LWN.net Closing Down
Anonymous Coward writes "The best Linux news site is calling it a day. Citing money problems, they are saying next weeks issue will be the last. I've been reading LWN.net since the very beginning. They have always demonstrated sanity, restraint and professionalism along with thoughtful commentary - unlike certain other well known Linux news sites. Very sad." They've had problems since last fall. It's been a good four year run for them.
it makes me wonder when *ahem* certain other Linux news sites will fail as well.
LNUX closed today at $0.66, i think...
Cretin - a powerful and flexible CD reencoder
This honestly isn't a troll. I'm just wondering how viable Slashdot is for the near future? Considering the well known "Slashdot" effect, they must pay a bundle on bandwidth charges each month, and 90% of the ads on the site seem to be for other OSDN sites, so I don't think they're pulling in any money there. I know they have subscriptions, but have THAT many people really signed up for them? How long until Slashdot is gone or goes a bit-more subscription based (ala Salon)? Anyone willing to make some public guesses?
I'm surprised this not-so-veiled insult made it onto the front page...
"They have always demonstrated sanity, restraint and professionalism along with thoughtful commentary - unlike certain other well known Linux news sites. Very sad."
Shots taken AT Slashdot ON Slashdot. Usually I have to atleast read the comments for that.
They have always demonstrated sanity, restraint and professionalism along with thoughtful commentary - unlike certain other well known Linux news sites.
Oh, you shouldn't say that about Slashdot...
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
They have always demonstrated sanity, restraint and professionalism along with thoughtful commentary - unlike certain other well known Linux news sites.
News sites like Slashdot?
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
This question obviously would not get posted to "Ask Slashdot", but I'm still curious.
What sites do you, the full-on geek slashdot community, think deserve my readership after next week's closing of lwn?
Loads of linux news sites are out there, from home-grown to corporate backed, but I've yet to find one that comes close to the professional and relevant lwn (not that I was looking hard - after all, I love lwn). Lay it on me!
3cx.org - A truly bad website.
lwn.net is my favourite site. I have been reading there for a long time now. well at least I still have linux.com and kerneltrap.com
The sad thing about the Internet, is not necessarily that when a site shuts down it stops putting up new content, but in many cases the archived information on the site disappears.
Yes I know about the Internet archiving effort (www.archive.org), but in many cases the sites going under had streaming video or audio, which is lost forever.
no comment
I have never heard of this Linux news site before for some reason. Now, seeing the site, it looks like a useful site that I would have visited daily. I wonder how many sites like this crumble do to lack of knowledge of their existence. Advertise!
Bring forth the "Linux is dying" posts!
Go!!! Go!!!
LWN is one of my favorite and daily sites.
I've been wondering if a new solution for the "money problems" involved in running a big site could be solved in part with freenet or some other distributed peer to peer network system. People would, it some sense, be donating their bandwidth. I don't know how you would insure that you were getting the actual site and not a rip-off, though.
I suppose I'm not too threatening, presently, but wait till I start Nautilus
When one has an email address listed, how are you any more anonymous than anyone else on slashdot? FWIW, at 11:11 EDT, it's listed as:
????@standardalternative.net
(? to replace name in case one of the editors... edits)
But, yes, it is very sad. Sad that professionalism and rationality lose out to childish posing and ranting.
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
This is a sad day for me. I've been reading LWN since it started, and they have always had excellent reporting and editorial content.
Their long memories, digging deep enough to get at the meat of the stories and excellent security coverage for Linux & *BSD will be sorely missed.
This is a good point. The Editors have not said boo lately about subscriptions -- I bet you a dollar that means they didn't get jack. Please read on before modding me.
Mr Malda can take this as a lesson. Rusty from k5 rustled up about $35,000 by passing the hat around, and at last count Slashdot had collected about 1/10 that, for offering "premium" service. It goes to show, if you treat your users with respect to the point of fanaticism, they will hold you in high regard with similar vigor. If you irritate 50% of them at any given time, you get it right back.
It looks like the Internet Age is heading towards dusk for VA; it's spent well over a month under $1 and will most likely be delisted when things in the stock market loosen up a bit.
Can Slashdot go free again? Without a change in leadership, I'm not so sure.
Just because Slashdot might receive money for a while, doesn't mean it is safe from going to shit. Many would say it is already happening right now. Whatever one's opinion, it is true that new management and ownership by a larger company will only increase the chance that Slashdot will be ultimately controlled by people who don't give a shit. That's never good for a website. I wouldn't even rule out Rob and friends being deposed themselves.
I guess we'll wait and see...
