How did GMG begin?

Started by Opus106, January 30, 2009, 07:17:55 AM

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Opus106

I know the story behind all the forums I have participated in except GMG. They range from commercially-backed-by-big company to a high-school computer science project that saw success beyond what it was designed for. So what's the story behind GMG? :)

Is there a GMG History thread that I could refer to?
Regards,
Navneeth

aquablob

Quote from: opus67 on January 30, 2009, 07:17:55 AM
I know the story behind all the forums I have participated in except GMG. They range from commercially-backed-by-big company to a high-school computer science project that saw success beyond what it was designed for. So what's the story behind GMG? :)

Is there a GMG History thread that I could refer to?

In the beginning, there was Rob.

greg


Brian

Quote from: opus67 on January 30, 2009, 07:17:55 AMa high-school computer science project that saw success beyond what it was designed for.
:o my little brother runs a forum like that! What's it about?

B_cereus

i vaguely remember it started as a little board with a rather garish blue & orange skin  :)

Lilas Pastia

I remember the "little board", but I can't recall blue and orange. But then again, Rob has always kept the place up to date. He's our benevolent deity.

Opus106

#6
Quote from: G$ on January 30, 2009, 11:44:55 AM
:o my little brother runs a forum like that! What's it about?

Primarily physics. But it also has a respectable maths section and smaller places for other branches/aspects of science and philosophy, career guidance in the sciences, etc. And a really fun general area.

What about your brother's?  :)
Regards,
Navneeth

Herman

#7
Rob's original GMG was mainly a board for newbies, as I recall. Then -   I'm not sure whether it was 2003 or 2004  -  a whole bunch of refugees from CMG moved to GMG. (Gurn, Todd, Lilas, Tony / Ezodisy, DavidW, me, many others) Since these guys were a little more sophisticated GMG changed a little, and the board got subdivided into the three or four sections of the Music Room, as I recall. There was a huge increase in traffic, too. There were enormous threads on Haydn, Chopin, and of course Beethoven, with a very high level of information and (kindly) passion. A bunch of guys from the NYT music forum joined (Karl among others), upping the chatter level and the Diner was created. There was a brief period ACDouglas graced our boards. Eric, at that point was a psychotherapist with a peculiar sense of smell, I seem to recall. (And a love of Debussy's Faun, obviously.) After long debates moderators were instituted, which only seemed to make matters worse. I think it's fair to say GMG is a much more peaceable kingdom now than three years ago.

Please feel free to correct me when I'm wrong.

One unfortunate thing was that virtually every one or two years new software was implemented, wiping out all the previous posts. Apparently there are some members who have archived some material from way back, but there's no institutional memory, and that's too bad. I think that changed (and ultimately hurt) GMG as much as anything, including the intramural conflicts. GMG is fun and friendly enough AFAIC , but it's very hard to ask people to write the kind of long and considered threads there used to be when you're sure they'll be destroyed sooner or later.

Opus106

#8
Quote from: Herman on January 31, 2009, 05:32:06 AM
Rob's original GMG was mainly a board for newbies, as I recall. Then -   I'm not sure whether it was 2003 or 2004  -  a whole bunch of refugees from CMG moved to GMG. (Gurn, Todd, Lilas, Tony / Ezodisy, DavidW, me, many others)

Thank you, Herman, for that look back. I too have been a part of a forum which was created by a refugee and soon joined by other refugees, although I wasn't one myself; I got invited early on by another member. But it's one of the friendliest places I've been to. I still am a registered member there, but I don't have the time to visit it as often as I used to.

QuoteOne unfortunate thing was that virtually every one or two years new software was implemented, wiping out all the previous posts. Apparently there are some members who have archived some material from way back, but there's no institutional memory, and that's too bad. I think that changed (and ultimately hurt) GMG as much as anything, including the intramural conflicts. GMG is fun and friendly enough AFAIC , but it's very hard to ask people to write the kind of long and considered threads there used to be when you're sure they'll be destroyed sooner or later.

That is unfortunate, indeed. I sometimes run across links to threads from the older forum and am disappointed to end up at 404.

There is this website called the Way Back Machine, which saves pages from the sites in the internet every (few) month(s), but I just saw Google warn me against visiting it due to possible malware attacks!
http://www.google.com/interstitial?url=http://www.archive.org/




EDIT: Re: Google tagging the site as malware. It appears to have been a glitch on their end. In fact, they had tagged every website including their own, according a Slashdot story, that way. Things are back to normal and archive.org is apparently safe to visit again.
Regards,
Navneeth

Herman

Quote from: opus67 on January 31, 2009, 05:56:00 AM
Thank you, Herman, for that look back. I too have been a part of a forum which was created by a refugee and soon joined by other refugees, although I wasn't one myself;
http://www.google.com/interstitial?url=http://www.archive.org/


let's be 100% clear: GMG was created by Rob. Only he (probably) can tell you about GMG's first year, before the incursion of the above mentioned.

