History of Slashdot Part 3- Going Corporate 126
Nobody had ever heard of Andover, and from our perspective, that was kind of the point. We had talked to companies that sold Linux distributions as well as a number of web network type organizations, but at the end of the day, we decided that we had to go with someone that would guarantee us editorial independence, and not create serious conflicts of interest by forcing us to favor some particular distribution. Likewise we didn't want to get into a situation where we were 'just part of a network' using all our stories to plug other network sites. Andover was not really a Linux company, so we were able to get a deal that met our needs.
I vividly remember the day we closed the deal. We went to some law firm high up in a huge skyscraper in Boston. Hemos & I signed papers lined from one end of a conference table to the other, along with Bruce (the pres of Andover). After that we went to the boston aquarium for a bit, and went out to dinner with the entire Andover staff at some seafood place that apparently is well known but I'm not a boston person so I don't really know what it was. I remember wanting to just read my email and being incredibly uncomfortable the whole time. I've never been a good person dealing with meatspace crowds. I was on the verge of panic the whole night. I had scallops and tried to smile and be polite when I just wanted to hide in the corner. I've still never really dealt with my ability to deal with crowds.
Following the sale, I found out what it meant to work for a large company. I joined the board of directors of Andover, but soon after realized that corporate boards are probably not the best place for me to spend my time. During that time we hired Jamie, Timothy, Michael and the company hired Pudge, Wes, and a number of other folks who initially worked for other parts of the company, but later came to work for Slashdot. Also we were able to give a paycheck to people who had, up until this point volunteering for Slashdot. Among them was Jon Katz who continued to write for us for a number of years until he decided it was time to write about dogs instead.
Besides an HR department, health insurance, 401k, and that other stuff, having a large corporate backer made a number of things possible. We actually migrated from just 2 boxes to like a half dozen. We chewed through a number of load balancing techniques and were able to scale up from a half a million to multiple million daily page views. We spent literally years getting by on minimal hardware. We spent years optimizing the code, adding layer after layer of caching. I still have mixed feelings on this matter. Had the corporate overlords given us a dozen machines, we could have been free to write a lot of new user features during that time. But instead we used the same database for nearly 5 years.
For me the biggest transition was offloading tasks to other people. With people on payroll, I was able to finally have engineers working on things instead of me doing most everything by myself. It took several years before I trusted the staff enough to take away my own CVS access, a decision that is really necessary. For years I was (fairly) mocked by Slashdot readers for my terrible way of developing code- I'd just write the code live on the site. When it worked, I'd just overwrite the old code live with almost no testing. On several occasions a typo resulted in a hundred emails in my box with readers reporting that Slashdot was no longer compiling. Under the corporate umbrella there was CVS committing, rollbacks, and scheduled deployment of code. I still get impatient with all this overhead to this day, but I know everyone prefers it this way. It's better, but it's definitely less 'Fun'.
Around this time a box arrived on our doorstep containing a bunch of glasses and t-shirts. They were unusual because they were clever and of good quality. When you do this long enough you really can tell when you're getting garbage, and when the people behind the work are smart and clever. The website was ThinkGeek. I brought them to Andover and pushed to have us acquire them. I shoulda got a commission off that deal... now they have like 30 employees and do millions of dollars in business. Most of the people that started the thing are still there (just like Slashdot!) and they are still doing great things (also just like Slashdot!) I still feel a strange connection to ThinkGeek... I think of them as my younger sibling... except that while I sit in the back of the class or maybe play on the chess team, they are starters in all the sports teams and get straight A's.
My first, last, and hopefully only ever COMDEX was in Las Vegas (although I went to Vegas countless times since for fun- NYC, Las Vegas and Tokyo are the 3 cities I love to visit). We had a crazy booth. It was absolutely huge, with bean bags and a plasma TV. ThinkGeek had this little niche in the corner. We had nerf guns. We had a install race- VA gave us a few machines, and we had people race to install Linux distributions on them. Patrick Volkerding. himself represented Slackware, and his machine had a faulty CD drive. It was hysterical watching him come in last. Some (shall remain nameless) distribution had a booth across the aisle from us, and speakers that were inappropriately loud. They would have constant presentations that were deafening throughout the conference hall. So we hooked up our own speakers and starting yelling at them and telling them their distribution sucked and making fun of their catch phrases... after you'd heard the speech 50x, it was pretty easy to mock. At least it was a distro nobody liked in the first place. My punishment for my bad behavior was catching the worst flu of my life. For some reason we flew into chicago, a 3 hour drive home. CowboyNeal and I were both on the verge of passing out, hallucinating with flu, singing at the top of our lungs just to say conscious.
