Fritz Benedict) (11/01/85)

<munch>
Another vote for the continued existence of net.sources.mac. I and many 
of my colleagues have obtained much of value from this newsgroup. These
public domain desk accessories and applications have increased my 
productivity both at work and at home. Rename net.sources.mac to
appease the purists, but don't pull the plug on it.
-- 
Fritz Benedict  (512)471-4461x448
uucp: {...noao,decvax,ut-sally}!utastro!fritz
arpa: fritz@ut-ngp
snail: Astronomy, U of Texas, Austin, TX  78712

bill@utastro.UUCP (William H. Jefferys) (11/02/85)

I for one would find it extremely painful not to have access to the 
Macintosh software that is being posted.  My productivity in my job
is greatly enhanced by it.  I can live without the games, but I would
have a very hard time living without the utilities and other useful
software that I can get in NO OTHER WAY.

Some are arguing that the stuff posted to net.sources.mac doesn't
have anything to do with UNIX and that therefore net.sources.mac
should get the axe.  I strongly disagree.  In the first place, 
95%* of what is posted to usenet doesn't have anything to do with
UNIX.  And in the second, a larger proportion of the stuff
in net.sources.mac *does* relate directly to UNIX (through the
use of Macs and their peripherals in UNIX environments) than is
true of most newsgroups.  So I just don't buy this idea.

Yes, phone bills are high.  Yes, this is a burden on backbone
sites.  Yes, we should find a way to improve the situation.  But
let's do it rationally, not by throwing out the baby with the
bathwater.

------
*  Rhetorical statistic :-)

-- 
Glend.	I can call spirits from the vasty deep.
Hot.	Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you
	do call for them?    --  Henry IV Pt. I, III, i, 53

	Bill Jefferys  8-%
	Astronomy Dept, University of Texas, Austin TX 78712   (USnail)
	{allegra,ihnp4}!{ut-sally,noao}!utastro!bill	(UUCP)
	bill@astro.UTEXAS.EDU.				(Internet)

genem@peoam.UUCP (11/04/85)

In article <170@sagan.UUCP> david@sagan.UUCP (David Taylor) writes:
>
>
>   
>I agree with previous poster to net.sources.mac that it is a highly useful 
>group and should be allowed to survive.  The vast majority of material
>coming over the wires is useful for one of the main reasons for the existence
>of Usenet namely EDUCATION.
>    A few people are using it to their own apparent financial advantage and 
>should be made aware of the danger to the MAC groups this causes.
>    Come on guys. This group and its associated group net.micro.mac is one of
>the "Lights of my life" and I am sure that I am not alone. PLEASE don't spoil
>the fun for a few measly dollars.
>    Please post more source and more examples. In my own turn I hope to do
>the same when I feel that it is a genuine contribution and IT WILL NOT BE 
>SHAREWARE but simply shared!
>-- 
>david
>... David W.Taylor, MicroPro Product Development
>{dual,hplabs,glacier,lll-crg}!well!micropro!sagan!david

-------------------------------------------------

I could not agree more.  The more I use and develop on the MAC the  more  I
am  convinced  it  has  made  major  new  inroads  into system and software
implementation.  Structured languages and documented programming  were  met
with  resistance.  Unless  we  develop  new  concepts  and  are open to new
concepts, we are placing our heads in the sand once  again.  UNIX  and  any
other  operating system can learn alot from MAC derived software.  If by no
other means than carrying thoughts and ideas from the MAC to  their  world.
My  single  vote  is  that this group should be allowed to exist and that a
more formal way of announcing cancellations should be  devised,  to  insure
the users of said groups are given fair warning of impending cancellation.

C. Eugene Mueller
District Service Manager
Perkin-Elmer Corp  Santa Clara Ca

henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (11/05/85)

> Mr Spencer, I'm sure you have the best interests of the net at heart

Actually, I have the survival of the local section of the net at heart.
The bills are becoming unsupportable; the volume of traffic must come down.
(No, compress and 2400 baud are not enough -- we already use both.  The
net has demonstrated a remarkable ability to outgrow such temporary fixes,
and in fact to grow faster than the rate of introduction of such fixes.)

> I must assert that net.sources.mac is used by a number of people at my organ-
> ization and many others at other sites that I have been communicating with
> regularly over the past year for legitimate UNIX related work...

I am willing to believe this.  Are you willing to prove it by using groups
like net.sources.mac to publish things that are of use to non-Mac users,
i.e. NOT JUST MAC-SPECIFIC BINARIES?!?  There is little evidence of this to
date.

I agree that net.sources.mac directly supports the work-related efforts of
many people, a fair number of them involved with Unix as well.  What I don't
believe, I'm afraid, is that the rest of us are getting a fair return on it.
Yes, the net helps you:  what have you done to return the favor?
-- 
				Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
				{allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry

al@ames.UUCP (Al Globus) (11/05/85)

> >In article <6081@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
> >>I am starting to feel really hostile towards net.sources.mac, especially
> >>since it's now #1 in volume...
> >
> >I would second that. The shareware postings are of course irritating
> >but even the non-commercial stuff bothers me. The way I see it,
> >there's a small group of mac users who have discovered this "free" way
> >of distributing software, namely USENET. It reminds me of the
> >proposals to form net.peace on the basis that USENET was a good way
> >for them to keep in touch. The common problem that I have with this is
> >that both these interests have nothing to do with the nature of the
> >network or its intended use, namely to support unix users. If the
> >volume were low net.sources.mac would be much more acceptable than
> >net.peace as there would be little question of liability. But the
> >volume is very high, the utility is very low, and I would love to get
> >rid of it.
> >

