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| | | | FAQ Revisions | Editors: File Quit , Johkal , sortofageek  Last modified on 2008-11-15 11:54:08
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1.4 Newsgroups·Advanced News Setup/Info ·Are there any free newsgroup services? ·How do I apply for newsgroup access? ·How do I set up newsgroup access on my computer? ·I can't access the Comcast newsgroups server
| | | If you are having trouble with Comcast provided newsgroup service, please see this FAQ. This guide will demonstrate how to configure your Usenet account in MS Outlook Express.
This guide uses MS Outlook Express v6.00.2600.0000 (xpclient.010817-1148) however this should be applicable to other versions of Outlook Express and Microsoft Outlook with only minor modification.
With the help of screen captures, this should be a relatively painless process.
Note: This guide was originally written for Verizon and has been altered to use with Comcast. Any reference to Verizon in the screen captures should be ignored. -----
•Part 1:
Start up MSOE Select the Tools menu and navigate to Accounts (refer below)
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•Part 2:
You should now see the Internet Accounts menu in Outlook Express. Select Add to create a new account and then select "NEWS" to make it a usenet account. (refer below)
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•Part 3:
Select the handle or name which will appear in the From: field whenever you make a post to a Usenet newsgroup. Example: John Doe (refer below)
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•Part 4:
Enter the email address that will appear whenever people reply or quote one of your messages. Some guidelines for selecting an email address:
a) Never use your ISP address. Use an alias or a free hotmail account. b) Obfuscate your email address so that people can't harvest it from usenet headers or quotes. It is a well accepted practice to use upper case to denote text that the person who wants to reply to you directly will need to manually remove. Ex: myemailNO@SPAMhotmail.com c) If you choose to enter a fictitious email address, please use the .invalid domain, a common etiquette on Usenet. Ex: dontbugme@leavemealone.invalid
(refer below)
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•Part 5:
a) Enter the Internet News Server Name.
b) Make sure to checkmark "[x] My news server requires me to log on" otherwise you won't be able to specify your login/password required to access Usenet.
(refer below)
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•Part 6:
a) Enter your account name and password to authenticate to the Usenet server.
Account Name: Password:
b) Checkmark "[x] Remember Password"
(refer below)

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•Part 7: Congratulations - You're done! Click Finish! (refer below)

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•Part 8:
Outlook Express may now prompt you to download a list of newsgroups for your newly created account. Select YES if you see this prompt now and skip to Part #10 in this guide.
(refer below)

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•Part 9:
At this point, Select the Tools menu and navigate to Accounts as per step one, once again.
Select the [NEWS] tab and notice how your account has been added to the Usenet section as "comcast.giganews.com" which purely cosmetic. Now is a good time to change it and learn how to edit an account so
a) Please highlight the newly created account "comcast.giganews.com" and click Properties
b) Notice that the cosmetic entry by which the account is identified is set to "comcast.giganews.com" - please change it to say John Doe , to match your posting signature. This is purely cosmetic and only displayed on your end, so feel free to skip this step.
c) If you have multiple usenet accounts configured, say from a dialup ISP and your Comcast/Giganews Newsgroup account, you may wish to choose the Comcast/Giganews account as the default. If so, highlight the Comcast/Giganews account and click the default button.
(refer below)

...after...

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•Part 10:
If you Outlook Express has finished downloading about 35000 newsgroups available on the Comcast/Giganews NNTP server, you can now subscribe to the newsgroups you're interested in.
Highlight the usenet group(s) and click Subscribe. Narrow your search by entering search criteria in the box above
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•Part 11:
Let's commence to make a test post . As common etiquette dictates, please use the subject "test post - please disregard" and make a test posting.
To see your post after it has been sent, you must "refresh" the headers. The easiest way is to move for a second to another group then come right back to your original one. Your post should now appear to you.
(refer below)

