A journey in the World of NewsgroupsThis chapter is supposed to be glance over the World of Newsgroups
and their inhabitants; someone who has never dared to go
there before will encounter some strange customs, which may give you a feeling
of being a lonely alien without backup; but stay calm, it is not like
this. The Usenet is a meeting place for all kinds of normal and
not-so-normal folks; it is here where they are distributing a lot of
information but also gossip and other stuff.References to more detailed and qualified essays on the Usenet
can be found at More
ResourcesWhat are ...... online-readers?An online-reader connects to a newsserver and gives you access to
its content. &knode; is an online-reader: you are reading your News
and publishing your own articles while the
online-reader stays connected.... offline-readers?An offline-reader connects to the Server and fetches only the
headers of new articles; then, the connection is closed and you can
mark (offline) the articles you are really interested in. When you
connect next time the offline-reader fetches the articles you
marked and sends the articles you have written whilst offline.There is no connection while you are reading or writing
articles.... newsgroups?You can look at newsgroups as public bulletin boards and forums,
where everybody is allowed to participate. Articles you have
published in a newsgroup can be read by everybody subscribed to this
newsgroup and, normally, everybody is allowed to publish their articles
in a newsgroup.... news?News is the collective term for articles published in a newsgroup.... threads?A thread is a topic of discussion in a
newsgroup.Online MannersThere are lot of different people meeting and talking in
newsgroups; it is seen as some kind of courtesy to obey some rules of
manner, the basics of which are listed here.Before you ask questions be sure you have read the newsgroup's
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) and didn't find
the answer.If you take part in a discussion be aware of the fact that everybody
can read the answer: do not say anything that you would not say to the others
if you were facing them; avoid insults.Try to avoid crossposting: do not ask a question in more than
one newsgroup when you do not know which is the right one. Ask in one
newsgroup; if it is wrong, you will be told which is right one.Formulate your articles accurately; nobody likes to read an
article with lots of typos, even with content worth a Pulitzer. Think
of your articles as letters: your letter speaks for you; it represents
you; somebody reading your article will draw conclusions about you
from it, wrong or right.Remember, nobody sees your grin when you are writing an ironic
sentence: it may be funny for you, but it can be very serious for the
person reading it. It is very difficult to include emotions in an
article.The most important rule: use your common sense when you are
answering or publishing an article.The Usenet languageYou will not be surprised about English being the main language on
the Usenet; however, there are special trees for German (de.*), French (fr.*)
and many other languages. If you are unable to determine the main
language of a newsgroup the only possibility is careful listening
or a possible explanation in the description of the group in the
grouplist.In addition, over the time the Usenet has developed its own language
but it is easy to learn.
RTFM and other typosWhen you read news, after some time you will read some strange
combinations of letters; for example, you can get a reply like:RTFMNothing else. Strange, but absolutely intended; to solve the
riddle: those, most of the time, are shortcuts, acronyms. It is easier
to drop some letters than to write the same sentence over and over
again.But what is the meaning of RTFM? The writer
is asking you to read the manual, documentation or
FAQ before asking questions in the
newsgroup. It stands for: (R)ead (T)he (F)...ing
(M)anual; BTW this is advice you should adopt.Wait, what is BTW now? Another often-seen
acronym which means (B)y (T)he (W)ay. It is easy when you know
it; to avoid you having to continuously speculate over the meaning of
acronyms there is table at he end of this section containing the
most-often-used acronyms.This table does not try to be complete and is based on a list by
Martin Imlau.
Acronyms on Usenet
Acronym
Meaning
<g>
grins
AAMOF
As a matter of fact
ACK
Acknowledge
AFAIK
As far as I know
AFAIR
As far as I remember
AWGTHTGTTA
Are we going to have to go through this again?
ASAP
As soon as possible
BFN
Bye for now!
BTW
By the way
BYKT
But you knew that
CMIIW
Correct me if I'm wrong
CU
See you!
CU2
See you too!
CYL
See you later!
DAU
German abbreviation for the silliest user you can imagine (Dümmster
anzunehmender User)
EOD
End of discussion
ESOSL
Endless snorts of stupid laughter
FYI
For your information
GOK
God only knows
HAND
Have a nice day!
HTH
Hope that helps
HSIK
How should I know?
IAE
In any event
IANAL
I am not a lawyer
IIRC
If I remember correctly
IMCO
In my considered opinion
IMHO
In my humble opinion
IMNSHO
In my not so humble opinion
INPO
In no particular order
IOW
In other words
LMAO
Laughing my ass off
LOL
Laughing out loudly
NAK
Not acknowledged
NBD
No big deal
NFW
No f...ing way
ROTFL
Rolling on the floor, laughing
RTFM
Read the f...ing manual
SCNR
Sorry, could not resist
TIA
Thanks in advance
Smile!Again, such a strange thing. What is this ;-) meant to be? Turn
your head so the left side of your screen is on top; got it? It's
a smile with a wink? This is a so-called emoticon; emoticons are an
often-used possibility to express emotions, one thing missing in
conversation on the Usenet (but there is a substitute, remember?
;-)It is very difficult to express emotions in email or news; your
joking comment appear to be very serious to the recipient and can lead to
unmeant reactions or conflicts (flames); so use emoticons to express
your intention.There are a lots of emoticons, which express a great variety of
emotions; the interpretation is easy if you turn your
head and think of a face.PLONK!This PLONK! looks like some comic-sound, does it not? And that is
exactly what it is used for. The one who reads it knows he was just
added to the killfile of a newsreader; normally this means the
recipient of the PLONK! annoyed the sender. The PLONK! is meant to
play back the sound of the recipients name hitting the ground in the
killfile.