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Re: CONLANG/ZBB crossover (WAS: CONLANG article deleted from Wikipedia)

From:Henrik Theiling <theiling@...>
Date:Tuesday, May 8, 2007, 15:33
Hi!

John Vertical writes:
> >Philip Newton writes: > > >... > > > (Not to mention that my Usenet client does threading, whereas most > > > forums I've seen don't -- they just dump entire conversations into one > > > window, much like Gmail, without making it clear who replied to whom.) > > > >And the confusing thing is that in contrast to mails where the correct > >threading depends on correct mail client implementations (References > >an In-Reply-To headers) and subject lines etc., which all tend to be > >partially broken, any forum software has ultimate knowledge about the > >threading because all replies are under its own control. Absurd. > > > >**Henrik > > I may be missing something here, but what the heck are you talking > about? I haven't seen a single online forum that would jumble all > messages together - > everything *must* be in a thred. Or is it thred-internal organization > you're after?
Yes. Fully recursive threading is what I was after.
> I'm not sure if that's feasible in forums, but not really on mailing > lists either, since it's commonplace to reply to more than one > person, or point, in a single post, and there's 99% of the time a > general "reply" option in addition to all the "quote" options > anyway.
Ah, indeed. This might be different if there *were* full threading. Well, I am not saying it does not exist, only not commonly -- I have seen full threading in Web-based system (I think Slashdot has it).
> In forums where going off topic (which isn't actually even a > prerequisite for composite replies) is scowled on, peeps just start > new threds when needed.
Sure, this is good behaviour. What is also good about Web-based systems is that a past can be moved to a new thread afterwards, so a moderator can try to resolve confusion. This is not possible with mailing lists.
>... > Maybe it's just user culture differences at play here.
Well, not 'just', but 'also' that's for sure. **Henrik