Slashdot Mirror


SJVN Tells How Reporting on Linux Has Changed in the Last 10 Years (Video)

SJVN is, of course, the well-known nickname and abbreviation for Steven J. Vaughn-Nichols, who has been covering technology as a journalist since... since longer than he cares to admit... and has been covering Linux and FOSS since the 1990s. This was basically a one-question interview: "How has reporting on Linux changed in the last 10 years?" After that, except for a couple of words requesting clarifications, we just let the webcam roll. (Note: if you know someone who would make a good Slashdot video interview victim, please put us in touch with them. Thanks.)

16 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Great guy by Johnny+Mister · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Before he started working as journalist, he was a programmer and a system administrator, so I can see where he is coming from and why Linux interests him. Back in the early 90's I worked very closely with him and it was a blast. He actually has contributed a lot to the Windows kernel and where from Microsoft took most of his good ideas to Windows and which later became the most successful OS ever produced. On OS X side, he has contributed to the creation of Linux like distro system, called App Store, and many of the technology aspects of it come from him.

    It's great to see he is still covering Linux and FOSS in general, after 20 years. Awesome fella.

    1. Re:Great guy by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even though he is a great guy. He isn't much of a public speaker. He isn't horrible but isn't that great, he should have put his commentary in texts and had us read it, I think we would have gotten more out of it.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:Great guy by pipatron · · Score: 2

      What the hell, the parent does not deserve a flamebait mod for merely stating an opinion like this!

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
  2. Why video submissions? by pipatron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do people really want video stories? I thought it was just the old-media newspapers that pushed them because you can't skip ads as easily in a stream as you can on a website.

    It takes ages to sit through a video with someone talking, compared to reading a transcription, so a written story is obviously superior.

    --
    c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    1. Re:Why video submissions? by Bill+Dimm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most of the videos posted as stories recently have been advertisements. The cynic in me says that this guy paid to have this posted to get publicity for himself, which would only be achieved via video (who notices the byline in a written article?). I wouldn't have suggested such a thing a few months ago, but with the way Slashdot has been run recently the motivation behind the stories that are posted has become murky.

  3. Well-known nickname and abbreviation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you say so.

    1. Re:Well-known nickname and abbreviation? by jellomizer · · Score: 2

      The Linux name is well known It is just below...
      Windows
      iOS
      Android (yea it is Linux but they don't call it Linux)
      OS X
      DOS
      (it may have risen above DOS)

      Saying Linux has won is kinda lame. Linux found it niche market and it isn't quite what the community 10 years expected it to be. 10-15 years ago. The Linux Community Wanted Linux for the Desktop. Today we still joke that Next year will be the year of Linux on the Desktop. We didn't get it. I doubt Linux will ever win the Desktop market until the day the the Desktop is irrelevant.

      Linux has a strong niche in the Back End for Servers, and with Android a strong showing in mobile. However I don't like to count Android as due to the sucess of the Linux community but more to the success of Google. Google could have just as easily made Android off of BSD, however because they were using Linux for their Servers they just modified it to make the Android OS with a Linux kernel.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  4. And why a video interview. by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am sorry for sounding like an old phogie, but why is Slashdot doing these videos. I got 1 minute in and just stopped it because I got a choppy video and a gentleman while I am not judging him isn't that much of a public speaker. Who seems to be saying stuff that has been summarized over and over again.

    Most of us have been taught this ability to read. It is a neat skill where we take symbols and without making any noise we can convert them into a method of exchanging ideas. Most of us has gotten so good at it that we can do it much faster then we can transmit the data by voice.

    Sure some things are better with video. But an interview like this just sucks minutes from our lives. The speaker isn't really adding anything in Non-Verbal Communication, they are not using animated imagery to express a concept. We just have a guy talking about stuff. Which we could get just as well from reading it.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  5. Re:Slashdot joins exclusive club by jellomizer · · Score: 2

    You didn't miss much. I watched it on windows and there wasn't much going on and the video was choppy.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  6. who? by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "SJVN is, of course, the well-known nickname and abbreviation for Steven J. Vaughn-Nichols"

    Honestly, I've been a heavy linux guy for 15 years and I have never heard of this guy, or at least not have heard of him enough to recognize his nickname.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:who? by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 3, Funny

      Jeez, you should get out from under your rock more often. I especially like his work from the Texas Flood/Couldn't Stand the Weather years.

