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The Network News Transfer Protocol is a computer protocol that was used to create groups that could exchange news articles between people.
NNTP (Network News Transfer Protocol)
NNTP (Network News Transfer Protocol) is no longer part of Internet Information Services 7.0.
RFC 977 "Network News Transfer Protocol: A Proposed Standard for the Stream-Based Transmission of News."
Newsreaders act as clients which connect to a news server, via the Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP), to download articles and post new articles.
Easynews offers Usenet access both through traditional Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) servers as well as a web interface using a standard web browser.
XOVER is a Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) command used to return information from an News server's overview database.
When local area networks became widespread, it was natural that administrators and users would desire remote access to the news spool, and NNTP, the Network News Transfer Protocol, was developed to serve that need.
The Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) is an application protocol used for transporting Usenet news articles (netnews) between news servers and for reading and posting articles by end user client applications.
The services provided currently include File Transfer Protocol, FTPS, Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, Network News Transfer Protocol, and HTTP/HTTPS.
The Network News Transfer Protocol, or NNTP, was introduced in 1985 to distribute Usenet articles over TCP/IP as a more flexible alternative to informal Internet transfers of UUCP traffic.
The UUCP protocol has now mostly been replaced by the Internet TCP/IP based protocols Simple Mail Transfer Protocol for mail and Network News Transfer Protocol Usenet news.
Brian Kantor of the University of California, San Diego and Phil Lapsley of the University of California, Berkeley authored RFC 977, the specification for the Network News Transfer Protocol, in March 1986.
Commonly, load-balanced systems include popular web sites, large Internet Relay Chat networks, high-bandwidth File Transfer Protocol sites, Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) servers and Domain Name System (DNS) servers.
University researchers helped develop UCSD Pascal, an early machine-independent programming language that later heavily influenced Java, the National Science Foundation Network, a precursor to the Internet, and the Network News Transfer Protocol during the late 1970s to 1980s.
Lapsley co-authored RFC 977, Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP), an Internet standard for transmission of USENET news articles, and was the primary developer of the NNTP reference implementation, nntpd.