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Re: browser interface to forums please?

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On 2017-03-27 23:23, Steve Litt wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 11:31:02 +0900
Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

If you have subscribed to more mailing lists than -general, having one
subfolder per list can also help a lot, grouping as well some of those
having a low activity, for example:
- one folder for -hackers and -hackers-cluster.
- one folder for -general.
- one folder for -jdbc and -odbc.
- one for -bugs and -docs.
- one for -jobs and -announce, etc.
Something like that will make your hacking activity way easier to
handle. I would bet that a lot of people around here do that.

I sure do. I have a heck of a lot of email in a heck of a lot of
folders, all stored in a nice, easy to drill down hierarchy. That
hierarchy is maintained by the Dovecot IMAP server that runs on my
desktop computer.

I'm not against mailinglists at all, but I am for ease of use, especially for newcomers.

Every time I tell someone about the mailinglists I then have to explain
how they can subscribe, how to create folders, filters etc. And more often than not
they just say forget it and go to some forum.

When it comes to having a
lively group discussion that focuses all minds into a supermind greater
than the sum of the parts, a mailing list is the best tool.

Well, in the end, it's not the fact that it's a mailinglist that makes the community great, it's just the fact that the active members share a methodof communication that they all like to use. Getting notifications of new messages is probably the single most important feature to keep discussions going
and email provides that.

The thing is; mailinglists are far from userfiendly if you are not used to them. Even in this thread several people have explained how much work they have done to get it into a state where they can easily work with it. Can you expect Joe Average to do something like that
if they want to get more involved in PgSQL?

Now, I'm not saying the mailinglists should go, I'm saying there should be an easier way to access them. It should be possible to register on the site, post a message and read replies, without having to subscribe to the list and setup a way of dealing with the influx of messages
that are, for the most post, simply not interesting to the average user.

I'd love to have an RSS feed that contains only new questions, so I can just watch the popup on my screen the way I do with the rest of the world, and not have to deal with replies to topics that I don't care about anyway.

And yes, I can probably setup my email to do something like that, the point is that I shouldn't have to.






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