Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 26, 2016 Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 I've been away from the LAVA forums for a couple years. Recently, due to some site maintenance. I decided to hang out and check out some of the cool discussions here on LAVA... I'm still trying to find them. So is LabVIEW just fading in popularity? Being relegated to some obscure language nobody cares about? Or have the cool kids gone somewhere else? Where do you go to discuss exciting LabVIEW topics, or even boring ones? I really want to know because I want to hang out there too! LAVA served a purpose to connect people in an independent forum where none existed before. Does LAVA still need to exist in this age of hundreds of ni.com communitiues? Has LAVA's glory passed? Or is it simply that we need some restructuring to get interest back again? Honest feedback welcome. 1 Quote Link to comment
Fab Posted April 26, 2016 Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 LAVA is still my number one place to go find answers. I am more of a lurker though... I would be very sad if LAVA were to disappear. LAVA needs to stay. 2 Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted April 26, 2016 Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 I'm sorry you've been somewhat disconnected from the community. Obviously I'm a bit biased but LAVA and the NI communities serve very different groups. If I was forced to migrate to an NI community I think you'd be harder pressed to find a group like this with as good of code repository, discussion, and light heartedness. LabVIEW in my career is hardly obscure. Job postings I applied for a year ago are still looking for experts. Restructure isn't a terrible idea and a LAVA face lift is a good start. Quote Link to comment
Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 26, 2016 Author Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 Here are new topic stats for LAVA since 2009: New post stats of the same period. The dips at the beginning of every year is the Christmas break and New Years. 11 minutes ago, hooovahh said: LAVA and the NI communities serve very different groups. Perhaps the groups served by LAVA are shrinking? 1 Quote Link to comment
Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 26, 2016 Author Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 So it looks like I'm getting biased answers. I get it. Nobody hangs out on ni.com. I'll use the line I use on my kids. "Just tell me the truth, you won't get in trouble, I promise." Quote Link to comment
CopperD Posted April 26, 2016 Report Share Posted April 26, 2016 I don't know where else to hang out at. The NI forms feel uninviting. According to the April 2016 TIOBE index LabVIEW is in slot 37 just under RPG and up from 42 in July 2015. Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 The truth is I call this place home more than any other, and I suspect I'm not alone. I still learn the most here, I still contribute the most here, and some of the best frank conversations take place here (as shown by this thread) Based on your line of questioning I'd suspect you are having a change of career, or internal struggle. In either case these are going to be very personal feelings, and somewhat unique to your situation. I'm happy, others are happy, if you aren't happy I can see why you might want to change something. Quote Link to comment
Neil Pate Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 Ditto for me, I would be very sad if this place shut its doors. I think the audience here is very different to ni.com forums, and personally I do not like the community aspect there, it feels too distributed. If I have questions, which I still quite regularly do, this is where I am going to ask them. Put another way, lavag.org is one of the few sites I would gladly pay towards the cost of running, so thanks for everything Michael :-) Quote Link to comment
LogMAN Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 3 minutes ago, Neil Pate said: Ditto for me, I would be very sad if this place shut its doors. I think the audience here is very different to ni.com forums, and personally I do not like the community aspect there, it feels too distributed. If I have questions, which I still quite regularly do, this is where I am going to ask them. Put another way, lavag.org is one of the few sites I would gladly pay towards the cost of running, so thanks for everything Michael :-) Amen. Thanks Neil I was attempting to write the exact thing right now (though I had trouble finding the right words) One thing I want to mention related to the graphs from above: Maybe there are less topics started overall, however the existing ones are extemly helpful as is and being continued on a regular basis (even ones that are over 10 years old). This forum provides a tremendous amount of knowledge, ideas and funny things which lure me to come back every day (sometimes even on holidays ). Also: Don't trust statistics you didn't forge yourself Quote Link to comment
