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The 10 Tech People Who Don't Matter

TopShelf writes "Business 2.0 recently ran a feature on the Top 50 People Who Matter in the business world, but perhaps more interesting is their list of the 10 People Who Don't Matter. Leading off the list is a Slashdot favorite, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer..." Given, Rob's in there as well, but I'd say his company in the list is pretty decent.

71 of 520 comments (clear)

  1. What is worse that a first post? by dada21 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The last post. On slashdot. Ever. Poor Rob!

    I don't agree with the article at all, and I definitely don't agree with the top 50 article. In the long run, nothing matters in history. The consumers have been, and always will be, the only important unit or group in any market transaction. Without demand, supply matters little. Even if demand is created because of a new supply of a new item or service, it matters little as that demand is fixed -- it would have gone elsewhere.

    Slashdot is definitely slowing down. So what? Digg is a mess, too. All I see on various blogs lately is "Click my ads!" and "Help me digg up my submission!" Nice.

    I'm a free market believer because I believe in ultimate freedom for the consumer. The only way that can happen is if the producers are given the chance to compete without favoritism, preferential grants or subsidies, or anti-market entry taxes, tariffs and regulations. It doesn't matter WHO the person is that discovers a new market or makes it better, it matters that the consumers are given the ability to voice what they want, no matter if it is immoral or even considered illegal by the previous generation.

    Slashdot will be gone in years or decades. So will Digg. So will Business 2.0. Who cares, as long as consumers consume, and producers can create what new consumers desire.

    1. Re:What is worse that a first post? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Diggs problem is the speed of the article flow.
      Its like a mashup of slash and fark in fast forward.

      Theres never enough time to savour an article.
      Slash has the posting speed just about right and the subject matter is spot on.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:What is worse that a first post? by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From the article: Malda knows his subject, and he's a good editor, but in the end, he's just no match for the power of the multitudes.

      He's a good editor? He's "ok" but he's certainly not a "good editor" and the people he has surrounded himself with are no where even close to the caliber necessary to run a site in this day and age (this isn't 1998 anymore and blogs and their "editors" have really stepped up).

      Digg is a pile of shit (and thus why I don't read it, ever) but Slashdot isn't responding very well to the outside pressures. Yay, CSS and a template redesign in 2006! I couldn't give a flying rats ass what the site looks like. I want good content (and in 1997 through 2001 it had that). Now it's crap and the fact that I no longer subscribe and don't post 10 to 15x a day (everyday) reflects my disappointment in this site.

      From the poster: All I see on various blogs lately is "Click my ads!" and "Help me digg up my submission!" Nice.

      They have Slashdot posting links too. It's just that most people have moved away from caring about Slashdot's minimal influence and week old stories (and numerous duplicates) to go with sites that are actually relevant in today's connected world. That's why you don't see them nearly as much.

      As far as ads go, they are even MORE annoying here than they used to be and I'm thrilled that I use adblock proxies so I don't have to see them. I forget to use the proxy sometimes and it never ceases to amaze me that with a community that is so behind Google's text ads that they would tolerate the bullshit that Slashdot panders. /old schooler rant

    3. Re:What is worse that a first post? by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 4, Funny
      The last post. On slashdot. Ever.
      Noooooooo!!!!

      Your insanely masterful trolling was the only thing worth reading on Slashdot!
    4. Re:What is worse that a first post? by saboola · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slash has the posting speed just about right and the subject matter is spot on.

      Check's in the mail.
      -Slashdot

    5. Re:What is worse that a first post? by east+coast · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Digg is a pile of shit

      While this is true I think the article missed the idea that /. is more a "middle of the road" type of news source. It's the equivalent of reading MSNBC for business news. While I (obviously) still come to the site I find that more and more I'm spending some old slashdot time down the corner at sites like devx.com. While DevX themselves is a much less active site (an understatement) than /. I find the reading more meaningful than the endless posts by armchair engineers, pizza delivery kids who couldn't really make the geek squad and the GNAA.

      And older articles on other more specialized technical sites have more impact and more value. I'm wondering if more people are like me and are looking for more technical meat over flamewars and bad noise.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    6. Re:What is worse that a first post? by bladesjester · · Score: 4, Funny

      If I had to guess?

      First. Post. Ever.

      --
      Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
    7. Re:What is worse that a first post? by dada21 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually, slashdot was owned by the GNAA, but Malda and his cronies had a coup to overthrow them and replace OSTG as the new overlords, which I for one welcomed. In the end we all got modded down.

    8. Re:What is worse that a first post? by HerbieStone · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slash has the posting speed just about right and the subject matter is spot on.

      Yeah, and in case you still missed an article. A dupe comes to the rescue.

