If there are 500 posts a day to comp.lang.c++, it strikes me that this group is *begging* to be split up. Besides the wading-through-heaps-of-stuff-you-'re-not-interested-in factor, some of us have to pay to receive news articles and suchlike, and a better targeted audience would save us lots of time and money.
Casper Boden-Cummins. On 06 Sep 1969 00:21 Brian C. White wrote: > REQUEST FOR DISCUSSION (RFD) > > moderated group comp.os.linux.debian.announce > moderated group comp.os.linux.debian.install > moderated group comp.os.linux.debian.nontech > moderated group comp.os.linux.debian.tech > moderated group comp.os.linux.debian.changes > > This is a formal Request For Discussion (RFD) for the reorganization of > three large Debian mailing lists into newsgroups. This is not a Call > for Votes (CFV); you cannot vote at this time. Procedural details are > below. I think having these lists gatewayed to official "big-7" newsgroups is a good idea. As per my thoughts on splitting the list, I don't think "debian-user" should be split into three separate groups. Over 500 posts a day can come into groups like "comp.lang.c++" with everything from newbies to experts and it doesn't get split up. Threaded newsreaders take up most of the slack, and make it much easier to manage than your standerd (un-filtered) mail reader.