Antoine Chalons Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 (edited) On NI Forums I give help, on LAVA I seek help. I post a lot less than before but I still have a look at all the new topics and read those that relate to what I do. Very often when I - or someone around me - has a LabVIEW related question, I remember of a topic I saw on LAVA and give the link, the amount of great advice/help available on LAVA is huge. Couldn't live without it! Edited April 28, 2016 by Antoine Chalons 1 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post ShaunR Posted April 27, 2016 Popular Post Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 (edited) 11 hours ago, Michael Aivaliotis said: I've been away from the LAVA forums for a couple years. Recently, due to some site maintenance. I decided to hang out and check out some of the cool discussions here on LAVA... I'm still trying to find them. So is LabVIEW just fading in popularity? Being relegated to some obscure language nobody cares about? Or have the cool kids gone somewhere else? Where do you go to discuss exciting LabVIEW topics, or even boring ones? I really want to know because I want to hang out there too! LAVA served a purpose to connect people in an independent forum where none existed before. Does LAVA still need to exist in this age of hundreds of ni.com communitiues? Has LAVA's glory passed? Or is it simply that we need some restructuring to get interest back again? Honest feedback welcome. If you answer why you haven't visited in 2 years then that will probably be the answer you seek. Not sure what you mean by "cool" discussions. If you mean things like LVOOP then, personally, I don't think it has anything to do with LavaG being past it. LabVIEW stagnated over 5 years ago and all the subjects have been talked to death and everyone has written and debugged their frameworks (as they were in other languages 10 years before that). There were really only a handful of contributors (AQ, Daklu, Shoneill .... and now I'm struggling) and the only one that still visits to contribute is Shoneill, I think. Generally, though the lack of LabVIEW innovation is the main reason there are less "cool" discussions generally. The thing that made this apparent to me was when a 15 year old technology (Vi Macros) was suddenly re-discovered and piqued everyones interest. There was then a flurry of contribution and excitement (especially me) that brought me out of answering implementation questions and sparked my need to investigate and explore - something that probably hadn't happened for a couple of years on LavaG. So new "cool stuff" isn't being discussed because LabVIEW isn't developing new "cool stuff". VI macros ended with the development of "Named Events" and that is "Cool" with a capital "ICE" If Lavag.org goes then I will not be going over to ni.com. I never post on ni.com and probably only visit it 2-3 times a year if Google gives me a result in the top 5.I got tired of it demanding to know the inside circumference of my colon just to log in and the quality of answers is nowhere near as adroit or concise as on here. You know how after 10 years of programming when you have a problem that would be a 10 minute fix if only you knew x, y or z? So you phone up NI and manage to get through to an application engineer then spend the next 4 hours explaining your problem and them passing it on to someone that actually knows, waiting for their response then replying back. Three days later of this back and forth and they finally escalate your query and you get to talk with the actual person that knows and they tell you "Oh thats what you wanted? x=2, y=4 and z=8". Thats ni.com! In this analogy, LavaG is where ni.com escalates the query to. So don't think of ni.com it as a competitor. Think of it as a filter for studenty and mundane questions Edited April 27, 2016 by ShaunR 3 Quote Link to comment
Bryan Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 I've been a LAVA member for quite some time. I actually found my current job through this website back in 2004 (and I'm still employed at the same location). I don't post much, but haven't done as much LabVIEW development in my career as I would like to. So I've fallen behind the curve as far as latest tips, tricks, architectures and methods. I haven't even used the Actor Framework yet, (we're still primarily using LV2010). So I haven't been able to lend much on LAVA as far as advice and help for those using all of these newfangled toys and methods or haven't had the need to seek help. This is possibly just a personal preference, but I prefer LAVA to the NI forums, and I rarely use the NI forums. I like how the smaller community feel is so concentrated with LabVIEW expertise. I wish I would be able to spend more time on here and be one of the regulars like I had been on previous forums in which I was a longtime member, but I just haven't had the need or knowledge to do so. That all being said, I may be on here a little more in the coming months as I've been somewhat asked by one of our company locations to modify a neat LabVIEW application. I've already seen the code and the previous developer was definitely someone I would consider to be a LabVIEW Architect. For all I know, they may be a member on here. Quote Link to comment