      Cheers
    9. Re:What is worse that a first post? by rwven · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think you've got it backwards. I feel that people got tired of waiting, sometimes hours, for a new story to be posted. At digg you can go to the site and skip the articles you dislike and savor the articles you like at any pace that you like. If you are bored at on the web or something, there's almost a guarantee that every 15 minutes there will be a new article up on the main page. Or you can look at the listing of recent articles posted that have no made it there yet.

      An added benefit of digg is that just because an editor doesnt like an article, doesnt mean it won't be shown. If the people like the article, tons more people will see it. If they don't, it will be lost. With the current /. method, any one editor can veto the posting of an article simply if he's the one that reviews it. I know plenty of stories that have been submitted to /. that were LOVED on digg...yet were rejected by a /. admin.

      People go to digg BECAUSE of the fast pace at which is flows...not in spite of it. That's what people want. I'm not dogging on /. here. /. DID pioneer the tech news industry that exists today, but it is possible that it's time for something new to be tried. Just try to "keep an open mind" about things like digg. Just because it's competition to /. doesn't mean it's evil.

    10. Re:What is worse that a first post? by timster · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I remember something different about the pre-2001 Slashdot, obviously.

      OMG look at this case mod1!!!

      Here's yet another link to Tom's Hardware! Look at how bad the Intel chip is!

      Study shows Windows is totally better than Linux. Gee, but are the considering all the advantages of Open Source?

      etc. In other words, it's my opinion that Slashdot content has matured over the years. In a sense it is no longer as exciting; back in the day it felt like we were all fighting an urgent war against the DMCA and Microsoft and Intel and even SCO (and the trolls were way way better).

      These days it feels more like a news and discussion outlet. I don't think that's bad, but it just indicates the ongoing aging of the editors and readership. I feel that this makes the comments more interesting because you are more likely to see a serious debate between intelligent people with good ideas. Back in the day it was more "party line" unless a troll came in to stir things up.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    11. Re:What is worse that a first post? by Robber+Baron · · Score: 5, Funny

      In other words, Digg fuels and exacerbates your ADHD...

      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    12. Re:What is worse that a first post? by Daengbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't actually have a problem with the way the front page of Digg works. I visit it every day and get more interesting stories than Slash has. Digg's weakness in is the community -- I just can't even stand to read the comments section. I rarely even click on the discussion because, when I do, it disgusts me.

      I still remember some 8 years ago probably -- when I first came to Slash -- how 5% of the level of conversation was amazing. You'd get people who had been working since the 70's who would be discussing how the unixy news of the day would affect them. There's even still a little of that left here sometimes. I wade through comments similar to what I've read a thousand times before in order to find that gem of one that truly edifies me. Digg's comment section just leaves me feeling dirty by comparison.

      Yeah, Malda doesn't matter. I don't even know if he ever did. The editors could change the story submission method to more reflect Digg's model and I don't think that it would change the community here much, which might be a good plan. Years ago, when Slash started choking on the crap it was feeding itself, I hoped Bruce's site would attract some serious attention, but it never really did. I still visit it once in a while, though.

      I will never leave Slash for Digg, unless it's community becomes better educated about tech, and that's not likely to happen since they are moving to a broader, not narrower, audience.

    13. Re:What is worse that a first post? by dada21 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      For me, I use a combination of RSS feeds that pull from news.google.com and blogsearch.google.com. I guess I've become a google fanboy but only because they offer such great tools (and APIs) for me to feed my need for information, opinions and conflict. Now that I basically have my own "wire" to all sorts of news on all my favorite topics, as well as OpEd ("blogs"), I can get what I want when I want rather than using a site like slashdot or digg.

      The great thing about this is that I tend to filter out sites that DON'T have an open comment forum at the end of the article. I still come to slashdot daily (RSS!) for the comments, but I also pay more attention to the everyman comments at other sites. I'm in it for the response of the readers, not necessarily for the "facts" in the article.

    14. Re:What is worse that a first post? by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An added benefit of digg is that just because an editor doesnt like an article, doesnt mean it won't be shown.

      Yea, and better yet, if an editor doesn't like your comment, they will just change it to mean something completely different. THAT is why I don't Digg anymore.

      Digg certainly has quantity, and I had participated in getting total garbage on the front page (which is easy to do on Digg) to demonstrate how flawed the system is.

      No nested comments (ok, one level) no way to filter, any idiot with an agenda moderates, everyone is "equal", which is certainly not the case when it comes to good judgement. No, Digg is just an interesting experiment to see what happens when you let the inmates run the asylum, and have accountability by the editors.

      Slashdot, for all it's flaws, has less quantity but more quality. I don't want the news that is the most popular, I want the news I need to know about. That takes editing (but my comments don't...)

      Slashdot has seen an improvement since Digg came out, so the competition is good indeed, although the new "look" rather sucks.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    15. Re:What is worse that a first post? by bonch · · Score: 5, Interesting

      any idiot with an agenda moderates

      I'm posting at -1 specifically because of idiots with an agenda. Someone set up a script to watch my user page and check for new comments, then load an account with mod points and mod me down. +5 posts weeks old would still be getting marked down until they were -1. I went from +2 karma to -1 in four days. Emails to the editors did nothing.

