George 152
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2002
- Messages
- 5,012
The place is running like a dream. No real delays.
Some-one needs a lot of thanks for their work behind the scenes
Some-one needs a lot of thanks for their work behind the scenes
I would very much like not to see this happen. I know nothing of the backroom but I still am of the opinion that there is a mutually beneficial relationship between JREF and this forum. TAM, as noted, is just one example. I suspect the forum acts as a feed for new JREF members and that that is a two-way street. The spin-off of Skeptical Community is an example to avoid.My preference - and others I've spoken to seem to feel the same - is that a new non-profit spun off from JREF is probably the way to go. (any legal/accounting folk with time/expertise in setting up and maintaining a non-profit, put your hand up)
I'm also getting the distinct impression there's a lot of backroom history we're dealing with here which has lead to the current somewhat critical situation. That may also make this entire discussion moot and something entirely different happens.
I would very much like not to see this happen. I know nothing of the backroom but I still am of the opinion that there is a mutually beneficial relationship between JREF and this forum. TAM, as noted, is just one example. I suspect the forum acts as a feed for new JREF members and that that is a two-way street. The spin-off of Skeptical Community is an example to avoid.
Somewhat rambling thoughts:
I've worked with a lot of non-profit organizations and have been president of several. While $1500 startup and $6000-$7000 a year does not sound like a lot, it can be to a huge amount to non-profit.
I agree with your point about a pro-admin/mod being needed. Volunteers are great, but their priorities can shift so needed activities don't happen when needed, they get done when they can be done. So you're talking more money. I don't know how much time would be needed for a pro-admin and therefore how much money. I'll throw out a number of $20K per year. I don't know if that's too much or more likely too little.
Will the community here support about $2000+ a month? Advertising can bring in revenue, but how much? I believe we have about 1500 frequent users. Could we get 150 to subscribe at $10-$15 a month? 10% participation in something like that is probably optimistic.
In non-profits it comes down to a matter of whether or not something can be done financially, not whether or not it should be done.
If you're spinning it off to a new non-profit, that can be done for $1000 or less, but would JREF want that?
Likely [the problem is current hardware], and not unlikely the contract is a couple of years old given that the forum doesn't seem to have been a JREF priority for the last few years.
Meaning that today you would get a lot more power for the bucks you signed in for, likely enough for the current needs, and I suggest that you lay all of this out to the amazing Randi and let him make the phone call for a new deal.
Just FYI, the current advertising income does not come close to covering the costs of the forum. While an upgrade to better equipment will, paradoxically, probably result in lower costs, it will likely still not be enough so ongoing funding solutions will need to be found.
That's the power of wanting it to be faster. The Universe responded.Oh, and it seems to be much faster already indeed.![]()
This is a very constructive discussion. I can't contribute anything to the technical side, but a brief comment about money might be helpful.
We have a detailed estimate from icerat that things could be made to run quite well for $500~600 a month. To be way generous, call it $10,000 a year. According to JREF's 2012 990 form, annual JREF revenue is around $1.3 million. Now there are lots of calls on that revenue, but it seems the forum could be kept running for about 1/10th of 1 percent of the JREF budget. This suggests to me the issue is JREF's level of interest, rather than any real money problem.
It would be good to have a frank answer from JREF before worrying too much about funding models.
I think you're off one decimal place; it would be about 1% of JREF's revenue. Still and all, it's not a huge amount of money, even for a comparatively small non-profit such as JREF.
Could the forum be self-sustaining? Possibly; if the membership put up, say, the hardware cost plus the first year's ongoing expenses, there would be time to develop some sort of model to generate revenue (I hate banner ads like the plague, but I would suffer them to preserve the forum, and I think most here would agree).
I think you're off one decimal place; it would be about 1% of JREF's revenue. Still and all, it's not a huge amount of money, even for a comparatively small non-profit such as JREF.
but I tend toward upgrading to Xenforo ($250 incl enhanced search) plus a yearly fee for ongoing upgrades/support ($65).
