Are there any free NNTP add-ins for Outlook 2007?

D

Dyndrilliac

I'm sick of having everything I need to start my day in Outlook with the
exception of NNTP based services like Newsgroups / UseNet (like this one, for
example). It is a feature that should have always been in Outlook, and I'm
not enough of a sucker to pay anyone another 20-30$ just get a feature
Outlook should have had all along. With that said, does anyone know of any
free NNTP add-ins for Outlook?
 
T

Tom Willett

Outlook Express.

: I'm sick of having everything I need to start my day in Outlook with the
: exception of NNTP based services like Newsgroups / UseNet (like this one,
for
: example). It is a feature that should have always been in Outlook, and I'm
: not enough of a sucker to pay anyone another 20-30$ just get a feature
: Outlook should have had all along. With that said, does anyone know of any
: free NNTP add-ins for Outlook?
 
D

Diane Poremsky [MVP]

There are free NNTP clients but no free NNTP addins for Outlook. Frankly, if
you are serious about NNTP and follow very many groups or servers, you'll do
better with another client.

See http://www.outlook-tips.net/howto/news.htm for NNTP addins.

--
Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]

Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com/

Outlook Tips by email:
mailto:[email protected]

EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange:
mailto:[email protected]

Do you keep Outlook open 24/7? Vote in our poll:
http://forums.slipstick.com/showthread.php?t=22205
 
G

Gordon

Dyndrilliac said:
I'm sick of having everything I need to start my day in Outlook with the
exception of NNTP based services like Newsgroups / UseNet (like this one,
for
example). It is a feature that should have always been in Outlook,

Err no. Outlook was/is designed primarily for CORPORATE use and most
corporations do NOT want their employees wasting their time on Usenet.....
 
T

Terry R.

On 10/30/2009 2:28 PM On a whim, Gordon pounded out on the keyboard
Err no. Outlook was/is designed primarily for CORPORATE use and most
corporations do NOT want their employees wasting their time on Usenet.....

Yeah, just on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, iTunes, etc...


Terry R.
 
G

Gordon

Terry R. said:
On 10/30/2009 2:28 PM On a whim, Gordon pounded out on the keyboard


Yeah, just on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, iTunes, etc...

None of which use port 119 the NNTP port.....
 
V

VanguardLH

Dyndrilliac said:
I'm sick of having everything I need to start my day in Outlook with the
exception of NNTP based services like Newsgroups / UseNet (like this one, for
example). It is a feature that should have always been in Outlook, and I'm
not enough of a sucker to pay anyone another 20-30$ just get a feature
Outlook should have had all along. With that said, does anyone know of any
free NNTP add-ins for Outlook?

And why should Microsoft include features in a *corporate* oriented
e-mail client when corporate customers have NOT been clamoring for a
feature that they consider a waste of their employee's time? So, of
those workstations at work, just how many have you seen that have TV
tuners in them so the company can lose money on employees watching
"Oprah" and "As the World Churns" everyday?

Not everyone that develops commercial software is going to kowtow to
your personal wants. I'm sure if you came up with $200K that Microsoft
might consider allocating some manhours to adding NNTP support and then
thoroughly testing it in alpha testing and then a year, or more, in beta
status before releasing it.

I have heard of no free add-ons to Outlook (any version) that add NNTP
support to Outlook. There are paid ones, like Newshound, but you're too
cheap to buy it or your parents won't fork out the money and you won't
do chores to earn it. So you're stuck with the free solutions, which
means you'll be using an NNTP client, like Outlook Express, Thunderbird,
Xananews, Xnews, MesNews, Dialog, and others.

You could go whine to Shoreline Software that their commercial Newshound
product should be free because, gee, it should've been free all along,
especially for your singular consideration. Uh huh.

If everything you "need to start your day" is in Outlook, you don't have
much to do.
 
V

VanguardLH

Terry said:
On 10/30/2009 2:28 PM On a whim, Gordon pounded out on the keyboard


Yeah, just on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, iTunes, etc...

Which corporations can block using site and content filters. Cheaper to
employ the resources needed to keep their employees working and earning
the wage they're paid than the wasted manhours on that crap.
 
B

Bob I

Enable the Web Toolbar, then Customize the Web toolbar to add the "News"
menu item. Clicking that Menu Item fires off the Newsreader in Outlook
Express.
 
T

Terry R.

On 10/30/2009 3:34 PM On a whim, Gordon pounded out on the keyboard
None of which use port 119 the NNTP port.....

I believe your emphasis was on employees NOT wasting their time.
Doesn't matter how it's done, does it?


Terry R.
 
G

Gordon

Terry R. said:
On 10/30/2009 3:34 PM On a whim, Gordon pounded out on the keyboard


I believe your emphasis was on employees NOT wasting their time. Doesn't
matter how it's done, does it?

Yes it does actually. AFAIK it's far easier to track employees using web
sites than it is to track traffic via the NNTP port...
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

I believe your emphasis was on employees NOT wasting their time. Doesn't
matter how it's done, does it?

All of those sites are blocked by a proxy server where I work. I was,
however, able to get permission for msnews.microsoft.com and port 119 on that
server.
 

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