Quote from: theotherjohn on June 21, 2020, 12:05:18 PM
I'm also curious to know why there was an impressive 1000+ members online around the 20th and 21st of January 2020 - a sudden influx of spam accounts being registered?
I think that might be misleading. It is actually different number that is "registered members" online, and what is just "people viewing forum". Due rather free minded content of forum (and perhaps reputation of the man who pays the bills), it is no surprise that it gets occasional DOS attacks and this registers as "people viewing" even if it is just bots. Normally it is not more than couple hundred at once, I recall.
I am very positively surprised that like forum statistics shows, it is pretty much stable and constant activity since beginning. Number of posted topics, replies, visits, etc remains almost the same as 10 years ago. While pretty much all music forums of the time, are long gone.
Forum belongs to "traditional internet", where you need to consciously go to, and select what you browse. If you write there, you need to actually write. For people who mostly use phones now, and prefer simply get stream of things popping and and contribute merely by posting pic and possibly one-liner... forum is heavily outdated format. For me, it seems vastly more important, though.
It depends what time of year it is, but it has been about 500 members visit at least weekly, many daily, on this forum. Those who are not logged in, don't register as "member visits" so number may be vastly bigger. In context of noise and power electronics, I find that number pretty big. I am fully aware that there is a lot more people globally involved, but also fact remains that most of noise struggles to move 100 units of release, hah... So how to measure what is big amount in noise? How to get people talk on forums, instead of chat applications and such? I doubt one needs to be concerned. Forum has specific advantages and function, and posting on social media or chatting with friends has other.