Looking back, I think it interesting that the moment in my life where I most experienced the excesses of the dot com boom was followed by probably the single most terrible bouts of illness of my adult life. Kathleen took care of me for days as I couldn't leave the bed.
Along the way Andover went public in a dutch auction style IPO. I don't have much to say about it except that I think it was the right thing to do, even if long-term it didn't much work out for me personally nearly as well as I had dreamed at the time. No personal jet. No military style compound. But a nice house isn't a bad way to start off your adult life.
Just as I was getting used to flying to boston regularly for board meetings (and racking up crazy frequent flier mile status in the process, getting nearly constant first class upgrades) the 'Merger' between VA & Andover came along. I wasn't surprised when it happened, and at the time there was a lot that made sense. VA had SourceForge (and we had the competing Server 51 project) as well as Linux.com. There was a fairly intense rivalry between a number of people at the companies, although I never really felt it. The bubble that Slashdot has always tried to stay inside has insulated from corporate politics- something that is usually true today as well. I knew the contract we signed guaranteed me the editorial control Slashdot needed regardless of ownership, and I was confident enough in the leadership of VA that I would not have problems with people trying to wreck the site.
Of course all of this happened during the bubble burst where we all went from thinking we would retire by 30 to realizing that we might be broke and jobless within a year. I'm still amazed that Slashdot has survived. From Blockstackers, to Andover, to Andover.net, and then to VA Linux Systems to OSDN to VA Software to OSTG to SourceForge. I've had a lot of different business cards. The names have changed, and a few faces have changed as well, but the core the site, the attitude and spirit remain the same.
Part 4 will run next week where I'll talk more about present day Slashdot operations and philosophy.
What Happened To Michael? (Score:5, Interesting)
Anybody know what happened to Michael?
He was one of the most abusive editors ever, using slashdot as his own personal blog, posting wrong stories, posting political articles that suited his viewpoints, and mod abused people who called him out.
One day, he mysteriously disappears into the ether without notice. Did the slashdot brass kick him to the curb?
Re:What Happened To Michael? (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks chaos theory!
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Re:What Happened To Michael? (Score:5, Funny)
One day, he mysteriously disappears into the ether without notice. Did the slashdot brass kick him to the curb?
he now goes under the name kdawson.
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* I kid! I kid!
Oblig. karma whoring (Score:3, Informative)
http://meta.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/02/1553218 [slashdot.org]
A Brief History of Slashdot Part 2, Explosions
http://meta.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/10/1445216 [slashdot.org]
Quite interesting.
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Re:What Happened To Michael? (Score:5, Interesting)
He was one of the most abusive editors ever, using slashdot as his own personal blog, posting wrong stories, posting political articles that suited his viewpoints, and mod abused people who called him out.
One day, he mysteriously disappears into the ether without notice. Did the slashdot brass kick him to the curb?
I hope so. I've still got a moderation ban from when I moderated a comment he left as offtopic, many many years ago.
Re:What Happened To Michael? (Score:5, Informative)
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-Bill
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And that's different from the other editors *how*? Okay, some are worse than others, but it's fun to say anyway. But all of the editors do these things in varying degrees, especially posting wrong/abusive/lame stories. Hence slashdot's reputation for sloppy "journalism".
Heh (Score:3)
The occasional slashvertisment not withstanding. To be fair though, I'm sure those aren't corporately mandated which was the point of that sentence, just people (ab)using Slashdot to generate some traffic.
Fret not! (Score:5, Insightful)
Taco, as a fairly long-time reader and contributor of comments, let me add the following statement:
You gained something more important then that and that's despite all the pissing, moaning and shoveling dreck into your general direction: Credibility & integrity and that's not a bad feat after being scrutinized to hell and back for ten years.
Congratulations to the whole team!
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I'm really enjoying this series. It brings back many fond memories, and some less fond ones also.