eberaud Posted April 27, 2016 Report Share Posted April 27, 2016 I visit LAVA everyday and either quickly check or thoroughly read all posts, depending of my interest/knowledge in the topic. This is my #1 source for keeping my skills up to date, LAVA must stay! Quote Link to comment
shoneill Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 Disclaimer: I don't mean to be negative in this post but I'm telling it as I see it. I may be wrong (no surprises there) but if we value frank and open discussions, here we go. I post a lot more on the NI forums than I do here. I like helping out possible future LV gurus. The word guru apparently means "He who dispels the darkness". Many of you have much brighter torches than I do but we need to spread the light and spread it far and wide. The more we withdraw into ourselves, the brighter the light may seem, but the fewer people benefit from it. To be honest I think LAVA has a bit of an elitist feel to it which does not help LAVA or its visitors (or potential visitors) in any way besides feeling smug about being good enough to be here (the people here are undoubtedy very knowledgable, this is undisputed). This is why I try to bring also more advanced topics to the NI forum. Chances are that it will reach more people. If we decide to only hang around with people we think of as our peers (because the ego boost feels nice) we either create an unaccessible wealth of knowledge which benefits only a select few or we actually miss out on changes in the commujnity and end up getting left behind. Neither outcome is particularly appealing to me personally. I come to LAVA when I need something for me which I think is uninteresting for others. I go to NI.com when I want my knowledge (or possible answers to my questions) to be as accessible as possible in order to benefit the LabVIEW ecosystem as a whole. If we insist on creating an "us" v "them" atmosphere then the gulf will only keep increasing which will of course stroke our egos even more which will increase the gulf which will......oh dear. I remember a story from way back when the computer game "Doom" was released. One report was that the game was technically brilliant and fun but the reporter tired of it quickly. It turns out he was playing the game in only the first room and never realised that what looked like a wall was a door to the rest of the first level (and to all other levels - he was playing like only the first 1% of the game). I think it's fine showing off technical prowess to users but if we don't help newcomers find the door the appeal will be very limited. Sure, not everything that comes through the door will be welcome but that's life (or Doom, I can't remember ). If all of this makes people wary of being overrun by the unwashed masses then I think a paid subscription model is the only way to go. But I severely doubt if that will increase the number of posts. For me personally the bottom line is that if I had to choose between the NI forum and LAVA, I would choose the NI forum because I think the effort spent there is maybe less valuable to me in the short term but is essential to the longer term health of the community. Don't get me wrong, I value LAVA greatly and have learned a lot here. I don't want to see it go. I also don't want to see it get increasingly isolated. 2 Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 (edited) @Shoneill I hear what you are saying but it is "LabVIEW Advanced Virtual Architects" so it is pretty much a given there is a certain level of discussion expected in here.just as there is an expectation with the CLA or CLD certification. I wouldn't call that elitism since non experienced programmers do get answers and are, I think, handled gently and patiently when they do appear. It's not like they are ignored because they are considered "newbies". If there is a perceived elitism then can that not also be argued for the CLA seminars and events where you are not welcome unless you are one? I think it is the same premise but on LavaG.org we refuse noone.. 2 hours ago, shoneill said: I come to LAVA when I need something for me which I think is uninteresting for others. That's just bizarre I'm not sure what you are trying to say here. Edited April 28, 2016 by ShaunR Quote Link to comment
shoneill Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 Shaun, I'm referring to tone not content. As I have mentioned in a few places in my post, the content here is great and I'm aware it's for more advanced users. It's more a background noice of belittling NI.com that alienates some people because if creates an "us" v "them" mentality. We had a discussion on the elitism approach to the CLA videos before and I outlined my position there very clearly. Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 @shoneill Ni.com has always been known as "The Dark Side" - a veiled reference to ni.com being a corporate support forum as opposed to an altruistic community run forum. You aren't talking about that, though. (Are you?) 4 minutes ago, shoneill said: We had a discussion on the elitism approach to the CLA videos before and I outlined my position there very clearly You'd have to give me a link. I have a first in, first out memory so that info is long gone. Quote Link to comment
