On 4 Mar 2026, at 12:04, Guus der Kinderen <guus.der.kinderen(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Personally, I am not in favor of abandoning mailing
lists for this type of discussion. Mailing lists have several important advantages:
Time to respond thoughtfully: Mailing lists allow participants to carefully compose
responses. Some people are naturally quick at finding the right words in real time, but
others (also including many for whom English is not a native language) benefit from (or
simply prefer) having more time to reflect. For example, composing this email took me 41
minutes (longer than I care to admit), a duration that would generally be impractical in a
live chat room.
Asynchronous participation and time zones: Mailing lists naturally allow people to
contribute "later" which is much harder to do in chat rooms (where conversations
'moved on'). This is especially helpful for people in different time zones or
those who cannot respond immediately.
Offline processing and focus: Threads in a mailing list are ordered and easy to read
offline. Chat rooms often mix multiple topics, making it harder to follow the discussion.
In practice, I don't expect the majority of people to scroll back in history, which
significantly reduces the potential reach.
Engaging quieter participants: Mailing lists often generate responses from participants
who do not otherwise join MUC discussions.
Record keeping and referencing: Mailing list archives provide a single, persistent URL
for referencing discussions. Chat logs are often fragmented and thus lack a canonical
link.
Strongly agree with this.
/K