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Interesting to see the sub 100k userids come to say the same. Seems like a lot of us (relative) old-timers are really enjoying thi
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Interesting to see the sub 100k userids come to say the same. Seems like a lot of us (relative) old-timers are really enjoying this series and reliving the past. I can't believe I have at least checked the headline of just about every story over the past 8 years. Granted I will miss some on the weekends, or manage to resist the urge to review when I go on vacation, but I really enjoy the quick synopsis of things going on I wouldn't hear about otherwise being available anytime (what a messy sentence, sorry).
Fortress /. (Score:2)
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Hey Rob, I'm still waiting for my "Sounds of Slashdot" CD that you promised me
Jon Katz is Gone? (Score:5, Funny)
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I sat there wondering how long he'd been gone before I noticed.
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Don't forget "In this post-Columbine world..."
and "... writ large"
Two of my favs
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Of course, I stopped reading him after I read a few of his stories(such as the one positing the Spiderman franchise as the newer generation's Star Wars franchise), and realized that, while his writing was great, his logic was on par with my cat's ability to speak(and she can't even meow).
I actually like version control (Score:5, Interesting)
For some people, this distracts from coding. For me, besides the initial learning curve, it doesn't. What distracts me most is pointless meetings, traveling to the other office, etc. With travelling and testing, sometimes a week goes by without touching any code.
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Doing anything having to do with software for businesses without traceability, version control, etc. is seriously beyond stupid.
Every time I join a project and I learn they don't know what version control is or simply don't want to use it, I consider myself stuck in deep, deep shit.
I like good procedures and the supporting tools, they helps keep things organised and complexity manageable. A lot of devs or pm's don't seem to grasp it...
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For small to medium sized dev shops, tools like SVN or Perforce are adequate, with plenty of plugins for tracking tools, Eclipse, etc.
Bigger dev shops usually don't have a choice and are already stuck with some vendor specific closed-source monstrosity that only interfaces correctly with that vendor's other tools. (Read: vendor lockin is teh suck.)
Tangentially, I heard there is a new version c
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Hear! Hear!
My company uses ClearCase, and it combines the worst aspects of text-based config files and graphical, menu-based systems.
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You might think that I'm a bit overdoing with the engineers vs. management, however in my experience managers have lost the experience to see through a learning curve and see stability, robustness etc. What is done then is that the tool with
Drive back from ORD.. (Score:1)
For some reason we flew into chicago, a 3 hour drive home. CowboyNeal and I were both on the verge of passing out, hallucinating with flu, singing at the top of our lungs just to say conscious.
That drive back to West Michigan from Chicago is hell. It's fine until you near the Michigan/Indian border and then it's all down hill from there. My things is having all four windows down, middle of winter, dead of night...it's cold, but I'm awake....the wife doesn't like it so much though, she might prefer it to my singing.
Re:Drive back from ORD.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Drive back from ORD.. (Score:4, Funny)
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Really? Actually I used to find that was roughly when the drive improved since the Chicago traffic started to subside, especially once past I-65, and there weren't any more stupid toll booths. I still didn't like the drive but I didn't dislike it as much as driving through Chicago. Admittedly that was partly my fault since the first time I did it, being an ign
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Basic Development Practice (Score:2, Insightful)
That's got to be more with the specific setup you had than with the philosophy in general, no? A good development sandbox setup where you can do dramatic changes, quickly test, and push to a generally stable live environment increases fun for most developers I know...
Interesting (Score:2, Interesting)
It's been fun (Score:3, Informative)
Anybody want to out the Linux distro? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Anybody want to out the Linux distro? (Score:5, Informative)
Seafood Place (Score:5, Informative)
It was probably Legal Seafoods. That's right near the aquarium.
Re:Seafood Place (Score:5, Funny)
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Bleh.
Kudos to Taco for forgetting who it was.
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Ugh.
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timothy
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The Union Oyster House is notable as it's the oldest restaurant in the U.S. [wikipedia.org].
I like their chowder...
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PT Cruiser? (Score:3, Interesting)
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I just found this comment [slashdot.org] that answers some of my questions - apparently it still is on the road.
The Katz era... (Score:3, Interesting)
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In other words the dog owners want to... (Score:5, Funny)
*rimshot*
The seafood place (Score:3, Informative)
In the movies? (Score:4, Interesting)
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No personal jet? (Score:1)
Otherwise, I'm leaving this dot-com thing I'm doing and I'm shaving the rest of my hair off and becoming a Buddhist Monk!