Some very useful software for interfacing Macs to UNIX, e.g., macget, macput, 
that window program, etc. have come over net.sources.mac.  The nature of
the net is that there's a lot of junk on it - but there's a few gems
hidden among the muck, and thats why we love it.  Let's keep net.sources.mac,
but maybe people could be a little more careful about postings.

royt@gatech.CSNET (Roy M Turner) (11/06/85)

In article <371@graffiti.UUCP> peter@graffiti.UUCP (Peter da Silva) writes:
>
>You know, if net.sources.mac contained sources it'd sure be less likely to
>generate this sort of reaction. I think I've seen a total of one peice
>of source code in it. Fine, binhex up the resources fork, but if you're
>going to post to a sources group, post sources.
>

Well, perhaps you could recommend a language for the postings?  Pascal?
MSBasic?  Assembler? C (and are all the C's available for the Mac
compatible??)?  XLISP??  As it is now, the binhex files aren't readable by
humans, but they *are* usable by all MacIntosh owners (unless you have done
something funky to your Mac, of course).  If source is posted, then it is
usable to only a small percentage of MacIntosh owners, ie, those with that
particular language.  If you want the source, you are probably wanting to
change something in it (else you would just compile it anyway), and can ask
the author of it, and if he or she wants you to have access to the source,
he/she can send it to you.

Roy

PS--don't bother with flames, my "n" key is getting worn out! :-)

cag@cuuxb.UUCP (C. Gerlach) (11/08/85)

Well, I think this has gone far enough.  I am getting tired of seeing this
discussion being carried out in parallel in 4 or 5 newsgroups.  Lets
get to the bottom of this and then move it to the appropriate newsgroup
so the rest of us can get on with our work.  

I would like to suggest that this discussion be changed from how to 
eliminate a newsgroup to the real problem of how sites can minimize the 
costs of being on the network.   The current discussion of network wide 
censorship is counter-productive and only aggravates the problem by greatly 
adding to the traffic on the network.  

The scope of this problem may be network wide but it remains one of
how each system controls its environment.  Network wide solutions for
individual site problems will not work since every site is different
and has unique problems.

It would appear that a better approach would be to examine the options 
each site has in managing its portion of the network (that is, the system 
itself and the links it has to its neighboring systems).  If it becomes 
apparent that sites can not control themselves, lets identify the tools 
needed by the site's network administrator and see what can be done to 
get the tools built. 

I have to believe that these issues are being discussed in the network
administration and management newsgroups.  Continued discussion in other
newsgroups of censorship and threatened network wide removal does 
little to foster rational thinking.  And misses the main issue.

Lets attack the real problem and stop arguing amongst ourselves.  Its
not a question of which groups have to go, but of network management
and control at the individual site level.

Now that I've said my piece, I apologize to anyone I may have offended.
And as usual these are my own thoughts.  No one else would want them.

					Chuck Gerlach
					...!ihnp4!cuuxb!cag

mmt@dciem.UUCP (Martin Taylor) (11/09/85)

>In article <6090@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes:
>>> If your criterion for eliminating a group is that it doesn't directly support
>>> unix users' but that it has a high volume, you can start by getting rid of
>>> the mega-flamage nets such as net.flame, net.politics, and net.religion...
>>
>>That is exactly what is being done, and that is the context in which the
>>desirability of net.sources.mac was originally raised.
>>-- 
>>                               Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
>>                               {allegra,ihnp4,linus,decvax}!utzoo!henry
>
>Mr Spencer, I'm sure you have the best interests of the net at heart but I
>must assert that net.sources.mac is used by a number of people at my organ-
>ization and many others at other sites that I have been communicating with
>regularly over the past year for legitimate UNIX related work. We are inves-
>tigating the use of the Macintosh as a productivity tool in the UNIX environ-
>ment. This group directly supports the WORK efforts of many UNIX users.

As I have pointed out privately to Henry Spencer, the fact that one works
USING a UNIX system does not mean that one works WITH or ON the UNIX
system.  There are many of us whose work benefits from the net news
who could not care less if unix-wizards and such groups were dumped.
Net.politics provides a mine of sociological information, and is
a lot more valuable.  Net.sources.mac provides occasional gems, without
which our work would be appreciably harder.

The net is a communications medium among people of widely varying
interests, but the ones who control the dissemination of newsgroups
are typically UNIX wizards who often seem to feel that only UNIX-related
stuff has any value.  There's not much the rest of us can do but
say "please think of the rest of us".  And, as I wrote to Henry,
we can offer to pay some of the costs personally, if the institution won't.
There are enough people reading the news that a small subscription
from each reader should more than cover the costs incurred by the
local institutions (especially the one covering the long-distance
charges).
-- 

Martin Taylor
{allegra,linus,ihnp4,floyd,ubc-vision}!utzoo!dciem!mmt
{uw-beaver,qucis,watmath}!utcsri!dciem!mmt

torek@umich.UUCP (Paul V. Torek ) (11/20/85)

Martin Taylor points out that users could personally pay their fair share
of costs to local sites.  I don't know how well this will go over with other
avid readers of/posters to nontechnical groups, but I'm willing to pay up to
double my fair share.  I am a semi-major contributor to some of the groups
that people have suggested cutting (not net.flame however), and I'd hate to
see them go.  I think another thing worth trying is asking the biggest posters
to voluntarily limit their contributions.  I've seen lots of needless included
text in some of these newsgroups, for example; it could be dropped relatively
painlessly.

--Paul V. Torek, the blooming iconoclast and once and future "top 25" news
submitter (something I hope to achieve by having the others come down to my
level!)								torek@umich
(313)996-2396