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Mandrake 10.0 - Networking/News

gnus-doc 5.10.6 GPL Gnus Newsreader for XEmacs You can read news (and mail) from within Emacs by using Gnus. The news can be gotten by any nefarious means you can think of -- NNTP, local spool or your mbox file. All at the same time, if you want to push your luck. This package is the documentation info files for GNUS version 5.10.6.
gnus-emacs 5.10.6 GPL Gnus Newsreader for Emacs You can read news (and mail) from within Emacs by using Gnus. The news can be gotten by any nefarious means you can think of -- NNTP, local spool or your mbox file. All at the same time, if you want to push your luck. This version is compiled for GNU/Emacs 21.3
liferea 0.4.6c GPL News aggregator, a FeedReader clone Liferea (abbreviation of Linux Feed Reader) is a news aggregator for RSS/RDF feeds which also supports CDF channels, Atom/Echo/PIE feeds and OCS or OPML directories. It is a simple FeedReader clone for Unix.
pan 0.14.2.91 GPL A USENET newsreader for GNOME This is PAN, a powerful and user-friendly USENET newsreader for GNOME. The latest info and versions of Pan can always be found at http://pan.rebelbase.com/.
slrn 0.9.8.0 GPL A powerful, easy to use, threaded Internet news reader SLRN is a powerful, easy to use, threaded Internet news reader. SLRN is highly customizable and allows you to design complex filters to sort or kill news articles. SLRN works well over slow network connections, and includes a utility for reading news off-line. Install slrn if you need a full-featured news reader, if you have a slow network connection, or if you'D like to save on-line time by reading your news off-line.
slrn-pull 0.9.8.0 GPL Offline news reading support for slrn This package provides slrnpull, which allows set up of a small news spool for offline news reading.
snownews 1.4.4 GPL Snownews is a text mode RSS/RDF newsreader Snownews is a text mode RSS/RDF newsreader. It allow you to read the headlines of your favorite news site if they propose a RSS newsfeed.
suck 4.3.2 Public Domain Suck - download news from remote NNTP server This package contains software for copying news from an NNTP server to your local machine, and copying replies back up to an NNTP server. It works with most standard NNTP servers, including INN, CNEWS, DNEWS, and typhoon.
trn 3.6 Distributable A news reader that displays postings in threaded format Trn is a basic news reader that supports threading. This version is configured to read news from an NNTP news server. Install trn if you need a basic news reader that shows you newsgroup postings in threaded format.
xemacs-tramp 20020411 GPL Transparent Remote (file) Access, Multiple Protocol TRAMP stands for `Transparent Remote (file) Access, Multiple Protocol'. This package provides remote file editing, similar to ange-ftp and EFS. The difference is that ange-ftp uses FTP to transfer files between the local and the remote host, whereas TRAMP uses a combination of rsh and rcp or other work-alike programs, such as ssh/scp.
xrn 9.02 BSD An X Window System based news reader A simple Usenet News reader for the X Window System. Xrn allows you to point and click your way through reading, replying and posting news messages. Install the xrn package if you need a simple news reader for X.
yencode 0.46 GPL Usenet yEnc encoder,decoder and poster yencode is an encoder, decoder, and posting package for the popular Usenet yEnc encoding format. It features the ability to encode single or multipart archives, a smart decoder which can decode multiple files (including files specified out of order or with nonsense filenames), an optional scan mode with recursion, and an easy to use Usenet posting utility. It is fully compliant with the yEnc specifications.

When you think about it, and put a business hat on, the idea that Linux could start as this little hobby project that would in the course of less than a decade become this extremely popular piece of software that people would bet on for mission critical applications. . . how did that happen? Nobody is in charge of it. Nobody owns it. It’s not controlled by a corporation. It fundamentally depends on cooperation and collaboration. . . . It’s an amazing model of how to get stuff done. — Mitch Kapor, founder of Lotus

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