WebProNews

Tag: slashdot

  • Amazon’s Open Programming Jobs Have Dropped by 32,000+

    Amazon’s Open Programming Jobs Have Dropped by 32,000+

    Amazon’s open programming jobs have dropped to a paltry 299, down from 32,692 in May of 2022.

    Amazon has been freezing hiring over the last couple of months and is laying off some 18,000 employees. As a tech company, Amazon might be expected to still have a plethora of software development jobs open but, as pointed out by a Slashdot reader, that number has dropped by more than 32,000 in the last seven months.

    Amazon’s software development jobs page still touts the exciting career opportunities available with the company…there’s just a lot less of them.

    We’re looking for software engineers who want to invent, build, and sometimes break things to make them easier, faster, better, and more cost-effective. To those who thrive at solving highly complex problems, and who aspire to impact billions of lives on a global scale: come build the future with us.

  • Rise From the Ashes: LimeWire May Return From the Grave

    Rise From the Ashes: LimeWire May Return From the Grave

    LimeWire may be returning from the grave, as a completely different type of app than it once was.

    LimeWire was once one of the most popular peer-to-peer file sharing apps, before being shut down over legal issues. Slashdot has learned the brand may be coming back, this time “as a digital collectibles marketplace for music.”

    The new company is currently in talks with various artists in an effort to secure exclusive partnerships, with a possible launch date in May.

    There are no further details are available.

  • Dice Holdings Buys Slashdot, SourceForge and Freecode For $20 Million

    Dice Holdings has acquired the online media business of Geeknet. This includes such notable tech sites as Slashdot, SourceForge and Freecode.

    The acquisition price is $20 million, which the companies say is the same amount the properties generated in revenue in 2011.

    In case you’re unfamiliar with the sites, Slashdot is a user-generated tech news site. You used to hear the term “slashdotted” a lot, when as site got so much traffic from the site that its servers crashed. There’s actually a sizable Wikipedia entry about the “Slashdot Effect”.

    SourceForge is an open sources software site for developers, and Freecode is a large index of Linux, Unix and cross-platform software and mobile apps.

    Slashdot gets over 5,300 comments a day and 3.7 million unique visitors per month. SourceForge gets 40 million unique monthly visitors, and about 80% of them are from outside of the United States, according to Geeknet. Freecode gets about 500,000 unique visitors per month.

    “The acquisition of these premier technology sites fits squarely into our strategy of providing content and services that are important to tech professionals in their everyday work lives,” said Dice Holdings Chairman, President and CEO Scot Melland. “The SourceForge and Slashdot communities will enable our customers to reach millions of engaged tech professionals on a regular basis and significantly extends our company’s reach into the global tech community.”

    “We are very pleased to find a new home for our media business, providing a platform for the sites and our media teams to thrive,” said Geeknet Chairman Ken Langone. “With this transaction completed, we will now focus our full attention on growing ThinkGeek.”

    ThinkGeek is Geeknet’s online shopping site…for geeks.

  • Geeknet to Sale Slashdot, SourceForge?

    Thanks to announcement from Geeknet, there’s speculation that the company could be selling some incredibly notable web properties in an effort to “maximize shareholder value,” meaning stalwart sites like SourceForge, Slashdot, and Freecode may soon be for sale. While we are still in the speculation stage, the idea of Slashdot and SourceForge changing owners, and the unknown alterations that usually come when ownership shifts, is a little surprising.

    The news of these potential sales was made public via a Geeknet press release, which spells out the motivations behind the idea. Naturally, it’s all about money:

    Ken Langone, Chairman and CEO of Geeknet, stated, “After much discussion, our management team and Board of Directors have decided to begin a formal review of our media business to realize the full potential of these valuable assets and maximize shareholder value. With more than 46 million total unique visitors last month, our media properties have a large community of engaged users and we are committed to creating the best online experience for them.”

    While Geeknet’s properties may have been reduced to more of a niche site, with their high popularity days seemingly behind them, as the statement shows, they still draw respectable amounts of traffic. Furthermore, Slashdot still maintains a consistent amount of input from users that have stayed the course the with news aggregate/forum-based commenting system.

    When you consider Digg’s fate after Kevin Rose exited with money in his pocket, the idea of these properties changing hands is almost unfortunate.

    That’s not to say the potential new owners will gut these services by favoring content from big-name publications instead of relying on user submissions, but then again, considering the aftermath of Digg, it’s understandable where there would be apprehension from the loyal users. Furthermore, when you consider these properties are still viable, traffic-wise (46 million uniques in April), such a change in ownership could cause massive defections, perhaps to the waiting arms of Reddit.

