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2008-04-27
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Usenet
History
| 
1979 |
The
idea of network news was born in 1979
when two graduate students, Tom Truscott
and Jim Ellis, thought of using
UUCP to connect machines for the purpose
of information exchange among users.
They set up a small network of three
machines in North Carolina.
Initially, traffic
was handled by a number of shell scripts
(later rewritten in C), but they were
never released to the public. They were
quickly replaced by "A'' news,
the first public release of news software.
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1982 |
"A"
news was not designed to handle more
than a few articles per group and day.
When the volume continued to grow, it
was rewritten by Mark Horton and Matt
Glickman, who called it the "B''
release (a.k.a. Bnews). The first public
release of Bnews was version-2.1 in
1982.
It was expanded continuously,
with several new features being added.
Its current version is Bnews-2.11. It
is slowly becoming obsolete, with its
last official maintainer having switched
to INN. |
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1987 |
Another
rewrite was done and released in 1987
by Geoff Collyer and Henry Spencer;
this is release "C'', or C-News.
In the time following there have been
a number of patches to C-News, the most
prominent being the C-News Performance
Release.
On sites that carry
a large number of groups, the overhead
involved in frequently invoking relaynews,
which is responsible for dispatching
incoming articles to other hosts, is
significant. The Performance Release
adds an option to relaynews that allows
to run it in daemon mode, in which the
program puts itself in the background.
The Performance Release
is the C-News version currently included
in most releases. |
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1986 |
All
news releases up to "C'' are primarily
targeted for UUCP networks, although
they may be used in other environments
as well. Efficient news transfer
over networks like TCP/IP, DECNet, or
related requires a new scheme. This
was the reason why, in 1986, the "Network
News Transfer Protocol'', NNTP, was
introduced. It is based on network connections,
and specifies a number of commands to
interactively transfer and retrieve
articles. |
There
are a number of NNTP-based applications
available from the Net. One of them
is the nntpd package by Brian Barber
and Phil Lapsley, which you can use,
among other things, to provides newsreading
service to a number of hosts inside
a local network. nntpd was designed
to complement news packages such as
Bnews or C-News to give them NNTP features.
A different NNTP
package is INN, or Internet News. It
is not merely a front end, but a news
system by its own right. It comprises
a sophisticated news relay daemon that
is capable of maintaining several concurrent
NNTP links efficiently, and is therefore
the news server of choice for many Internet
sites.
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