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User Journal

Journal More on the GCHQ Hack Involving Slashdot Users: Official Statement 19

Over the weekend, Der Spiegel reported that among Edward Snowden's continuing bonanza of revelations about government surveillance is one that GCHQ, the British spy agency, intercepted user requests to certain websites — Slashdot and LinkedIn, in particular — and spoofed them in order to install spyware on users' computers. As you might expect, the agency denies knowledge.

Here's the official statement from Slashdot's parent company, Dice Holdings:

"We were alerted to these reported government agency actions by a submission on Slashdot made by the community Sunday evening linking to news stories. To be clear, we have not been asked to cooperate with any government agency related to this matter and have not provided access to Slashdot systems or user information. We know of no unauthorized Slashdot code manipulation, or attempts to effect any. We do not approve of this reported activity and if true, it's unfortunate that we are yet another in a long line of internet businesses to suffer this type of intrusion."

This is probably something that should surprise no one: claims, many of them credible and recent, point to various ways in which some well-known web sites and online services (Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, AT&T, Facebook, AOL, Skype, Apple, YouTube, and more) have all been affected by alleged government surveillance of one kind or another.

Being offended (as we on the editorial and coder team at Slashdot all are) by even a hint at spying on readers doesn't help in itself, so here are some practical notes: Nothing here involves Slashdot's code base or user data: the allegation is of transparent proxies between website (LinkedIn and Slashdot happen to be mentioned, but most likely many others) and user. The spoofing and malware injection said to have taken place relies on the fact that between practically any server on the internet and the end user, there are compromisable links. However, it's probably a wise policy to assume that you never know all the possible ways your privacy may be compromised online.

Please keep in mind, too, that Slashdot has long enabled and encouraged anonymous participation; you are welcome to read the site, leave comments, and submit stories, without logging in. (Logged in readers can read with SSL turned on, though.)

User Journal

Journal Quick update from AppsWorld 11

After a red-eye flight (my first trip to the UK) I've spent today in London at AppsWorld, live editing Slashdot for everyone who wants to see the sausage get made. "AppsWorld" sounds like a conference all about (you guessed it) mobile apps, and it is that -- but there's also a lot of interesting hardware, hackathons, etc. (It turns out, there's also some enthusiastic synchronized dancing from the Microsoft Surface crew, just across the aisle; but since we have a large screen TV set up, and access to YouTube, I couldn't resist looping in some dancing Steve Ballmer in the background as a sort of enthusiastic instructor.)

At the Slashdot booth, we've gotten some volunteer spam-whacking and department-line suggestions, too, of which more is always welcome, and some good suggestions on ways to keep improving our ongoing Beta page. The conference continues tomorrow; hopefully, you'll see some video on Slashdot soon with some interesting conversations and projects. And if you're here at the conference, come by and have a drink on us, while supplies last.

User Journal

Journal Beta update, and a chance to see Slashdot live in London 9

The ongoing Slashdot redesign effort has drawn a few notes from the outside world; here's what TweakTown and Business Insider have to say. Important to remember: the Beta site works — but it's transparently, inherently a work in progress, and the engineers are putting a lot of effort into bringing to the new page feature parity and more. The existing site isn't going away anytime soon, but the more ideas and bug reports we get (on the Beta, and in general) the more robust the next generation of Slashdot is going to be. As we revamp comments, submissions, and other aspects of the site (down to how text flows on various screen sizes), your reactions are crucial.

You can play with the site in the privacy of your own home, of course, too, but in person (at LUG meetings, etc) we enjoy giving "factory tours" of the backend of the site. We've gotten the chance to show off the evolving new design to readers (and passers by) at Interop and at the NYC Tech Meetup earlier this month. If you happen to be in the neighborhood, we'll be at AppsWorld, too, from October 22-23 in London. Stop by and get some swag (while it lasts) and perhaps help us reject some spam or hit Save on a story.
User Journal

