By Alan Schwartz
First Edition
March 1998
Pages: 290
ISBN 10: 1-56592-259-X |
ISBN 13: 9781565922594
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
(Average of 1 Customer Reviews)
This book covers four mailing list packages (Majordomo, LISTSERV, Listproc, and SmartList) and tells you everything you need to know to set up and run a mailing list, from writing the charter to dealing with bounced messages. It discusses creating moderated lists, controlling who can subscribe, offering digest subscriptions, and archiving list postings.
Full Description
Cover | Table of Contents | Index | Colophon
Featured customer reviews
Oldie but a goodie, March 04 2008
When I bought this book back slightly before the dawn of time, I was in the process of standing up several corporate mailing lists to interact with our sendmail gateways. All of this sort of stuff was new to most of us and this book was a great help.
Like all of the ORA blue books, it is straight UNIX. No pointy-clicky stuff here. Instead you get solid command line, text based configuration files and basic troubleshooting techniques for getting your lists running and keeping them running.
It is beginning to show its age in that it no longer covers some of the more modern listserv systems (like mailman) with web based frontends, but it is still a great reference for explaining what a listserv is and how it should be managed and used.
Managing Mailing Lists Review, April 09 1998
Submitted by Jacob Haller [Respond | View]
The easiest thing to do after you read a reference book
is complain, so let me start by saying that I think that
this book is quite well-written and would be a good
resource for anyone wanting to get started using a free
mailing list server on a Unix machine.
That being said, as an experienced LISTSERV maintainer, I
didn't learn much new. (Since I generally only looked at
the LISTSERV and general material, that's mainly what I'll
be talking about.) I'll mainly be using the book to loan
to people who want to learn more, and I'll definately quote
some of the material in the handouts I give to new
listowners.
A couple of gripes: It wasn't clear to me before I got the
book that it would cover LISTSERV _Lite_, not LISTSERV
Classic. It's an understandable decision to make since
Lite is free, but this could have been made clearer on the
cover.
Another issue is that this book was Unix-only, which I
also didn't realize until the book arrived. I had
assumed that it would give some coverage to the different
platforms, but (although it mentioned which of the mailing
list packages were available for other platforms) stuff
like installation instructions, etc. was all for Unix
versions of the products. Again, I don't have a gripe
with that decision, but I would have liked to have known
about that before I got the book. (Now someone will point
me to a place in the book's description that made that
clear, I'm sure.)
But all-in-all I liked the discussion of mail protocals,
the sort of things you should be thinking of when you
set up a mailing list server or create a mailing list,
the comparison of the different packages, and the
information on LISTSERV Lite, and I'll definately be
loaning this book to the LISTSERV-administrator-in-
training that I'm supposed to be bringing up to speed.
Media reviews
"
gave me a solid foundation in several major mail list programs."--Daniel Fishman, Database Trends and Applications, February 2001
"You will be hard pressed to find a book that can compete with Alan Schwartz'
Managing Mailing Lists in the field it covers." --Professional Webmaster, December 2000
"Nothing fancy here, just accurate information in a well-written book. For all collections." --Thomas Gillespie, Library Journal, July 1998





