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Fifteen years of LWN

By Jonathan Corbet
January 23, 2013
Sometime around mid-1997, your editor and Liz Coolbaugh were discussing ways in which one might go about starting a business around the Linux operating system. As we watched the Unix wars and awaited the arrival of the universally-proclaimed operating system of the future (a thing called "Windows NT"), we realized that Linux was the best hope there was for those who wished to avoid a future dominated by proprietary, closed systems. Linux seemed to be going somewhere in a time when Unix-based systems as a whole were beginning to struggle, and we wanted to help it get there. And besides, working with Linux was a lot of fun.

The idea we went with was to form a support company joined into Red Hat's ill-fated support partner network. But how were we going to attract customers — and keep busy while waiting for those customers to show up? The idea we came up with was simple enough: start a web-based newsletter to help the world keep up with what was happening in the insanely fast-moving Linux world (the linux-kernel list sometimes carried a shocking 100 messages in a single day back then) and, at the same time, inform that world of just how clever and on top of the situation we were.

So that is what we set out to do. The first LWN.net server went on the net in January, 1998, though we would not acquire that domain until much later that year. It ran on an old machine in your editor's basement and served its content over a single ISDN line. We published the January 22 issue when we had something that looked somewhat reasonable, thus establishing the Thursday publication cycle without any conscious thought on the matter. One week later, with a second issue written (headlined by the timely announcement that the Netscape browser would be open-sourced), we sent a message to the comp.os.linux.announce newsgroup telling the world of our existence, and life was never the same thereafter.

Like many business plans, ours failed to survive contact with the real world; a number of its successors fared no better. But, through it all, we kept LWN going. It didn't take long for the ISDN line to prove inadequate, even on a site with almost no image content at all. Linux began to take off for real as it led the final wave of the dotcom boom; LWN's readership rose with it. Eventually we realized that, while our various business schemes never seemed to get far, people were always interested in LWN. Far too late, we figured out that, perhaps, LWN was the business we'd been trying to build all along.

So, toward the end of 1999, we set ourselves to that task in earnest. Our long-suffering readers have heard much about our ups and downs over the years, but, by one obvious metric, LWN is a success: fifteen years after that first issue, LWN.net is still here. There is no shortage of work to do or things to improve, but somehow we seem to have found a way to do enough right to stick around.

We have watched Linux grow from a "hobbyist" system that few took seriously into the platform on which much of the world's computing is based. When we started, the number of people paid to work on Linux could perhaps have been tracked efficiently with an eight-bit variable; now it would be hard to even begin to guess how big the Linux employment market is. We have seen companies try to FUD Linux out of existence; others have tried to claim ownership of it. And we've seen Linux survive these challenges and more; Linux, too, is still here.

When LWN started, the community had no real idea of how to run a free software project involving hundreds or thousands of people. Those that tried often ran into trouble; the kernel process choked several times while others, like the project to make a workable browser out of the Netscape code, often seemed on the verge of collapsing under their own weight. The evolution of our software over the last fifteen years has been impressive, but the evolution of our community is doubly so. We can now take on projects that seemed unattainable even in the middle of dotcom boom optimism.

Fifteen years ago, we were a small, youthful band that thought it could change the world and have fun in the process. It is fair to say that both objectives were achieved nicely. Now we are numerous, older, professional, and tightly tied into the market economy; the wild-west days are mostly behind us. There will be plenty of work to do on Linux for a long time, but one might well ask: are our days of changing the world done?

The answer to that question is almost certainly "no." We have, at this point, succeeded in the creation of a large body of software that is not under the control of any one person or company. That software now forms the platform used for the growing swarm of ubiquitous devices; as these devices get smaller and cheaper, they will only become more prevalent. We have established the expectation that the code for these devices should be available and free, and we have promoted the idea that the devices themselves should be open and hackable. But we have not yet fully created the basis for free computing and, with it, a more free society. There is a lot of work to be done yet in that area.

When LWN got its start, our community's objective was simple, create a freer, better Unix. We have long since crossed that one off the list; now we need a better operating system for the devices — and the challenges — of the future. The problem is that we don't yet know what that operating system needs to look like. Unix embodies a great many solid design principles, but a system that was designed for slow terminals on minicomputers cannot be expected to be ideal for a phone handset, much less for hardware that we cannot yet envision. The system must evolve, perhaps in ways that cause it to diverge considerably from its Unix roots. Guiding that evolution without fragmenting our community or losing our focus on freedom will be one of our biggest challenges in the coming years.