Opus106

Quote from: Herman on January 31, 2009, 06:15:19 AM
GMG was created by Rob. Only he (probably) can tell you about GMG's first year, before the incursion of the above mentioned.

I don't deny that. :)
Regards,
Navneeth

Brian

Quote from: opus67 on January 31, 2009, 04:27:38 AM
Primarily physics. But it also has a respectable maths section and smaller places for other branches/aspects of science and philosophy, career guidance in the sciences, etc. And a really fun general area.

What about your brother's?  :)
Uh, physics, math, other sciences ... oh boy.  ;D

Is it ScienceForums.net?

Dungeon Master

Quote from: Herman on January 31, 2009, 06:15:19 AM
let's be 100% clear: GMG was created by Rob. Only he (probably) can tell you about GMG's first year, before the incursion of the above mentioned.

Stay tuned for a book to be released soon about this very topic!

;)

cheers
Rob



Opus106

Quote from: Brian on January 31, 2009, 07:44:10 AM
Uh, physics, math, other sciences ... oh boy.  ;D

Is it ScienceForums.net?

Nope. physicsforums.com.

Quote from: admin on January 31, 2009, 08:22:25 AM
Stay tuned for a book to be released soon about this very topic!

;)

cheers
Rob

All hail the Great Cat-that-inhales-the-dust-from-what-appears-to-be-a-proto-planetary-disk! :D
Regards,
Navneeth

DavidW

Quote from: opus67 on January 31, 2009, 08:52:07 AM
Nope. physicsforums.com.

Really?  He did that as a high school project?  I post on that forum, and it's easily the best forum to discuss physics, math and engineering online at any level. :)

Opus106

Quote from: DavidW on January 31, 2009, 09:01:43 AM
Really?  He did that as a high school project?

I hope you didn't fall for that trip through the Amazon river story. ;D ;)

QuoteI post on that forum, and it's easily the best forum to discuss physics, math and engineering online at any level. :)
HA! I know another GMG'er who used to post (still posts?) there, but I wasn't aware that you also took part in the discussions. :) That's good to know.
Regards,
Navneeth

DavidW

Quote from: opus67 on January 31, 2009, 09:11:38 AM
I hope you didn't fall for that trip through the Amazon river story. ;D ;)

Oh sneak!  I'm just too trusting! :D

QuoteHA! I know another GMG'er who used to post (still posts?) there, but I wasn't aware that you also took part in the discussions. :) That's good to know.

Ah must be Daverz, I've seen him there.

Dungeon Master

GMG started in 2002, as a beginners guide to classical music.

Here are some screenshots of the early days.

The forum was very rudimentary, with very few features. It had a single "board" and members of guests could post a message and get replies, but that was about it. No PM's, no images, no moderators, and a very garish colour scheme (hey, I still like it). It got about a post every week or two.

Then, all of a sudden, there was a sudden influx from CMG. The software had to be updated a few times to cope with the huge increase in traffic. One of those software upgrades went very badly - the database got muddled up. I struggled to keep it afloat and running with a corrupted database for a few months, but it was clear that sooner or later it was going to crash and not be recoverable.

So I warned everyone to copy the posts they wanted to keep, and started a new forum with a fresh database and a fresh install of the software. This is the forum we have now. With a few minor glitches, this forum has been crash-free for over a year now. And, as expected, the old forum finally became inoperable. The database still exists (and the data is still there), but I do not have the database skills to repair it. (anyone??)

cheers
Rob

George

Quote from: admin on January 31, 2009, 10:29:11 AM
GMG started in 2002, as a beginners guide to classical music.

Here are some screenshots of the early days.

The forum was very rudimentary, with very few features. It had a single "board" and members of guests could post a message and get replies, but that was about it. No PM's, no images, no moderators, and a very garish colour scheme (hey, I still like it).


Great story Rob!  :)

Any chance we could get some color options with the current software? I am mostly interested in getting a darker overall back ground.

Gurn Blanston

Ha, I remember that scheme all too well. It was hideously ugly, yet with a certain charm... :)

We were still very small when I came here but the growth rate was stupendous. I really don't know how you managed to keep it running in those days. Clearly though, the biggest advance came when you made alternative color schemes available...   ;D

8)

----------------
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Haydn: that genius of vulgar music who induces an inordinate thirst for beer - Mily Balakirev (1860)