shoneill Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 1 hour ago, ShaunR said: That's just bizarre I'm not sure what you are trying to say here. Others = not LAVA If I think a topic of of general interest- NI. If I think a topic is only of interest to the LAVA crowd - LAVA. It's not really very complicated. Quote Link to comment
shoneill Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 (edited) 52 minutes ago, ShaunR said: You'd have to give me a link. I have a first in, first out memory so that info is long gone. Here you go: I also don't know why linking to a post includes the majority of the first line.... For the record, I believe we were on the same page regarding that discussion IIRC. I find the fact that Mark publishes the videos an outstanding piece of work and he forever has my gratitude. Regarding the "elitist" attitude it is in part what you describe wih the "dark side". Your own post in this thread about not wanting to go to NI even if LAVA was closed is in a similar vein. I just find it could present an unneccessary barrier to newcomers. If someone comes here after learning from the NI forum (it IS possible) and they sense this attitude, it can be intimidating. It is also a shame you don't post over there. While I agree that the signal to noise ratio here is hugely better than on the NI site I think the community at large would benefit greatly from you popping over to the dark side to answer a few questions instead of only posting here. Is it a huge thing. No. Can it be off-putting for newcomers who aren't as rambunctious as some of us? I think so, yes. Ps I also think your insinuation that the work done in the NI forum is somehow not "altruistic" is quite off the mark. Edited April 28, 2016 by shoneill Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 (edited) 44 minutes ago, shoneill said: Your own post in this thread about not wanting to go to NI even if LAVA was closed is in a similar vein Not really. It's a case I can't log into ni.com without jumping through obnoxious "fill all this info out" pages. Because I control what sites can and can't put on my computer, I always have to prove who I am with lots and lots of info which I can't usually remember (first in/out, don't forget ). You obviously missed the attempted humour about my colon that explained that . It's also one of the reasons I never sign up for the beta - unless I really, really have to because the sky will fall in. It's the same as with any cloudflare site. I always (and by that I mean every time, not sometimes) get a captcha -which I can't see because it gets blocked - so I don't go to any sites behind cloudflare. It has nothing to do with a closed attitude. I'm also not sure that me posting over there would alleviate any inferiority complexes they have. It's a corporate support site and doesn't require our input to function. LavaG does so I'd rather post here where I can just log in unmolested! So. Having outlined one possible reason, what are your proposals? Edited April 28, 2016 by ShaunR Quote Link to comment
shoneill Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 I don't have any proposals. You're completely free to choose to go or not go where you want. Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 @Michael Aivaliotis Do you have stats for sign-ups over time like you have shown for posts? Quote Link to comment
AutoMeasure Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 (edited) Hey, Michael, I think that LAVA is great and I prefer it to the noise and style of the NI forums. Thanks for keeping it running. I appreciate the expertise, brightness, and time-generosity of the frequent posters here! I'm a very infrequent poster because my job takes all my time. I liked the Info-Labview email list, too, before I moved over to LAVA, but that list lingered way past its expiration, ha ha. I don't think LAVA is at that point, I think it's still great. 