      At Digg, everyone has a voice, so if one person doesn't like me, so what? I might convince other people who will balance out the rating. Here at Slashdot, you can ruin someone's account just for fun.

    16. Re:What is worse that a first post? by edmicman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know it's all been said, but I'll throw my two cents in on the Digg vs Slashdot thing.

      While they may be similar on the surface, I don't like the comparison, as they each serve different uses. I think Digg gets its publicity because of it's sense of "freshness", of having supposedly current material instantly available. Digg is good because of the mob moderation. But Digg is bad because of the mob moderation. Unless you sit and stare at it all day, you'll miss something that hits the front page. I'll check Digg out because things will show up that wouldn't ever make Slashdot's articles. But they're commenting system is horrible. They took a step in the right direction by having threads at least. But giving every half retarded geek out there to "digg down" comments he doesn't agree with (whether they're insightful or not) is bad.

      Slashdot, on the other hand, feels to me like Digg's older, more mature brother. Honestly, one of the best things about Slashdot is the discussion. There's a lot of good info here, and the moderation system seems to work pretty well. Sure, the editors get criticized, but that's going to happen in any sort of community. Perhaps a group editing module that worked like moderating where a rotating group of people approve stories could be fun. But you don't see too many articles on Slashdot where the summary is a single line and it's a link to a blog with a link to a story.

      When you're trying to be the fastest, your going to lose the insight and thought that comes with taking your time at something. I'll keep browsing Digg occasionally, and primarily reading here for the group discussion, and we'll all go on our merry way. At this point in the game, though, I don't see Digg having the lasting effect of Slashdot. Where will we be in 5 years?

    17. Re:What is worse that a first post? by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's an interesting feature - I hadn't seen that before. Browsing back to 20010911 brought back some terrible memories.

      It's interesting to browse through those stories, and see how many posts there were, within an hour or two of the attacks, saying "now this will result in a war on terror, watch our rights get trimmed, etc." Impressively prescient.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    18. Re:What is worse that a first post? by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I wish I could give my mod points away. I'm tired of being saddled with approving this garbage for the general public's consumption. Maybe I should start modding GNAA posts Insightful...

      Find a Score:5 post that really doesn't deserve it but at first glance seems to. Mod it down as Troll. You'll get spanked in Metamod. Do this a few times and your mod point problem should go away. I've made the mistake of doing this once or twice, now I just reply to such posts rather than mod them.

      Of course, it works modding down legit comments too, but in that case you're taking out an innocent at the same time and that's not cool.

      Then again, you could just go into your prefs and disable the mod option. Preferences / Homepage (wtf?) / Willing to Moderate.

      Personally, I like the Slashdot moderation system. It's far from ideal, but works much better than an small unaccountable elite whacking individual posts.

  2. Unfair by tygerstripes · · Score: 4, Funny

    Right, I'm sick of this. The one article where I deserve a mention and they leave me out. Guess I just don't matter.

    --
    Meta will eat itself
    1. Re:Unfair by DaSenator · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, you do matter, just not enough to make a list, but enough not to make a list.

      --
      Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
  3. A has-been already? by plover · · Score: 4, Funny
    That's kind of sad. You got to be a dot-com millionaire, left with nothing but a T-shirt, and now they're mocking the T-shirt as well.

    Hey, at least you got there in the first place. More than most of your readership will ever accomplish!

    --
    John
  4. FAKE by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Funny

    This article is complete fake, and you know how I know...

    Malda knows his subject, and he's a good editor, but in the end, he's just no match for the power of the multitudes.

    Only kidding, slash is home I won't believe its dying until netcraft confirms it.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  5. #11 by spazimodo · · Score: 5, Funny

    #11 - Cowboy Neil

    --

    Fsck the millennium, we want it now.
    Millennium Crisis Line: 0890 900 2000 [calls cost 50p/min]
  6. The list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
  7. Leading? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 4, Informative

    Leading off the list is a Slashdot favorite, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer..."

    Even though the list says "In NO particular order"

    But hey, I think Ballmer is a tool even though I'm not a big MS hater...

  8. In other news... by JoaoPinheiro · · Score: 5, Funny

    An innocent bypasser was killed in Redmond today by a mysterious falling chair...

  9. New Slogan by thelonestranger · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slashdot - News For Nerds Stuff That Doesn't Matter.

    --
    To err is human. To forgive is not company policy.
  10. Ouch by llamalicious · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just ouch. They put extra sand in the vaseline for slashdot in that little article.

  11. Speaking of things that don't matter... by paedobear · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a list from Business 2.0. I'm afraid I'd have to put them on my top 10 list of "magazines that don't matter"...

