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   alt.msdos.batch.nt      Fun with Windows NT batch files      68,980 messages   

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   Message 68,964 of 68,980   
   J. P. Gilliver to Paul   
   Thunderbird and MIDs (was: Re: why graph   
   20 Feb 26 11:54:09   
   
   XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-xp, alt.windows7.general, alt.comp.os.windows-10   
   From: G6JPG@255soft.uk   
      
   On 2026/2/19 15:2:47, Paul wrote:   
   []   
      
   > Did you test with a Nightly, as a check for forward-progress ?   
   > I'm not familiar at all with running these, but this is the   
   > quickest way to tell whether the MID mod got any traction.   
      
   No, I'm on the ESR line - quite the opposite of nightlies!   
      
   > You would be doing this for science . A thing like this   
   > should start with a private profile. The profile might even be   
   > inside the launch folder, rather than being in AppData. When   
   > I tested with the Betterbird Portable, that should be largely   
   > similar to the operation of the Nightly. I would be testing   
   > this in a VM, because I hate cleaning up a mess, and I just   
   > shovel these VMs into the trash :-) The one I was using for   
   > the Betterbird test, is already gone. When you do a build yourself   
   > of Thunderbird, these days, with an HG (Mercurial pull), one of the   
   > outputs would be one of these.   
      
   I haven't "built" anything for I think over 40 years! I don't think I   
   even have a compiler these days, unless there's one present as part of   
   Windows or similar.   
   >   
   >    https://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/nightly/2026/02/202   
   -02-19-10-01-27-comm-central-l10n/   
   >    https://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/nightly/2026/02/202   
   -02-19-10-01-27-comm-central/   
   >   
   > The method I observed being used in Betterbird is "technical"   
   > but not "optimal", and it depends on how snooty the TB devs are   
   > as to whether the idea would have any traction at all. The launch from   
   > command line, as a URI, that's the slow one, the while-running selection   
   > of Mork Summary Files to scan, seems to be faster.   
   >   
   > There might be a small amount of similarity, if someone were implementing   
   > a crosspost-read feature. You could clumsily do it by keeping a lot   
   > of group.msf files open, with a resulting larger-average RAM footprint.   
      
   Yes, I see what you mean.   
      
   > The current devs will always be thinking in terms of scalability,   
   > which many people here (with one exception) would not be testing   
   > and commenting on. My subscription list is too short to notice   
   > how slug-slow it would be with a thousand groups subscribed (but   
   > not actively read). There's even a danger for people on smaller   
   > machines, they might run out of RAM if they subscribed to a thousand   
   > groups and a MID-launch was attempted.   
      
   Wow, I can't imagine having such a subscription list! (Can't think _why_   
   I would, if I wasn't going to read them.)   
      
   >   
   > There seemed to be some difference, in how Netscape Communicator treated   
   > multiple USENET servers, and perhaps how Thunderbird treated them. This   
   > led to the  bug we used to see, where it would triumphantly claim   
   > "you cannot send to two servers at once", and how it used to cherry   
      
   Now you mention it, I vaguely remember some such message when I was   
   using Turnpike (which _did_ handle crossposted posts properly - reading   
   them, or marking them as "keep", in one 'group made them so in the   
   others, whichever one you did them in first. I don't know if it stored   
   multiple copies).   
      
   > pick group a.b.c from AIOE and d.e.f from E-S. There is something you   
   > can type, into the newsgroup area to stop that (basically directing   
   > the stupid thing to stop auto-selecting servers, then denying such   
   > a function exists), but that was an issue for quite a while.   
   >   
   > The USENET news component was re-written in javascript, and that was   
   > the opportunity to change the internal architecture away from the   
   > fractured thing it used to use.   
      
   Was the opportunity taken? (I've only stared using TB in the last year -   
   I think it might have been version 138; I did dabble with it decades ago   
   [single-digit I think], but used Turnpike until I had to go 64-bit.)   
   >   
   >    Paul   
   >   
   John   
      
   --   
   J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()ALIS-Ch++(p)Ar++T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf   
      
   --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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