The next fifteen years, in other words, promise to be just as interesting as the last fifteen were; here at LWN, we plan to continue to be a part of our community as those years play out. LWN, too, will need to evolve to best meet the community's needs, but, like Linux, we will evolve while keeping that community's values at heart. Thousands of you, the best readers one could possibly ask for, have sustained us for these years and helped to keep us honest. It is our hope to serve all of you even better in the coming years. It has been quite a ride; thank you all for letting us be a part of it. We are looking forward to seeing where it takes us next.


to post comments

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 2:26 UTC (Thu) by mezcalero (subscriber, #45103) [Link] (1 responses)

Congratulations for the first 15 years! Here's to the next 15!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 31, 2013 7:17 UTC (Thu) by kragil (guest, #34373) [Link]

It would be great to get Linus to write one article for the 20th birthday.
But anyways, congrats!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 2:29 UTC (Thu) by jschrod (subscriber, #1646) [Link]

Congrats to your 15th birthday, and here's for you staying in business and providing us with the best Linux news ever, like you did for the last 15 years!!!

Joachim
(getting 51 today, although two days to late to be on the same day :-))

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 2:47 UTC (Thu) by jcm (subscriber, #18262) [Link] (4 responses)

Here here! Hope we're drinking beer in 6 years from now when you're old enough :)

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 9:26 UTC (Thu) by Seegras (guest, #20463) [Link] (3 responses)

You know, this makes me cringe. It's 16 for drinking beer in the rest of the world...

Anyway, congratulations!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 13:02 UTC (Thu) by philipstorry (subscriber, #45926) [Link] (2 responses)

18 in the UK.

But we can give our children alcohol at home from the age of five, as it's assumed that their drinking will be supervised.

Anyway, this is pedantry, and I shall apologise and make up for it with an anecdote...

I suspect my first drink was at around the age of five or six. I don't remember the age precisely, but I do remember the drink - a brandy. My gran gave it to me to try to make me sleepy whilst I was hyperactive.

(All she got was a drunk hyperactive child. At first this was deemed a failure, but it soon became clear that a drunk hyperactive child asks the most delightfully improper questions, and the amusement this provided meant it was actually a success.)

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 21:27 UTC (Thu) by man_ls (guest, #15091) [Link]

18 in Spain too. It seems that the drunker the country, the later it lets its children start drinking, to overcompensate.

My personal anecdote is far sadder: when I was 7 or 8 I used to sneak to the fridge and get a nice gulp of red table wine. Not enough to get drowsy or tipsy, but just to taste it. And it tasted great! Now I'm more of a beer person, and I have mostly abandoned liquors (thank god, they are awful inventions).

Anyway, happy birthday, LWN!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 31, 2013 18:48 UTC (Thu) by Wol (subscriber, #4433) [Link]

I was too young to remember my first drink. According to my mum, my parents were drinking sherry and I wanted to try. "He won't like it" said my dad and gave me a sip. I promptly wanted more ...

How old was I? Months, not years!

Cheers,
Wol

I remember...

Posted Jan 24, 2013 5:09 UTC (Thu) by kena (subscriber, #2735) [Link] (8 responses)

Printing out the weekly edition -- along with the week's worth of Freshmeat that you used to put out. I'd learn about some new facet or other -- be it a journaling FS, or whether the kernel should use BitKeeper or not. It was all so daring -- even exciting. A *nix-based OS was really beginning to make inroads! I think it is safe to say that LWN has offered an awesome platform both for the dissemination of FOSS info, but also for us to comment on the stories, and learn from the others in its fantastic userbase. I remember despairing -- if understanding -- your decision to pull the plug, followed shortly by my elation that that would not be required.

Keep up the fantastic work, Jon, and everyone else. I look forward to n more years of LWN!

I remember...

Posted Jan 24, 2013 20:46 UTC (Thu) by jonabbey (guest, #2736) [Link] (6 responses)

Oh, hey, I was the person who joined LWN right after you, neat!

I wonder how many of the early subscribers are still around?

I remember...

Posted Jan 24, 2013 23:20 UTC (Thu) by nas (subscriber, #17) [Link]

Still here. Congratulations the the LWN crew!

I remember...

Posted Jan 25, 2013 1:14 UTC (Fri) by kena (subscriber, #2735) [Link] (1 responses)

Wow. *Right* after. That is funny. Honestly, I gotta think LWN turnover is lower than most sites: we are here because there is simply nothing nearly as good in its particular market segment. I'm no kernel hacker, but reading Jon's kernel column is top-notch stuff, and the signal:noise ratio in comments is almost always very, very good. Hell -- I would even go so far as to say LWN played a role in Samba4 finally shipping.

Throw in some Grumpy Editor reviews, top-notch staffers and other contributors, and why would folks like us ever leave? ;-)

-Ken D'Ambrosio

I remember...

Posted Jan 25, 2013 19:56 UTC (Fri) by nix (subscriber, #2304) [Link]

Quite so. There *are* things I'd spend my money on before I spent it on LWN, but that's things like food, heat, power, and network service -- things without which an LWN subscription is useless.

I remember...

