Should bike radar swallow it's pride and just retire

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

cyberknight

As long as I breathe, I attack.
Imagine our horror when we pitch up at midnight to find that the server was set to CET. Besides, 11pm on a school night is really as late as I'm willing to go.

haha 8 pm for me this week , mind you i try to get up before my alarm that is set for 3.45 am .I did clock on at work at 5 am .
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
haha 8 pm for me this week , mind you i try to get up before my alarm that is set for 3.45 am .I did clock on at work at 5 am .

Ha, those days are well behind me (by about 25 years). I twice managed to milk two herds of cows before 8am: as I was leaving the first one at about 6.15am, the owner walked in, we exchanged greetings, and he didn't bat an eyelid.
 

Pat "5mph"

A kilogrammicaly challenged woman
Moderator
Location
Glasgow
Maybe Bikeradar will have a Paddy's day leaving do, come back covered in Guinness sponsored gear and forget all about it....
 

wafter

I like steel bikes and I cannot lie..
Location
Oxford
Can anyone give me a brief rundown of what's occurred here?

Personally I quite like the main Bike Radar site as it seems a little more left-of-the-field than some of its contemporaries.. although I've not paid much attention to the forum. I assume the main site will continue despite the forum heading for the bin...?

I've witnessed forum collapses in the past and can appreciate how often the atmosphere on such site-attached discussion boards can rapidly head south if malcontent spreads amongst the membership. On top of that it's a thankless task moderating forums and I wonder if they've chosen to bite the bullet in the face of all this social-media-hate-speech jazz that's being chucked about currently..?

EDIT: Explanation given on the forum here; I wonder if that's the sole reason or if there's more to it than that - while the rise of more dickhead-friendly social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram and Twatter are cited as contributing factors, I've never found them a viable substitute for more traditional bulletin board sites like the good ship CC..
 

sungod

Active Member
Can anyone give me a brief rundown of what's occurred here?

Personally I quite like the main Bike Radar site as it seems a little more left-of-the-field than some of its contemporaries.. although I've not paid much attention to the forum. I assume the main site will continue despite the forum heading for the bin...?

I've witnessed forum collapses in the past and can appreciate how often the atmosphere on such site-attached discussion boards can rapidly head south if malcontent spreads amongst the membership. On top of that it's a thankless task moderating forums and I wonder if they've chosen to bite the bullet in the face of all this social-media-hate-speech jazz that's being chucked about currently..?

EDIT: Explanation given on the forum here; I wonder if that's the sole reason or if there's more to it than that - while the rise of more dickhead-friendly social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram and Twatter are cited as contributing factors, I've never found them a viable substitute for more traditional bulletin board sites like the good ship CC..

there've been at least two botched software changes, resulting in long outages and successively poorer page design, there was a noticeable drop off in active users each time, the last one in particular, some bits had no activity for long periods

without users, the ad revenue will have declined sharply, though anyone capable will have been ad blocking it for ages as they became ridiculously obtrusive at one point

there's been near-zero moderation for a long time, presumably a cost reduction, i'd guess the final nail in the coffin was the online safety act https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/online-safety-act-explainer/online-safety-act-explainer

with the cost of compliance/risk of penalties, and the lack of revenue, no surprise that they chose to shut it down
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
I think the bottom line was that it wasn't worth the expense or faff for about 50 active forum members left, as there would be no advertising revenue and no Click-throughs to the main website.
 
Top Bottom