Groklaw Calls it a Day, To Close May 16

posted by Thom Holwerda  on Sun 10th Apr 2011 19:57 UTC, submitted by PLan

http://www.osnews.com/story/24623/Groklaw_Calls_it_a_Day_To_Close_May_16

Should I be sad or relieved? Groklaw, the website that played a central role in 
the SCO vs. sanity case, has just announced it will close up shop on May 16 of 
this year. Groklaw's place in history has been secured, surely, but in recent 
years, the site became more and more like a relic from the past, clearly stuck 
in the everyone vs. Microsoft mindset of the late '90s and early 2000s. Even in 
today's announcement post, Groklaw shows that its time has indeed come.

I've never been an unequivocal fan of Groklaw, for the simple reason that its 
author, PJ, pretty much saw Microsoft's hand in everything. However, this does 
not negate the fact that Groklaw has played a crucial role in the SCO case; PJ 
uncovered several pieces of important evidence in the case, which even lead to 
SCO targeting her on a more personal level.

Despite these accomplishments, the site started losing its edge the past few 
years - in my eyes, at least. PJ is still entirely hung up on Microsoft, even 
in today's announcement post. She goes on and on about how Microsoft is tying 
to destroy Android, and keeps on talking about the mobile space as if it's 
Microsoft vs. Linux, stating that Groklaw isn't needed because Android has 
beaten Microsoft. This makes no sense - Microsoft was already beaten long 
before Android came onto the market. Android is beating iOS and BlackBerry, not 
Microsoft.

Still, credit where credit is due. "No matter what happens next, I know that we 
changed the course of history. How many people get to say that? I never 
expected it, frankly, and I am grinning just thinking about how much fun we've 
had doing it," PJ writes, "Our work will be available for historians 
permanently, so the impact we had isn't over today, and someday we'll tell our 
grandkids that we were part of this, part of Groklaw. We are in the history 
books. Our work will continue as long as anyone cares about this unique time 
period in the history of computer software, a history that we are a part of 
forever. And that is a long, long time."

Thank you, PJ, for your work, and good luck with any future endeavours.
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