Slashdot Mirror


Introducing SlashBI

By now you’ve noticed that Slashdot is growing. We recently introduced Slashdot TV, which offers up everything from “amateur” rocket launches to the return of Leisure Suit Larry. We revamped our newsletters. Now we’re launching some new sites devoted to very specific corners of tech. Our first one, SlashBI, focuses on the fast-changing world of business intelligence, and features articles and opinion pieces on everything from how Big Data and analytics could make salespeople extinct, to B.I. apps for your iOS device, to choosing the right database for a business. No matter what your background, chances are good you’ll find something of interest here. Swing on over, give it a look-see, and let us know what you think.

18 of 339 comments (clear)

  1. SlashBI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not to be confused with /b/

  2. Here we go by Anrego · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't even have any specific objections... this just feels wrong somehow. Maybe I'm cynical or just following the trend of slashdot pulse, sponsored "ask slashdot", slashtv, etc.. but this feels like when a big company buys out some site you like and runs it down the drain. Obviously that's not exactly what happened here, but I'm starting to think Cmdr. Taco leaving had the same effect.. like maybe he was holding back this tide.

    Right now it feels like the "gliding on legacy" phase.. coming soon is the "trying to gather new audience" stage.. then the "please come back, we're still cool and returning to our roots stage" and finally .. acceptance and forgiveness.

    I hope I'm wrong. I'd love to see slashdot return to its former glory.. or at least turn into something better than what it was. It managed to turn back from it's "digg" path a few years back.. maybe it can do the same here.

  3. slashdot news vs SlashVertisements by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How much of this will be paid content?

  4. Re:SlashBI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So Slashdot is turning into a blog site?

    Slashdot was a blog site before there were blog sites.

  5. Re:SlashBI by underqualified · · Score: 5, Funny

    SlashBI - News for Bisexual nerds. Stuff that matter.

  6. Re:SlashBI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can I suggest the sub-site SlashBiCurious, since some of us aren't really into BI but want to know more about it.

  7. Re:I'm going the way of Malda by PGC · · Score: 5, Funny

    But AC, you are the most active poster here. What would this site be without you... ?

    --
    The Dutch will inherit the earth. If not, we'll settle for a bit of ocean. Beta delenda est!
  8. Holy crap by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Has anyone actually looked at that site? Holy crap, that's all I can say. I'm floored. It has all the appeal to a longtime /. reader of a piece of dog shit on your shoe. I'm having a hard time understanding how it even came to exist. I'm actually really depressed now.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  9. What I think by Jim+Hall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think Taco exited at the right time. Also, I think I might be spending less time here, if Slashdot has started focusing on keywords like BI, and away from the core idea of "News for Nerds, Stuff That Matters", which is why we joined the site in the first place & kept coming back.

    1. Re:What I think by marcop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Couldn't agree more. This site is becoming forgettable. The news isn't all that interesting any longer. Slashdot used to be my central geek news site, but now I can find more geek news elsewhere, albeit across multiple sites.

      Editors... get back to the basics and do it the best in the industry. Then your site will grow. And while you're at it...moderation is going downhill too. Personal attacks are increasing and moderators mod them up as "interesting". The comments section is one of the main features of slashdot, but they are becoming less enjoyable to read.

  10. loss of focus by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Instead of doing more stuff, how about doing the stuff you should be doing better?

    There have been complaints about the editing and story selection - the core aspects of /. - for many years now. It may not be true, but this second side-project feels like confirmation that one of the reasons this has never been fixed is that you're simply trying to make more money with more stuff.

    I have taken a good look at this new offshot, and I can guarantee that it's the last look I have ever taken on it. I simply couldn't care less, even though I am the CEO of a small company, so I'm right there in your target audience.

    But I don't come to /. for "business intelligence" (more on that in a second) and I don't expect any from /. and I don't trust /. as a source of any. One of the reasons loops back to the beginning: If you are not doing an excellent job in your core business, why should I expect you to do a good job in an offshot project?