    As pointed out by TheNextWeb, despite these good traffic numbers, Geeknet lost money:

    Earlier this month, the company announced financial results for the first quarter of 2012. During the quarter, Geeknet booked revenues of $22.3 million, compared to $19.9 million in Q1, 2011. However, the company posted a net loss of $2.1 million.

    With that in mind, does it make sense for Geeknet to cut their loses and make whatever money they can from these still-popular web properties? If so, how does the idea of Slashdot, SourceForge, and Freecode being under new ownership strike you?

  • Slashdot Launches SlashdotTV

    Slashdot Launches SlashdotTV

    Slashdot, the tech-related news site owned by Geeknet, Inc., announced today the launch of SlashdotTV, its first dedicated business-to-business technology video channel.

    slashdottv

    SlashdotTV offers access to a wide library of video content surrounding its highly engaged community of IT influencers. Users can browse content grouped by a number of criteria – title, subject, popularity and featured videos picked by SlashdotTV moderators.

    Geeknet Media Vice President and Editor-in-Chief Stephen Wellman states that “SlashdotTV represents an evolution of the Slashdot site experience.” He adds, “since first launching video in January this year, we have seen tremendous growth in the numbers of video views and engagement. The launch of SlashdotTV gives our readers a deeper way to engage with the tech news stories and a great complement to our existing social commenting experience.”

    About Slashdot:

    Slashdot is the first and leading social media destination for
    technology professionals and IT decision makers. Slashdot’s highly
    engaged community of IT influencers share and socialize hundreds of
    pieces of content every day, including news, analysis, peer questions,
    and professional insight. Slashdot is a website of Geeknet Media, a
    wholly owned subsidiary of Geeknet Inc. (Nasdaq:GKNT).

    Hat tip to Geeknet Inc.

  • Rob “CmdrTaco” Malda Has Resigned from Slashdot

    Founder and editor-in-chief Rob Malda, better known as CmdrTaco, has resigned from Slashdot.

    After 14 years and over 15,000 stories posted, it’s finally time for me to say Good-Bye to Slashdot. I created this place with my best friends in a run down house while still in college. Since then it has grown to be read by more than a million people, and has served Billions and Billions of Pages (yes, in my head I hear the voice). During my tenure I have done my best to keep Slashdot firmly grounded in its origins, but now it’s time for someone else to come aboard and find the *future*“, CmdrTaco posted on Slashdot.

    Slashdot began when Rob Malda and Jeff Bates created it while undergraduates of Hop College. Eventually the site wound up in the hands of VA Linux Systems, where Malda ran it out of the SourceForge Inc. office in Dexter, Michigan. Though Malda has held numerous titles and roles over the years, he’s stated that his main role was just to “Make Slashdot Great“.

    For those hoping that CmdrTaco would be sticking around in some capacity, he’s not. Essentially after he uploaded his resignation post to Slashdot, he lost his ability to post anything further. He states that’ll he’ll submit stories form time-to-time, but there is no guarantee they’ll make the cut.

    As part of my resignation, after this story appears I will lose the ability to post. For me, this is the most bitter pill to swallow. Posting stories has always been my favorite part of the job. I created Slashdot to share these stories with my friends from IRC and school. It was never ‘work’. Now I will have to go cold turkey. I’m walking away from the soapbox I built. I wish I could continue to post stories forever, but those closest to me know that if I maintained the ability to post, I’d never move on. I’ll continue to read Slashdot and hopefully my occasional story submissions will make the cut. My old mantra: News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters still holds true here today. Nobody does it better.

    During his tenure CmdrTaco has seen some amazing events cross the front page of Slashdot. “The explosion of Linux. The rise of Google. The return of Apple. The Dot Com Bubble. The DMCA. 9/11. Wars. Elections. Numerous successful Shuttle Launches and one Disaster. Scientific Breakthroughs galore. Cool toys. Web2.0! Social Networking. Blogging! Podcasting! Micro-Blogging! The Lord of the Rings being filmed and an entire trilogy of new Star Wars.” But the most important to him was his proposal to his longtime girlfriend Kathleen Fent, which he did via the front page of Slashdot on February 14th, 2002.

    It’s pretty fitting that CmdrTaco ended his last post as editor-in-chief with the line “thanks to every Slashdot reader for giving me your time all these years. I hope I’ve wasted it efficiently and enjoyably.

    It’s unclear at this time who will be named the new editor-in-chief, but they will no doubt have some big shoes to fill.