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sci.astro.research
Please consider sending your postings on topics in astronomy and
astrophysics to sci.astro.research! sci.astro.research is a moderated newsgroup for the discussion of astronomy and astrophysics. It is intended that the group should be `lightly' moderated, bearing the same relation to sci.astro as sci.physics.research does to sci.physics. Only postings which very obviously contravene the moderation principles set out in the charter, which can be found at http://www.star.bris.ac.uk/sar/charter.html , (by being excessively irrelevant to research in astronomy or astrophysics, speculative in content, or abusive) will be rejected, and if this happens the poster will be notified by e-mail. Commercial advertisements are not permitted by the charter. Commercial (or other) postings which in the moderator's opinion constitute spam will be rejected without notification, and a complaint will be sent to the originator's ISP. Any other content which would be on-topic in sci.astro should be expected to be accepted for sci.astro.research. In this way it is hoped to provide a high signal-to-noise forum for the discussion of astronomical topics. Prospective posters should consult the sci.astro FAQ (http://sciastro.astronomy.net/) and if appropriate relevant sections of the physics and relativity FAQs (http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/faq.html ; http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/relativity.html) before posting general questions. They should also consider whether sci.astro.research is the most appropriate group for their posting; possible alternatives include sci.astro -- for more general discussions sci.astro.amateur -- particularly for discussions of amateur equipment and suppliers; discussions and questions about amateur observations are welcome on sci.astro.research. sci.astro.fits -- for discussions related to the FITS data format and its applications. sci.astro.seti -- for discussions of the Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence. sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity, sci.physics.research -- for discussions which are primarily about physics rather than astrophysics. The moderators will set followups to one of these groups if it appears that discussion would be more usefully conducted there. Cross-postings between sci.astro.research and other groups are unlikely to be appropriate, and if they are accepted the moderators are likely to set followups away from sci.astro.research. Note that followups for *this* announcement are set to sci.astro only. Some people have trouble posting to moderated newsgroups, usually because of a misconfiguration on the part of their ISP. If you post to s.a.r. and the posting reaches the moderators, your post will either appear on the group or you'll get a rejection message. If neither happens, your posting has probably gone astray. As an alternative, you can submit postings directly to the moderation e-mail address ). Please note that, if you use a spam-blocked or spam-trapped e-mail address, you may not receive a rejection message. We recommend that posters avoid spam-blocks or spam-traps when posting to sci.astro.research, and in general we frown on postings which do not contain a clear and simple means of contacting their author. This announcement will be posted to sci.astro.research and other groups in the sci.astro hierarchy from time to time. Martin Hardcastle sci.astro.research moderator |
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sci.astro.research
* Martin Hardcastle schriebt:
Some people have trouble posting to moderated newsgroups, usually because of a misconfiguration on the part of their ISP. If you post to s.a.r. and the posting reaches the moderators, your post will either appear on the group or you'll get a rejection message. If neither happens, your posting has probably gone astray. In e.g. [comp.lang.c++.moderated] one gets a confirmation message that the posting has been received in the moderators' queue. That would be a nice feature for this group also -- hint hint! For else, one may have to wait a long time to be sure whether the non-appearance of a posting is due to never appearing in the mod queue, being rejected, or some mishappening (e.g. one's NNTP server). Not that I've ever been rejected here, complete newbie that I am... ;-) But the time for a posting to appear has varied greatly, from days down to half an hour, and if I didn't have earlier experience with moderated groups I'd probably post the same again either to this group or, perhaps more likely, to some other group. -- A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail? |
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sci.astro.research
Martin Hardcastle wrote in message
... Please consider sending your postings on topics in astronomy and astrophysics to sci.astro.research! sci.astro.research is a moderated newsgroup for the discussion of astronomy and astrophysics. It is intended that the group should be `lightly' moderated, bearing the same relation to sci.astro as sci.physics.research does to sci.physics. Only postings which very obviously contravene the moderation principles set out in the charter, which can be found at http://www.star.bris.ac.uk/sar/charter.html , (by being excessively irrelevant to research in astronomy or astrophysics, speculative in content, or abusive) will be rejected, and if this happens the poster will be notified by e-mail Contrary to the above statement, the sci.astro.research "moderators" will not allow any post on their group that does not conform to the personal predjudices of the moderators (unless they feel that they can 'spike' it with a 'moderators note'). Not only will such submissions not be posted, but quite frequently, they won't bother to notify the author when they refuse a post. Abuse is tolerated ... if it supports their personal view. Any flight of fancy or speculation is tolerated ... if it supports their personal view. Any post that attempts to raise a subject with which they disagree will be labelled 'speculative,' regardless of support or content. Direct responses to questions in a thread will not be allowed. They will not allow even a notice that the response will be addressed in sci.astro. They will not allow any documentation that counters known historical myths -- or even corrects simple historical errors -- if the correction in any way 'lessens' apparent support for their personal views. May the group continue to rot away from lack of interest.... {snip} -- greywolf42 ubi dubium ibi libertas {remove planet for return e-mail} |
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