

Not really unfortunately. As much as I dislike linking to Reddit their Usenet subreddit does have a decent wiki with some of the info you’d need: https://www.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/index/


Not really unfortunately. As much as I dislike linking to Reddit their Usenet subreddit does have a decent wiki with some of the info you’d need: https://www.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/index/


I would have expected that too, but they say:
the specific thing that died is not usenet itself. it is usenet as a service your isp gave you.


Usenet is a weird one on that list. They frame it as Usenet by default from your own ISP, and that is indeed pretty much dead. But on the other hand there has never been more data shared through Usenet than right now. Absolutely everything is available on it, at full download speed, with encryption, without having to upload anything back to anyone.
People who still use (public) torrents to get their stuff have no idea what they’re missing out on. It’s a steep learning curve and not free, but once you have it all set up just right it’s amazing how well it works.


Jellyfin on an Android TV does DV just fine here, so any android box that supports DV should work I guess.


He did, but that doesn’t excuse what the US did.


Why not switch to LibreOffice?
Honestly the barrier to entry of Usenet was always high, finding a working Usenet provider only made it slightly harder in a world where everything lives in your browser.