    1. Re:Speaking of things that don't matter... by GPLDAN · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Seriously. The dot-com cheerleader mag that has absolutely nothing to say anymore. Go profile John chambers and his three hair comb over again.

      BTW, could they have chosen a worse picture of Linus? Don't answer that.

      Oh, and they are fools to throw the Netflix guy out there. He owns a distribution model, and with HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, I don't think the DVD as a distro method is nearly as dead as they think.

  12. Cascade of chairs by truckaxle · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wait what is that I hear - the sound of a continuous stream of chairs being violently
    thrown in the general direction of Business 2.0 Magazine offices.

  13. 1 article that doesn't matter by Haeleth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So I went to look at the list, and it wasn't in the article. There was a link to it, though. So I middle-clicked the link, to open it in a new tab, and... oops. The tab's empty.

    Oh, I see, it wasn't a link at all, it was a pointless bit of JavaScript that merely looked like a link. So I go back and click on it the way they were expecting, and... oops. There's still no list: just an empty window with a title at the top.

    Okay, fine, their online article won't work in Firefox. So I'll use the print version instead. No JavaScript there, right? Wrong. The print link takes you to... the same article, formatted for printing. Complete with lack of list, complete with stupid JavaScript non-link.

    Sorry, guys, but if you've gone to such lengths to make sure I can't read your damn article, I really don't see why I should care who you think matters. If you can't write plain HTML, you have no business talking about the web.

    1. Re:1 article that doesn't matter by Cyphertube · · Score: 4, Informative

      I had the same issue... That is, until I turned of Adblock.

      If you have it on, you will see nothing in any of the money.cnn.com galleries. So turn it off, temporarily, and hit reload. The one banner is gonna kill you. Then, when you're done, turn it back on. CNN has the worst Java-based ads.

      Slashdot is one of the few site for which I allow all the ads to come through.

      --
      Linux - because it doesn't leave that Steve Ballmer aftertaste.
  14. Too bad... by east+coast · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yeah, sadly slashdot is becoming less and less a part of my daily habit. I use to be sure to meta moderate and try to give meaningful contributions to the site but seeings as where the development end of things have been in a nose dive around here and the site has become more a Bush bashfest than a technical news source... eh... I just don't feel bad not being as much a member of the community anymore.

    On another note about the top ten: I have to completely disagree with the "DVD is an endangered species" noise mentioned for NetFlix. While I'm not a NetFlix subscriber physical media like DVD is certainly nowhere near its endlife. I just don't know what people think is going to replace the physical aspect of DVD media in the near future. I've heard this boy cry wolf before and frankly it's gotten old.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  15. Who matters at all? by gelfling · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In the thirty years I've been involved in IT I have to guess that we're approaching the point where hero-god-gurus don't matter much at all. Hasn't the industry matured to the point of being boring yet? When are we going to get past eccentric non repeatable brilliance and to the point of dull efficient execution?

  16. Digg is Shit by abscissa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Finally, an oppertunity for a Digg Sucks thread... while TFA may be right that Digg is "supplanting" Slashdot, this is not for the better. Digg posts inaccurate articles, tons of dupes, poorly edited articles, etc. on its front page. Slashdot occasionally does the same, but not like 20 times every day. Recently Digg seems to be up in arms about Scientology, as if this is some sort of new thing. I read "A Piece of Blue Sky" about 6 years ago...

    Socrates said that democracy was the WORST form of government because it meant rule by the ignorant masses... the content of Digg is just proof of that.

    1. Re:Digg is Shit by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Not only that, the "democracy" way of moderation in digg is vulnerable to astroturfing. I posted it on my journal.

      HOWEVER, I agree that the story submission system on digg is nice - it avoids much bureaucracy that currently exists on /. . It's not unusual for slashdot to publish stories that were posted on digg 2 days earlier. Perhaps there could be a way to make high karma users to accept or reject (or even vote on) pending stories?

      Regarding scientology, what we're seeing on digg is some kind of "gossip" phenomenon - with echoes. Digg could be used as a measure of what the geeks are thinking about today. It's like some kind of social laboratory with nerds as rats and stories as the maze.

      I wouldn't say digg is going to replace slashdot. But it's a very nice complement. As someone said in digg, "I read digg for the stories, and slashdot for the comments". This could be an indicator of what is good on slashdot and what needs to be improved.

      Apart from that, digg is becoming not exactly a technology website but a nerd website. The stories on scientology and global warming are representative of it.

      The real problem with digg competing vs. slashdot is that, as i said before, real technology stories typically posted on slashdot are posted much faster on digg. I used to read slashdot on a daily basis to find out "what's new" on the tech world. Today i read digg for that (and not the published, but the pending stories).

      In conclusion, I'd say digg is much broader than slashdot, and appeals to a less specialized public. Perhaps changing the submission method for slashdot would help us regain some popularity.

  17. Linus on the List by neongenesis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Linus has the one entry that is really a compliment.

