Print Isn't Dead: How Linux Voice Crowdfunded a New Magazine
M-Saunders (706738) writes The death of print has been predicted for years, and many magazines and publishers have taken a big hit with the rise of eBooks and tablets. But not everyone has given up. Four geeks quit their job at an old Linux magazine to start Linux Voice, an independent GNU/Linux print and digital mag with a different publishing model: giving profits and content back to the community. Six months after a successful crowdfunding campaign, the magazine is going well, so here is the full story.
This is like the 4th story on "four guys who quit some magazine no one ever heard of start a new magazine no one will read"
https://www.google.com/search?...
They have like 3k subs. Can we agree not to give them a story until they get 50k or 100k subs?
They are using Slashdot as a promotional platform and place to farm refs for Wikipedia.
Linux is great. These 4 guys don't matter.
PCMagazine, unarguably the finest computer mag, second only to PC World, could not make it in print, neither will this. Advertisers need BUYERS and if it's one thing Linux users don't do it is BUY.
:Windows lusers don't buy either:
But they make it up in volume. 45.000 percent more would attract the best of the best, not the freetard crap let loose to those of your particular demonination, of which there are several, and what complany is going to do a dozen or more Linux versions when a single windows version captures 10.000 sales to every 1 of your demoniation. The same that do a Linux print magazine is your answer.
Could you not do overly dramatic headlines on the front cover, please.
Last issue had "Learn to Hack" in massive yellow text.
Right in the middle of the News Corp phone hacking trial, the Snowden leaks, some police evidence tampering stories, as well as a few other computer security related things in the press at the time.
My postman avoids me now....
Just a friendly suggestion,
Ta
At least "Windows: The Official Magazine" is doing fine. I can easily speed up my sluggish OS, and if that's not enough, I can fix any problem, and as the ace in the sleeve I can find out how to reinstall Windows in just 1 hour. Once again we can see, that if I am in the proprietary software domain, information is easily available, and my workflow is never interrupted.
I was glad to see them succeed, and it's an interesting mix of "old" print media, and the "new" social networking and crowd funding. Like crowd funding a new 8bit arcade game, but less hipster ironic.
Anyway, I prefer the Hobgoblin myself. Pool tables, you see.
Syllable : It's an Operating System
I love the magazine. Great content. However...
I currently have 4 unopened on my desk. Instead of the paper version, I read the pdf versions while I was out and about.
I still read the dead tree in occasionally, it is great in my bathroom, but print is dying.
Also Linux Voice guys, great job but please get some proof reading in there. Sometimes the articles are almost impossible to parse.
Thanks!
Signature v3.0, now with 42% less memory usage.
I love linux periodicals, but the ones from Europe always seem to be extremely pricey, at least to US customers. For print, I intuitively understand that, but the digital-only prices always seem high to me.
1-Year US/Canada Subscription: 95 GBP == 162.13 US Dollar
1-Year Digital Subscription: 38 GBP == 64.86 US Dollar
I keep looking at Linux Format, but that has even higher digital-only prices.
My impulse buy point for digital subscriptions is maybe $50/year.
For comparison, I looked up a subscription I do have:
Linux Journal offers 24 issues for $49.50. I suppose it's more advertising-supported, but still.
Oh well. I'm glad that these periodicals exist, and I hope they do well enough to hang around. :-)
So far, it's the best Linux magazine on the market, period. I also subscribe to Linux format and Ubuntu User, but Linux voice IS the best of them. Really recommended if you havn't read it.