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169:" facility, which allowed the system operator to cause messages to be displayed to the user at login. A News (so called because each message began with "A" as a marker character) was an expansion of this facility that allowed news messages to be distributed across an arbitrary number of systems using the new
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In addition to the login display, news articles could be read at any time from the command line. A user could also post new messages to the local machine (by posting to a special default newsgroup called "general") or queue it for network-wide transmission by placing it in a public group such as
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Because Usenet grew rapidly, the limited capabilities and simplistic article storage scheme (all articles were placed in a single disk directory and there was no facility for expiring old articles) quickly made A News impractical to use. It was largely superseded by
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used in 1980. The initial "A" dictated the layout of header and message information, and expansions would require changing the initial character. This scheme was abandoned after A news for the more verbose but expandable format seen today.
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The software was designed primarily for announcements, so the interface was extremely simple. There were no provisions built in for replying to articles over news (
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replies were supported), skipping over messages, or threading. Because the system was designed only with uucp in mind, posters were identified by their uucp "
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The message format was designed for compactness rather than flexibility, consistent with the slow dialup
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type are the equivalent header names in a modern Usenet article.
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113:Learn how and when to remove this message
263:world.std.com archive containing A News
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51:adding citations to reliable sources
270:The Daemon, the Gnu and the Penguin
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237:Bonnett, Cara (May 17, 2010).
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239:"A PIECE OF INTERNET HISTORY"
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155:conference held at the
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16:For another use, see
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103:January 2021
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45:Please help
40:verification
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280:Categories
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244:June 24,
62:"A News"
190:ARPAnet
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126:A News
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