[Coco] CoCoList and the Web, was Re: CoCoList Survey on email?but no web browser access CoCo?users.
Frank Pittel
fwp at deepthought.com
Wed Apr 22 23:18:43 EDT 2009
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:23:37PM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Wednesday 22 April 2009, John W. Linville wrote:
> >On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 07:06:55PM -0500, Roger Taylor wrote:
> >> At 12:57 PM 4/22/2009, you wrote:
> >>> On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 11:59:27AM -0500, Sean wrote:
> >>> > Mailing lists are good for current discussions, but forums are much
> >>> > better for archiving info or being able to search for specific topics.
> >>>
> >>> * Citation needed *
> >>
> >> http://www.google.com/search?q=color+computer+forum
> >
> >Congratulations! Google can find your website...so?
> >
> >>> If anything, I find web forums to be _much_ more _difficult_ to search
> >>> for specific topics.
> >>
> >> http://www.google.com/search?q=color+computer+forum+nitros-9
> >
> >Setting aside whether or not "nitros-9" is a _specific_ topic...
> >
> >All that does is point me at your forum. It doesn't prevent me
> >from having to click through it or deal with its awkward interface.
> >And if I wanted a local copy of the information, I either need to cut &
> >paste to an editor or I need to mirror your website (which also could
> >change on a whim).
> >
> >For comparison:
> >
> > http://five.pairlist.net/pipermail/coco/2009-April/thread.html
> >
> >Of course, that still completely misses the point. I don't want to
> >have to use a web interface _at_all_. The email comes to me, and if
> >I think it will be interesting in the future then I don't delete it.
> >When I want to search for something, it is probably in my mail
> >folder already. And if not, Dennis/Mailman has it waiting for me.
> >
> >John
> >
> >P.S. Couldn't leave "specific topic" alone...
> >
> > http://www.google.com/search?q=color+computer+superboard
>
> Neither could I john. First, I do NOT expire this list, ever, but due to a
> drive crash in early 2002, my corpus of email from this list starts then and
> with maybe 20 exceptions, every msg since then is sitting here for me to
> consult should I be of a mind to. Other than my inbox, this is the only non-
> expired mailbox I keep here and the list of lists I'm on in the left pane of
> kmail is about 3" higher than my 1680x1050 screen. Email comes to me, from 3
> accounts on 3 servers, absolutely and totally automatically via some scripts I
> wrote years ago that drive fetchmail, which in turn uses procmail as the local
> MTA (Mail Transfer Agent), and procmail runs it all through spamassassin for
> labeling. I long ago gave up caring about false positives, so now when the
> mail comes back from SA with an 'X-Spam-Level' line with 5 or more '*' in it,
> procmail sends it on to /dev/null & I never see it, true for around 2000 a
> week. That leaves me with maybe 8 to 12 spams it didn't catch each day, which
> I drop into the spam directory with one drag-n-drop, and about 10am in the
> morning another script will feed all those to sa-learn -spam and then delete
> them.
>
> So ALL I have to do is sit here, and hit the + key to read the next message
> and reply if I am so moved. There is simply no way that webmail (that has to
> be navigated to and then logged into) will ever be that simple and convenient,
> nor is a 'forum' that has to be logged into just as if it was webmail.
> Fetchmail takes care of all that stuff every 90 seconds, which is probably at
> least 50 times faster than I could do it by hand. Kmail scans the box
> procmail dumps into every 2 minutes and sorts it to the appropriate folder
> here, and all I see is a bold faced number of new mails showing up adjacent to
> the folders name. Send me an email, and the maximum possible time lag between
> it hitting the server at vz and my seeing it here is 3:30. The last time I
> logged into my mailbox at vz was several months ago & probably took me 5
> minutes to get in cuz I had to look up all the passwords to get there. And
> then I had to keep hitting F5 to refresh my view.
>
> That doesn't describe anything I'd call convenience compared to reading this
> mailing list already sorted into the 'coco' folder. Using convenience and
> webmail in the same sentence is an oxymoron comparable to military
> intelligence.
>
> Simply said, this mailing list Just Works(TM).
I host my domain "deepthought.com" and the mail server is mine. All incoming mail
goes through sendmail which hands it off to procmail. I then use procmail to move
mail from mailing lists into their own folders. I use mutt as my mua and it has little
trouble dealing with multiple mailboxes. Rather then block "spam" I pick the mail
that I'm interested in from the incoming stream as best as I can. The rest I go through
every few days. Nothing gets deleted. I have no interest in a gui mua and find that
I miss out on a lot of spam.
Frank
More information about the Coco
mailing list