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newsgroups

Happy Valentine’s Day, From Giganews

Friday, February 13, 2015

Happy Valentine’s day! Today’s the perfect day to share your love of Giganews with friends and family. When you refer a friend that sticks around Giganews for a month or more, we’ll give you up to a free month of Usenet – whatever the value of that account is. Everybody wins!

Just log into your control panel here to email, tweet, or Facebook out to the ones you love most, anytime.

The Giganews Team

Leave a Comment Category: giganews, newsgroups, usenet, usenet invite, usenet providers with vpn, usenet referral, usenet vpn, valentines day, vyprvpn

Happy Holidays, From Giganews.

Monday, December 22, 2014

We would like to wish all Giganews members Happy Holidays and the best for 2015. Without all of our great members, Giganews would not be what it is today. We are honored by all of your support.

Have a wonderful holiday season,

The Giganews Team

Leave a Comment Category: giganews, holidays, newsgroups, usenet, usenet providers with vpn, usenet vpn, vyprvpn

Giganews “For Dummies”

Thursday, April 19, 2007

newsgroups, usenet, book
Giganews “For Dummies”
Giganews gets mentioned in a new book
Giganews would like to send out a special thank you to Woody Leonhard the author of “Windows Vista Timesaving Techniques For Dummies” for mentioning Giganews in his book!

In the chapter “Technique 20: Downloading from Newsgroups” Woody states…

“I, Personally, use Giganews. It’s fast. They claim 99%+ completion. Binaries stick around for 90 days or more.”

(Obviously this was written before Giganews’ last retention upgrades to 100 and then to 120 days.)

The chapter is one of the most comprehensive “how to” instructions on Usenet we’ve ever read, and is an excellent read for anyone looking to learn how to use Usenet (especially good for first time users!).

If you’re running on Vista, purchase a copy of “Windows Vista Timesaving Techniques For Dummies” and check out the mention of Giganews on page 216.

Thanks Woody!

Leave a Comment Category: book, newsgroups, usenet

1 Billion Usenet Articles

Thursday, April 12, 2007

newsgroups, usenet, articles
1 Billion Usenet Articles
Observations on Giganews’ 1 billion article capacity
As we were writing our recent announcement regarding our upgrade to 120 days retention, I was surprised to discover that our news servers were offering nearly 1 billion newsgroup articles in over 100,000 newsgroups.

This is a significant achievement for Usenet, which was originally designed to handle only a few dozen articles per day.

In Usenet’s beginning there was a steady march of Usenet server software development centered on the evolving challenges of a growing community. These evolutions of server software were primarily spearheaded by graduate students working in their spare time to solve problems with matters such as naming conventions, performance, and portability.

Since the early days of Usenet, a lot of things have changed. Internet access in the developed world is commonplace, personal computers are widespread and readily available, and Usenet has grown to over 100,000 newsgroups.

Now that Usenet is a global network with countless participants, the landscape has changed. No longer will the collaborative efforts of graduate students working in their spare time solve the challenges of operating a Usenet network processing nearly a billion newsgroup articles. These challenges require significant investment, time, and experience.

Luckily for Giganews, we have a loyal customer base which allows us to focus our efforts on reinvesting in our network and technology. This investment has been used to develop a scalable, patent-pending news server software platform designed around plug and play storage upgrades.

It is this technology that allows Giganews to perform massive retention upgrades with no service interruptions. Seamless upgrades are one of the more understated things that we do at Giganews, and are something our company and our customers tend to take for granted.

Service improvements like our 120 day retention upgrade represent huge engineering challenges, but thanks to tremendous efforts by our programmers and engineers, Giganews is able to deliver these advancements with little to no impact on our service.

Now that Giganews has taken Usenet to the next level and is making Usenet more accessible than ever before, I wanted to take a second to thank our engineering staff for developing systems and technologies which allow Giganews to improve service for our customers with virtually no downtime. If you enjoy Giganews’ service, post a comment on this blog post and let our engineers know how much you appreciate them!

7 Comments Category: articles, newsgroups, usenet

Giganews in Cambodia

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

newsgroups, usenet, travel
Giganews in Cambodia
Giganews makes an appearance in Cambodia
Below is a picture of Jerry from Giganews’ design department with his Giganews t shirt on at the Angkor Wat temple in Siem Riep, Cambodia. Jerry snapped this photograph on his trip to Bien Hoa, Vietnam to visit family. Thanks Jerry for the cool pic!

4 Comments Category: newsgroups, travel, usenet

Accurately Measuring Usenet Retention

Thursday, February 1, 2007

newsgroups, usenet, retention
Accurately Measuring Usenet Retention
Notes explaining Usenet retention statistics
As you may have seen, Giganews recently announced a storage upgrade which will raise our binary retention to 100 days over the next two weeks. This got me thinking about how retention is measured and reported by various Usenet servers.

Articles on a news server are commonly stored “first in / last out”. What this means is that every time a new article is posted to a Usenet system the oldest article is deleted. The oldest available article on a news server is generally what defines a news server’s retention.

Some Usenet systems will also apply this “first in / last out” rule based on hierarchy.

