On Tuesday 29 January 2002 07:20 pm, you wrote:
> Quoting Joel Rosenberg (joelr at ellegon.com):
> > A 486, with maybe 16 meg of memory and a slow hard drive, ought to be
> > more than ample, assuming (a fair assumption), that it's going to run
> > some sort of standard mailing list software, like, say, mailman under
> > Linux.  We're talking about a mailing list, after all, that, on a busy
> > day, has fewer than several dozen emails.
>
> Hmmm, no.
>
> The box does over 7Million hits a month on the web archives and with
> pipermail you cannot seperate the list server from the archives.
>
> It push over 16gb of data a month via web.
>
> It processes 25,000 pieces of mail a day.

I think we're discussing different things.  By "We're talking about a mailing 
list, after all, that, on a busy day, has fewer than several dozen emails," I 
thought was discussing the requirements for a low-volume mailing list -- the 
TCLUG mailing list -- rather than everything that you've got this particular 
box doing, only a small percentage of which, manifestly, is the TCLUG mailing 
list.  Unless I'm seriously mistaken about the number of folks on the TCLUG 
mailing list, I can't imagine that it's often in excess of a tiny 
fraction of that 25,000 pieces of mail a day, even if each copy of each mail 
sent out is considered a separate piece of mail.  

That said, there may well be advantages to having the mailing list on the 
same box as a machine that apparently does a lot of other things, including 
some TCLUG things, that outweigh the disadvantage of the slow, sodden pace of 
TCLUG mailing list responses.