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•Part 12: Useful resources.
The most important things to be aware of:
1. Please change your name to something other than comcast.giganews.com. 2. Do not post advertisements/spam in the newsgroups. 3. Do not personally attack or harrass other newsgroup participants. 4. Do not post any copyrighted material but instead post a link. 5. Do not crosspost absolutely necessary. 6. Never crosspost between newsgroups. 7. Do not post in MIME or HTML. Many people in the usenet community intentionally disable HTML in their client. All posts should be made in plain text. Binary posts to alt.binaries.* tree and other binary groups should be ideally done in yENC Format. 8. comcast.giganews.com does not allow cancellation of posts due to past abuse so please proof-read.
•Usenet Links:
What is Usenet? www.mibsoftware.com/userkt/0003.htm
Is Usenet safe? www.mibsoftware.com/userkt/0005.htm
Posting Etiquette: www.mibsoftware.com/userkt/0009.htm
Everything you could ever want to know about Usenet: www.faqs.org/usenet/
Select another Usenet client: http://dmoz.org/Computers/Software/Internet/Clients/Usenet/Windows/
•The most popular and robust clients under Windows which are better for binary usenet reading than Microsoft's Outlook Express: (not in any particular order of preference)
1) Luu Tran's XNews @ http://xnews.newsguy.com/
2) Newsbin's NewsBin Pro @ www.newsbin.com/downloads.htm
3) Forte Inc's Agent and Free Agent @ www.forteinc.com/main/homepage.php
4) Microplanet's Gravity @ cws.internet.com/news-gravity.html
5) Grabit @ www.shemes.com/grabit/
Many of these are freeware! The two favorites Xnews and Grabit are free.
yENC: The new standard of Usenet binary encoding
Q: What is yENC or messages with a [yENC] note in the subject?
A: yEnc is a new encoding method which offers efficient and proper transmission for binaries on the Usenet (or by eMail and other applications). Other encodings are BASE64, BinHex, UUencode, Quoted Printable, etc. yEnc is NOT a multimedia or archival format (MOV, ZIP) nor a picture format.
Q: Why has yENC pretty much replaced uuencode as the pre-eminant binary encoding format on Usenet?
A: News and Mail transfer require that a binary attachment is "encoded" before it is sent. And they are "decoded" after they have been received. Normally all this is done by your newsreader (or mail-program). You dont see it. Most dont even know it.
The encoding is necessary because the special methods for the transfer of news & mail (protocols) require it. A message with a binary which is not encoded is corrupted during transmission - or transmission is denied at all.
Transport of messages by News and Mail was restricted to US-ASCII characters when the protocols were written (20 years ago). These services have been created to transport only plain US-text. Special characters (control-characters, symbols, non-US-characters) were forbidden - and used for special purposes. But because people wanted to send also binary attachments by News and Mail some 'tricks' were implemented: The binary was changed to "allowed US-ASCII-characters" before transmission (encoding) - and back to a binary after transmission (decoding). The usual encoding methods are still respecting these old limitations - and are used everywhere.
Unfortunately there is a price for this 'trick': Encoding makes a message longer. And not just a little, but 33%-40% longer than the original attachments. This results in 33%-40% more bytes for a message - 33%-40% more time for the transmission - 33-40% more diskspace on the harddisk where there messages are stored (on news- and mail-servers).
Meanwhile Usenet is able to to transport more than "US-ASCII", it could also transport other characters. Just a few special characters are still forbidden. Unfortunetaly the encodings were never changed. We are all still using BASE64, BinHex, UUencode. We are all wasting every day bandwidth, time, diskspace and money.
yEnc is now a proposed (and implemented in almost every alternative reader) encoding method which is using the fact that news-servers can today transport binaries more efficient. On eMail the situation is far more complicated because there are a lot of older programs and computers involved. But also there would be potential for savings.
Reprinted from »www.yenc.org - Please visit to read more about yENC.
/* Written by Sedated for DSLReports Verizon ILEC Forum FAQ on Nov 28, 2002. - Revision 2a(web)[ty Brian W] - Submitted to DSLReports as a FAQ entry for VZ group and posted to http://verizon.rules.it */ Editted By kadar for use in the Comcast forum.
*This FAQ is based on user knowledge from a volunteer core of BroadbandReports' members. This FAQ in no way constitutes official information from Comcast or any of its affiliates.
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by kadar edited by Johkal  last modified: 2008-11-01 14:44:35 | | | A small percentage will miss the news service provided by Comcast, are not interested in the binaries and would like to continue to read newsgroups without spending a lot of money. Several suggestions for free and inexpensive services have been given by our members. You may find it helpful to search the following discussions for links to those services: »[Newsgroups] The Comcast Newsgroups Service Discontinued »[Newsgroups] Comcast canceling newsgroups! »[Newsgroups] Comcast shuts down newsgroups »[Newsgroups] FYI - Newsgroup provider ratings
*This FAQ is based on user knowledge from a volunteer core of BroadbandReports' members. This FAQ in no way constitutes official information from Comcast or any of its affiliates.
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by sortofageek edited by Johkal  last modified: 2008-11-01 14:44:50 | | | Comcast does not have their own News Servers, they use Giganews. The free account included with your service imposes a 2.0 gigabyte quota per month (not including headers). If you exceed your cap during a transfer, it will be automatically deducted from the next month's quota and your newsgroup access will be suspended until the first day of the next 'billing period.'
You no longer have to apply for newsgroup access. Your Giganews username and password is the same as your primary email account. For more information, see this page: »online.comcast.net/giganews/
*This FAQ is based on user knowledge from a volunteer core of BroadbandReports' members. This FAQ in no way constitutes official information from Comcast or any of its affiliates.
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by kadar edited by Johkal  last modified: 2008-11-01 14:45:07 | | | Comcast only supports newsgroups usage with Outlook Express. To configure Outlook Express, follow the instructions below:
1. Open Outlook Express.
2. Click on the Tools dropdown menu and choose Accounts.
3. Click the Add button and choose News from the submenu.
4. Enter your display name. This is the name that will appear in the "From" field when you post a message to a newsgroup. Click Next.
5. In the "E-mail address" field, enter the e-mail address that you want other members to reply to. Click Next.
6. Enter news.comcast.giganews.com for the name of the news server, and click on the checkbox that asks if your news server requires you to log on. Click Next.
7. Enter your account name and password (Same as your primary email account) and click on "Remember My Password". Leave the checkbox empty that asks if you prefer secure password authentication. Click Next.
8. Click Finish.
9. Close the Internet Accounts dialog box.
*This FAQ is based on user knowledge from a volunteer core of BroadbandReports' members. This FAQ in no way constitutes official information from Comcast or any of its affiliates.
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by kadar edited by Johkal  last modified: 2008-11-01 14:45:26 | | | Comcast is discontinuing this service as of October 25, 2008. Please see this front page article: »Comcast Discontinues Newsgroup Service
*This FAQ is based on user knowledge from a volunteer core of BroadbandReports' members. This FAQ in no way constitutes official information from Comcast or any of its affiliates.
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by sortofageek edited by Johkal  last modified: 2008-11-01 14:46:23 |
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