Journal Slashdot Beta Update 6

A few days ago, we opened the curtains to give everyone an early glimpse of what Slashdot is going to look like. More than a thousand comments and hundreds of emails have poured in, offering some very useful feedback and advice: thanks. As you'd expect, Beta is work in progress — we have a long way to go not only in integrating all the features we want, but in smoothing over inevitable rough edges. This blog post is to give a few updates on the state of the Beta, and tips on using it. As we sifted through your feedback we noticed some common areas of critique:

One group of readers we've heard a lot from are those who don't like seeing the images that the new Beta introduces in its Standard view. Good news: seeing images is a preference that's easy to change. Just select "Classic" from the view-selection widget on the menu that appears near the top of the page. (You can see an illustration here.) You can always change your view, and your choice is persistent until you select a new one.

Likewise, many readers have raised (understandable!) objections to the Beta's fixed-width; expect changes in the near future that will address this. We're aiming for a page that displays cleanly on as many devices, screen sizes, and browsers as possible.

We're only partway into this redesign; a lot of stuff is coming. One big example: the commenting system is only partly in place, which means many of the features currently available on the regular page haven't been implemented yet on the Beta. Likewise, the submissions and login systems are under active development, and you'll see enhancements rolled out in weeks to come as the beta gets closer to production.

We know there are some general problems with readability in the Beta, too; In the coming weeks we'll be experimenting with various fonts, texture and styles to make the page easier on your eyes.

You make Slashdot what it is — so please keep the feedback coming. (Details, including screenshots, make bug reports and suggestions much easier to act on). Watch this space: We'll be giving more updates via this blog on improvements as they're worked on.

User Journal

Journal You're Invited: Take a Look At Slashdot's New Beta 69

The Upshot:

Welcome to the first Slashdot blog post in quite a while — it's a big one. Launching today at beta.slashdot.org is the biggest redesign that Slashdot's ever seen, and you're invited to help shape it. (We've put a lot of work into the look and feel, trying to make the site easier to navigate as well as nicer looking, but between true bugs and imperfect ideas, we know that this isn't the end-state: that's why it's a beta! Feedback is welcome!)

What's new (or improved)?

Most obviously, the look of the page is different. We've tried to create a simpler, cleaner experience for login, submission, and navigating the site in general. Slashdot's main page is slightly simpler (but adds some pictures to ponder, too). Most importantly, we've upgraded the ways you can view the page, with three layouts you can choose from: besides the default (the "Standard" view -- that's where you'll see the pictures and brand-new layout), you can view in Classic mode (closer to the Slashdot you're used to), or Headlines mode for quick scanning. Some other changes:

  • You'll see more content, in the form of community-promoted stories, in the "All Stories" view. That means more brain candy in the form of submissions (ones you might have had to search harder for before, because they hadn't been selected by the editors as regular posts) bumped up the food chain to your view of the page.
  • For every user, there's a more informative (and just prettier) profile page to track your comments, conversations, and karma. Now, your profile page (at your option) includes a mini bio, too.
  • There's now a handy shortcut (the "Most Discussed" link) to reach the stories where the most comments are landing, whether you want to dive into the discussion as a participant or just to skim.
  • Under "Topics" in the menu bar, you can jump straight to the most active topics, too, to see what subjects are driving the most conversations.

Along with these, there are lots of smaller improvements, too, that we hope you'll find useful.

What's the same?

  • Under the hood, the same Slashdot editors are still assembling a stew of reader-driven and original news, and still bringing you original reader-participant interviews, Ask Slashdot crowd-sourced questions, and more.
  • Your submissions and suggestions are still the most important ingredient in the site. Please tell us what you think of the beta; we can't take every suggestion at the same time, but if you run into puzzling paths, borked links, or anything else that doesn't behave as you think it should, please let us know.

A big thanks to all the engineers who have worked for months to integrate the pieces that go together to make this upgrade possible. Remember, as a beta, this is an ongoing project, not The Last Word, so look forward to continuing progress as we respond to your feedback. A round of thanks, too, to our users who provided valuable feedback during the alpha stage of this redesign. We couldn't have done it without you! Note: You can sign up to be a beta or alpha tester for any new initiatives on Slashdot or be notified about any cool stuff we're working on.

