[comp.sys.amiga.advocacy] comp.sys.amiga.advocacy a success

zerkle@iris.ucdavis.edu (Dan Zerkle) (05/08/91)

** Followups to news.groups **

In article <1991May7.192731.5241@zorch.SF-Bay.ORG> xanthian@zorch.SF-Bay.ORG (Kent Paul Dolan) writes:
> [ assorted praises of comp.sys.amiga.advocacy in getting a lot of ]
> [ junk out of the other comp.sys.amiga.* groups                   ]

Absolutely.  Of the various new groups created in the comp.sys.amiga
re-organization, this one was one of the most useful.

Before this newsgroup was created, there were a whole lot of posts
from people saying why the Amiga was so much worse/better than some
other computer.  Well, it bothered me.  For better or worse, I have an
Amiga, and I can't toss it aside and buy another computer.  I want
posts that will tell me how to make it more useful, instead of telling
me how dumb/stupid I was to spend all that money on one.  All of those
comparison posts were simply not useful to me or any of the people who
already own a computer (which includes most of the readers of
comp.sys.*).

After the .advocacy group was created, a lot of this moved out of the
groups in which I am interested.  I think there was only one
persistent thread, which compared the Mac to the Amiga.  This
eventually went away.  It was nice seeing all of the followups to
.advocacy at the end of the thread.  Right now, there are *none* of
these threads in the groups I read.  It is indeed a pleasure.  In
fact, if one of these threads does crop up in one of the groups I
read, it's reassuring to know that I (and lots of other netters) can
tell the errant posters to simply "...take it to .advocacy."

On the other hand, those people who do like to read and write about these
things now have an opportunity to do so.  I usually see well over 200
unexpired posts in that group. People who want to talk about those
sorts of things have an audience there.  Mind you, I imagine that they
have an audience that is rather likely to jump all over you if you
post something, but....

The .amiga.advocacy group has been such a success, I would strongly
suggest that the other personal computer areas that have a problem
with certain posters comparing their machines with other ones create
their own .advocacy groups.  The areas where I think there are likely
to be problems (I don't read, sorry) are comp.sys.next, comp.sys.mac,
and comp.sys.atari.st.  (Is a NeXT a personal computer or a
workstation, anyway?  It's marketed like a personal computer but it acts
like a workstation....).

Of course, you folks can keep struggling with your kill files if you
want....

           Dan Zerkle  zerkle@iris.eecs.ucdavis.edu  (916) 754-0240
           Amiga...  Because life is too short for boring computers.