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by a7776f88862 2802 days ago
Recently started using RSS2email. Combined with a decent email client (ie not webmail crap like Gmail) it is awesome. The last time I was reading so many blogs and enjoying it was in the "classic" Opera browser circa 2010. Don't discount Usenet either. I know a couple of people who started using Usenet text groups again, and I am planning on joining them. I have come to the conclusion that it will be a better investment of time, because Usenet is archived and accessible. I regularly look up things from the 1990s and 1980s on Google Usenet search. Forums, websites, and blogs just disappear. Hopefully the same thing will not happen to Hacker News, but there is no guarantee.
1 comments

+1000, unfortunately for usenet now we have a problem: fast majority of servers are down... In the past ANY ISP, universities, many companies offer nntp server, now we have only very, very few...

Actual trend is suppress anything free and not fully controllable: usenet is decentralized and no one can really own it so it's pushed as much as possible to the oblivion, offering colorful and limited substitute from StackExchange to Reddit passing through HN and /., same for mail, they are not distributed but still decentralized enough to be out of complete control, so here came webmails just to avoid people keep their messages locally and paving the way to new "email substitute" that are web-only, fully centralized etc, Slack, Google wave etc are all tentative to bury emails in the past. Webcrap is the same, instead of a WWW of hypertexts. Push of mobile instead of PCs is the same.

Also with these kind of "modern" solution we as clients can't really discuss, try HN, try Disqus we do not really have control and voice, we are only data producer to be milked.

> unfortunately for usenet now we have a problem: fast majority of servers are down... In the past ANY ISP, universities, many companies offer nntp server, now we have only very, very few...

There are fewer, but not exactly "very, very few": http://top1000.anthologeek.net/

Because Usenet is fully distributed, the high number of site-local servers in the past was in large part about reducing bandwidth costs (having a Usenet server on your network is a lot like having a caching proxy, but even more effective).

Running your own text groups Usenet server has also never been cheaper. Most small Usenet server operators will be happy to peer with you, as long as you have a static IP.

The market for binary newsgroup providers is also healthy, but that is not about discussions anymore.