User Journal

Journal Thoughts From Readers on Replacing Google Reader 50

Last week, we asked you about replacements for Google reader. In both this Ask Slashdot (errr, "Slashdot Asks") and this poll, readers responded with suggestions. Not everyone cares about Google Reader; nearly 70 percent of the poll respondents said they didn't use it anyhow. So think of the rest of this post as something like the gum commercials which draw their conclusions from "those dentists expressing a preference." Below, some of the collected wisdom:

There are a lot of RSS aggregators. In the poll, the clear winner of the small list of options we could squeeze into the list was Feedly; in fact, it was the only replacement option to break into a double-digit percentage, tied with the catch-all "other alternative" choice.

Some of the strongest endorsements are for Tiny Tiny RSS (also knowns as tt-rss), including this one from the esteemed Col. Klink (retired), who also links to a "free (and improved) fork of the Tiny Tiny RSS Reader Android app."

An anonymous reader says that Tiny Tiny RSS "would be the 'slashdotter solution,' since it has a lot of strength in its plugin capabilities, is GPL v2, fully stylable, has an API, etc. If you have your own server available (or a shell account somewhere), I can't see any reason to not use this solution. I left Google Reader after several years upon the close-down decision earlier this year, and I have not missed it a bit. For those that have previously tried TT-RSS and didn't like it, it can be said that it has evolved significantly in my eyes during this year. Development is very much alive."

For those who'd rather stay in the browser, stevegee58 is one of several to suggest Netvibes: "It seems like the RSS reader market is flooded with apps so it was difficult to find web-based services. I had grown used to the Reader look and feel so I settled on NetVibes as being the closest fit."

Note: Digg's promised alternative to Google Reader is supposed to arrive soon, too — June 26th, according to that Washington Post article.

For those uninterested in using a yet another app when there's a perfectly good email client to read things in, there's this, from reader devent: a quick HOWTO on setting up an email sink for your favorite RSS feeds.

And for those who'd prefer a bit more esoteric solution, reader yosephi suggests Emacs + Gnus + Gwene, and links to an informative video tutorial, writing "There is a steep learning curve, but having mail and news in one place is nice."

(That suggestion was seconded by reader Sq, who writes "It will turn any RSS to newsgroup, and you can read those with any NNTP newsreader (for which I already have setup .newsrc syncing between accounts).")

Finally, at least two readers (uberjack and billstclair) have written their own alternatives.
User Journal

Journal On the way to LinuxFest Northwest! 7

LinuxFest Northwest takes place this weekend in Bellingham, Washington. It's one of my favorite conferences — a long-running, volunteer-run, low-hype gathering with two days of presentations, demonstrations, and kibbitzing at Bellingham Technical College. I'm on the way there now, in an oddball fashion, having hopped a ride from Seattle on the giant bus that Dice.com (the Dice which bought Slashdot's parent company last year) has rented for an ongoing advertising road-trip to promote their stock in trade as employment matchmakers. Since Bellingham is at the north end of their range, I'm going from Seattle to the festival that way.

If you'll be in the area, the conference is excellent and free (!); the bus has enough of an internet connection that I hope to give some demonstrations of the Slashdot admin interface for anyone who'd like to see the flow of stories as the editors do, and click the buttons that will send at least a few pieces of spam to the special circle of hell for which they are destined.

User Journal

Journal Geeknet Media Is Now Slashdot Media 1

As of today, what was Geeknet Media has been utterly transformed: now we're Slashdot Media. Actually, it's just the name that's been utterly transformed, at least as far as this site is concerned. We're still News For Nerds, Stuff That Matters — just now with more Slashdot. (And for that matter, we're still just as grateful for and reliant on your news submissions and ideas as ever. Tell us what you want to see.)

What it all means:

For Slashdot readers? Not much. For readers (and editors, and programmers, etc.), this change has no impact on what you'll see on the page, how we select stories, the layout of the page, or anything else except trivial things like the nomenclature on copyright and other legal notices. For others? Slashdot's an advertising-supported site; selling the ads that effect that support — "the business side," vs. "the editorial side" — has its own logistics and its own internal logic. The folks around the world who are in the business of buying ad space online will see the new name in places like letterhead and contracts.

