~terry
Mon, Feb 9, 1998 (07:28)
seed
cyberspace.org
~terry
Thu, Sep 3, 1998 (02:56)
#1
M-Net / Grex Message
By: Jan Wolter (janc_CW) 7/26/98 10:51:13 AM
A few bits of news on Grex:
- We've been getting lots of new users. On the
average day, we get 175 people signing up for new
accounts. Last Saturday we had 250 new users, a
new record. We keep breaking our records though.
Grex now has about 24,000 users. At the current
rate of growth, we expect to exceed 64K users
sometime next summer. This has our Unix gurus
worried because most versions of Unix, including
ours, go cross-eyed at the concept of more than
64K users.
- In spite of this vast growth in users, the new
machine is holding up pretty well. Most of the
time, the machine is still pretty zippy.
- Vandals seem to be holding steady at about 0.5% to
1% of the users. Unfortunately, that means we get
one or two new vandals attacking the system every
day. Luckily, the vast majority are morons (who
else would attack a free system?). Security has
held well so far, and we've been able to survive
most denial-of-service attacks. If Grex is slow
these days, it's usually because a mail bomb or
fork bomb attack is in progress. If it's down,
then it's either an especially nasty fork bomb or
a power outage.
- Finances are OK, but not great. Membership hasn't
been growing anywhere near as fast as usership,
and we are reaching the point where our income only
covers our operating expenses, leaving nothing for
improvements and upgrades. We are planning to
start getting a bit more aggressive about asking
for donations. After people have been on Grex for
three months, they will get E-mail asking them if
they might like to donate some money.
- Grex was originally constituted to be a 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt corporation, but in the first 6 years of
its existance, nobody ever filed the (somewhat
daunting) paperwork with the IRS. I did this a
few months ago, and we have now been formally
granted tax-exempt status. Among other things,
this means we won't have to pay tax on the phone
bills for our 13 dial-in lines, which saves us
$30 a month, which is enough to tip us back into
the black for a while. Next step - go through a
similar process to see if we can avoid Ann Arbor
city property taxes.
- We did some redesign on our web page, at
http://www.cyberspace.org
to make it a bit more attractive and informative.
Still very low-tech.
It looks like the basic question we have to answer is
not "can we survive?" but "how big do we want to get?"
None of our volunteer staff and board members are all
that eager to keep growing, but the only way to slow
growth would be to make our service in some way less
attractive to some segment of our user base. We've
worked hard to make it good. Making it less good isn't
our idea of fun either. Our best chance is if more
people start more good free services - we need more
competition.