Cretin - a powerful and flexible CD reencoder
The simple fact of e-publishing is that it costs money. You can't publish a book wihout people buying them, and likewise you cant publish a web page without getting money from somewhere. We now know that most web advertising is a flop, so subscriptions seem unavoidable. But if i read 10 news sites a day, i dont want to pay even $4 for each one because that sure adds up. If you can think of a solution please let me know, cus there is money to be made there.
linuxinsider
linuxtoday
firstlinux
linuxsecurity
and somewhat linux related but definitely awesome...
oreilly's meerkat
oreillynet and not so much news but definitely up to date...
ONLAMP
Heil Sig! -Rob
Oh my, all I could think of at that was the image of 21 cute little penguins being shot out of cannons. The poor things can't even fly...
___
Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
we'll be seeing a lot more of this.
Suse ROX
Red Hat RUL3Z
Mandrake BAY-BEE
MySQL is PHAT
PHP is 37337
You download the shit. Try paying for it once in a while.
This
(slightly OT, sorry.)
speaking of the slashdot effect (on
considering how many people view the article (thus the effect) and their caches, it's something to think about. page lifespans, upload limits, etc. would get rid of some of the big obvious issues.
I am deeply saddened by this loss. I will truly miss them. LWN did something no other Linux site was doing. LWN will not be replaced any time soon. LWN... was important, perhaps the most important Linux news site.
I have been known to post over-the-top comments here because I believe that Slashdot shouldn't take itself too seriously. But I will not rant in this thread or make funny remarks. Now is not the time for wit. Now is not the time for "Funny, +5" comments. Now is not even the time for moderation.
I would like to propose a moment of silence. I know, Slashdot is just a weblog. I know, I am almost taking this forum seriously. But face it, the LWN editors have earned it and this is as good as it's gonna get. Take a minute. You can always read the funny comments tomorrow.
Until people realize there is an endless stream of funding in the form of tax deductions for art donated to the public OPen Source projects will run dry.
AIK
When did Linux suddenly spawn this goal to eliminate Microsoft? I'm glad I wasn't around to see it. I always thought Linux was a kernel, and GNU/Linux distros were cool things geeks played with. Linux was successful before Redhat and before SuSE. It was successful and fun before Mandrake and before lwn.net. It will survive simply because it is open source. You can't kill it, so why does it need to compete with Microsoft?
You don't like MS, fine... I don't either. But please, please don't use Linux as a weapon against MS because you don't like MS. Use Linux because you like Linux.
Slackware forever. Honestly, what else would you trust when it absolutely positively has to be stable, secure, and easy
a great site and will be missed. Fortunately we still have other great sites like linuxtoday and distrowatch.
A moment of silence... As I flush the toilet 21 times.
please login and say thankyouon the comments page.
give thanks where thanks is due.
Working for necessity's mother.
I suppose I should have supported their site with some cash, but there's only so many sites one can subscribe to with limited resources (I'm a subscriber at Salon and Crikey.com.au, amongst others).
Hopefully one day the web ad market will come back just a teency bit to help support good sites like LWN.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
Save LWN by giving them the Blender money! They're a far more valuable resource than Blender...
Some of my favorites: Indian chief Tux (page 4), Tux playing on a Lexmark "sliding board" (page 5), Beowulf cluster Tux (page 6), Argentine Cowboy Tux (page 9).
They are out of money for professional writers. However, why not continue in another form?
LWN was run voluntarily at first. Can it continue in this fashion? I mean, I like reading the excellent editorials, but I can also live with fewer of them. Say, the amount one person would willingly write in their spare time and contribute to the community.
Paying jobs are nice to have, I know. But LWN could continue as a hobby, like Kernel Traffic exists today. As long as you have hosting which provides bandwidth and the archives, everything can continue.
If all else fails, at least let other people mirror your archives. This way the great work LWN has contributed to the community will not go away. I only wish my financial situation were better, so I could give back some money to make up for all the times I've read LWN since 1998 (I've been reading every weeklf edition since 1999) until present and found the content to be useful.
--
Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
Anyhow, I'm very sorry to see LWN go. They provided a great resource, and I was glad to donated money to them. It's too bad the donations weren't sufficient, but I guess it's not surprising.
Sigh.
by posting more news of them.
/. effect along could help pulling them out of misery.
"LWN.net closing down"
"More on LWN.net closing down"
"LWN.net closing down - count down"
"LWN.net 3 days before closing down"
"LWN.net closing down" (/. editor repeat the last week's news)
"Will LWN.net closing down tomorrow?"
The hits gained from
How hard would it be to just send this info out on a readonly mailing list? There's plenty of mailing list servers around if you don't want to run your own email server. If all else fails, spammers seem to be able to send millions of huge ads for a couple of bucks, I don't think a weekly ASCII newsletter to willing subscribers is going to hurt anyone.