    Dennis Ritchie gave a nice talk on the 21st(??) birthday of Unix about how it is like a child growing up, leaving home, being all grown up and an adult... He felt a little like a proud parent.

    What better compliment for Linus than to have created something that has grown and matured to the point that it is beyond the creator? I can imagine few more satisfying accomplishments in life.

    1. Re:Linus on the List by MoxFulder · · Score: 4, Informative

      Even if Linus's place on the list was meant as a compliment, I still think it's incorrect. Linus definitely DOES matter. He may NOT be writing all the code these days, he may not be the one coming up with all the innovations, but he *IS* still the one putting the Linux kernel together into a coherent whole.

      Just read the Linux kernel mailing list and you'll see that Linus has an amazing grasp of all the major kernel subsystems, a clear sense of goals and direction for the kernel, as well as things to avoid, and a good ability to delegate tasks to the other kernel developers.

      Basically, Linus remains "benevolent dictator" for the Linux kernel, and I'd say he's doing a highly effective job in that role. I'd put him in a top 10 list of tech people who do matter.

    2. Re:Linus on the List by abb3w · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I suspect Linus's role is rather like that of a Highly Effective Systems Administrator; he doesn't seem to do much, everything just works, and even if some idiot runs him over with a truck, it takes a long while for things to fall apart afterwards. OTOH, if when the time comes you don't replace the loss with someone nearly as good, the difference will eventually be noticed.

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  18. Re:to be honest (digg) by tgd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Thats the beauty of slashdot. Some people live the high-performance, cutting edge, gotta-be-connected, crackberry life, but as us older geeks age, its nice to have our news slowed down. It gives us time to think about it.

    And for some of us, its very useful to remind us of the news again a day later. (Thanks Zonk!) ...

    Now what was I just doing?

  19. Linus by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, it bothered me. Because Linus is not only the creator of Linux. He also maintains the kernel and adds new features once in a while. The latest kernel release adds significant features and possibly performance enhancements.

    It seems to me that whoever wrote the article, thinks that Linus' role is over and that he's nothing more than a decorative figure. He's not.

  20. Slashdot should have opened the story queue... by spludge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot could have easily had the equivalent of Digg if they had opened up the story queue for public viewing. I know that this is not how the editors want Slashdot to work, but I think it would have let Slashdot address the audience that wants the absolute latest stories and the audience that wants indepth discussion. I have read the FAQ and I understand the issues with spam, but I think those are all solvable problems.

    Oh well, too late now, Digg stole that thunder :)

  21. Title: Complete Nonsense by Yst · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The title of this article appears to be its major problem. This is not an article about People Who Don't Matter. This is an article about People of Whom We Disapprove or People Whose Current Operations Don't Impress Us Much or some such thing. One doesn't need to be justified or qualified to matter, in the grand scheme of things, and the fact that Business 2.0 is unimpressed by these individuals' current endeavours ultimately has no bearing on their importance to the world of business or to society in general. A powerful fool can change the world in a way that matters, whether or not we may think he's a fool.

    --
    Karma: Chameleon (comes and goes)
  22. Re:to be honest (digg) by FinestLittleSpace · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've never come to /. for the speed of news... I've come for the OVERALL quality of comments... there's some extremely bright people on here amongst the crap.

  23. Higher rank w/ Alexa data = Digg users more oWn3d by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Alexa is spyware, is it not? If Digg is getting more visited by Alexa users than Slashdot, to me that signifies that more people that read Digg are unsavy enough to have spyware installed on their machine. To me, having a lower rank in the Alexa ranking system when you are talking about a tech news site means that the readers of the lower scoring sites have better spyware protection and are more tech savy. This lends MORE credence to slashdot than Digg, IMHO.

  24. The power of suggestion by rueger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Although describing our esteemed head honcho as a great editor may be pushing things a bit, the comments about Slashdot miss an important point.

    The challenge faced by many Internet sites is not to generate reams and reams of content, but to allow users a way to filter out only what they want or need. What with "citizen journalists" and plain old trolls and conspiracy theorists, there needs to be some kind of moderating hand to make information useful.

    Peer review, like that created by Slashdot, is one way of doing that, but a firm editorial hand is even more useful. That's why my daily reading includes not just Slashdot, but other sites and blogs which cover specific topics and direct me only to the stories or posts that are of value.

    Despite gripes - and I don't even bother trying to post stories any more - Slashdot does a reasonable job of that filtering.

  25. Where's Dvorak? by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That list is totally inaccurate. It's missing both Dvorak and John Thompson.

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  26. In response.. by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slashdot.mil has demoted Malda down to LtTaco.

  27. Re:Slashdot is Dead! by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 4, Funny
    Slashdot is Dead!

    Business 2.0 confirms!

    Oh yeah? Well, I have four words for you. *I* *love* *this* *website*! YEEEAAAHHHH!!!! [throws chair]

  28. cheap trick by Blob+Pet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Q) How do you get people to read your lame business articles?

