On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 5:39 PM, Carlos E. R.
Plus, the LKLM method requires support from the staff and software, I'm afraid.
That's lost on me. If you are talking about on the server end, several opensuse lists already are open for non-subscriber posting and have been for 2+ years. The anti-spam filters are already in place, etc. Changing all opensuse lists is a relatively easy technical task. The issue really is netiquette and is not technical. At least it is not technical on the server end. There are technical issues on the client end. For the casual subscriber that rarely posts, there is not much difference. For the active participant, there are all kinds email client recipes available to support the LKML approach. I believe one of the favored recipes is to segregate out threads in which someone has posted from the rest of the background threads. That way if a dev wanted to stick their toe into this list on occasion, they could then have the threads they end up on the cc list put into its own folder, whereas most of the emails for this list would go into its own folder. Thus, I would hope it would make it more likely that devs would subscribe to this list and now in then engage in one of the threads. As it is now, all threads are equal, so I suspect the devs stay away due to the high volume of traffic here and their inability to segregate out threads of interest. Greg -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org