Posted Feb 5, 2013 23:23 UTC (Tue) by Baylink (guest, #755) [Link]

I have a 4 digit Slashdot user number, and a 3 digit Metafilter one; forget where I am here. :-P

And for me, that childhood experience was "can I have some of that [vodka martini]?"

Only part I liked was the olives... which is still true today (I'm a rum and bourbon drinker now, when I drink at all, which is rare).

Happy Anniversary, Jon and Company! Keep up the good work.

I remember...

Posted Feb 5, 2013 23:52 UTC (Tue) by rgmoore (✭ supporter ✭, #75) [Link] (1 responses)

I think the user ID system came a few years after the site started, so the ordering of low numbers is more a result of who happened to get there early on the day signups started than who has been here for the absolute longest. That's the only way I can explain having such a low number. I have obviously been here for a long time, but certainly not since anywhere close to day one.

I remember...

Posted Feb 5, 2013 23:58 UTC (Tue) by corbet (editor, #1) [Link]

User ID's started at 1 (which some selfish insider naturally snarfed) when the "new" site code was first deployed in June, 2002. Some of the lowest numbers belong to members of the Quixote mailing list who helped us test the code before we switched over; after that, it's just a matter of who created accounts first. We didn't expose them for some years, but they have existed for as long as this version of the site has.

I remember...

Posted Feb 1, 2013 12:36 UTC (Fri) by ajmacleod (guest, #1729) [Link]

This was me, too - I used to print out the one page edition for reading on the train home on Fridays. Funnily enough I was "tidying" old stuff on my hard disk the other day and came across one of those LWN pages, from 1999. It was probably more interesting reading it the second time round, with all these years of hindsight!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 5:35 UTC (Thu) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link] (2 responses)

Congrats. Would it possible to say license all the older articles under CC-BY-SA after sometime has passed? I think a lot of the content would be reused if freed.

CC-BY-SA

Posted Jan 24, 2013 14:24 UTC (Thu) by corbet (editor, #1) [Link] (1 responses)

That has been on the list for years. There are various grungy details to deal with, like getting the copyright notices right (and carefully not relicensing stuff we don't have the right to), but it's not that hard. Meanwhile we routinely grant such rights to specific articles when people ask; I don't think we've ever turned anybody down.

Why not a book

Posted Jan 31, 2013 21:44 UTC (Thu) by nhasan (guest, #1699) [Link]

Jon,

First congrats. LWN always feels home to me. Here is a suggestion: Why not publish the best kernel articles as a book series? Maybe one volume every year? In today's world, self publishing is not that hard and you already have a distribution channel :)

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 5:43 UTC (Thu) by parys (guest, #32756) [Link]

Congratulations!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 6:01 UTC (Thu) by ghane (guest, #1805) [Link]

The first Linux book I bought was by Jon Corbet, in 1999 or so. Device Drivers. I was trying to convince a software development company that there was money to be made writing applications on a Linux platform. At that time I had absolutely no idea who he was.

The first person I invited for the 2001 Singapore Linux Conference was Liz Coolbaugh (by this time I was avidly reading LWN). You can see her writeup at: http://lwn.net/2001/features/Singapore/

Unfortunately, the 2002 event collapsed, which in hindsight I justify by saying that this proved Linux had arrived, as only minority groups form clan associations, the majority needs no lobby group :-)

I strongly recommend LWN to colleagues, 20 mins a week reading LWN enables you to sound knowledgeable at meetings!

Congratulations, and good luck ahead (I remember the scare 6 years ago as LWN talked of shutting down).

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 9:47 UTC (Thu) by stevan (guest, #4342) [Link]

Many congratulations. As it happens, LWN's early days parallel my own live deployment of Linux systems, which date from pretty much that time. I have never forgotten the sense of wonder that all was running as intended in a corporate environment, followed by the sense of achievement when I realised it was all far better than I had hoped. I hope you feel the same about LWN.

Thanks for being there during all that time, and it's timely too to thank all the contributors to Linux itself as well as LWN who have made my and so many other lives better.

S

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 10:48 UTC (Thu) by nelljerram (subscriber, #12005) [Link]

Congratulations!

If you don't mind a slightly odd further compliment, I'll add what an compelling example that first edition is of the importance of getting something done over getting it perfect. One could criticise the presentation of that first edition in various ways, but the more important thing by far - inexpressibly far - is that you got it out and kicked off the marvel that is LWN.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 11:44 UTC (Thu) by tomsi (subscriber, #2306) [Link]

Congratulations.

