| A few notes as I read through this: - Passwords are still just as broken now as they were then. - Functional programming is still widely discussed, though the focus is more on Lisp than Clojure/Haskell/etc. - Fourth post is the usual, somewhat sensationalist, this commonly-accepted thing is bad! sort of headline that makes the rounds here every so often. - This post on syntax highlighting [1] reminds me of another recent one [2]. - 37signals is there with another sage-like statement on the business. - Article on women in tech in slot #13. - Woah, is that Clojure there in #14? And on SourceForge, even. It's come a long way since then. - Fears about government invasion of privacy abound. - Hey, MySpace! That spam "epidemic" never quite subsided, it seems. - Interesting mathematical discussion in slot #24. When reading the headline, I almost expected to read "stackoverflow.com" in the domain slot. Goes to show how popular that sort of post is here nowadays. As someone who wasn't around back then, it's interesting to look back on this now and see what the site I love now was like five years ago. [1] http://web.archive.org/web/20071110115358/http://drinkbroken... [2] http://www.kyleisom.net/blog/2012/10/17/syntax-off/ |
As a simple indicator, there are only two articles about functional programming on the front page, and they're both fairly shallow, general and not current. They're also related: same author and similar subjects.
I'm sure it's just a function (heh) of HN's growing userbase and more diverse audience. Still, I really would like more functional programming stuff. I even vote on interesting FP articles on new, but it often isn't enough, especially because the new page moves fairly quickly and I don't go there that often.
But yeah, ignoring the relative proportions of subjects, the front page actually seems fairly similar to the current one.