    A) Say something inflammatory about Slashdot so that it gets posted on Slashdot!

    --
    "...today consumers have been conditioned to think of beer when they see a bullfrog..."
  29. Bush Bash-Fest is OLD by Black-Man · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Too many political topics have destroyed this site. Sad, really.

    1. Re:Bush Bash-Fest is OLD by StarvingSE · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pre-2000: Everything was happy-go-lucky. New tech everywhere, dot.coms making millions overnight. Tech and computers is now popular, and everyone wants to talk about it.

      Post 9/11: The US government makes war on terror, and the reality comes in: Everything is on computers, all our information, anything the gov (or highest bidder) wants to find out they can (and they are). People's SSN's are leaked from corporate databases and sold to the black market. Newer scams like phishing are making even more people vulnerable. All of this is due to the influx of technology in our daily lives. Its no longer a hobby, its an essential. And thus, the government is passing legislature directly affecting technology (net neutrality, DMCA, etc). Therefore, it is only logical that tech talk and politics converge.

      Politics, although nasty at times, is very important and is definately worthy of discussion since it affects us all in one way or another.

      --
      I got nothin'
  30. Slashdot isn't about News... It's about Community by abh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Slashdot isn't about news... everything that's on Slashdot has already been discussed in the blogosphere for a couple days. The value here is in the community and user comments.

  31. Who needs fame. I'll take giving a damn. by ScentCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What is so difficult for you in making voting system for stories?

    The same thing that makes it difficult in Florida and Ohio. Even when it turns out that it was working, people who don't like the outcome say it's the system that's broken. When they do like the outcomes (because they've figured out how to perform the Digg equivalent of Karma-whoring or stirred up a bunch of traffic for their simpering Google-ad spam page), then, gosh, Digg sure is timely and wonderful!

    Nope, just like the recent discussion here about how even the Washington Post web site is turning into a "conversation" instead of journalism - I fear that the droning of Digg will become the norm, and only people who appreciate some editorial steerage will populate sites that perform at least a little thoughtful editing. Which is not to say that Timothy counts.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  32. Re:to be honest (digg) by slashflood · · Score: 4, Funny
    There's some extremely bright people on here amongst the crap.
    Like me!
  33. Here's the List (as text) by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Informative
    The List:

    (Because CNN's site sucks worse than anything else I've seen lately; if you want to read the little blurbs on each, you'll have to suffer through their shit, because I can't be bothered to copy/paste it all...)

    Allegedly in "no particular order:"

    1. Steve Ballmer, CEO, Microsoft
    2. Jeffrey Citron, Chairman and chief strategist, Vonage
    3. Reed Hastings, CEO, Netflix
    4. Ken Kutaragi, President, Sony Computer Entertainment
    5. Warren Lieberfarb, Senior Consultant, HD-DVD Promotion Group
    6. Rob Malda, Slashdot.org
    7. Arun Sarin, CEO, Vodafone
    8. Jonathan Schwartz, CEO, Sun Microsystems
    9. Linus Torvalds, Creator, Linux
    10. Mark Zuckerberg, Founder, Facebook

    Here's the blurb about Malda:
    Remember the days when "getting Slashdotted" was every sysadmin's worst nightmare? Referrals from the "News for Nerds" website would send so much traffic to websites that many crashed. But for those that survived the flood, it was the online equivalent of a papal benediction. Today, the buzz has moved elsewhere. Slashdot's editor-driven story selection model is being supplanted by user-generated systems such as Digg. According to recent Alexa data, Digg already has more daily reach and generates more page views than Slashdot. Malda knows his subject, and he's a good editor, but in the end, he's just no match for the power of the multitudes.
    And just because I thought it was interesting, here's the blurb about Linus Torvalds:
    It's a testament to the success of Torvalds's open-source ideas that he's on this list at all. His Linux operating system is fast, cheap, and out of control - and that's entirely by design. While Torvalds still oversees any changes made to the innermost core of Linux, most of the innovation is now done by others, and commercial businesses like Red Hat and Novell increasingly steer its future. Although he can claim credit for popularizing one of the most powerful ideas ever to sweep through the software industry, Torvalds's project has matured to such an extent that it's largely outgrown its illustrious creator.
    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  34. 10 Other Things that Don't Matter by neonprimetime · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. Articles by Business 2.0
    2. Microsoft Security Updates
    3. Digg
    4. Opinions of Hollywood Actors
    5. Printed Newspapers
    6. Seatbelt Laws
    7. Global Warmning
    8. The National Deficit
    9. SCO Linux
    10. My Slashdot Posts

  35. Slashdot's content is discussion; Digg's is links. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In other words, Digg fuels and exacerbates your ADHD...

    Pretty much.

