• Welcome to rec.radio.info!

    From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 22 06:00:04 2021
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: uk.radio.amateur, rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 22 07:00:04 2021
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: uk.radio.amateur, rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 22 06:00:04 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: uk.radio.amateur, rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 22 06:00:01 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: uk.radio.amateur, rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 22 12:19:56 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 22 07:00:01 2022
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 22 06:00:00 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 22 06:00:01 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 06:00:01 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rec.radio.info Admin@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 22 07:00:01 2023
    XPost: rec.radio.info, rec.radio.amateur.moderated, rec.radio.amateur.misc XPost: rec.answers

    Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3.2 beta (PGPMoose V2.0, Perl 5.005)
    Archive-name: radio/rec-radio-info/welcome
    Revision: 1.5 2013/02/21 04:09:48
    Posting-Frequency: posted quarterly
    URL: http://www.panix.com/~rram/usenet/rri/index.html

    Changes followed by "|".

    *** Welcome to rec.radio.info! ***

    Welcome to rec.radio.info, a group that aims to provide a noise-free
    source of information and news for the entire rec.radio hierarchy.

    Two introductory articles about rec.radio.info are posted to the group
    every month. You are now reading the first article, which explains what rec.radio.info is, and answers some Frequently Asked Questions. The
    second article is titled Posting Guidelines, and you only need to read
    it if you want to submit an article to rec.radio.info.

    You can skip to the next section of this article by searching for the
    next
    " -- " string. The sections available are:
    - What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?
    - Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?
    - What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?
    - OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.
    - What type of material is considered inappropriate?
    - I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted to
    rec.radio.info?
    - Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?
    - I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    -- What is the purpose of rec.radio.info?

    The purpose or charter of rec.radio.info is to provide the Usenet
    community with a resource for information, news, and facts about any and
    all things radio.

    All the other rec.radio groups are intended for discussions and general
    chit chat about radio. Rec.radio.info will contain informational,
    factual articles only. Follow-ups are redirected to an appropriate other
    group, and further discussion (if any) will not take place in
    rec.radio.info.

    In order to ensure that rec.radio.info contains only appropriate
    articles, it was decided to create the group as a moderated newsgroup.

    -- Why are messages almost always cross posted to rec.radio.info?

    It provides a "tag" for each article to be assembled into a filtered presentation in rec.radio.info (even with cross-posting, only one
    message, with a unique Message-ID, is propagated across the net). This
    tag also facilitates a pre-existing method of dropping or canceling the articles locally within the discussion groups if you don't want to see
    them. This accommodates individuals who want to separate the bulletins
    from the discussions, discussions from the bulletins, as well as those
    who are adamant about not reading another newsgroup and wanted to see everything all in one basket.

    With the total size of Usenet (in number of newsgroups and total
    traffic) doubling every year or so, this is no insignificant
    contribution to reducing information noise and chaos. Making the
    discussion groups a catch-all, and making extra newsgroups filters on
    that catch-all, is also the most realistic way to implement such a
    scheme (It's not intuitively obvious what the charter, contents, and
    general appropriate topics for each and every newsgroup are. Seeing
    FAQ's and charter/intro postings in the home newsgroup is beneficial for
    new readers).

    By cross-posting one only is adding a few tens of bytes to each bulletin
    (to specify the extra group on the Newsgroups line), but are adding the capability for very powerful filtering features available on most news
    servers, listservers and readers. Your local news guru could probably
    explain these features in more detail.

    In rn, for example, according to Leanne Phillips in her rn kill-file
    FAQ, add a line of the form:

    /Newsgroups:.*[ ,]rec\.radio\.info/h:j

    either in ~/News/KILL (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles anywhere) or ~/News/rec/radio/amateur/misc/KILL (if you don't want to
    see them just in rec.radio.amateur.misc). The latter method means your
    kill file will only be consulted during rec.radio.amateur.misc (and
    hence runs more efficiently), and will probably work for most people.

    In nn, according to Bill Wohler in his nn FAQ, add a line of the form:

    rec.radio.info:!s/:^

    in ~/.nn/kill (if you don't want to see rec.radio.info articles
    anywhere), or put the following lines:

    sequence
    rec.radio.info
    rec.radio.

    at the end of ~/.nn/init in order to see all the rec.radio.info
    bulletins first, then read the remaining rec.radio.* without the
    bulletins.

    In slrn, according to the srln FAQ, the following scoring rule will
    allow you to see rec.radio.info-crossposted bulletins, while still
    filtering out most SPAM or "Velveeta" crossposted to more than 2
    newsgroups (as such articles usually do not contain a 'Followup-To:'
    header):

    Score: -9999
    Newsgroups: ,.*,
    ~Followup-To: .

