Why do programmers still use mailing lists? [duplicate]
https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/71148
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31-10-2019 - |
题
This question already has an answer here:
Why do many open source projects collaborate primarily through mailing lists rather than through, say, forums? I may be ignorant in my assessment, but I, along with my communication teacher, think mailing lists are rather inefficient:
- It's hard to reference old messages. You have to wait until an archiving site picks up the message you want to link to, then look it up.
- It's hard to reply to messages you haven't received from subscription, since you have to manually copy the sender and message contents.
- It's impossible to moderate threads of discussion. Posts cannot be deleted or modified without supernatural powers.
- It's tricky to keep threads together (namely, to ensure all participants in the conversation are copied/replied to).
- It's tricky for users to participate in multiple high-volume mailing lists, as they have to subscribe and set up filters (or just be really involved).
What real edge do mailing lists have that didn't occur to me?
没有正确的解决方案