Slash (Slashdot-Like Automated Storytelling Homepage) is a content management system, originally created for Slashdot, one of the oldest collaborative sites on the Internet. Slash has also been known as Slashcode.[1]
Slash is a set of modules, plugins and applets — scripts or programs executed by the server — written in Perl.[2]
History
Early versions of Slash were written by Rob Malda, founder of Slashdot, in the spring of 1998. Andover.net bought Slashdot in June 1999.[3] Work was done by Brian Aker, Patrick Galbraith and Chris Nandor, resulting in version 2 of the software, released in 2001. Until 2009, Slash was maintained by Jamie McCarthy and Chris Nandor, among others. The original codebase was abandoned in September 2009.
Rehash remains primarily under the GNU General Public License and anyone can contribute to development.[4]
SoylentNews
SoylentNews is a fork of Slashdot using a 2009 fork of the Slashdot engine.[5] Michael Casadevall (NCommander), is a New York Ubuntu core developer,[6] and SoylentNews Public Benefit Corporation (SN PBC) president.[7][8][9][10][11]
On 22 May 2023 NCommander announced that SoylentNews will be shutting down on June 30 of that year.[12][13] However, the decision was reversed in an announcement made on 5 June 2023.[14]
References
- ↑ "Slashcode v1.0 Released - Slashdot".
- ↑ Chromatic; Aker, Brian; Krieger, David (January 2002). Running Weblogs with Slash. Sebastopol, California: O’Reilly Media. ISBN 0596001002.
- ↑ Malda, Rob (1999-06-29). "Slashdot Acquired by Andover.net". Slashdot.
- ↑ "README". Rehash. GitHub. 2020-01-14. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ↑ "SoylentNews FAQ". SoylentNews. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
- ↑ "[The Circle of HOPE] Speakers".
- ↑ "Welcome to SoylentNews!: SoylentNews Submission".
- ↑ "About Me".
- ↑ "Michael Casadevall".
- ↑ "35 Years Later, a Retro Computing Enthusiast Puts Windows 1 Back to Work". 24 May 2020.
- ↑ https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-casadevall-a7622312
- ↑ SoylentNews Site Shutdown. "soylentnews".
- ↑ "SoylentNews To Shut Down On June 30th". slashdot.
- ↑ "SoylentNews PBC Will Formally Continue Operations + Site Overhaul Status". 2023-06-05.
External links
- Slashcode: The Slash Open Source Project at the Wayback Machine (archived 2012-04-15) — archive of former official site, inactive after 2009
- Slash on SourceForge — historical copy of Slash source code
- slashcode on GitHub — historical SoylentNews copy of Slash source code imported from SourceForge in 2009
- rehash on GitHub — SoylentNews Rehash code since 2009