comp.unix.apps (Re: comp.unix.sco)
Peter da Silva
peter at ficc.uu.net
Wed May 2 22:13:13 AEST 1990
In article <1106 at icdi10.UUCP> fr at icdi10.UUCP (Fred Rump from home) writes:
[ about non-technical UNIX users] Feeding
> comp.unix.xenix or comp.unix.i386 to them is a total waste. I've tried it and
> the stuff is simply not read as most of it is way over their heads or plainly
> not of interest from their vantage-point.
There are existing groups for applications: comp.text, comp.databases, etc.
Since many of these applications have DOS equivalents (many are copies of DOS
programs) perhaps these groups would be better.
> In the small systems world Xenix is still the
> standard.
And there is a group for that.
> The current vitriolic debate about comp.unix.sco could probably have been
> avoided by having asked for a 386 applications specific subgroup that most
> current readers of comp.unix.xenix or comp.unix.i386 would not have been
> interested in and probably not opposed either. At least, that is how I see
> the need being that I'm not privy to the proposer's real intent.
I agree. My original article on splitting up comp.unix included a
comp.unix.apps group. This was not thought a good idea by others, so I dropped
it. Perhaps it needs to be reconsidered.
> Perhaps there are others out there who actually have user/customers on the
> net? What say ye to such a group?
I say, let's have a Call For Discussion.
New groups:
comp.unix.misc
comp.unix.huge
comp.unix.apps
Name changes:
comp.unix.microport -> comp.unix.i286
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