    As for "business intelligence" - that crap is a dime a dozen. If you want to enter the market, do something different. Like actual intelligence. The word largely means "information" these days, but it should mean more than that. A good intelligence source requires really good editing. And that is not exactly a strength of /.

    I hope this dies a quick death and you will learn that you need to make your core business brilliant before even thinking about doing anything else.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  11. SlashPHB by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Quick-hit tech items... check.
    No context... check.
    Lots of buzzwords... check.
    Lots of random, cool-looking stock photography having nothing to do with the stories... check.

    Why not just call this SlashPHB and be done with it?

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  12. Re:SlashBI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Next in line, SlashBS where we repost all the bullshit we posted last week so you can complain about dupes all day!

  13. If I were Slashdot by blind+biker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I were in charge of Slashdot, I'd rather concentrate on improving the quality of the posts - the summaries are eye-bleedingly horrid in every aspect. The only reason anyone ever comes to /. is the quality of some of the replies in the thread. That is, it's the readership that makes Slashdot valuable.

    Piss off your readership, and you pissed away Slashdot - since the quality of the content is otherwise rubbish.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  14. Re:SlashBI? by Howard+Beale · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slashdot - Nudes for Nerds, Sluts that Matter?

  15. Slashdot is dying, netcraft confirms it... by BlueBlade · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well folks, that's it, the beginning of the end. Instead of making sure the site stays attractive to hardcore geeks, the people who are managing slashdot are diluting its value by doing some blatant marketing pushes.

    I've been reading slashdot daily for what, 8 years now? Between the stupid "vlog" and all the latest attempts at being something it should not be, I think I'm going to be done with this site soon.

    Slashdot has always done only a few things, but these core qualities were done extremely well, making this site interesting for people like me.

    1. Keep the signal to noise ratio high. The moderation system has worked well to keep the SN ratio relatively high. Browsing at +2, when not moderating, keeps the discussion fairly clean and interesting. It's degraded a bit over the years, but I feel this is still slashdot's strongest point. Compared to sites like digg and reddit, slashdot discussions are mostly sane, polite and flame-free.

    2. By the virtue of point 1 above and being a site targeted at hardcore geeks, you often get to speak with people involved in the stories first-hand. Over the years, I read and participated in threads with some very smart, interesting people. On stories about solar powered car competitions, we had the participants pitch in. On stories about new wireless chips, we sometimes had the engineers who designed it comment. On stories about Star Trek, you had Wil Wheaton giving behind-the-scenes stories. This was possible because slashdot was a site where geeks felt comfortable having discussions. Over the last few years, slashdot has been slowly losing this quality.

    3. Clean, clutter-free interface that doesn't attempt to be anything else than a good place to discuss news stories of interest to geeks. Geeks like function over fluff and slashdot delivers. It doesn't need to be ugly, just functional and not distracting. All the crap you've been adding to the site of late is detracting from this. Things like the stupid videos or the "pulse" poll; blatant advertising barely disguised as something else.

    This is just one geek's opinion, but slashdot is slowly going in the wrong direction. I know that if you keep this up you're going to lose me as a reader, and I have the feeling I'm far from the only one.

    --
    Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
  16. Re:SlashBI? by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    How soon until Slashdot goes NSFW

    You don't browse at -1, do you?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  17. Re:SlashBI by postbigbang · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank you.

    Yet this is GeekNet's Jump The Shark moment, today, May 1, 2012, for anyone keeping track.

    Philosophically, News for Nerds, and the concept of what /. means now has another branding barnacle: BI. I understand BI, big data, and why. I see the horizon of words and phrases like: new paradigm, hadoop(y), your OpenStack engine, and other revenue-generating phrases.

    This is branding gone wrong, like putting a Continental kit onto a Kia Rio. We, the customers of /. aren't ideological customers of BIG DATA and BI. We're theorists, engineers, completely whacked out of our mind gamers, and people that make antennas with Pringles cans. I'm shocked that the publishers would believe that they can somehow meld these two concepts together. It's really frightening that they're trying as BI would have told them: only a subsection of /. readers give a rat's patootie about BI, and BI's been around for more than a decade in one form or another.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.