  7. Transcript by QuasiSteve · · Score: 5, Informative

    Title: How Has Reporting on Linux Changed in the Last Decade?
    Description: Steven J. Vaugh-Nichols, who has been writing about Linux nearly forever, explains how much covering it has changed - for the better. For one thing, he says, he no longer has to tell people what Linux is.

    [00:00] <TITLE>
    "Tech Journalist Steven J. Vaughn-Nichols" appears along with the SlashdotTV logo bar reading "How as reporting on Linux changed in the last 10 years?" over a view of the interviewee in what appears to be a private residence room.

    [00:02] Steven>
    The last decade, well, you know, the thing is, we've won.
    We haven't really realized it 'cos we didn't win the way that we thought we would, you know, marching down the streets of Redmond holding torches and Bill Gates fleeing, in a helicopter, petting a white cat as he goes, saying "I'll get you Mr. Linus, you and your little penguins, too!" - stay tuned for the sequel.
    As a result of that, reporting about it has also sort of changed.
    Once upon a time, if I were to write anything at all about Linux, I'd have to say what Linux is and go through a lot of background information.
    I don't need to do that anymore.
    Instead, what I have to do is, I have to remind people that, you know, Linux is everywhere.
    So it's a different sort of context.
    Also, when I wrote about Linux, it used to be I could assume that my audience was pretty technical - because nobody except techies really got into Linux.
    And, again, it's sort of different now.
    Everyone sort of knows about Linux, so I don't have to get really technical about it, but again I sort of have to remind them of where Linux is in today's computer world - which is, again, you know, it's everywhere.

    [01:30] <TITLE>
    The SlashdotTV logo bar with "What about Android?" fades in and out of view.

    [01:30] Steven>
    Android is actually, again, it's one of those areas that we're winning in.
    I mean, sure, all the excitement is about iPhones, but you know Linux - rather, Android - which, again, is just Linux - it's just an embedded Linux, that's all it is, folks! - is pretty much in all these devices.
    If you have a smartphone, if you have a tablet, if it's not an iPhone, if it's not an iPad, it's almost certainly running Android.
    The way I see it spinning out is, you know, people who just absolutely have to have that nifty, cool, Apple device.. okay, they're gonna buy that, they'll pay a premium for it.
    But for everybody else, it's going to be Android.

    [02:18] <TITLE>
    The SlashdotTV logo bar with "Is Oracle relevant to Linux?" fades in and out of view.

    [02:18] Steven>
    As far as the patents go, I've been following that pretty darn closely.
    Not as closely as Pamela Jones over at Groklaw does - and her friends.
    But, you know, the bottom line is.. out of all the patents that Oracle brought up against Android, only two of those remain.
    Of those two, their own expert came out and said "Well, the damages from this would probably come to something like, you know, maybe, maybe, high end $70M or $80M. If, if, Google is found guilty."
    Now, $70M or $80M, I mean that's a lot of money to you and me - but for companies the size of Google and Oracle?
    I mean, that's a hiccup.
    I mean, that's a footnote.
    If you wanna talk about a company that has actually made real money from Android and hasn't had a thing to do with it, the company you wanna talk about is Microsoft.
    Because they've got all these cross-licensing deals with the OEMs, because the OEMs are a little scared of Microsoft, so they'll just pay off these patent deals without actually trying to fight them.
    It wouldn't surprise me to know that Microsoft actually makes more money from Android than they do from their Windows Phone or Mobile CE or one of the other various mobile platforms they have now.
    Oracle, though - You know, it's turned into a non-story.

    [03:54] <TITLE>
    The SlashdotTV logo bar with "What about Oracle L

    1. Re:Transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      TL;DR, Too bad there isn't a video.

    2. Re:Transcript by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      Thank you very much sir! I was able to read that a whole lot faster than a video. And thank you for pointing out how I missed out on the annoying slashdot bars popping up and fading out of view. How irritating that would be.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  8. me too! by Thud457 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I rarely bother to look at a story on any site if it's just a link to a video.

    I mean, it's nice that we can (sort of) do video on the web now, but we don't need to use it for every damn thing. Video may be more engaging for most viewers, but you're forced to consume it at it's pace. You can't just leave a page open and dip in to read a paragraph or two in and idle moment. You can't really search within video. And most of the time, you need to have sound enabled to get the most out of a video.

    tl;dr - video has some advantages, but you lose a whole lot of what makes the web so goddamned useful.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  9. Ads in Videos by b5bartender · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If a stream starts with an Ad first, it's killed without being watched. End of story. The only thing worse are those web articles presented in "slideshow" format to maximize ad revenue.