Why? Why? Why?

Because of the business changes last year (if you're not keeping score, Slashdot and ThinkGeek are no longer part of the same umbrella group), this name change was agreed on to prevent confusion about who's who. That makes it easier for the business-side folks to lease out your valuable eyeballs, so we can keep the lights on (well, keep the monitors on) and keep up the flow of news, interviews, reviews, and the occasional bit of snark. And besides, "Slashdot" has a nice ring to it, doesn't it? If you have any questions about this name change, feel free to pass them along to feedback@slashdot.org; we'd like to know if you have any concerns worth addressing for everyone in a followup post.
Math

Journal Happy Pi Day! 5

We at Slashdot would like to wish everyone a happy Pi day! Itâ(TM)s one of the few minor holidays we feel is worth actively noting because it celebrates concepts very close to this communityâ(TM)s heart. Itâ(TM)s not just the number itself; itâ(TM)s an opportunity to glorify math, knowledge, and nerdiness.

Large-scale celebration of Pi Day began in 1988, mostly through the efforts of physicists Larry Shaw and Ron Hipschmann at the San Francisco Exploratorium. The Exploratorium still runs Pi Day events 25 years later, including Pi-themed processions and pie for dessert. In 2009, Pi Day became semi-official through a vote by the House of Representatives. (They did a better job with Pi than did Indiana, who almost legislated it to be 3.2.)

The best way to celebrate Pi Day is to get together with some friends and talk math over a pie. You could even go for a pizza pie, since a pizza with radius 'z' and height 'a' has volume = pi * z * z * a. If you're too busy, there are plenty of Pi Day events to check out on the Internet, too. Princeton is holding a video contest to celebrate the day, or you can check out the pi pies people are making. If you'd care for a game, head over to the Pi Day Challenge, which features a series of pi-related logic puzzles. Or just spend the day learning about pi.

Cool pi facts: Pi is currently known to about 10 billion decimal places. You can calculate pi using the Fibonacci sequence. A few years ago, Steven Rochen mapped the digits of pi to musical notes and turned it into a violin solo (video). Others have made music from pi as well. Mankind didn't know the first hundred digits of pi until the year 1701. How many digits of pi can you recite? The record for memorization currently stands at 67890 digits. The record for reciting pi while juggling three balls is just under 10,000.
User Journal

Journal What do you want to see at SXSWi?

South By Southwest Interactive is getting underway today in my home city of Austin; I'm going to see as much as I can today, Saturday, and Monday, with video camera in hand. If there's anything in particular you'd like to see (this list of exhibitors may give some ideas), leave a note here. As with any big gathering (hundreds of exhibits, tens of thousands in the madding crowd), there is much too much for any one person to see. Plenty to choose from, in fact — start-ups, gaming, and more. I hope to get a look at the forthcoming Digital Bolex camera, too.

Handhelds

Journal A New Year, a New Mobile Experience 18

A message from Gaurav Kuchhal (Head of Product, Slashdot)

While it's been in beta for a bit, we are very proud to announce the new mobile interface for Slashdot (m.slashdot.org). The new Slashdot mobile experience is the first major set of innovations for Slashdot in years. Weâ(TM)ve built the mobile user experience with the future in mind, embracing a more personal, a more social and certainly a more mobile web.

We've built this new mobile interface optimized exclusively for your touch smartphones and tablets. This new mobile site gives existing readers a new way to engage with Slashdot, and attracts the new audience by allowing them to sign in using their Twitter, Facebook or Google+ social profiles.