For example, Giganews does not expire any text articles so our text retention is 1300+ days. Our binary retention (based on available storage) is 100 days. This means that it takes 100 days for a newsgroup article to drop off of our servers in the binary hierarchies.

When you’re discussing a news server’s retention make sure you understand exactly which hierarchy you’re referencing. If you see people refer to a news server’s retention based on text hierarchies then chances are they’re embellishing to make the news server seem better. In reality their retention in the more challenging binary hierarchies is probably much lower.

In addition to people using text retention to embellish the quality of a news server, you’ll also see some Usenet systems carry long retention rates in just a handful of newsgroups. If we use our simple definition of retention— “the oldest available article on a news server”— then this would be an accurate description of that news server’s retention. Of course most people aren’t going to want long retention on just a handful of newsgroups, so you could consider this misleading. Many people sign up for Giganews after using other Usenet servers which advertise long retention rates but provide those retention rates in just a couple of newsgroups.

The final thing to look out for when trying to measure retention is “invalid date headers”. In some newsgroups the headers of certain articles will contain the wrong date. In the beginning of this post, I said that most news servers apply a “first in / last out” rule to newsgroups and that the oldest article on a news server defines its retention. What I didn’t mention is that the “first in / last out rule” is based on article numbers (number assigned to an article based on when it is posted) and not the date displayed in the headers. This means that if an article contains a date in the header older than the retention of the news server it still may appear in the newsgroup because it hasn’t been purged based on its article number.

The best measure of a news server’s retention is to look at the oldest article date in *many* popular binary newsgroups. This will generally give you the best idea of the news server’s retention. If you notice a few groups with longer than normal retention, the news server is either hand picking certain newsgroups to misrepresent their overall retention levels or there is an article with an invalid date header.

4 Comments Category: newsgroups, retention, usenet

Alternate NNTP Usenet SSL Ports

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

newsgroups, usenet, ssl, encryption
Alternate NNTP Usenet SSL Ports
Alternate ports for SSL NNTP access
As you may have already seen, Giganews recently announced support for 256 bit SSL encrypted Usenet access on port 443. The reason we decided to offer support for port 443 is that some customers were experiencing slow download speeds on port 563 due to port-based speed limiting on networks between their computer and Giganews.

One of the quickest ways to get around speed issues is to try switching ports. Many customers downloading on non-encrypted accounts have already found this out by switching their Usenet downloads from port 119 to port 80. This trick oftentimes quickly improves throughput rates when the source of the slowdown is port based-bandwidth limiting (networks limiting speeds on port 119).

There are two advantages to downloading Giganews’ 256 bit SSL encrypted Usenet access over port 443. First, it will help you avoid port based speed limiting on port 563. Secondly, you may also avoid service-based speed limiting as your NNTP traffic is completely encrypted and running over a web-based port (port 443).

The goal of Giganews’ support for port 443 is to offer our customers another path to access our encrypted Usenet service and to assist customers dealing with port based speed limits.

If you have experienced speed issues while downloading on port 563 and notice a speed improvement while downloading on port 443, please feel free to leave us a comment.

60 Comments Category: encryption, newsgroups, ssl, usenet

Usenet on the Go

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

newsgroups, usenet
Usenet on the Go
Use a USB stick to access Usenet from anywhere

At Giganews, we love to try all sorts of gadgets and applications to make our day a little easier. Which is why when we learned about an application that allows you to access Usenet away from your desktop/laptop using any computer and a USB thumb-drive, we were itching to try it.

How does it work?

For starters, you need to download a program called MojoPac and have access to a USB thumb-drive (my drive was a twenty dollar 1GB Memorex USB thumb-drive). Note: MojoPac will ONLY run off of flash-based removable storage devices. Also, MojoPac only works on 32-bit Windows XP based OS’s, sorry Mac.

After downloading MojoPac you need to run the install and point it to your thumb-drive. MojoPac will create a profile setting for you similar to creating a new user profile in Windows XP. All of your personal settings, shortcuts and … installed programs are accessed via your MojoPac “virtual desktop” stored on the thumb-drive. Awesome!

Usenet Testing

To test Usenet access, I installed NewsBin Pro and Newsleecher from my MojoPac desktop portal on my thumb-drive, and after configuring the servers, subscribing to my favorite newsgroups and some last minute tweaking, I was browsing Usenet Newsgroups without any noticeable drop in speed or performance. Pretty cool! Better yet, all of my subscribed groups, server settings, etc, are retained every time I start my news client within MojoPac. Security isn’t a problem using Giganews’ SSL feature and the stealthy ability of MojoPac to secure your files apart from the host computer. After unplugging my drive, no trace of my activity was left on the host computer. That’s because everything resides within my MojoPac profile stored on my thumb-drive. Simple and Powerful!

With MojoPac, access Usenet Newsgroups anywhere using any Windows XP host computer and flash-based portable USB thumb-drive, now that’s cool.

If you have any suggestions or tips on unique ways of accessing Usenet, comment below. We’d love to hear from you.

Leave a Comment Category: newsgroups, usenet

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