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[Pan-users] Re: A couple of Pan question


From: Duncan
Subject: [Pan-users] Re: A couple of Pan question
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 06:34:51 +0000 (UTC)
User-agent: Pan/0.133 (House of Butterflies)

Ben Barto <address@hidden> posted
address@hidden, excerpted
below, on  Sun, 02 Aug 2009 23:12:23 -0400:

> -ThanksI&#39;m currently using Pan 0.132.  I&#39;m fairly certain some
> features are missing from the previous version, but I thought I&#39;d
> ask anyway. Firstly, in older versions of Pan, there was a
> &quot;Folders&quot; area, where posted messages were kept.  Is there any
> way to see which articles I&#39;ve posted to which newsgroups?  And
> secondly, I was formerly able to right click on a newsgroup and show the
> number of articles in that particular group.  This was especially useful
> in determining if the group was worthwhile.  Is there any way to see the
> total number of messages in a group?<br>
> <br><br>-Thanks<br><br>_______________________________________

First, you're posting to the pan list, a list some of us read /using/ pan.
 If you can't be bothered to turn off HTML posting in general (for
security reasons and because some people seriously boost the spam score of
anything coming in as HTML, and not to look like one of those "Eternal
September" people, google it if you need to), please at /least/ do so for
the pan list, as you likely already know what HTML looks like in pan, or
any other non-HTML client.

As for the questions...

The "folders" are gone, yes.  FWIW, there were complications to the
previous implementation in any case, which caused a number of hard to
resolve bugs.

There are two things that /partially/ replace them, or at least sent
messages.

First, you download your posted messages like any others, now. (One of the
bugs I mentioned above was that pan already had that message so it didn't
download it when it came across it again, so you never saw if your message
actually made it to the server without corruption, or not, since you
always used the local copy.  That's not a problem now since your messages
are downloaded like any other messages.)  Combine that with the fact that
expiration is now dependent on your local pan settings, not on server
settings, and you can retain any messages you download for as long as you
wish.[1]

Second, pan now has the save-draft and open-draft functionality.  So
**IF** you remember, for particularly important messages or those you've
worked on for awhile and want to make sure they get to the server, you can
save a draft, send the message, and if it doesn't make it, open the saved
draft and resend.

Unfortunately, there's no way to automate that, and you have to remember
to save the draft.

The total messages per group info doesn't appear to be available any more,
unfortunately.  There have been requests to bring it back, and it likely
will come back at some point, but it hasn't been as urgently or popularly
requested as some of the other things on the list (bringing back something
to replace rules, so there's a way to auto-download, for instance, and a
way to categorize the group list for those that might subscribe to a whole
bunch of groups, are the two most requested features, see previous
discussion in the archives for the deal on those, but there's a workaround
for group categories, at least).

Meanwhile, Charles' pan development has been very much on-again, off-
again.  He'll pretty much ignore it for a couple years, then come back and
go great guns for a year or so, then ignore it for awhile again. Right now
is one of the "ignore" periods, and we users, even the regulars here on
the list, don't really have any idea when he'll get back to it.

In the mean time, however, one of the group regulars, K Haley, has git-
cloned the Gnome pan repository and is doing some patching and stuff. Who
knows where that will eventually lead, but that's what a lot of the
regulars are using now, since upstream has been pretty much dead for two
years, now, even if that's not unusual and it has come back before.

.....

[1] Do note that pan's cache is only 10 MB by default, however, so if you
don't change that, setting messages not to expire will keep the headers,
but you'll lose the messages themselves pretty fast if you download
binaries, in a few weeks, perhaps, if you do text-only and aren't too
active.  There's a cache size setting in preferences.xml, but deliberately
no GUI config option for it as that's considered too complex for simple
Gnome user's minds to comprehend, apparently, so you can set it, but only
by editing the config file directly, using a text editor or whatever.  I
have my cache set to several gigs and my expiration disabled, and am still
building messages after about two years now of use.  Of course, after some
time doing that, pan does begin to take longer and longer to startup, but
I have it set to start with kde, and seldom quit it except to reboot or
restart X and kde, so that's not a big issue.

-- 
Duncan - List replies preferred.   No HTML msgs.
"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master."  Richard Stallman





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