Hackaday For Sale, Editors Seek Crowd Funding To Buy It
ilikenwf writes "Hackaday's owner, Jason Calacanis, has decided to sell the popular hacking/modding site for around $540,000. Multiple parties are interested; the most promising buyer at the moment appears to be the current editors, who are attempting to buy the site via crowdsourcing and incorporate it under a nonprofit to keep the hacks flowing. One way or another, the site should survive."
good luck with that.
What exactly does it mean to "buy" a blog? Are they wanting to pay half a mil for a domain name? Is the content really worth half a million bucks? Or, are people just stupid when it comes to trying to put a dollar value on anything Internet related? It seems like a lovely little blog, but I don't see how any sane person could come up with a $500,000 valuation for it.
I don't respond to AC's.
So the way I see it, the campaign initiator is asking a whole bunch of supporters to buy this site for him at a cost of $540000, the contributors will not be part owners or have any say in the direction the site is run. They'll just get some trinkets in return, stickers, T shirts or some free advertising for a year.
Why is the owner an asshole?
Presumably, he's spend quite a lot of his own time and money building and growing the site.
Whether it's worth the money he asks for it, is upto the market to decide. Apparently the editors think it is.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
That's the article title they should have used.
Just wanted to say I don't have a stake in this either way, and I'm not contributing anywhere. I read Hackaday and live near Caleb Craft, and thus enjoy taking a peek from time to time.
No you're totally off it's better than that just not 540,000$ better
If Hackaday shuts down, why don't the editors fire up another one and use their experience to compete with all the other sites that will spring up to take its place? It's not as if the Hackaday site is based on some complex or difficult-to-reproduce web site technology. People will always be making cool stuff, and will always be looking for a place to talk about the cool stuff they are making.
I've read hackaday for years.
A couple weeks ago on July 1st, Caleb Kraft announced he was leaving and the site went for sale on the same day.
This was kinda suspicious for both things to happen at the same time especially because Caleb never explained why he left. HOWEVER, Caleb has posted to his personal site that he's started a new job at EETimes.com. Not sure why that was worth keeping secret.
Still, the whole thing feels like the current owner is holding the site for ransom. The way it is being explained is that the profits from hackaday are being poured into other weblogs, but if this campaign is successful, a non-profit will be formed and advertising profits will be poured back into the site.
I don't understand why they don't just buy a new domain. The freakin site is made with wordpress, who cares, the community can migrate.
As a site builder, I can understand wanting to sell it for $megabux and retire or at least pay off the house. As a somewhat frequent visitor to hackaday, there are a lot of nice kewel hacks (arduino, raspberry pi) that is more technical than ./ covers (knowing about fan-in, fan-out, identifying types of transistors, resistors, capacitors, fuseable links, prom/eprom/eeprom, watchdog timers, etc. I like the hacks, and a total for-profit company would kill the site (banning some contributors, allowing hacks on some hardware to get published, but not others, etc. A crowdsourced, open site would be best.
I like hackaday, been following it for years. But now that it is for sale, i might as well forget it. 99% that some corporation is going to buy it and ruin it.
Makers are big, hacking is big, somewhat popular site based on those 2? Ya, corporation is going to fuck it till it bleeds, then leave it for something else.
Be seeing you...
He's a pretty douchy constant self-promoter and bragger. I also remember one of the few times I've sat around watching the TWiT (This Week In Tech) network with Leo Laporte and he was on it (the $10m/yr indie podcasting network with like 20+ shows and like 40 hours of content a week) and he asked him if he could use "This Week In..." for ONE of his shows that he wanted to do on his own network.
Next thing you know, JC was building an entire network of his own where EVERYTHING was "This Week In..."
That's pretty fucking low and douchey.
You just make sure I get a share of the revenue. Until then, fuck you and your kickstarter.