What is an Internet mailing list?
|
 |
Visited: 1705 |
|
|
| 1.0/5.0 (1 votes total) |
|
|
|
|
by M6.Net June 24, 2003
|
An Internet Mailing List is a list made up of subscribers using emails as the
medium of communication. Joining a ‘mailing list' is a way of saying "Keep
me informed"; a list of people have requested to be informed of a specific
subject matter and all relevant issues, these issues submitted by other list
members.
E-mail is, and
has always been, the greatest application of the Internet era. Did you know
that more e-mails are sent daily than telephone calls are made?
When one thinks
of e-mail it is usually regarded as a person-to-person communication activity.
Mailing lists, though, encourage a greater and more varied amount of e-mail
activity, anything from two-way communication to full interactive discussions
open to the public. Lists can be restricted to within private circles; and,
one-way lists can deliver announcements, newsletters, and advertising.
Advertising mailing
lists comprise a significant bulk of electronic traffic. Information on this
type of list can be found here: http://serverwatch.internet.com/listservers.html
Generically speaking
mailing lists can be classified in two ways: a ‘one-way', and a ‘two-way' mailing
list. A one-way mailing list either accepts or sends information, the user
only interacting with the list server; and a two-way list creates interaction.
One-way mailing
lists are often used to send newsletters, announcements, and advertising.
One-way incoming mailing lists are less common but still useful. These are
often used to allow users to send commands to a server. For example, a fax-back
service might accept incoming e-mail requests for a document, and it may
fax (or e-mail) the requested document back to the individual. E-mail Spam
is another example of a one-way outgoing mailing list.
A two-way mailing
list lets users interact with other subscribers to that mailing list. Two-way
mailing lists are generally limited to subscribers, in the sense that a user
sends a message to a specified address to sign up for that particular list.
List subscriptions may be open to the public, meaning that anyone can subscribe,
or they may be private and restricted to known parties. For example to be
used for educational discussion lists for specific courses.
In the same way
that a single ‘Web server' (a computer with web space allocated to storage)
can host multiple unrelated Web sites, a ‘list server' (another computer)
often hosts multiple mailing lists.
A typical list
server has 3 levels of management: the server administrator, the list server
administrator, and the list owner. The server administrator has top-level
access to the configuration of the list server and probably to the machine
on which it runs. He or she maintains the list server software. The List
Server Administrator has access to the administrative functions of the list
server software to create, adjust or delete mailing lists and to assign list
owners. The list owner manages a particular mailing list. Privileges may
include handling subscription problems and templates.
Through the utilization
of mailing lists there is an endless scope of information available on almost
any topic, this application worth is obvious, research is important to most
people, whether it is for business, personal or even the school project.
A typical place to start is: http://www.lsoft.com/lists/listref.html
Mailing lists
can also be used as quick and effective information gathering devices. ‘Information
Catalogues' are available on the search engines in which to find the appropriate
mailing list.
There are also
services to aid you in creating your OWN mailing list; the most popular web
hosting companies now commonly offer these services. More frequently Web
Hosting companies, such as M6.net, found at http://www.m6.net offer
very powerful and maintenance-free mailing lists with their hosting services,
and usually, as in M6.net's case, for no extra cost to the account holder.
It is advisable
to check out whether a web host can offer this service first before you consider
a home for your project's website. After all, the mailing list is probably
the best promotion tool on the Internet today, and the email is its life-blood. |