* public-inbox can coexist with existing mailing lists, any subscriber
to the existing mailing list can begin delivering messages to
- public-inbox-mda(1)
+ public-inbox-mda(1) or public-inbox-watch(1)
* public-inbox uses SMTP for posting. Posting a message to a public-inbox
instance is no different than sending a message to any _open_ mailing
tools for for email, including: git-format-patch(1), git-send-email(1),
git-am(1), git-imap-send(1). Furthermore, the development of git itself
is based on the git mailing list: https://public-inbox.org/git/
- (or http://hjrcffqmbrq6wope.onion/git/ for Tor users)
+ (or
+ http://4uok3hntl7oi7b4uf4rtfwefqeexfzil2w6kgk2jn5z2f764irre7byd.onion/git/
+ for Tor users)
* Email is already the de-facto form of communication in many Free Software
communities..
* git is distributed and robust while being both fast and
space-efficient with text data. NNTP was considered, but does not
support delta-compression and places no guarantees on data/transport
- integrity. However, a read-only NNTP gateway is implemented.
+ integrity. However, read-only IMAP and NNTP gateways are implemented.
* As of 2016, git is widely used and known to nearly all Free Software
developers. For non-developers it is packaged for all major GNU/Linux
- and *BSD distributions. NNTP is not as widely-used nowadays.
+ and *BSD distributions. NNTP is not as widely-used nowadays, and
+ most IMAP clients do not have good support for read-only mailboxes.
Why perl 5?
-----------
* some (mostly GUI) mail clients cannot set In-Reply-To headers
properly without the original message.
+* marketing - as it should: <https://public-inbox.org/marketing.txt>
+
Scalability notes
-----------------
Copyright
---------
-Copyright 2013-2021 all contributors <meta@public-inbox.org>
+Copyright all contributors <meta@public-inbox.org>
License: AGPL-3.0+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.txt>