On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 13:39:04 +0100, Marcelo M. Garcia wrote: > Humm. I think you are confirming what I said. No. > If every user should be in both, No, users should be free to choose. > since they have something to do with Fedora, why to separated > lists? fedora-list => high traffic, tedious discussion threads fedora-announce-list => very low traffic, only announcements > > And who maintains the _list of lists_ to which announcements shall > > be sent? Do you ask for major cross-posts to [more than] a dozen lists? > > > > Yes, I'm talking about Fedora-Announce and Fedora-List only. And subscribers of other lists don't receive the announcements? Then let's cross-post the announcements to all fedora lists, or what? > I'm not so sure if packages-announce is in the same level as > Fedora-announce. Why not? It's relevant to users, so let's cross-post all package announcements to fedora-list and remove the separate list. (just kidding in case you don't get it) > >> Even in a high volume list like "Fedora-list", if I see a header > >> "[INFRASTRUCTURE TEAM - Urgent] ..." I will read the message. > > > > Only if you read the list on a daily basis or if you know what > > special subject marker to search for in your filters. > > Yes. I read the list every day. What is easier? To read fedora-announce-list every day (roughly a single message per month or so) or to skim over hundreds of messages on fedora-list every day? > >> Maybe because English is not my native tongue, but the word > >> "announcement" doesn't to suggest something that important. > > > > Announcements at the airport or at the train-station, do you ignore > > them? > > > > If I remember right, the announcements in [...] So, if you listen to those announcements, why do you consider a mailing-list for Fedora related announcements not important? Re-read your part of the quote above, please. > Now image the opposite situation, that you have to go to a specific > place, a room, to have announcements. I think that the life of > travellers would be much more difficult. See my other reply. I refer to your sentence where you comment on the word "announcement" and its meaning. Let's stop splitting-hairs - some Fedora users might prefer to receive announcements via SMS or IM instead of being forced to read e-mail lists daily. Other spend much more time on IRC or reading news feeds. The thing here is that because you read fedora-list every day, you want to get announcements in that single place, too, while I argue that so far it isn't asked too much to subscribe to fedora-announce-list. Very low traffic that could go directly to your inbox. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list