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| I'm trying to figure out how to use tin to read remote news but there's a couple of things I don't understand. Namely: (1) tin downloads the (large!) active file every time I start the program and (2) tin tries to download every single header when entering a group, even if I've previously marked the group as read and there are only a few posts marked as unread. This takes a long time for some groups -- too long for tin to be usable. Comparing tin to slrn: in the first case, slrn only downloads the active file if you invoke it with --create, and in the second case slrn only downloads headers for posts marked as unread and prompts for a number in any case. I know about tin's -G option, but I feel like I'm missing something here. Am I doing something wrong or approaching things in the wrong way? Thanks for your time |
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| 9 Way <9way@botnet.com> wrote: > Am I doing something wrong or approaching things in the wrong way? Try the -q option to tin and see if that eliminates the problems you've been seeing. It should at least get rid of the newsgroup polling at startup. |
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| 9 Way <9way@botnet.com> wrote: > I'm trying to figure out how to use tin to read remote news but > there's a couple of things I don't understand. Namely: > > (1) tin downloads the (large!) active file every time I start the > program I use tin -Q > > and > > (2) tin tries to download every single header when entering a group, > even if I've previously marked the group as read and there are only > a few posts marked as unread. This takes a long time for some > groups -- too long for tin to be usable. > > Comparing tin to slrn: in the first case, slrn only downloads the active > file if you invoke it with --create, and in the second case slrn only > downloads headers for posts marked as unread and prompts for a number > in any case. > > I know about tin's -G option, but I feel like I'm missing something > here. > > Am I doing something wrong or approaching things in the wrong way? > > Thanks for your time -- William Park <opengeometry@yahoo.ca>, Toronto, Canada Slackware Linux -- because I can type. |