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From: Jonathan de Boyne Pollard on 16 Jan 2010 17:43 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> <html> <head> <meta content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type"> </head> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000"> <blockquote cite="mid:a9ae32a6-a64d-42a1-bb4e-02ecb575dc76(a)b15g2000yqd.googlegroups.com" type="cite"> <blockquote type="cite"> <p wrap="">This question, and the rest of your post, seem to be offtopic in every newsgroup to which you posted; certainly it is offtopic for <code>comp.os.linux.networking</code>. You should try the equivalent of coln for Windows.<br> </p> </blockquote> <p wrap="">I have been posting in Usenet for as long as it exists.<br> </p> </blockquote> <p>It's a shame that Usenet has had to suffer such pitiful and clueless excuses for not using the correct newsgroups for so long.</p> <blockquote cite="mid:a9ae32a6-a64d-42a1-bb4e-02ecb575dc76(a)b15g2000yqd.googlegroups.com" type="cite"> <p wrap="">It so happens that in Linux (Unix in general) NGs you frequently find people more knowledgeable (that includes Windows networking) and willing to share their expertise than in Windows NGs.<br> </p> <blockquote type="cite"> <p wrap="">You should try the equivalent of coln for Windows.<br> </p> </blockquote> <p wrap="">That would be the empty set. :-)<br> </p> </blockquote> <p>Here's where the cluelessness in the excuse comes in. Not only are there in fact at least five newsgroups in that set (my server, for one, carrying <code>comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.networking</code>, <code>comp.os.ms-windows.networking.tcp-ip</code>, <code>microsoft.public.win2000.dns</code>, <code>microsoft.public.windows.server.dns</code>, and <code>microsoft.public.windows.server.networking</code>), but if you had posted in them, someone there would no doubt have told you about the DNS Client service, its caching options, and its interactions with the <code>hosts</code> file, which is something that none of the "more knowledgeable" people in the "Linux NGs" who responded here even mentioned. You didn't even notice the existence of <code>comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains</code>. <br> </p> <p>The simple truth is that the "more knowledgeable" people actually <em>do</em> tend to hang out in the <em>correct</em> newsgroups, and are rarely found in incorrect ones (and even more rarely willing to help any people who post in incorrect newsgroups and then argue that they're right to persist in doing so when others tell them the proper places to post). One loses, as you have lost here, by selfishly thinking that one will just post in any old newsgroup one likes, the actual newsgroup topics be damned.<br> </p> </body> </html> |