    I've gone over to Digg from time to time, but I've never stayed there because I just don't enjoy it as much. Slashdot, to me, is a discussion site. The articles are really just prompts that get people talking; the real "content" isn't in the links / TFAs -- which are mostly just stuff you can find on Google News most of the time anyway -- but in the discussion itself.

    Digg is the other way around. It seems like it's basically a news aggregator, and the discussion is mostly mindless drivel (even compared to Slashdot) and people voting. Maybe I just picked the wrong threads to read, but the S/N ratio was even lower there than it is in your average Slashdot thread, and that's really saying something. Yeah, Slashdot has bizarre trolling phenomena (FPs, the whole GNAA business, etc.) but there's almost always good posts as well; on Digg, quality posts seemed more the exception than the rule.

    I can get my news anywhere -- there are tons of aggregators and newsfeeds and bloggers who sift endlessly through basically everything the internet has to offer, pulling out things to read. That, to me, isn't particularly interesting. The discussion (which comes from the userbase) is: that's something that has value to me, and why I think Slashdot still comes out on top of Digg.

    If Digg draws the ADD-types away who are just looking for an endless stream of new links, all the better.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  36. Alexa stat is bad by dkarney · · Score: 5, Informative

    Whenever people proclaim that Slashdot is being beat by Digg, they drag out the Alexa pageview stats. However, people forget that Alexa's software only runs on IE. Considering that a large number of Slashdot visitors use browsers other than IE, the Alexa stats don't accurately reflect the number of pageviews that Slashdot gets.

  37. Roger by Tony · · Score: 4, Funny

    Cue the UID comparison thread.

    You got it.

    Oh, and I agree, too. The quality of the articles has turned into a gamers' report site, and the discussion threads always degenerate into "me, too" posts, talks about how /. has really taken a turn for the worst in quality, and UID comparisons (where smaller seems to be better, for some reason).

    It's shameful, really.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  38. I don't matter by digitaldc · · Score: 5, Funny

    I certainly don't matter, why am I not on that list?
    Not to be matter of fact, but how much do you have to not matter in order to get on a 'People Who Don't Matter' list?
    To make matters worse, you matter more just for being on that list.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  39. Re:Slashdot's content is discussion; Digg's is lin by DrSkwid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The thing that turned me off Digg was the lack of "see replies to my posts"

    I like Digg's article mix and it's one of my clicks when I'm bored but the discussion isn't really there. My opinions are great and all that but what I want is responses. Some of the best posts I read are the ones telling me what's wrong in my own. Being challenged is one of the ways to learn, and often when one does some background research into one's opinions one finds that the world has changed since you formed the opinion or you were wrong all along.

    Digg just doesn't have it.

    plus the layout screws up when you force large fonts.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  40. Re:Slashdot moderation by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's just frustrating, Jamie. We've been hearing about a "future moderation system" for a few years now. I call today's version absolutely, totally broken because it doesn't scale well. It only takes one moderation from one person to knock a post up or down an entire grade. A +5 Interesting just means 3 or 4 people who had mod points found it interesting, not everyone else. Also, it's far too easy to modbomb and ruin an account.

    I'll stay tuned...

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  41. Re:Slashdot's content is discussion; Digg's is lin by siriuskase · · Score: 4, Interesting

    me2

    The first thing I do when I come to /. is read the replies to my messages. It is cool to see how and why various people disagree or, occasionally, agree with me. I noticed you got a lot of replies to your Stallman messages, so I will have to go there next.

    I just went to Digg and checked a few threads, the Apple sweatshop thing and another which I forgot. The comments were stupid and uninteresting. /. has more threads that are interesting including quite a few that are both stupid and interesting. Heiarchial threading (sp?) does a better job of displaying the conversation structure. Why don't more websites use it? It's not a new idea, it's also one of the things I like about usenet.

    Minor complaint about new /. design: I have a harder time following the structure, children seem to be nowhere near their parent.

    --
    If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
  42. Next week in People Magazine... by Infonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... I mean, Business 2.0.

    This is exactly the sort of pure fluff that masquerades for journalism now. Does Steve Ballmer, the man who runs the most powerful computer software company on the planet, suddenly have no power? Ask his employees. Ask companies that partner with Microsoft. Ask Scott McNealy. Sure, Microsoft is on a downward slide, but that doesn't mean Ballmer is suddenly a garden gnome.

    Torvalds? Hastings? Both very, very smart guys with long roads ahead of them. I don't know about the rest of the folks on the list, but Schwartz could surprise a lot of people. If Sun is thriving in five years, ask the knuckleheads at People.. uh... Business 2.0 what they think of Schwartz.

    The "what's the flavor of the minute" attitude of the article is made manifestly evident by the Slashdot v. Digg comparison. As others have pointed out, Digg may be hot, but it is absurd to suggest that the level of discourse on Digg compares to that found on Slashdot. Digg is oriented toward instant "hot or not" feedback, while Slashdot is about in-depth discussion of a smaller number of topics.