Or are you just un-1337 if you don't have a website?
I would be happy to pay for a LWN subscription, but I don't. Why? Because I'm afraid I'll eventually pay a similar amount for every online publication I want to read and that would stack up too much for me.
But basically I wouldn't mind paying for the fact I'm an Open Source fan.
My solution: Get together with similar publications (Linuxtoday? Slashdot? Freshmeat? rpmfind? MozillaZine? Apache Week?) Charge a fee as a group. Create a free, outdated (four weeks) version of the sites to show what you're offering. Don't get overboard on the rates. Create student rates. Make it very easy to sign up, and easy for us non-US citizens to transfer the money.
I would personally pay $15 a month for a combined subscription. My company would pay more.
The Globe-project (http://www.cs.vu.nl/globe) from Tanenbaum has some application (called GlobeDoc) that attempts to replicate websites over various servers based on the use of the site. Dunno if it's handy for anything as dynamic as a newssite though.
#include Currently using the projects various parts for my masters-project.
Things don't look good for entities like Slashdot and / or LWN (and others).
So, to help out, we must make tons of moolah.
Way to do it ?
Imitate what Global Crossing did
Or we can learn a chapter or two from the Enron / WorldCom / ImClone / Xerox folks - COOK THE DAMN BOOKS !
Slashdot and LWN sure can use some of the "excess" from the "book-cooking extravaganzas" and all the other slashdotters / lwnners will definitely looouuurrrrvvvveees you to death.
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
2002 has been the worst year out of the nearly 40 I've seen
.
I'm (was) a permanent reader of LWN and will sorely miss them (I also donated when I could), but come on, in the last 40 years there had been wars, famine and disease that killed and maimed hundreds of millions of people worldwide ; some of these events I find a bit worse then closing of my favourite magazine
2002 wasn't very bright so far, but it also wasn't the gloomiest.
Working for necessity's mother.
Larry Augustin done nothing but sell stock from day one my friends
-- the most controversial site on the Web
"It's been a good four year run for them."
Duuuuuh....obviously not too good. A good run would have enabled them to pay their bills and be in a position to keep going.
. Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
I'm pleased to see all the positive comments about LWN. It's also been my favorite Linux site, going back to 1998. In fact, LWN broke the news about Zope going open source, one hour after I announced it at a Python conference. We weren't ready for the exposure they provided, so we had to haul *ss to catch up. :^)
What isn't discussed here is the personal side. I think Liz, Jon, and Dennis are some of the most honorable, decent people in the world of Linux. They've all given a lot to the community, even beyond LWN.
Lots of others shoved wads of cash in their pockets when the bubble inflated. LWN held out until an offer with integrity showed up. Alas, it turned out to be a moral but non-lucrative choice.
To Liz and Jon and Dennis: kudos for being Good People. You've already created a warm legacy, something not enough people in the community can claim.
They have always demonstrated sanity, restraint and professionalism along with thoughtful commentary - unlike certain other well known Linux news sites.
You mean like this one?
Why bother.
It's my fault, yesterday wasn't going well.
Broke my working code, couldn't fix it again
Had a crash in my car on the way home
My expensive DVD player (out of warranty of course) let out the magic smoke
LWN announced it was shutting down
Seriously though, they will definitely be badly missed. They were part of my daily net routine. Interestingly a number of users on the LWN comments page have made substantial donations just after the news broke (several US$200 donations were mentioned). Perhaps its time we stopped griping and just put our money where our collective mouthes are. I'm going to donate tonight after I get home, and I challenge every other reader who can afford it to do likewise.
Stealing a rhinoceros should not be attempted lightly.
Most (if not all) of those sites are just spitting up links to Linux news and articles elsewhere on the web. LWN has actual solid quality journalism, and they'll be hard to replace -- I don't think any of the sites you've listed fit the bill, even though they might be good in and of themselves.
What part of ANALOGOUS do you fucking idiots not understand?? It was a web site and not an open source project? No fucking shit Sherlocks.
The best thing about LWN from my perspective was that they would actually take some time to analyze the news themselves. It's easy to put together a site that is just a collection of news stories. It takes a lot more effort to try to explain to your readers what the news means. For instance, their kernel coverage was fantastic for someone like me who doesn't really understand the kernel at more than a superficial level.
Second, LWN was unabashedly pro-Linux, not anti-commercial-software. They really took more of an OSI like attitude: Open-source is great, here's why, but we realize and accept that some companies won't do it, and they make useful software too.
