
Where Can I Get Free, Read/Post Usenet Access? 25
Phaedras asks: "G'day. I live in Germany, and have an Internet connection from a simple ISP, no email, webpage or other services included. (It's cheap, of course. You need that in Germany, at our usage costs...) Now I would like to have access to the Usenet, but can't find a free provider out there that will do that. I'm talking something like a webpage where i can call up articles and post back. Surely something like that must exist, and I'd be most grateful if someone could point me to such a provider." After a quick search of the web, I found a couple of lists which list a few servers offering free NNTP access. You might want to check them out. Be aware that Your Milage May Vary with these services.
I use remarq.com (Score:2)
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Free Usenet (Score:3)
NewsGuy is pretty good too.. (Score:1)
Related question (Score:2)
There was a PHP portal thing that kind of included the feature as an afterthought but I didn't get it working very good. Maybe I should re-evaluate that or figure out the code and fix it myself.
deja.com (Score:1)
Re:[Mostly OFFTOPIC] Which reminds me (Score:1)
Re:Whats the point? (Score:1)
On any given group, you can almost guarentee various flavours of spam, a couple of "You all suck" posts, some people having a private crossposted flamewar about something unrelated to most of the groups (Apple vs. MS crossposted to all Apple, MS, Linux, BeOS, Amiga, and programming groups is quite common), and a few quiet people talking on topic.
How about Deja? (Score:1)
Note, I am not on Deja's payroll nor have I ever been one or will be one in the near future.
[Mostly OFFTOPIC] Which reminds me (Score:1)
I remember using (and liking) nn back in the day but didn't find it on my machine. What good non-graphical (nostalgia value, mostly) newsreaders are there for Linux? Or was I just misusing tin? How about for the Mac (for my wife)?
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Re:[Mostly OFFTOPIC] Which reminds me (Score:1)
anonymous posting (Score:1)
emacs/slashdot. (Score:1)
Damn... would you have a slashdot-mode? (so that there are handy shortcuts for moderating, collapsing a thread, etc.) or hmmm...
Taco, you listening?
Whats the point? (Score:3)
One, you can't get good porn on it anymore. All the right wing nazi anti-porn weenies cancel parts of the multi-part postings, so you can never get the whole message/pic.
Two, the noise to signal ratio is so bad with Usenet. You have to read about 100 messages to get just alittle bit of information. That is not worth it to me.
Three, there is so much traffic that you can't keep up with it and there is too many people talking at once. A newsgroup with tens of thousands of readers and posters is too much. Slashdot is becoming the same way. That is why I like the Ask Slashdot that don't show up on the main page. Lots of signal, no noise.
Four, can't find a good free server. I want to get a feed to my home computer, but as someone pointed out, once everyone finds out and the server gets smoothered.
I tell you, the epoche of Usenet was back in 90-94' where there was few noise and lots of signal. You actually knew the people on Usenet. You knew their personality, and you kinda knew what they knew and they did not. Usenet is a big city with too many "faceless" people on it. I like the small and old town Usenet of yester year.
gnus is cool! (Score:1)
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Re:[Mostly OFFTOPIC] Which reminds me (Score:1)
I generally advise new users of gnus to try XEmacs at first, and use the pull down mousey menus (horrors!!!) to find the various list-all-groups and subscribe-group and post-article type functions; you can remember the keys which are listed in the menu, and go back to using emacs or turn off the menus after a while.
But that's only if you have some inability to do M-x info. For some reason a lot of people are extremely resistent to using info.
By the way, gnus is also an extremely good mail handler also. It is pretty easy (well, ok, copy the elisp of someone who already did it and edit the regexp's to fit your situation) to make it map your various mailing lists into their own little newsgroup like folders. It makes much more sense to read mailing lists in this fashion rather than have them mixed in amoung all the personal mail you actually read.
I've been planning to set up my gnus to have a folder for each of my web-based mail accounts, such as yahoo, hotmail, etc. I know you can do it because I've seen people who did it, I just haven't copied their elisp yet.
A searchable/ranked list of open NNTP servers (Score:3)
The real question (Score:3)
I know there was some elisp floating around that allowed you to search deja through gnus. Does that still work given deja's recent changes ? Is it possible that gnus could use the w3 stuff to interface with one of the web based newsreader/posters ?
And -- here's the big question: if that is possible, can someone hack that interface so that I can browse slashdot from emacs ? Wow. That would be awesome.
Free NNTP Listing (Score:1)
Re:gnus is cool! (Score:1)
I would say it was time for this thread to migrate to gnu.emacs.gnus or comp.emacs. Much more help there
Re:Whats the point? (Score:1)
Re:Related question (Score:1)
You should also check out alt.binaries.news-server-comparison or something like that (do a search on *news*server*). You can good some good recommendations in there as well as see some the problems usenetserver.com has been facing lately. Despite all the complainers in the group, overall, usenetserver.com is a pretty good service.
Hope it helps,
LiNT
Re:Whats the point? (Score:1)
JB
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Re:NewsGuy is pretty good too.. (Score:1)
Newsservers.net (Score:1)
Re:[Mostly OFFTOPIC] Which reminds me (Score:1)
As far as newsreaders go, slrn is pretty cool by all accounts. I use tin and leafnode. tin seems to be designed for fast networks.