All of the above should be considered pre-alpha quality, more like a whiteboard of insanity. If, despite all these caveats, you'd still like to check out the spool for yourself, point your newsreader at nntp-test.soylentnews.org. There are three groups on the server, soylentnews.discuss, just for general discussion for folks who come by, a test group for testing posting, and the spool itself at soylentnews.test.mainpage.
I look forward to hearing your thoughts and comments below.
[UPDATE: Corrected typos and added links]
(Score: 3, Insightful) by Jaruzel on Monday July 21 2014, @09:22PM
I can this being a fun thing from a technical POV - but my main concern is that, if it was to be propagated across USENet, how would you handle the reply delays? Some people would only have access to a local ISP run NNTP server, and those things are not known for updating that quickly. I foresee comment threads quickly getting out of sync, if you allow NNTP people to post on threads and then re-import those threads back into the main site.
Personally I'm in a quandary with it - it's a cool 'code hacking' type project, but who really would use it regularly?
-Jar
This is my opinion, there are many others, but this one is mine.
(Score: 2) by Magic Oddball on Tuesday July 22 2014, @11:27AM
Based on the discussion thus far, quite a few people would, including me.
Anyway, I can see a few solutions to the issue just offhand:
1) SN could maintain its own server; the vast majority of newsreaders are set up to support separate servers/accounts because that used to be a common practice among orgs, businesses & universities.
2) If not, SN would hopefully already be directing potential users to the high-quality free Usenet providers like EternalSeptember.org, and in my limited experience, they were good about updating.
3) It might be possible to adapt SN code to optionally sort posts by when the most recent comments were posted, as most newsreaders can. That aspect of newsreaders means a discussion traditionally continues for days or weeks, sometimes being dormant for days and then flaring back up when someone suddenly remembers something they wished to say or a busy regular comments. The ability could make SN much more attractive to people that leave high-quality comments but are short on time.