Hence I recommend subscribing to keeep this infochannel open.
Thanks for the pointer; I hadn't realized that the site experienced challenges of the financial nature. I just subscribed.
I used to subscribe to photo.net but it experienced multiple changes in ownership and moves to different platforms, quite a lot of the site functionality disappeared, and so did the number of active participants on its forums. I wonder why even the old articles had to go and be replaced by links to creativelive's video courses. I don't mind those (I have purchased a few on portrait lighting etc.) but am surprised why the old content of the site had to go. I can't imagine it took much space. I guess this is what is to be expected that hyperlinks stop working and people have to find new sources for content that was housed for a long time under the same link.
I am wondering if public libraries should archive online content or just stick to mostly conventional books on paper as their domain. I hate to admit it but I'm not reading as many books nowadays as I used to. But I feel that electronic content is quite volatile and what might seem as permanently archived may not be so. While digital media mostly work, if there is no hardcopy, it can cease to exist. Of course, hardcopies can burn in fires as well. But I have this feeling that people may not quite appreciate how easily some digital content can be lost.
Although I was not a big fan of dpreview's forums - there was so much of "I know best and everyone else is wrong" kind of attitude there, that it was painful to read. However, they did publish quality articles on technical topics and reviews. I'm wondering what Amazon was hoping to gain from dpreview and what changed their minds regarding the site's future. I can't imagine Amazon is not making enough profit. What bothers me about Amazon is that traditional brick-and-mortar bookstores don't have as good a selection any more as they used to, especially where it comes to textbooks. I understand that if a book costs 20€ more in a local store, it is difficult for a student to select it rather than purchasing online, but the local stores offered the unique option of actually assessing first hand what one is buying. I just don't feel that online stores offer that, and thus I rarely purchase books from them.
I think it'll be interesting to see what is preserved of present day digital information (say) 100 or 300 years from now, and of course, how it might be accessed, if there is a method.
Thanks for keeping this site up and running and I hope to visit more often.