Videos and Report From Embedded Linux Conference
Thomas Petazzoni writes "The fourth edition of Embedded Linux Conference was held from April 15 to 17 in Mountain View, California. With more than fifty talks and tutorials around the use of Linux in embedded devices, this conference covered a wide range of topics: power management, debugging techniques, system size reduction, flash filesystems, embedded distributions, real-time, graphics and video, security, etc. For those who could not attend the conference, Free Electrons has published under a free license videos of nineteen talks and an extensive report of them. You can for example watch Andrew Morton's keynote, Klaas van Gend's talk about the real-time version of the Linux kernel, or Mike Anderson's tutorial on the use of JTAG probes for kernel debugging."
Okay, this is the third thread in a row on the front page that has been nothing more than an overblown opinion piece or random uninteresting conference coverage. I don't think anyone is really going to be disenfranchised if I take a detour from our regularly scheduled wankfest and open up the floor to Slashdot gripes.
Slashdot has changed a lot since I first logged on here so many years ago. And while I don't expect a site to be static, I do expect that it evolve to preserve the good features and remove the bad features. Slashdot has, in my opinion, done a relatively good job of retaining its "flavor", but it has done a terrible job in preserving the "Slashdot Community". I am interested in your opinion of this, as well as concrete examples of either ways Slashdot has done a good job, in your opinion, or has hurt the community through their bad decisions.
One of the biggest regressive changes was the decision to make Funny moderations worthless, thereby turning funny posts and comments into karma sinks. This has fundamentally shaped the tone of Slashdot comments into a much less humorous form. Slashdot has evolved, through this one action, into a community of sour-faced monks. Such a community makes me wonder why I want to still be a part of it.
Many other changes here at Slashdot have resulted these types of feelings, and if you have an opinion, please feel free to post it in this thread. Be aware, though, that this thread (at least this post) will be modded to -1, so if you can't spare the karma, you may want to move on quietly.
What changes have you seen to Slashdot that have diminished your enjoyment of this site?