    More information about kill files may be obtained from Dave Fawthrop's
    Killfile FAQ at:

    http://static.slated.org/killfile/killfilefaq.htm |

    -- What is a 'follow-up', and what does 'moderated' mean?

    If you are new to Usenet and are not familiar with the terminology, you
    might want to read the general introductory articles found in the
    newsgroup news.announce.newusers. Doing so will make your life on the
    net much easier, and will probably save you from making silly beginner's mistakes.

    If you think that at this moment you are reading an echo, a conference,
    or a bulletin board, I'd also strongly suggest a trip over to news.announce.newusers.

    For the rest of this article, we will assume you have a basic knowledge
    of Usenet terminology and mechanics.

    A moderated group means that any article that needs to be posted to the
    group has to be accepted by the moderator of the group. Since we need to
    ensure that followups to an article (discussion) do not show up in the rec.radio.info newsgroup, the `Followup-To:' header line contains a
    newsgroup that is appropriate for discussions about the specific article.

    -- OK, so now I know what 'moderated' means. Tell me more.

    Rec.radio.info is a moderated newsgroup, which means that all articles submitted to the group will have to be approved by the moderator first.

    The current moderator of the group is the rec.radio.amateur.moderated Moderation Team. Submissions to rec.radio.info can be posted, or
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info@panix.com

    Comments, criticisms, suggestions or questions about the group can be
    e-mailed to:

    rec-radio-info-request@panix.com

    But before you do so, please be sure to check out the "Posting
    Guidelines" article.

    The influence of the moderator should be minimal and of an
    administrative nature, consisting chiefly of weeding out obviously inappropriate articles, while making sure correct headers etc. are used
    for the appropriate ones.

    -- What type of material is considered inappropriate?

    There are three broad categories of articles which will be rejected by
    the moderator:

    1) Requests for information: rec.radio.info is strictly a one-way
    street. We receive information in our mailbox; we then post it to
    rec.radio.info. Requests for specific information belong in the
    normal discussion newsgroups. If your request gets answered, you
    might consider passing the answer on to rec.radio.info,
    though. Especially if you can edit it into a informational, rather
    than a discussion, format.

    2) Obvious discussion articles, or articles that appear unsubstantiated.

    3) Commercial stuff: a relatively unbiased test of a radio product would
    be accepted, but any hint of for-profit might be reason for
    rejection. For three reasons: This is not the purpose of the list,
    for-profit is a controversial topic, and this list may be passed onto
    Amateur Packet Radio (where for-profit is prohibited except under
    certain provisos).

    rec.radio.swap may be more deserving of the posting in any matter.

    Similarly, copyrighted material generally cannot be used. If it's
    TRULY worthwhile to the net, We would recommend obtaining permission
    from the copyright holder. Please note the source, and if permission
    was given. We reserve the right to make the final decision concerning
    appropriateness in all situations. In most cases, a brief summary
    of, or pointer to, the copyrighted information may be all we can
    allow.

    -- I do not have access to news, how can I get the information posted
    to rec.radio.info?

    Google has an excellent web interface to Usenet newsgroups. It is
    available at:

    http://groups.google.com

    It supports both reading and posting.

    Another excellent web interface to at least the radio-related Usenet
    newsgroups is the RadioBanter site:

    http://www.radiobanter.com

    sponsored by the NewsgroupBanter project:

    http://www.newsgroupbanter.com

    It, too, supports both reading and posting.

    -- Will the material appearing in rec.radio.info be archived somewhere?

    Yes. See Google Groups and RadioBanter above.

    Effectively this means that anything you post to rec.radio.info will be permanently stored, so your work will not be lost.

    -- I have a regular posting with timely information, is there a way to
    speed up it's delivery, or automate for more convenience?

    Yes, there is! It may take a bit of chatter with the moderator, but we
    are willing to take responsible people and provide them the means of
    posting the articles directly from their site. We will try everything we
    can as we fully realize that DX (distant signal) and astronomical data
    can be somewhat transitory. We are also willing to allow regular posters
    of information the same courtesy, even if the information is not as time critical.

    We refer to this as self-moderation, which is partly based on the model
    for rec.answers/news.answers. This requires co-operation and goodwill
    to be beneficial to the community in the rec.radio hierarchy.

    Please direct any comments, questions, or criticisms about this article
    to rec-radio-info-request@panix.com.

    (Adapted, with permission, from the original article written by Mark
    Salyzyn, AG4YD, ex-VE6MGS.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)