Yeah i've heard 'newsgroups' are awesome for file sharing and stuff. But i've also heard the term usenet or usenext thrown around.
what is it? like p2p?
what is it? like p2p?
15 more years! 15 more years!
Wow plus 1!max wrote:
induring me
Usenet isn't peer to peer but rather server to peer. Think of it as a huge forum to which people post either text or files. Using a Newsreader program you can download these files. There is a huuuuuuuuuuuuuuuge amount of files there. Giganews alone transfers a good 5TB a day.
Usenet is split up into groups - keeping with the forum analogy it's like a subforum. There are discussion groups and binary groups (for files).
You can either download the headers of the groups to look at all the files in the group or use an internet based search engine (like Newzleech) to search for something specific in all groups.
To acess usenet you'll need a usenet provider. Some ISPs offer limited usenet access for free, but for high quality and fast access you'll probs have to get an account. I have giganews. They have the longest retention with 240 days (providers delete old files from their servers after some time).
Usenet is great for video (1080p goodness ) and software. Depending on which Usenet provider you have you can have unlimited downloads and encryption (unlike RS). Speeds are great and you don't have to upload (unlike torrents). At my uni I've downloaded at a little over 25MB/s (thats Bytes not bits). If you're looking for music, private torrent communities are probably better.
So is it an ISP thing or a Company thing?max wrote:
It's 1 big "forum". The providers exchange data - . Theoretically something posted with provider A might take a couple of minutes until it's transferred to provider B, but I've never run into that problem.
ISPs and some cheapo providers however may not carry all groups. For example all the major US ISPs afaik dropped the alt.binary.* groups from their service. Sadly that's where all the good stuff is ...
All major providers carry everything, so that's nothing to worry about really.
Ohh ok i get it!max wrote:
Some ISPs offer free usenet access.
If you use a third party company like giganews, easy news or whatever you can access everything.