CmdrTaco loves the pain! (Score:1)
and then...
(although I went to Vegas countless times since for fun- NYC, Las Vegas and Tokyo are the 3 cities I love to visit)
umm. because you are a masochist?
As seen on TV? (Score:2)
I remember in the movie Revolution OS [wikipedia.org] there was an interview with one of the Slashdot crew, at a tradeshow, in a beanbag chair... was that the same tradeshow? Which staffer was it?
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hopefully only ever COMDEX (Score:4, Interesting)
I remember that booth. Not on the show floor, over in the 'Linux Pavillion' which, that year, was in a hotel attached to the LVCC. The BSD crew was there too. And the Caldera guys across the way making too much noise.
The only time I've met any of the /. crew IRL.
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And here in Las Vegas, we only have one thing to say about that:
Thank God.
Seriously. We had wanted it gone by the early 90's, but even then, there was place else that could host something that large.
It tied up facilities without the usual economic impact. The city was overrun with incredibly lousy tippers who didn't gamble . . . There were constant complaints of hotel "gouging" during Comdex but that wasn't really the case. Prices certainly went up (tripled in some cases), but
incredibly lousy tippers who didn't gamble (Score:2)
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hawk
Ah... Jon Katz (Score:2)
Good for us
Who hired Zonk? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Conflict of interest (Score:2)
Given your current Corporate Overlords (stock symbol LNUX, owners of linux.com etc.,) how do you feel about conflicts of interest?
Sourceforge's Stock Price (Score:2)
For those of you wondering where those dreams went, I give you a graph of VA/OSDN/Sourceforge's stock price [google.com].
Weren't you worth a couple hundred million at some point Taco?
(Note: I'm not trying to disparage or flame Taco, I'm just trying to use the graph illustrate to all the young-uns how insane dot-com bubble was. And people think the current housing bubble is bad!)
On a non-geek note... (Score:2)
Now that's true love. (No joke. Taking care of a sick person is one of the least-fun things you can do.)
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Me and my family took care of my dying grandmother at home for 6 months before she passed away.
It's one of the most gruelling experiences of my life with a bitter ending.
But in the end I felt good about myself (how weird that may sound)that all of us did it, even if it almost destroyed us as well.
She was so loved by us right until the end and where ever she is now, I know she is looking down on us with the same love.
Re:Oh Please (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Oh Please (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot, specifically that it was worth enduring that jackass because the rest was so good. Besides, the inevitable flamewars in reaction to stories like "George Bush Admits Torturing Kittens" (when the linked article was about farm subsidies or something else totally unrelated) were usually pretty entertaining.
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Y'know, it's pretty easy to bash slashdot and I've been guilty of it myself from time to time. But, even with the trolls and vitriol that gets spewed here, compared to most sites, especially with sites that have issued a million plus accounts, Slashdot reads like de Tocqueville in comparison.
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Listen to You? (Score:3, Insightful)
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100% Troll
TrollMods say "Troll" means "I disagree with you, but can't argue".
Maybe that OP was right.
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Though as you know,
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But what's clear is that such a baseless, anonymous, unexplained mod was more important to the modder to make than actually arguing with something they disagree with.
A good improvement to the Slashcode would be requiring negative moderations to include a hidden, but viewable, reason why. Including a checkbox next to a definition of "Troll" or "Flamebait" to indicate the modder is explicitly saying that the post meets that definition. It wouldn't eliminate the comm
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- Alaska Jack
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The problem is that we want to give a linear grade to nonlinear judgements. What if I want to look at "funny flamebaits"? By linearizing the system, we make it fail to reflect what it's describing. Which is the basis for system gaming. There are other nonlinear, but problematically combinatorial, features of moderation, like the prohi
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IMO the best filter for this sort of behavior is to let it roll off, rather than increase the number of carping, acrimonious meta posts about moderation, which I have apparently just incremented, dammit.
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I've been on
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the old days (Score:1)
is there any waay to roll back the clock?
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That's what an open blog is like.
Or maybe another tech market crash to make geekery unpopular again and drive off the posers.
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I think the all-minified.js script is too brutal for some browsers to load. It will also be a good idea to validate the site. That'll take care of the typical problems.
I just hope that