Finally, LWN rarely required you to visit another page on their site to get to the article they were linking too. Linuxtoday does this and it annoys me to no end. On the front page LT quotes the first paragraph of the story, on the next page the first 3 paragraphs. Only from there can you go to the actual article.
(Don't waste bandwidth with the obvious question, "So why didn't you donate?". I'm too broke.)
LWN's site says nothing of their next issue being their last (that I can find anyway), and there is no link posted in this story. Has anyone actually verified that this is true?
A squid eating dough in a polyethylene bag is fast and bulbous, got me?
What the internet needs is non-profit organization(s) that handles subscription to websites, sort of like cable companys do. The current model, similar to magazine subscription will never work, as most people see little value in it.
You must have missed the annual memo from ESR
Je ne parle pas francais.
It's been a good four year run for them.
Well, seeing they have to end their run, I don't think the above statement is entirely true...
...that was closing down instead.
Human costs aside, running Slashdot probably costs a fraction of what even running your local corner store costs. I honestly don't know where and how these sites that only serve up HTML and a few images lose money.
Maybe I'm ignorant, and I don't think I am, but bandwidth charges aside none of these sites should be losing money if they have a steady flow of advertising deals. And the deals don't have to be big.
Let's say you've got a one man operation...
If you had 80 customers willing to pay you $80 a month just to be in the ad rotation (forget this CPM crap, it's more confounding to predict than 95th percentile) that's $6500 a month in revenue.
Pulling numbers out of my arse;
You've got a half-cab that'll cost you $600 USD, you've got bandwith that will cost you let's say $1200 USD for a 3Mbit contract (if you've got a good supplier? I don't know, I'm in Canada and we tend to pay a little more for bandwidth). And that's if you have low numbers. 80 ads isn't that many ads in rotation really, you're sort of dogging it if you have a high traffic site and only 80 people come forward to pay for monthly ads cheap.
So now you've got 4400USD left over. Some goes to taxes, and the rest can go into your pocket.
Am I saying a one man operation could run a Linux news site? Sure, why not? You contract out for articles, you admin it yourself etc..
Hell, maybe I'll try it, I just sold myself. Ok that went way longer than I thought it would, I'm going back to work.
-- The unsig...
He hasn't because that's too overt. The DoJ would shut him down for sure then. It's got to be gradual, like the frog in the pot of water. Think about it. How can his goal be to have 100%, but leave some for the Linux guys? Get real. It's all a Chess game.
No, his plan is to get Palladium security onto every piece of hardware produced in the world. Linux, being open to massive change since the source is open, is inherently a risk. Linux won't be ALLOWED to boot, and Microsoft won't likely be giving out the documentation so we can hack Linux in.
Checkmate.
Goodbye Linux, hello Windows XP2. I hope you have your VISA ready, because you won't have a choice but to buy or go Amish.
BlackBolt
LWN Contribution page
Matthew Newhall
President of LILUG.
Long Island Linux Users Group.
Novel theory: Modern Man evolved from psychopath
This is not fair.
Hell, close down slashdot before LWN. This site is pitiful in comparison.
Even during the most furious times, LWN has always been mature.
What the hell. What the hell.
Yet, on the LWN comments page, it looks the money is rolling in.
Maybe they will get their miracle. Wish I could help too--no money.
Thank you LWN. May the source be with you.
Always.
The IRS allows tax deductions for non-cash donations to (the public) ie charities benefitting the public's interest.
The IRS has special rules for certain listed types of non-cash items. For example: "Works of Art" and "Collections" which includes vinyl record collections. I admit the descruiptions are a bit archaic, but the practice of law has long been interpreting the contemporary meaning of laws written years ago.
Its hardly a stretch to realize that Books and Magazines are an artform., and that Web-Magazines are still art. Even computer code is art in my opinion and could be donated for tax reimbursement.
...and the even bigger shame is that some people will moan about how valuable content will be lost and not make the smallest effort or contribution toward preserving that information.
It's not a "...sad thing about the Internet..." situation, IMO. W/O the Internet, you might have never even had the opportunity to access that information. Sort of the, "better to have loved and lost..." kind of proposition.
Consider museums and art collections. Folks will donate to museums to preserve artifacts. Why doesn't anyone contribute to websites that preserve and show information?
You mean you'll put down your rock, and I'll put down my sword and we'll try and kill each other like civilized peo
Can there be some kind of general rule, that an acronym can be no longer than 5 characters.
TANSTAAFL
What the hell does that mean? Next we'll be seeing:
RCPAHOHSCALASS
Robert's Cat Puked A Hairball On His Shag Carpet And Left A Stinky Stain
Sorry, but regardless of its length, that one is famous and well-known, especially among nerds. If you're curious about it, you'll find the research to be effortless.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.