Features:
  • Read comments and stories in a mobile-friendly view (no more squinting!)
  • Most popular stories shown right at the top
  • Access the latest (even unposted!) stories right from the Firehose
  • See rich user profiles of your friends and foes
  • Quickly sign in with your Twitter, Google+ or Facebook account
  • See beautiful achievement badges
  • Quickly participate in polls
  • Show off your latest Gravatar

What's under the hood?
The new Slashdot mobile site is built on top of open HTML5 web architecture and serves as a first step to improve the entire Slashdot site experience. We built this app using the latest technologies and frameworks such as Backbone, Zepto, Underscore, Hamstache, Jasmine, and Sass. Since there are so many mobile devices and capabilities, we targeted webkit browsers, and Android versions above 2.3. While the site should work in FF and Opera, we really recommend you use the latest version of Chrome. For more information about browser capability, see our FAQ.

A thanks to the community!
We didn't start sketching the blueprints based on what we thought a mobile experience should be - we asked YOU. From in-person interviews, user surveys, and all of your feedback we listened to your thoughts (and you had a lot!). From our initial alpha launch, to our tablet and smartphone betas, we want to thank all of you for patiently testing each version and giving great feedback. Slashdot IS Slashdot because of the community and we love every comment.

Point your mobile browser to m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

User Journal

Journal HAPPY NEW YEAR from the Slashdot crew! 5

We hope 2012 has been good to you (or was good to you, depending on your time zone) and that 2013 is even better. The world did not boil off into space in earlier, which is at least a good start on both counts.

It's been an eventful year in the world of Slashdot, and we're glad you're reading. We started shooting videos (the cycle will be a bit more complete when we get some videos from CES, which starts in the second week of January), interviewed people like Richards Dawkins and Stallman (answers pending), celebrated 15 years of News for Nerds (if you've been along for the ride and scanned them all, know you've had something like 125,000 stories flashed into your head), and changed corporate affiliation.

On this last day of the year from our vantage point in the central U.S., here's a reminder that Slashdot has communication channels besides what you see by hitting the front page. We try not to clutter the page too often with meta-information in the flow of stories, but you can tap into slightly more if you'd like:

Our Twitter feed: This is a good way to keep up on headlines as they appear on Slashdot while you enjoy your active, outdoor lifestyle, and every so often the twitter feed features a note or three that appears only on Twitter.

The Slashdot page on Facebook. Here, too, you can see the stories that appear on Slashdot, as well as a few extras or notes about the site itself. For instance, you can see a a bit of of reader artwork, and photos from our anniversary gatherings. If you have a Slashdot-related image, send it along -- we'd like to add more.

If you've got a smartphone or a tablet, try a different approach to Slashdot with the mobile version. The same stories you'll find on the main site, but presented in a way we hope takes better advantage of (read "suffers less from") the smaller screen, touch interface, etc, of mobile devices. It works, but it's also a work in progress; tell us what you like about it or hate about it, so we can iterate in your favor.

For MBA-caliber scanning of headlines (and firewall sneaking, too, if you would like to read somewhere that Slashdot is blocked by censorware), you can also read Slashdot's stories in the form of a newsletter; it's easy to sign up (you'll need an account and an email address, because that's how it arrives) by clicking "Newsletter" in the menu at the upper right of the page.

Also remember that there are, besides Slashdot (at last count, but stay tuned) three sister sites that focus more narrowly and feature boatloads of original stories on the domains of data centers, the cloud, and business intelligence, as well as tv.slashdot.org, which collects all of the videos that we've shown on Slashdot along with some others.

Finally, our all-purpose (all singing, all dancing) email address is feedback@slashdot.org. If you've got an interface idea, a problem, a query, or the number to a Swiss bank account you'd like to share, sending to feedback@slashdot.org means the editors will see it. (We regret that we can't respond to every email, but if you report a bug or make a cool suggestion, it will get passed on to the right people!)

Have a happy and safe holiday — and enjoy the next orbit of the only Earth-like planet of which we are thus far aware.

User Journal

Journal How To Fix a Submission Oopsie? 2

Reader contributions are what make Slashdot Slashdot. We've posted more than 125,000 news items over the years, and the vast majority of them started out as reader suggestions. Someone read (or wrote!) a cool story, or witnessed an interesting event, or was stumped by a technical or ethical question, and thought it was worth sharing with the rest of the world.