I haven't followed you all 15 years; I missed out a few of the first :(

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 12:12 UTC (Thu) by canatella (subscriber, #6745) [Link]

When some friend gave me a slackware 6 cd in 1998 (I was 19 at the time) I quickly understood that one day this would be my job. Today, I got that dream job by developing linux embedded systems. I've been reading LWN since around 2000 and it helped me getting to know each part of my beloved OS. If I'm happy going to work every morning, it is certainly partly due to LWN. Thanks a lot for all those years of great articles and grumpy reviews.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 13:07 UTC (Thu) by philipstorry (subscriber, #45926) [Link]

Congratulations on reaching 15 - I've never regretted my subscription. LWN always has excellent coverage, especially on complicated areas.

And even on the slowest of news weeks, there's always the Quotes sections in Security and Kernel. The gems that have been found there are beyond price! :-)

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 13:44 UTC (Thu) by branden (guest, #7029) [Link]

Congratulations, LWN! I've been a loyal reader since very near the beginning.

Here's to fifteen more, and eventually your coverage of the impending year-2038 disaster.

I see that it's time to renew my subscription...

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 14:02 UTC (Thu) by kfiles (guest, #11628) [Link]

Congratulations! I remember when LWN was just a little newsletter on the Eklektix site. It's the best subscription I've ever had.

Over the years, I've learned a ton about the kernel, new projects I hadn't known of, and benefited from the comments of prominent community members who are themselves LWN members.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 14:57 UTC (Thu) by ebirdie (guest, #512) [Link]

With 15 years in the field of LWN.net readership I can now do LWN.net cryptanalyzes: in following passage from the article there is hidden words written between the lines in purpose. ;-)

"The system must evolve, perhaps in ways that cause it to diverge considerably from its Unix roots. Guiding that evolution without fragmenting our community or losing our focus on freedom will be one of our biggest challenges in the coming years."
-- LWN.net reading comprehension number I, compulsory examination.

Congratulations! It's been a joy ride with the moments of fear and monger inherent to the joy from emotions. Looking forward to yet another 15 years.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 16:30 UTC (Thu) by karim (subscriber, #114) [Link]

Thanks for sticking around long enough to figure out a viable business model. That's a feat in and of itself.

Looking forward to continue reading amazing articles from LWN.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 16:45 UTC (Thu) by malor (guest, #2973) [Link]

Congratulations, everyone. This remains one of the better sites out there; clean, straightforward, and focused totally on the content. I don't even know how long I've been reading, but I do know it's been a great long while. I believe I subscribed as soon as you asked for money, and remain completely happy with the site.

Thanks so much for all the effort you've put in over the years.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 18:23 UTC (Thu) by a9db0 (subscriber, #2181) [Link]

I have no idea how long I've been reading LWN, but I know it goes back to the "old" format / layout. Every issue has been a pleasure to read, informative and entertaining. Jon you and your team has done one heckuva job, and I look very much forward to your continuing to do so. Thank you so very much for all that you've done.

Dave

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 19:36 UTC (Thu) by johannbg (guest, #65743) [Link]

Congrats from top of the world for those 15 years! Cheers to the next 15!
Keep up the excellent work ;)

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 20:45 UTC (Thu) by jonabbey (guest, #2736) [Link]

Congratulations, congratulations, congratulations.

And thanks so much for providing such a great resource over the last fifteen!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 21:27 UTC (Thu) by ortalo (guest, #4654) [Link]

Joyeux anniversaire!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 24, 2013 22:12 UTC (Thu) by dune73 (guest, #17225) [Link]

15 years already. Sure feels like yesterday. Keep on rocking!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 25, 2013 5:23 UTC (Fri) by keithmo (subscriber, #12811) [Link]

Congratulations, and thanks for 15 years of insight and information.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 25, 2013 8:54 UTC (Fri) by espenast (guest, #5196) [Link]

Congratulations all the way from Norway!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 25, 2013 19:11 UTC (Fri) by mcopple (subscriber, #2920) [Link]

I don't even remember how long I've been reading LWN. My account page says I started subscribing in 2002, but I know I was reading LWN at least as far back as 2000, and probably even in 1999.

Congratulations on 15 years, Jon and team! Let there be no doubt, I'll be celebrating your 30th with you, as well!

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 26, 2013 23:40 UTC (Sat) by hjb (subscriber, #25523) [Link]

Congratulations from Pro-Linux.de, almost 14 years old.

Additionally, I'm using Linux for exactly 20 years now. And I don't think I missed a single issue of LWN.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 28, 2013 12:58 UTC (Mon) by kvv (subscriber, #5806) [Link]

Congratulations!

I remember the time when you announced you had to stop publishing LWN because of the failed business model. Now many years later the subscriber model seems to be stable enough to keep up the good work.
Thank you for staying on top of the news, I look forward to the next 15 years.

Kees.

Fifteen years of LWN

Posted Jan 30, 2013 14:48 UTC (Wed) by mb (subscriber, #50428) [Link]

Thanks for the site and the fair conditions the content is provided under. Like subscriber links, for example. That is one major reason to stay with LWN.


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