When I started this site just over nine years ago, I didn't have a clue about what I was doing nor how the site would grow. I found the platform we still use today by accident and back in the heady emerging social media days of 2007 and 2008 they were great. The platform was constantly evolving and if I ever had any problems they were incredibly responsive.
However, the exciting (excitable?) social media buzz of those days has settled down to a background hum. Many tech companies went to the wall. Our platform hosts have survived, but were bought by a company which if it were a parent would long ago have been taken to court for severe neglect. This second-rate parent has just sold the platform on. Some accounts suggest that the new owner may be less parent and more modern-day slaver.
Worldwide, users of this platform are up in arms that our monthly fees are being doubled, but perhaps more than that, people are concerned about the viability of the platform in the medium term. So it seems like it's time to start contemplating some other futures.
If the platform closes down, not only would HoL face oblivion, but almost a decade of local community conversation will be lost for good. (This would be just one small part of what's being talked about as potentially the 'forgotten century' as all sorts of digitally stored archives disappear forever). That would be a shame for us now as well as for those who come after us.
To ensure our survival and the preservation of the rich tapestry in our archive, we may need to find a new home. As a first step I've reached out to the other Haringey sites that patterned themselves on HoL and used the same platform.
But, whether we do it alone or work with other sites, any move would mean specifying a new platform and then finding someone to make it for us. So two questions from me at this point:
1. In terms of the features we have and the ways things look, what would you like to change and what stay the same?
2. Can anyone help out on the technical side? As you can imagine the site is not blessed with huge wealth! (But we have won multiple awards and are well known in communities around the world....and...and....I guess any solution you make for us can be applied to a huge number of other people currently using our platform and also looking for a new home).
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Thanks Nanz, We're not on our uppers yet, just looking at taking precautionary measures.
Another member who messaged me following my adding this post, flagged up the option of Social Engine. He linked me to a web page that might answer your question about archive format. (Useful if Ning's archiver will ever let me sign in!).
I think that's the key Hugh, if you can get in to archive the site it should be fairly straight forward to import into socialengine or similar (from my quick investigation socialengine does seem to be the best alternative).
I am a developer but do not have a lot of experience with social networks, happy to help if I can though.
https://www.phpbb.com/ is one of the larger free forum providers (although you'd need to pay for hosting). Vbulletin is also pretty popular https://www.vbulletin.com/en/vbulletin-cloud
https://microco.sm/ is very good but I'm not sure whether it's taking on new forums anymore.
This isn't the easiest site to use, the threaded display is hard to follow and the multiple forums make it difficult to work out where things actually are. As a result I, and I suspect a fair few others, just look at the most recent few posts.
Slack is more for temporal discussion
If Slack-2Plus is good for eternal discussion, I'd be interested.
I second Microco.sm as a platform too (albeit as a user of forums, I have no idea what it is like to manage!) I particularly like the 'today' option that it offers where you can see all the threads that have been updated today without having to trawl through different subsections. An example is this one: https://www.lfgss.com/
It's clean and clear.
I'd suggest Drupal. It is free and open source and flexible, and there is a vibrant developer community. The upside (and it is a huge one) is that Drupal can be configured to do just about anything. The downside is that it has quite a steep learning curve (I have now done the same workshop on it twice and can just about build a single page, so I am unfortunately not the right person to do it). So, unless there is someone out there in Harringay who is a Drupal expert and willing to give up their time - or unless there is some funding in the HOL coffers to perhaps pay someone to design and set up the site, and enough people out there with enough experience to maintain it, it's probably not a workable option.
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