Just curious what the etiquette is since both groups have
the same purpose.
BACKGROUND BELOW:
On Wed, 01 May 2013 12:19:01 +0100, Peter Duncanson [BrE] wrote:
> On Wed, 1 May 2013 08:08:52 +0000 (UTC), Steve Crook <
st...@mixmin.net>
> wrote:
>
>>On Wed, 1 May 2013 02:37:25 +0000 (UTC), Frank Jones wrote in
>>Message-Id: <klpv54$vhg$
1...@news.mixmin.net>:
>>
>>> Now this is odd indeed!
>>>
>>> The newsgroup "alt.english.usage" is an historic, common,
>>> and very active newsgroup (for both British & American
>>> English questions); yet, it appears not on the Mixmin server
>>> and also not in the file you referred, to wit:
>>>
ftp://ftp.isc.org/pub/usenet/CONFIG/newsgroups
>>>
>>> Why would this very common and very active and historically
>>> well respected newsgroup be totally missing?
>>>
>>> NOTE: Alt.usage.english is _not_ the same newsgroup; nor
>>> is it as popular; nor is it as well respected.
>>
>>Hi Frank,
>>
>>My apologies, I didn't appreciate there were two groups with such common
>>names:
>>alt.usage.english
>>alt.english.usage
>>
>>If the group alt.english.usage isn't on the ISC list then it's one of
>>many groups that was created without going through the formal group
>>creation process. This usually happens when a group begins life on a
>>single newsserver and slowly spreads as other servers are asked to carry
>>it.
>
> That is a common suggestion as to how it happened. No one seems to know
> for certain.
>
> alt.usage.english and alt.english.usage go back some time.
> alt.usage.english was created in 1991.
>
> From the AUE website:
>
http://www.alt-usage-english.org/intro_a.shtml#altusageenglishandaltenglishusage
>
> <quote>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> alt.usage.english and alt.english.usage
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> We are sometimes asked why there are two newsgroups with similar
> names. We don't know; it may have been an error. We are also asked what
> the difference is between the two groups. We are not aware of any
> official policy differences; participants of both groups report that
> alt.usage.english has significantly more traffic. Beyond that, you
> can make your own judgements about atmosphere, attitudes,
> personalities of current contributors, etc.
>
> A historical note: one of the messages from 1991 about the formation of
> a.u.e can be found at:
>
http://alt-usage-english.org/alt.usage.english-1.txt
> <endquote>