Been a developer for client/server database apps and/or web services for the last 25+ years. From the limited info I have seen, I don't think new hardware is required. I think there's a specific root cause, which has not been identified, that is causing it to appear to be a system that has outgrown its hardware.
I'd be a bit leery of such an approach. What happens after year one if a revenue model is not found? Is there some way to estimate revenue streams from various business models before starting down one road? Surely, yes, because we can't be the first non-profit to fact this situation.Could the forum be self-sustaining? Possibly; if the membership put up, say, the hardware cost plus the first year's ongoing expenses, there would be time to develop some sort of model to generate revenue (I hate banner ads like the plague, but I would suffer them to preserve the forum, and I think most here would agree).
Mr. Adams, on the JREF board, is able to get in and do some technical tweaks to the hardware and software.
One insight he has given me is that right now 40% of the queries are from search engine bots, a good proportion of the traffic is from China. Legitimate traffic?
...
That would be this Mr Adams for those interested. So as you can imagine he has the technical nous but perhaps has other interests he prioritises over this forum
...
Yes, it's running quicker, but many people still can't log in and I can't access the registration queue, which is growing and growing and growing:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/230853dff92cabfa9.png[/qimg]
Sharon (idoubtit), I hope Mr. Adams, who is perhaps the person who's been installing the Sucuri website firewall (see here for an explanation) for the forum in recent days, is fully aware of the problems mentioned by Lisa Simpson and Wolfman above. The number of active users is currently rather low (about 325 now, usually about 700 [?]), this may explain why the forum is fast. It would be nice if you could convince this person (or whoever is currently in charge of the hardware) to post in the Forum Help & Member Support sub-forum. In this way, he could explain what he's doing, interact with, and receive advice from the experts of this forum.I've got a problem...I can view the forum no problem, but every time I try to make a post, I'm taken to the Sucuri Website Firewall, with the following information:
Block details
Your IP: 123.151.32.96
URL: forums.randi.org/newthread.php?do=postthread&f=26
Your Browser: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/31.0
Block ID: BLACK02
Block reason: Your IP address is listed in our blacklist and blocked from completing this request.
Time: Tue, 05 Aug 2014 02:35:34 -0400
Server ID: cp413
I've had issues with the Sucuri thing before, but never this error message. It seems to arise only when I'm making posts, not when I'm just viewing the forum. Given the previous information that a lot of traffic is coming from China, I'm concerned that perhaps someone changed the security to block Chinese traffic?
I'm currently accessing the forums through a VPN, but that's far from an ideal solution.
Sharon (idoubtit), I hope Mr. Adams, who is perhaps the person who's been installing the Sucuri website firewall (see here for an explanation) for the forum in recent days, is fully aware of the problems mentioned by Lisa Simpson and Wolfman above. The number of active users is currently rather low (about 325 now, usually about 700 [?]), this may explain why the forum is fast. It would be nice if you could convince this person (or whoever is currently in charge of the hardware) to post in the Forum Help & Member Support sub-forum. In this way, he could explain what he's doing, interact with, and receive advice from the experts of this forum.
System Performance
%vmstat 3
Code:%vmstat 3 procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system-- -----cpu------ r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa st 7 0 252 86180 55660 7092544 0 0 219 71 7 7 26 3 62 9 0 4 0 252 80972 55740 7094984 0 0 912 1376 1625 2253 20 1 76 3 0 3 0 252 57136 55820 7100208 0 0 1621 692 1396 3459 21 1 74 4 0 3 1 252 57728 55824 7094740 0 0 1211 616 1423 2835 19 1 76 3 0 4 5 252 47628 55536 7052016 0 0 3113 1072 1399 11270 21 3 65 11 0 2 5 252 47948 55572 7050052 0 0 3379 479 1529 2090 10 1 79 10 0
I'm not an expert on interpreting vmstat but this sample doesn't appear too bad (ie it's not a time when things are lagging badly) but a cpu upgrade would provide some immediate benefits, as I suspect would moving images out of the db, if they're not already.