    I suppose they have to come up with something to write about, but the world is full of interesting business and technology stories. This sort of crap is worse than useless, because at least some percentage of the people who read it actually think it is worthwhile information.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  43. I like Slashdot by rinkjustice · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've been reading it faithfully since (circa) 1998, but it's not as hardcore as it used to be. It might be I'm getting older and wiser or that I'm not as militant about Linux as I used to be, or it might be a dilution of the nerd population to other discussion forums - I dunno. But the fact is I've seen contenders vie for /.'s crown before (Kuro5hin immediately comes to mind, maybe Plastic) and they've been trounced. Slashdot feels like home. It's a part of my life. I enjoy the readership and have made lots of friends and enemies here. And best of all, I've learned alot.

    Malda may be irrelevant to the biz/tech world, but not to me and many other readers. I guess what I'm trying to say is "thanks Slashdot, for being a part of my life!"

  44. Re:Slashdot moderation by cagle_.25 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    On the chance that you're taking suggestions, I'll start a thread:
    1. Get rid of "Troll". There are relatively few genuine trolls compared to the number of people of simply express unfounded opinions. Not that we want to reward that habit either, but calling them "trolls" is rude.
    2. Get rid of Underrated/Overrated, or make it subject to metamodding. There is a very good reason to allow people to post Anonymously. By contrast, there is no good reason to allow people to moderate without being subject to metamods. Underrated and Overrated both allow that. As a result, Overrated becomes the scoundrel's refuge: "I don't like [Republicans|Democrats|atheists|Christians|your sig], so I'll ding you a spite point and hide behind the Overrated rule." And anyway, what could "overrated" possibly mean? Rated over what level? Well, obviously, my subjective assessment of the comment's ideal score. That's nonsense. Every mod point assigned should have some objective component to it, else it is meaningless as feedback for readers and posters. "Overrated" and "Underrated" encourage pure subjectivity.
    3. Allow for a "Useful Sources Cited" mod, which would reward those who take the time to provide useful references for the rest of us. Yes, Google can and should be used by all ... but effective Googling should be rewarded. This is different from Informative in that it rewards process rather than content.
    4. Provide options to mark something as "Counterfactual" or something like that. Suppose Alice posts something that gets modded as +5 informative, but which Bob challenges. The moderator sees the challenge, checks the info, finds out that Bob is right, and wants to bump Alice down a bit. What are the choices? Troll, Flamebait, or Overrated. Troll and Flamebait do not fit the situation. Overrated is overly broad (leaving aside the issues mentioned above). A "Counterfactual" option could be very useful here to give specific content to the negative moderation. Also, a Counterfactual mod could be easily scored by a metamod.
    5. Ditto for a "Sound Argument" mod.
    In general, the current mod system tends to reward those who think thoughts agreeable to the majority of moderators; that is, it rewards content instead of process. As a result, comments often become cheerleading for one side or another. A good moderation system would reward those whose thought process furthers the conversation at hand, not those who spout party line.
    --
    Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
  45. Re:Slashdot moderation by bit01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree with your points however:

    In general, the current mod system tends to reward those who think thoughts agreeable to the majority of moderators;

    It is impossible to avoid this, it's a democratic process; only by giving some people more votes than others can you avoid it.

    Then it's no longer one-person, one-vote. A meritocracy in other words.

    Then how do you decide who has the merit? Democracy again.

    You can put in various other feedback loops that attempt to encourage more "quality" but people aren't stupid, they adapt their articles and their moderation, and then you're back to square one. In extreme cases unethical people will use sock puppets to get what they want or trickery to fool the meta-meta-mod's.

    Other down-mod's I'd add:

    • Commercial astro-turf. Somebody pretending to be objective is pushing a commercial message.
    • Commercial propaganda. Somebody is pushing a commercial message.
    • Deceptive post. Many propagandists attempt to push their message by having a sentence of vaguely relevent material followed by several paragraphs of propaganda.
    • Unnecessarily insulting. Many regularly insult slashdotter's just for their own amusement or as a way of making their own propaganda seem more palatable.

    The biggest problems on slashdot are not flamers and trolls but commercial interests trying to drown out other points of view with their propaganda. We get way too much repetitive commercial propaganda in the mainstream media without encouraging it here as well.

    ---

    Marketing talk is not just cheap, it has negative value. Free speech can be compromised just as much by too much noise as too little signal.

  46. Re:Slashdot moderation by identity0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think one of the problems is that the mods system tries to do in one dimention categorization that is in multiple dimentions - Topicality, abusiveness, quality, humor. A post can easily be funny and flamebait, or insightful flamebait, or interesting and offtopic.

    I would like to see the mod system as a series or radio buttons that go like
    [Funny | unfunny], [on | offtopic], [redundant | overrated | underrated], [flame | tame], [insightful | interesting | informative | incorrect]

    with the ability to customize your view to rank comments based on humor, topicality, etc. instead of just the numerical ranking.