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GIGANEWS BLOG

April Fool’s Day on Usenet

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

april, fools, usenet, spam
April Fool’s Day on Usenet
Usenet fun on April Fool’s day.
Soviet Union Prank

Wired magazine has an interesting article featuring their picks for the 10 best April Fool’s gags in the digital era.

One that might be very familiar to truly old-school Usenet veterans is the launch of “kremvax”, the Soviet Union’s very own Usenet server, in 1984.

Of course, it was all a joke, but at the height of the Cold War, users across the globe bought right into the deception — a sure sign of a great April Fool’s Day prank.

You can read a transcription of the original article as well as some reactions once the ruse was up at http://www.godfatherof.nl/kremvax.html.

Ironically, a few years later, a legitimate Usenet server actually did come online in Moscow, and many readers were skeptical that posts coming from the server weren’t actually more pranks. Eventually, the server’s administrators took the joke to heart and had their gateway renamed to kremvax.

Birth of SPAM

April 1 also marks another momentous event for Usenet. Unfortunately, this one has little to do with humor and much to do with the universal annoyance we call spam, and why we even call it ‘spam’ in the first place.

On March 31, 1993, a program called ARMM (Automated Retroactive Minimal Moderation), which was designed to streamline and automate the process of sending cancel messages for abusive posts, experienced a catastrophic bug. ARMM began posting follow-ups to its own messages, causing a recursive ‘feedback loop’ and flooding the news.admin.policy newsgroup with useless posts.

Joel Furr, then of considerable Usenet fame, described the flood of messages as ‘spam’ and the name simply stuck. Furr’s usage of the term came from a popular Monty Python sketch in which Spam was the only item on a restaurant’s menu, but no customers wanted. Accounts are varied, but most agree that Furr was the first to use the term to describe Usenet messages, and his usage of the term eventually migrated to unsolicited email.

Check out the Wikipedia article about spam for more history of the term.

Leave a Comment Category: Uncategorized

Giganews Paris Party Contest

Thursday, March 13, 2008

We ran across this picture in the newsgroup giganews.contest and thought we’d share it on our blog. This is an entry in a contest for tickets to our 10th year anniversary party in Paris.

If you’d like to attend our 10th year anniversary party, don’t forget to submit your entry ASAP as the contest ends soon.

You can find instructions on how to enter the contest on this page.

**************************
About the Event:

Paris, France
10 May 2008
~20:30 – 02:00

Giganews is proud to host our customers, website publishers, technology press, Usenet members, and Giganews’ founders, staff and friends for our 10th year anniversary party.

The event will be held at an amazing club in central Paris. We have hired a DJ and will be providing plenty of food and alcohol.

We are looking forward to you joining us for this exciting chance to meet, exchange ideas, and network with some of the brightest stars of the Usenet world.

For members attending the party from outside Paris, we have secured a discounted hotel rate at a nice hotel near the venue.

Selected winners will be placed on a guest list which will be checked at the door. The only thing the winner needs to bring to the party is government issues photo identification (example: passport).

We are excited about getting to meet so many interesting people from the technology and Usenet worlds in one place. For many years we have known these people only through the other side of an email, newsgroup posting,or forum thread. Having the opportunity to interact in person is something we are eagerly looking forward to.
**************************

Submit your entry now!

Leave a Comment Category: Uncategorized

Usenet University™ High Definition Videos

Friday, February 1, 2008

usenet, university, video, newsgroups
Usenet University™ High Definition Videos Available on giganews.usenet.university
Giganews makes Usenet University™ videos available in high definition on giganews.usenet.university.
By now I’m sure you’ve come across Giganews’ new Usenet newsgroups tutorial content available via our Usenet University™ tutorial series.

You may also have seen that Giganews produced an entire series of Usenet tutorial videos along with our extensive Usenet tutorial web content.

These videos are available in low resolution on our web page; however, Giganews is now making high resolution videos available via the newsgroup giganews.usenet.university.

Visit giganews.usenet.university to access high definition screen captures and instructions showing you all the techniques you’ll need to become a Usenet pro. If you’re not sure how to access giganews.usenet.university, visit our web content linked above for instructions on configuring your news client.

Enjoy!

1 Comment Category: Uncategorized

Usenet and the History of the Poke

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

usenet, history, poke
Usenet and the History of the Poke – Giganews Blog
“Poke” history as it relates to Usenet
You log into your Facebook® account and find that one of your friends from junior high has poked you…and the battle begins, poking back and forth until one of you gets horribly annoyed and a truce is called. This is an experience that millions of users have every day. The poke is ubiquitous in Facebook culture. But where, you must ask yourself, was the first poke war fought?

According to Andrew Girdwood at e-consultancy.com, the poke is a comfortable middle aged concept born in 1963 with the BASIC computing language. This is a far cry from the rambunctious poke that Facebook addicts recognize today.