10 new topics per week rates as an active forum, and it looks like everyone gets replies to their questions. ShaunR hit the nail on the head about Labview stagnating for the last 5 years. You can see the slowdown in innovation, energy, and buzz. Probably this is natural given what's happening in high tech and computing. Labview is such a unique beast - beautifully engineered, hugely powerful, alone at the top as the best solution for test & automation. Engineers will continue to choose it as their platform, although it looks like zero growth in the new-adopters-per-year figure. It's weird for me to have spent half my life immersed in a single vendor's toolset. My livelihood is maybe too dependent on a thriving NI. But I still really enjoy the work, and there are not enough Labview experts to fill the demand. -Joe Edited April 28, 2016 by AutoMeasure 1 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post Rolf Kalbermatter Posted April 28, 2016 Popular Post Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 (edited) It's a general tendency I have noticed on LabVIEW forums, although maybe less so on the NI forums. I also signed up at the German LabVIEW forum and while 5 or 6 years ago you had every day several new topics varying from the newbie question of how to do a simple file IO operation to the advanced topic of system architecture and interfacing to external code, nowadays it is maybe a tenth of that with most topics ranging in the more trivial category. The German forum had and has a somewhat broader target range since it was equally meant for beginners and advanced users while LAVA started by the nature of its name as a forum for somewhat more advanced topics, although I would like to think that we never really gave a newbie a bad feeling when posting here, as long as that person didn't violate just about every possible netiquet there is. The German forum may have one additional effect that may contribute to it getting less traffic and that is that English has also in Germany got the defacto standard in at least engineering. But without having any numbers to really compare I would say that the German forum and LAVA have seen similar decay in number of new posts and answers in general. And yes I have been wondering about that. Where did those people go? I feel that some went to the NI forums as they got more accessible over time but I do think that a more important aspect is that LabVIEW has gotten in many places just one of many tools to tackle software problems whereas in the past it was more often THE tool in the toolbox of many developers. That is probably a somewhat jaded view from personal experience but I certainly see it in other places too when I get there during my job. And Shaun definitely addresses another point when he mentions that LabVIEW innovation has slowly been getting to the point of stagnation in the last 5 to 10 years. That would hurt specialized forums like LAVA or a local forum like the German forum most likely a lot more than the NI forum, which catches most of the more trivial user questions of how to get something done or about perceived or real bugs. I'm not sure in how far the NI forum has been seeing a similar slow down. Personally I feel it might have been getting a little less active overal in comparison but what is more apparent is the fact that there too the general level of advanced topics has been slowing down, which would be in accordance about little to no innovations in LabVIEW. The interesting things have been discussed and brainstormed about and very little new things got added that would spur new discussions. What is posted nowadays is mostly about problems when using LabVIEW or some hardware or how to get a simple job down quickly! Is LabVIEW dead? I wouldn't feel so as I still see it used in many places but the excitement about using LabVIEW has been somewhat lost by many. It's a specialized tool to do certain things and in a way the only one in town doing it in this way, but by far not the only one you can use to do these things. In fact there have been many new and not so new possibilities about doing it (I see for instance regularly situations where people have decided to use Python for everything even the UI, which is not something I would easily consider) and the general target has been shifting too. If you want to do internet related stuff then LabVIEW is definitely not the most easy solution and also not the most powerful one. Engineering simply has been getting a lot broader in the last 10 years and while measurement and testing where you directly tinker with hardware and sensors still is quite important, there has been another big market developed that has very little to do with this and where the qualities of LabVIEW don't shine as bright or even show nasty oxidation spots. Maybe the fact that LabVIEW always was designed as a closed environment with very limited possiblities to be extended directly by 3rd parties has hurt it to the point of being forced into the niche market it always tried to protect for itself. It will be interesting to see how NI is going to attempt to fix that. The stagnation in LabVIEW development is something which supposedly happened because they focused the energy on a fundamental redesign of the LabVIEW platform, which has dragged on longer than hoped for and claimed more resources than was good for the existing LabVIEW platform. Edited April 29, 2016 by rolfk 5 Quote Link to comment
CopperD Posted April 28, 2016 Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 I have been waiting for this "fundamental redesign" and it doesn't look like it's coming out this year. Quote Link to comment
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