Gopher and news servers prepare for retirement ---------------------------------------------- Following years of declining usage, Computing Services plans to retire the UMM gopher and news servers in summer 2001. UMM's gopher server was an important source for online information in the mid-'90s, acting as a campus-wide information system and a part of the network of University of Minnesota gopher servers. The gopher software (developed at the Twin Cities campus) was heavily used around the world. By 1997, though, the vast majority of information and material that had been formerly provided via gopher had moved to World Wide Web servers and browsers. At the present time, nobody has updated any information on the UMM gopher server for about a year, and all gopher-based applications that are known to us in Computing Services have been moved to the Web server. The gopher server (no longer a real physical server, but only a partition on the same machine as the UMM Web server) will be shut down this July. The UMM news server, sometimes called a Usenet server, is one means of access to the Usenet newsgroups -- a network of tens of thousands of topical discussion groups with names like alt.rock-n-roll.classic, sci.bio.microbiology, and rec.collecting.stamps. Similar to electronic mailing lists, but with messages delivered to a public server rather than to a private mailbox, the newsgroups began to decline when they were discovered by the advertisers/spammers. Usenet continues to be popular among an ever-smaller group of users. There are now only about twenty regular Usenet users at UMM. The serious problem with running a news server locally on the UMM campus is the huge amount of network bandwidth and server disk space it requires. Since there are in excess of 10,000 Usenet newsgroups, with some generating dozens of messages a day, the Usenet news "feed" to the UMM campus requires regular transmission of large, multi-megabyte files across UMM's Internet connection. Then those files with their hundreds of messages are stored on a UMM server, requiring a massive allocation of disk space and a regular schedule to "expire" or remove older messages. With only a handful of UMM users reading perhaps a few dozen newsgroups total, it is immediately obvious that hundreds of megabytes a day of Internet traffic and disk storage are being wasted on newsgroups and messages that nobody is reading. Closing the UMM news server does not mean that UMM users can no longer read Usenet newsgroups! Access to newsgroups will be as simple as changing your newsreader (Netscape Messenger for many users) to point to news.tc.umn.edu instead of news.morris.umn.edu. There will be a small amount of hassle the first time, as the news reader and the news server will not be able to exchange information about the messages that have already been read. After the first time, however, access will be as simple as it always has been, and network traffic will be confined only to the messages that people actually want to read. Also, some classes (especially in the Science and Math Division) have sometimes used local newsgroups to communicate in classes. Based on observed usage, this doesn't seem to be common anymore. However, we will continue to set up local newsgroups (such as umm.biol.class.1003) for class use at the request of any faculty member, for at least the next academic year. If you have any questions, please contact me. John Bowers ========== POSTSCRIPT ========== After years as the master gopher, the once great gopher.tc.umn.edu seems to have gone to the great Gopherhole in the sky, and Gopher seems no longer officially supported by the institution that created it (University of Minnesota). From the new generation of Gopher wranglers, we'd like to have a moment of silence for the Gopher masters and the founders of Gopherspace, as it was a nice ride while it lasted. Who knows where this classic technology will lead tomorrow? -- Cameron Kaiser