newsreaders

2007-12-25 8:49:00

The following is the summary of responses received regarding my

question concerning newsreaders. Listed are sites for source then

the messages I received -- Kim Fabricius Storm provided the README for

nn. Send me mail if you wish to have a copy.

Thanks to all who responded - Judi Connelly cjudi@nesmgr.nlm.nih.gov

---------------------------

xvnews ftp.uu.net comp.sources.x opcom.sun.ca:/pub/tars

xrn

GNUS

mxrn

NetScape ftp.mcom.com:/netscape for gov sites

nn newsgroup: news.software.nn

trn

tin

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>>>>>>>>From grossjoh@linus.informatik.uni-dortmund.de Thu Jan 5 04:08 EST 1995

There's xvnews with an OpenWindows look-n-feel. Then there's xrn with

an Athena Widgets look-n-feel. And finally, there's GNUS for Emacs.

I use GNUS...

        \kai{}

>>>>>>>From demarthe@alpha.cad.cea.fr Thu Jan 5 05:56 EST 1995

I use either mxrn (Motif X Read News) or NetScape (which is a WWW browser

with a very good News interface).

NetScape is at ftp.mcom.com under /netscape/ and is free for you since you are

under gov domain :-)

Though I use it on a Dec Alpha under OSF/1 it should work of on a sun box

under Solaris 2.x

| Herve DEMARTHE %^) E-Mail: demarthe@alpha.cad.cea.fr |

>>>>>>>>From kevin@uniq.com.au Thu Jan 5 06:09 EST 1995

nn works fine.

>>>>>>>>From Steve_Kilbane@cegelecproj.co.uk Thu Jan 5 06:12 EST 1995

Anyway, I use xrn (v6.17, I think; my current window manager doesn't

show the top border). It's compiled for NNTP usage, and works reasonably

well. I picked it because I'm expanding usage of News into a currently

PC-dominated market, and it's GUI-based, fairly easy for beginners to

use, and not *too* much of a problem for experts to use.

>>>>>>>>From admin@di.uminho.pt Thu Jan 5 06:30 EST 1995

 nn, trn, xrn, emacs gnus.

- Jorge Portugal Andrade

>>>>>>>>>From gturner@aer.com Thu Jan 5 08:52 EST 1995

we use nn and like it very much. here's the README which does a much better

job of describing nn than I can:

We have an unmoderated news group dedicated to nn: news.software.nn

Kim Fabricius Storm

>>>>>From imp@orbotech.co.il Thu Jan 5 03:17 EST 1995

Try xvnews.

ftp.uu.net should carry last version, I hope...

Cyril Plisko imp@orbotech.co.il

>>>>>From ratinox@unilab.dfci.harvard.edu Thu Jan 5 09:56 EST 1995

r/tin is probably one of the best newsreaders out there. There's also trn,

a threaded version of rn; xvnews, a reader that uses the xview toolkit I'd

guess (I've never used it). My personal favorite is GNUS, part of GNU

Emacs.

Richard Pieri, IS/Networking

>>>>>From ericb@telecnnct.com Thu Jan 5 10:39 EST 1995

We like tin and xvnews.

-- Eric William Burger -- Eric.Burger@telecnnct.com --

>>>>>>From jsm@sqi.com Thu Jan 5 11:20 EST 1995

I currently use xvnews from comp.sources.x

The gui is very easy to use

John Marquis

>>>>>>From Birger.Wathne@vest.sdata.no Thu Jan 5 12:31 EST 1995

Stand-alone, PD: xvnews (XView based).

Best I have seen so far, but can still get better, Commercial: Netscape.

Birger

>>>>>>From Kenneth.Erickson@Eng.Sun.COM Thu Jan 5 12:43 EST 1995

A good ascii newsreader is 'trn'.

A good X newsreader is xvnews.

You should be able to locate either one with archie.

-ken

>>>>>>From tag@mls.saic.com Thu Jan 5 14:05 EST 1995

If I understand you right? NEWS, being inews or rnews

allows you a exec called RN which then gets you article by article

and newsgroup by news group.

I am not sure if that was what you are looking for,

or would you be talking about like a XMOSIAC or NETSCAPE

product that gives you a GUI interface.

Robert Tag

>>>>>>From johnb@blas.cis.mcmaster.ca Thu Jan 5 14:07 EST 1995

i use xvnews, an xview news reader. it's kinda nice. i believe you can

get it via anon. ftp from opcom.sun.ca in the /pub/tars directory.

        -john

>>>>>>From fetrow@biostat.washington.edu Thu Jan 5 14:25 EST 1995

 How about trn, nn, GNUS (an emacs application) or even mosaic?

 -Dave Fetrow fetrow@biostat.washington.edu

>>>>>>From shipley@merde.dis.org Thu Jan 5 15:41 EST 1995

gnus

>>>>>>>>From jdt@concorde.com Fri Jan 6 14:01 EST 1995

You can try "rn", "trn", or my favorite, "nn" ("no news", as in "no news

is good news").

/joe

>>>>>>From @miranda.umds.ac.uk,@furry.pet:johnh@gerbil.umds.ac.uk Mon Jan 9 04:50 EST 1995

You could try netscape!

I saw it briefly being used as a newsreader on the PC.

Looked good!

Point-and click type stuff.

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