Mailing lists vs. Web Fora
The Ministry of Information's take on HippyDave's post on mailing lists vs. web forums.
On the initial topic (e-mail groups vs. online fora), I definitely favour the latter, for one main reason: threads. For me, that's the 'killer app' of fora, with which e-mail lists can't compete. I drastically prefer to read the topics I choose, rather than an undifferentiated stream of all traffic.
I can see the point on signal-to-noise ratios, but I find that the extra time spent checking and navigating web forums is longer that the time skimming and deleting off-topic postings on most mailing lists. This may be because I'm still on dialup, and I find web forums with all those graphic avatars and other 'cute' cruft take forever to load. But few if any web forums have an easy way of telling you which posts you have and haven't read, or even which threads have new posts.
Most mailing lists support threading if you use a decent mail program (i.e. anything other than Microsoft Outlook, which was intended for corporate email, not Internet discussion groups, and it shows), although that gets weakened by poor thread discipline, mostly from top-posting Outlook users who don't realise that other mail programs exist.
One of these days someone will come up with a 'killer app' that combines the best elements of both. Although I think the usability of web fora would be dramatically improved by the simple addition of RSS feeds which can tell you when there are new posts on a particular subject - I can't imagine the Blogosphere without RSS.
Posted by TimHall at October 22, 2006 04:55 PMI prefer some kind of elegant hybrid of both -- one where you can use either the web interface or email to respond to and manage posts. The forum I'm trying to build for a custom site will eventually have something like that.
Posted by: Serdar on October 22, 2006 06:41 PMKaren Cravens of The Phoenyx is working on such a beast, which I believe is now at quite an advanced stage of development.
One problem is coping with all the various methods of quoting, for which the solutions are as much social as technical.
Posted by: Tim Hall on October 22, 2006 06:58 PMAdvanced state? Some days I think that, other days I go "Geez, there's so much left to do..."
(But if you notice some weird hits from venice.dreamhost.com, that's me, on a DayQuil-fuelled coding rampage today. I'm testing my XML transfers on your feed.)
Posted by: Karen on October 22, 2006 11:15 PM