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From: | J.B. Nicholson |
Subject: | Re: “Get rid of digests” |
Date: | Sat, 2 Nov 2019 19:51:24 -0500 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.7.2 |
Lori Nagel via libreplanet-discuss wrote:
I used to read digests cause I got too many emails and was on tons and tons of email lists about various topics of interest.You could have chosen to use the filtering capability found in any modern email client to sort emails into folders. That approach would automatically keep threads organized, let you quickly identify what's active, where to focus your attention, and let you do things like mark threads as read when that thread became uninteresting (or simply ignore the thread). Then mark everything in the folder read to 'catch up' on all of those messages. Server-side filtering would let you do this organization into folders as well; server-side filtering is particularly handy if you read your email account from multiple MUAs. With this approach the number of emails becomes a non-issue; you stop reading when you want to knowing the rest of what you didn't read is still there in a well-organized and easily accessible fashion. The point being that I've not seen such support in MUAs or server-side filtering for digests and you can make choices that won't cause you to think that it's a burden to handle "tons and tons" of emails.
Which means you're allowing each forum owner to change what people write at any time (even well after their post was made), block messages from being seen by you, and generally give forum owners a much greater amount of time to exert censorious control over what you're allowed to read and when. I don't prefer that tradeoff.Now, for a lot of that stuff I just read message forums and don't bother with email.
There is just no way I could keep up with the amount of conversation that goes on in those communities, and that is why they have forums rather than lists.I can think of reasons some prefer web forums over mailing lists, none of which have anything to do with the amount of conversation: some people don't really want the administration of hosting any service so they outsource that job to a web forum by hosting their discussion to Reddit, Facebook, or some other system they don't administer. One thread (perhaps it was on this mailing list) encouraged the FSF to adopt a Discuss-driven web forum on the basis that it was more liked by (the inchoately described) young people. No evidence was given to back up that claim but the claim had nothing to do with the amount of conversation.
My experiences with mailing lists involving hundreds of people tells me otherwise.Lists are really only good for a small group of people that are frequently writing to each other.
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