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Thanks For Reading: 15 Years of News For Nerds

Slashdot turns 15 this month! You may have noticed that we’ve swapped out the usual logo for the first of the reader-contributed designs we'll be featuring this month. (If you think you have a better idea, we'd love to see it; all artists whose designs we choose to run will get Slashdot anniversary T-shirts, and one will get a Nexus 7 tablet.) We're also happy to announce an overdue feature here on Slashdot: a blog with information from the developers and editors. We'll use it to provide updates and background information about the site's development (for instance, new features or fixed bugs, or changes in the user interface), and try to answer reader questions about the site at greater length than the FAQ. Shameless tease: today, you can read about the launch of Slashdot mobile in the inaugural post. We might use the blog to expound on story choice or to make non-critical announcements, too. You probably don't come to Slashdot generally to read about Slashdot, though, so don't worry &mdash the blog will live safely and quietly in the background until you want to read it. Since this is a new feature, we're still working out exactly how it should best be used, so feel free to make suggestions below on what you'd like to see. Between now and the end of October, look for a passel of other treats, too, starting with an interview with Woz later today. We hope you'll get together with other readers at one of the many parties planned for later this month, also. Slashdot exists for and because of everyone who reads the site; thank you for being part of it.

19 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Congratulations by frank_carmody · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To everyone involved, on both sides of the fence!

    The new logo is really great BTW.

    1. Re:Congratulations by Foske · · Score: 5, Funny

      As a real nerd I have to object. Endianness is all about the order of equal-sized elements in a larger container. In the most popular form, it is about the order of bytes within a larger (16, 32 or 64) word. Hence, assuming every character is stored as a byte, the logo should be

      todhsalS (64 bit), salShtodh (32 bit) or lSsadhto (16 bit).

      This logo is not a correct representation of any little endianness stored Slashdot, not even on 24 bit machines.

    2. Re:Congratulations by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Funny

      You, sir, are definitely in the right place.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
  2. Haha by Life2Death · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The title gives the impress "thanks for reading, we're shutting down /. kthxbi"

    as always, tl;dr

    1. Re:Haha by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      The new corporate overlords thought that one lie ('news') per tag line was as many as their lawyers were comfortable with.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  3. Thanks by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank you Slashdot. You created one of the greatest communities on the internet. Yeah, it is a community, despite the fact that we mostly argue with each other all the time :-) No other site comes close to being as insightful and interesting, and occasionally hilarious.

    I'm sure there will be lots of "Slashdot is dying" posts, but I think it is more of an inevitable change. Long gone as the Emacs vs. vi holy wars, to be replaced with the Android vs. iOS wars. How long ago the late 90s seem now.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:Thanks by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Funny

      3 obvious points about that:
      1. I'll believe /. is dying when Netcraft confirms it.

      2. Your preferred $EDITOR sucks. Mine rocks.

      3. I want Natalie Portman naked and petrified in hot grits.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    2. Re:Thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      In Soviet Russian, Natalie Portman pours hot grits on YOU.

    3. Re:Thanks by MtViewGuy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What I find fascinating is that how much the influence of UNIX has become in today's computing landscape since Slashdot started 15 years ago. After all, Apple's MacOS X runs off a UNIX kernel variant named Mach, and both iOS and Android runs off UNIX-like kernels. In short, the dream of running UNIX on consumer devices has become reality, though in a way nobody expected.

      Congratulations on 15 years of one of the most influential places on the Internet, and may you be around for its 30th anniversary. We do miss Rob Malda (CmdrTaco) and his stewardship of Slashdot, though.

    4. Re:Thanks by drjzzz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "I don't think many people realize just how many embedded devices run Linux or BSD."

      True. I've seen a couple airplane entertainment systems booting recently (normal startups, not reboots) and was a little surprised to recognize many of the usual daemons waking up. In contrast, I've seen a number of information screens in lobbies of hotels or office buildings stuck on a crashed Windows error message. Once upon a time, such a contrast would have cheered slashdotters but now it's just the way it is. So long Windows, and thanks for all the BSODs (in keeping with the thread above).

      --
      to err is human, to forgive is divine, to forget is... umm...
    5. Re:Thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I, for one, welcome our hot grit pouring Portmans from Russia Overlords.

  4. No, thank you! by johnsnails · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No thank you /. for enabling me to be across such a wide range of technology issues, it actually helps earn boss respect to be across so many things that I attribute to /. news.

  5. Thanks for all the fish... by Spectrumanalyzer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank you for bringing me a community with people that are more than willing to give me sleepless nights.
    Thank you for giving me a reason to surf on the job, just to check if that rat bastard Anonymous Coward has brought insult to my name, once more.
    Thank you for bringing us a site that is immediately quoted on a bazillion dupe wannabee sites once it gets slashdotted.
    Thank you for reminding me that I am a geek, no matter where I work, whom I work for - ultimatively Im really your bitch and nobody else.
    Thank you for occasionally making me a moderator and handing me anything between 5 to 15 moderator points just to take it away from me a few days later, just to tell me that every geek is created equal.
    Thank you for posting subjects making it possible to discuss no one else but us geeks would ever dream of discussing.

    And ultimatively...

    Thank you for being the one and only site out there, reminding us all of - that we have no life, really - we dont! ;)

  6. Slashdot on 9/11 by lateral · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'll never forget September 11th 2001 on Slashdot. When I first heard the news that somebody had flown a plane into the World Trade Centre I reflexively checked the BBC website. It was unreachable - completely swamped. I checked CNN and that was swamped too. I went to Slashdot and they were reporting it and available so on-and-off I followed the story on Slashdot and on TV all day.

    By the evening on the TV they had already gathered their pundits and reduced the days events to a continuous 10 second loop of a plane hitting a building. It was already starting to look like a music video.

    Meanwhile on slashdot there were real conversations going on with real people who had been there, seen it or been affected by it. I remember one comment in particular - somebody wrote about psychologists being dispatched (volunteering I think) to go to school bus stops to tell some of the waiting kids that their parents were dead.

    L.

  7. How about joining the 21st century? by Zarhan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know, like implementing things like IPv6 and UTF-8 support.

  8. Long missed feature by Vintermann · · Score: 5, Interesting

    so don't worry &mdash

    Speaking of, when will we get unicode support?

    --
    xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  9. Re:dayummm by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Informative

    My sig points to some research I did to answer this question.

    EDIT: For those of you not logged in, the sig says http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  10. Slashdot: a better example of what the net can be by concealment · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having had legitimate posts downvoted to "Flamebait" for offending community pretense, I'm not going to pretend Slashdot is a Utopia. People are still people, and people are still stupid, even when they're smart. On the internet, this all gets turned up to 11.

    However, Slashdot is a better example of what the net can be than "social networking" like Facebook, Myspace, Digg, Fark, Reddit, etc. These sites are clustered around the idea of people socializing through the internet. As a nerd, I think that's foolish. You socialize around being a person who likes to be with other people, and you find people who you respect.

    A lot has changed in the past 15 years. UNIX is now mainstream, running on thousands of devices. Even more, computer technology and networking are now mainstream, with ordinary people navigating wi-fi hotspots and even writing code for their phones. What once was special and unique is no longer so removed from the experience of normal people.

    I miss CmdrTaco and his guidance, but think the team is doing a good job. That's fortunate, as they have quite a task ahead of them: remaining focused on what it is they do well in a world that has surged past their original mission, and now needs new types of guidance with new uses of technology.

  11. My post for 2012 by davidu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I guess this is an appropriate post for me to comment in. Nice work Slashdot, still going strong.

    --

    # Hack the planet, it's important.