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USENET is a collection of thousands of discussion groups
called "newsgroups." These newsgroups are passed
from site to site throughout the globe.
Almost every site on the Internet participates in USENET.
There are thousands of newsgroups arranged in 100
hierarchies. Among the collection is the traditional core
groups of USENET, an electronic newspaper, numerous regional
hierarchies, discussions from abroad (not only in English but
in languages such as Japanese, Chinese, German, French,
Finnish, etc.) and multitudes of public, private and
non-profit organizations.
To read newsgroups, you use a newsreading application. A
newsreader keeps track of which newsgroups to read as well as
each article within the newsgroup. Once an individual article
is read, that article will no longer be displayed and only
new articles to that newsgroup will be displayed. There are
several newsreaders available including tin, rn, nn and trn.
We recommend trn and that is the reader we will discuss here.
Using trn
At the "%" prompt, type "trn." Since all primushost.com
users are subscribed to a few local newsgroups, you will have
something to read right off the bat. A screen similar to this
will appear:
- If you answer with a "+" a list of unread
articles will be shown.
- To mark an article to be read type the letter or
number appearing in the left column. Hitting the
space bar will move you to the next page.
- "c" will mark all of the articles as read.
"y" will confirm the choice.
- "q" will quit the group and move to the
next group with unread messages.
- The "g" command followed by the name of a
newsgroup will allow you to read it and also offer
the option of subscribing to the newsgroup.
- The "u"command will unsubscribe a group.
- Help is available from within trn with the
"h" command.
The entire list of available newsgroups complete with a
short description may be downloaded from the directory
/usr/lib/news.
If you wish to download this file to your machine at
home, just use whatever file transfer protocol you usually
use. For example, let's say I use Zmodem. I would set up my
machine at home and then type:
% sz /usr/lib/news/newsgroups
Then the file transfer would begin. I can then browse the
file at home at my own pace.
If you attempt to subscribe to a newsgroup, and you get a
message saying the newsgroup does not exist (or something
similar to that), then North Shore Access does not subscribe
to this newsgroup. No problem. Just email support@primushost.com
with a request for the newsgroup, and we'll get it. There
will be a couple of days (max) before articles start
appearing. Then subscribe to this newsgroup as explained
earlier.
NOTE: When posting to a newsgroup, pay particular
attention to the distribution field. The default answer is
worldwide and if the article is sent with world distribution,
it will go to every other USENET site.
Some common distribution fields are:
- ne - New England
- usa - Only to USA sites
- na - Only to North American sites
- world- Each and every USENET site throughtout the
world
The classic example of inappropriate distribution is an
article about the sale of a dinette set posted with the
distribution field of "world." People in Australia
are not likely buyers of a Massachusetts dinette set.
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