On Fri, 8 Feb 2002, Stephen Stuart wrote:
The topic being discussed is to try to reduce USENET bandwidth. One way to do that is to pass pointers around instead of complete articles. If the USENET distribution system passed pointers to articles around instead of the actual articles themselves, sites could then "self-tune" their spools to the content that their readers (the "users") found interesting (fetch articles from a source that offered to actually spool them), either by pre-fetching or fetching on-demand, but still have access to the "total accumulated wisdom" of USENET - and maybe it wouldn't need to be reposted every week, because sites could also offer value to their "users" on the publishing side by offering to publish their content longer.
I'm a bit behind on reading the NANOG list, so excuse the late reply. If we can really build such a beast, this would be extremely cool. The method of choice for publishing free information on the Net is WWW these days. But it doesn't work very well, since there is no direct relationship between an URL and the published text or file. So people will use a "far away" URL because they don't know the same file can be found much closer, and URLs tend to break after a while. I've thought about this for quite a while, and even written down a good deal of them. If you're interested: http://www.muada.com/projects/usenet.txt Iljitsch van Beijnum