this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)
Emacs
313 readers
3 users here now
A community for the timeless and infinitely powerful editor. Want to see what Emacs is capable of?!
Get Emacs
Rules
- Posts should be emacs related
- Be kind please
- Yes, we already know: Google results for "emacs" and "vi" link to each other. We good.
Emacs Resources
Emacs Tutorials
- Beginner’s Guide to Emacs
- Absolute Beginner's Guide to Emacs
- How to Learn Emacs: A Hand-drawn One-pager for Beginners
Useful Emacs configuration files and distributions
Quick pain-saver tip
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I dream of a world gnus wont hang emacs.
I guess you should try Commercial Emacs, then.
If the author could only communicate better and bring his changes upstream..
I tried to see what do make of his first patch against Emacs 28 that bring threading to Gnus however it was quite hard to rebase/split them up as the original patch was just one big blob.
E.g. he doesn't just add threading to Gnus but also remove or rename variables, e.g. secondary select methods. He doesn't explain changes, he adds unnecessary or rude comments to the commits or code.
I didn't say it would be easy. ;)
I live in that world by outsourcing article fetching to external services and storing all messages/articles locally. The basic setup is this:
Emails:
RSS/Atom feeds:
All 3 of these services do their job regardless of whether Emacs is running, and nnimap is super fast when the server is local.
I don't read actual newsgroups anymore. If I did, I'd install Leafnode for them. But I wonder if the nntp backend would benefit to the same extent that nnimap does.
I'm also using Gnus with IMAP directly too but connecting to a remote Dovecot on my root server. Fetching takes maybe 1 or 2 seconds at max.
I filter all my mails on my server before hand.