Taming the mailing lists?

Mikha ben Avraham mikhame at sbcglobal.net
Fri Apr 30 20:20:31 UTC 2004


M. Fioretti wrote:

>Uh? Sorry, what is the difference between looking at a thousand
>messages inside your email client window and the same thousand
>messages inside your browser window? And who ever said that you are
>forced to read every email you receive?
>  
>
The difference is as you talk about below: predefined subject 
categories. Also, it takes less time for me to load a forum then it does 
for me to download my email. I'm on DSL and it still loads faster.

>Maybe you meant to say that since forum may offer predefined subjects/
>areas, they pre-sort clueless postings a bit better (visually
>speaking) than a mailing list. Even in that case, however, if you
>follow ten different forums, you'll save much more time when they are
>all reformatted to one single interface that *you* chose (email client)
>than jumping back and fort among the same number of sites designed
>with ten different intervaces.
>  
>
For the most part, if you want the simple functions of view topic->reply 
to topic then all the major forum software will function in the same 
manner with nearly the same interface.

>Forums are OK for casually following one or two subjects, not for
>heavy usage in many areas. A corollary of this is that people with the
>greatest expertise, who may help newbies more, won't waste time on
>forums, but prefer mailing lists.
>
>Ciao,
>	Marco Fioretti
>  
>
Another corollary could just be personal preference. I can imagine that 
for the most part, the people helping the newbies out are old-timers 
that either "learned the internet" when forums weren't either availiable 
or popular (I'm 18, so perhaps I am mistaken on this, so it's just a 
guess), or simply prefer the interface over the normal forum interface.

Look at it this way, I can register a username in fedoraforum.org and 
automatically I have access to the same things people suggest to do with 
mailing lists: predefined subject categories. They would certainly taim 
mailing lists, as they do forums. But a newbie to both mailing lists and 
forums will find learning a forum to be easier than mailing lists.  A 
newbie does not have to subscribe to multiple mailing lists, just to one 
forum.

Furthermore, forums are found easier than mailing lists. "linux help" in 
google will bring up more forums than mailing list archives.

Forums have the biggest advantage for someone new to mailing lists and 
forums and to those who want less work finding what they want. Mailing 
lists have the biggest advantage for those who want everything in one 
interface so they don't need to relearn difference interfaces.





More information about the fedora-list mailing list