Explain news servers

modern10

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Hi Guys/Gals

I just recently got an adsl line installed. I'm on the Telkom 3 month free trial. I was wondering what exactly news servers are and how do they work. I'm also about to get the MWEB 3 month free promotion. Do you guys reckon its good value for money.
 
While newsgroups were not created with the intention of distributing binary files, they have proven to be quite effective for this. Because of the way they work, a file uploaded once will be spread and can then be downloaded by an unlimited number of users. More useful is that every user is drawing on the bandwidth of his or her own news server. This means that unlike P2P technology, the user's download speed is under his or her own control, as opposed to under the willingness of other people to share files. In fact, this is another benefit of newsgroups: it is usually not expected that users share. If every user makes uploads then the servers would be flooded; thus it is acceptable and often encouraged for users to just leech.

There were originally a number of obstacles to the transmission of binary files over Usenet. First, Usenet was designed with the transmission of text in mind. Consequently, for a long period of time, it was impossible to send binary data as it was. So, a workaround, Uuencode (and later on Base64 and yEnc), was developed which mapped the binary data from the files to be transmitted (e.g. sound or video files) to text characters which would survive transmission over Usenet. At the receiver's end, the data needed to be decoded by the user's news client. Additionally, there was a limit on the size of individual posts such that large files could not be sent as single posts. To get around this, Newsreaders were developed which were able to split long files into several posts. Intelligent newsreaders at the other end could then automatically group such split files into single files, allowing the user to easily retrieve the file. These advances have meant that Usenet is used to send and receive many terabytes of files per day.

For those who don't want the long historic version:
Files are uploaded to news servers,these files are split into articles and disseminated to other news servers. To access these files you'd need a Binary Newsreader,and an NZB file which is pretty much an index of all the articles that make up the Binary files. Along with these files usually are included PAR2/PAR/SFV files. These PARs are parity files used to repair damaged binary downloads due to missing articles.

Explaining parity is a whole extra paragraph so i'll skip it
 
What size is your line and think very carefully if you want to be locked into an isp. How many months is the contract.
 
Are there specific news servers for MWEB and how do I connect to them

Sent from my HTC Sensation Z710e using MyBroadband Android App
 
It's a 12 month contract but you only pay for 9

Sent from my HTC Sensation Z710e using MyBroadband Android App
 
News servers are basically broken up in to two different types: free news servers and paid news servers. Some internet providers have their own news servers which you can connect to (e.g. IS and MWEB), however they are only really good for getting things that have been released recently. Paid news servers on the other hand will run at full speed (if not shaped of course) on all content and they have a specific retention period on the content (e.g. 1000 days). The retention period is exactly what it sounds like, the content only stays available for however long the retention is.
 
Axxess Juice

Hi Guys/Gals

I just recently got an adsl line installed. I'm on the Telkom 3 month free trial. I was wondering what exactly news servers are and how do they work. I'm also about to get the MWEB 3 month free promotion. Do you guys reckon its good value for money.

Just seen this yesterday. It's still in beta but works well.

If you have time have a look at this:
http://www.axxess.co.za/aboutjuice

Axxess have made it easy for non-tech users to search and download from news servers.
 
news.saix.net

only works after hours, on 384k its great, higher line speeds, cached has decent speed.
 
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