(Submitting a story to Slashdot should be fairly painless. Hit the submission guidelines, and then the submission form to stack an item on the pile for consideration.)

But sometimes we (the editors) goof by either overlooking or introducing errors, and sometimes we (the all-inclusive "we" of humanity) goof. If you find that you've submitted a story but left out a vital link, or got hijacked by a cut-and-paste demon, or hit "Save" when you meant to his "Keep Editing," here's the best way to fix it:

  • Resubmit, using the same submissions form :) Except in unusual circumstances, that's far easier for us to deal with that attempting to fix things by email, over the phone, or in the smoke signals. Versioning is the work of the devil, especially when it means mixing streams of communication.
  • Point out that it's a resubmission, and briefly explain why. ("I'm resubmitting to fix some bitrot; site changed its addressing scheme right after I read this article," say, or "I didn't realize that Finnish keyboards put the 'Enter' button inside the space bar," etc.)
  • If you've still got a link to the previous submission (the one you're updating), we'd appreciate it if you could include it (it's something like "https://slashdot.org/submission/$number-here/your-previous-articles-title"). That makes it easy to compare the new one to the old and understand why you've resubmitted. Any given editor might have not realize that you'd submitted a different version previously, especially if you submitted it anonymously.

That's it!

Note: We must decline far more of the submissions that come in to Slashdot than we run; that's the nature of the beast. So we can't guarantee in advance that any particular submission will run on the page, but we definitely give re-submits a close eye.

For a bigger-picture view of the submissions process, see our previous blog entry, too.

As always, we try to answer reader questions (whether personally, or by incorporating design changes, or by explaining in ways like this blog) that are sent to feedback at Slashdot dot org; pop us a note if you've got a question, suggestion, or complaint.

User Journal

Journal What Happens To Your Submissions 3

One of the purposes of this blog is to provide a more detailed explanations of various aspects of Slashdot -- things that don't fit in the FAQ. Today we'll address a common point of confusion among users trying to share news with the world: What happens to my submission once I've submitted it?

Once you finish typing up your summary and hit submit, two things happen immediately: you're shown a permanent link at which your words will reside for as long as our database does, and your submission is entered into the top of the firehose. If you'd like to keep an eye on your submission, I'd suggest either bookmarking its permanent link, or watching it from the submissions tab of your user page. It'll always be in those two places regardless of what happens to it. More on that later.

When your submission has successfully entered the firehose, a few more things. Other readers will be able to read, vote on, and comment on your submission. You can comment on it too, so if you stumble upon a correction that needs to be made, or more information you want to add, feel free to drop it there. You're also quite welcome to send us an email for that sort of thing — feedback@slashdot.org will hit all of us, or you can contact individual editors using their username @slashdot.org.

Speaking of the editors: at the same time, the editors will be looking over your submission for possible acceptance. Unless you're submitting in the wee hours of the night, it's likely theyâ(TM)ll see your submission the moment it comes in. Don't fear that it will get missed — the editors' workspace is basically an expanded view of what users see in the firehose, with a bunch of tools for working on submissions, whacking spam, and so forth. We get a much broader view of the incoming stream of information, and user submissions stand out.

Now, that doesn't necessarily mean that your submission is going up on the page immediately. There's often a delay, and since users only see one end of the process, it can sometimes feel like nobody's paying attention. But don't worry, that's definitely not the case. The reality is simply that Slashdot's front page runs on a schedule. We try to have a new piece of news at the top of the page at regular intervals so that you get something new every time you visit. One of the side-effects of this schedule is that if five interesting things happen at 8:00 AM, they get spread out over the next couple hours instead of all going on the page at once.

So when will my submission be approved?
Approved submissions generally go up on the page within several hours of being submitted, but not always. If the article you submitted isn't of immediate importance, it will probably wait until the time-sensitive news has been posted. For example, say two submissions come in at exactly the same time. One is about some big company buying another company, and the other is an opinion piece about sci-fi movies. Weâ(TM)ll post the one about the two companies first since it's "hard" news, and something people want to know about immediately. That's not to say the opinion piece is less interesting or less deserving of being posted — it's simply a matter of prioritizing.