The poke of 1963 turned into a “social currency for the gamer geeks” who used it to cheat games and shared their knowledge with friends and fellow users over Usenet. Girdwood’s article goes on to compare the poke to Linux’s finger command, which allowed users to get personal information such as phone numbers and real names from their friends on the network. Nowadays, the poke has devolved into something more playful and, says Girdwood, something not “quite so simple and elegant” as its ancestors.

So the next time you get poked, nudged, or winked at, think of the 45 year old father of the poke hanging out in Usenet newsgroups, facilitating gamers in accumulating unlimited lives, hordes of ammo, and more, and let the battle wage on.

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Giganews Flame Wars

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

giganews flame wars, usenet, arcade game
Giganews Flame Wars
Post your high score for the Giganews Flame Wars™ arcade game!
Giganews recently announced the release of our Usenet-themed arcade game, Flame Wars.

In the Flame Wars™ game, you’ll take on the role of a Giganews® recovery pilot, given the task of recovering Usenet articles that have been waylaid by trolls. Power-ups at your disposal include kill-file missiles for taking out those nasty trolls and a Giganews Accelerator to speed up your download beam.

So far, our in-house high score is 198,000. Post your own high score as a comment on this blog post. Comments are moderated so please be patient if your comment doesn’t appear right away.

Good luck!

22 Comments Category: Uncategorized

Usenet History Puts Town on Map

Monday, December 17, 2007

usenet, history, newsgroup, town, map
Usenet History Puts Town on Map – Giganews Blog
Nashau, New Hampshire is the state’s second largest city and the one time home of Digital Equipment Corp.’s Unix Engineering Group. DEC’s move to New Hampshire in the early 1980s, according to a recent article in the Nashau Telegraph, put the city on the map. The article also states another, related, claim to fame for the Nashau area: one of the first Usenet newsgroup articles to appear in Deja News’s (now run by Google) Usenet archive.

The Deja News/Google Usenet archive began as the personal archival project of Henry Spencer after he took over the Duke University Usenet feed in 1981. You can read more about Henry Spencer, including an interview, at our Usenet History Project site. By the time Spencer handed his archives over to Deja News he had accumulated more than two million articles dating from 1981, including Nashau’s DEC Unix announcement.

The Deja News/Google archive and all of its millions of archived articles are important historical resources and certainly document an exciting time in computing history. The early 1981 DEC post may be one of the earliest archived Usenet articles, but Usenet had been humming along for two years before Spencer started his archive and the Unix post was captured for the future’s eyes. Get details about the earliest days of Usenet by visiting Giganews’s Usenet History Project at http://www.giganews.com/usenet-history/index.html.

2 Comments Category: Uncategorized

Help Giganews Review our Services and Features

Monday, September 10, 2007

giganews review, giganews, review, reviews
Giganews Review
Customers help Giganews review services and features.
Giganews is celebrating our 10th anniversary next year and this year has been one of the most exciting in our history. We’ve made lots of advances and have worked very hard to provide improved and updated service for all our customers.

In an effort to keep improving and to make our 10th year a memorable one, we’re asking Giganews customers to do a review of our services so that we can better understand what you all are thinking.

In an effort to get a thorough Giganews review, we’re asking that our blog readers leave comments reviewing a variety of aspects of our service and customer care. Please, feel free to give an honest review of your Giganews experience. Do remember that the comments on this blog are moderated, so try to avoid inappropriate comments which may not make it through moderation.

Giganews is asking you to review:

– Retention
– Completion
– Giganews Accelerator
– 256-Bit SSL Encrypted Usenet service
– Customer service
– Control panel
– Website
– Etc.

If you can think of anything else we should include in our Giganews review, feel free to comment on that, as well.

Thanks for all of your help!

70 Comments Category: Uncategorized

New to Usenet Newsgroups?

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

new, usenet, newsgroups
New to Usenet Newsgroups?
Giganews helps explain Usenet newsgroups to new subscribers
So you know that Giganews has 160+ days of binary article retention and 1500+ days of text retention (as of the date of this post). You know that we have 99% completion across all of our 107K+ newsgroups. Great, sign me up! Now what?

Usenet is a vast community, and when paired with a high performance provider like Giganews, the options a user has are nearly endless. Variety is great. But it can also be a little overwhelming.

Users who are new to the Usenet community can find several helpful Usenet tutorials on the Internet, which will guide you through the process of setting up your newsreader, navigating newsgroups, and contributing your own posts to newsgroups of interest.

If you need a basic overview of Usenet terminology, check out Giganews’ glossary where you’ll find definitions for terms such as headers, streams, completion, retention, and much more.

Giganews customers who need help with any aspect of their service, accessing Usenet, posting to newsgroups, downloading articles, etc. can contact our 24/7/365 tech support staff, who will be able to guide you through these steps.

If you’re a Giganews customer who is unfamiliar with how to use our service or if you’re considering signing up, but need some more information make sure to use our contact form to reach out to one of our friendly support reps!

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