One of the big parts of the editors' jobs is prioritizing stories. Sometimes we'll have more interesting stories than we can reasonably post in a day, and the surplus (interesting but time-insensitive articles) spill over into the next day, assuming there's not another flood of good stories. Other times, there will be a few slow news days in a row, so we'll hunt around for any interesting submissions we can find. Also, if there are stories of particular interest to people in particular countries, weâ(TM)ll try to run those stories when it's daytime in that part of the world.

My submission disappeared from the firehose!
Unfortunately, we canâ(TM)t run everything we receive. If your submission is gone from the firehose view, it's unlikely to be posted. There are many reasons for this -- it may be that we already ran something about the news you linked, or that it was just too far off-topic for our readership. It's also possible that somebody else submitted the same news and we chose their submission instead. We love getting submissions on the same story from 10 different users, but the down side is that we have to decline 9 of them. Declining doesn't mean we don't appreciate your submission, or that it isn't useful -- often times if we get a few different good submissions, weâ(TM)ll blend them together.

But my submission was red!
Our scoring system works mostly like you'd expect, but we put in a few tweaks to highlight good submitters. If you've had several submissions accepted, your new ones will enter the firehose at a higher color level than the average submission. This is to make them stand out for readers browsing the firehose. Give it some time -- if people continue to like it, it will stay high. However, as above, if it's a dupe or if it's offtopic, it may disappear despite the high rating.

What can I do to maximize my chances of having a submission accepted?
We have a handy list of submission guidelines that will help immensely. A quick look through the stories on the front page will help, too, to give you an idea for how long and how many links to use. If formatting and hyperlinking is turning you off, don't worry too much about that — as long as the editors get your words and links, we can make it look right. One big suggestion would simply be to write what you know. Whoever you are, you're pretty smart, and you probably know more than the average reader about something. Focus on that. If you know a bunch about Linux desktop environments, write about those! If you're a huge sci-fi fan, send us some sci-fi news and reviews! If youâ(TM)re an expert on cosmology, keep us apprised of all of latest discoveries!

Again, as always, if you have questions about any part of the process, don't hesitate to contact us.

Cellphones

Journal Not Just Phones Any More: Unveiling Slashdot Mobile for Tablets 3

(A message from Gaurav Kuchhal (Head of Product, Slashdot)

Getting beta all the time ...
We're proud to announce the final beta version of our mobile site. Now, from both your smartphone and your tablet, you can read Slashdot and interact with the community.

Over the past several weeks, we've been hard at work building this mobile site and releasing it to you in stages. Your comments (hundreds!) and feedback on the alpha version have driven its design.

What's new in this beta?
  • Notifications: Did someone reply to your comment? Was your story submittal approved? Now you can see all these updates in one place.
  • Firehose: Quickly skim through the latest story submissions and vote on your favorites. Also, submit new stories directly from your phone or tablet.
  • Richer Profile: Want to learn more about another user? Now you can tap on any username and quickly see past story submissions and comments. Tap 'Friend' or 'Foe' to follow their updates.
  • Friend's Activities: Keep up with the latest activities from your friends and foes, from their story submissions to comments.

Anything big I should know?
Since we're geeks, we purposely built a mobile site using the latest open web technologies, but compatibility with hundreds of mobile devices is still challenging with HTML5. Since carriers don't always update their devices with the latest browser software, if you are using an Android device, we recommend using the Chrome browser directly from Google, not the version packaged with your handset. If you are using an iOS device, we recommend using iOS version 6.

What's next?
We're always polishing and refining the functionality of the site, so before we move to v1.0 we want to make sure we've addressed any pressing issues that you find. It's easy to join in the beta from any supported mobile device: just load up mbeta.slashdot.org and start reading. If you find any problems or have ideas for improvement, please use this survey form to give feedback.

(And as always, you can fire complaints and suggestions about all aspects of the site to feedback@slashdot.org.)

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