Hi,
right 1999 was open the first server - but in that time it was running under polarfox.com domain (the only remains from that time is the site icon and probably some not updated links in remote pages of some opensource projects)
Indeed, polarhome has changed the user base in the past 16 years.
Here you can find some statistics
http://www.polarhome.com/service/statistics/In particular the new user statistics and trends per years
http://www.polarhome.com/service/shell/user_per_server.phpand server choice
http://www.polarhome.com/service/shell/user_per_year.phpWe can conclude that indeed, less and less new users register.
...also that users from 2003-2006 (when the registration peeks) not many of them use their polarhome accounts.
Your question - what is the purpose of keeping polarhome alive is absolutely valid - as well as your observation that I am much less motivated in keeping it online then 10 years ago.
I have those thought also when I am tired of fighting stupid harmful hackers, but at the end I find my positive reasons to keep it.
Well - here are my reasons (that I should, in fact express in much more elaborative way but I do now a short version)
- polarhome is history and a whole generation of programmers arose from here
- it still hosts the most diverse and odd, publicly avalilable server park in the World
- collection of the man pages is highly appreciated
http://www.polarhome.com/service/man/- still some significant open source projects use polarhome - like Perl, OpenSSL for example
- valuable GNU projects use for testing, bug fixes like make, gtar, parallel
- polarhome server setups on odd architectures are used as baseline for open source development environment
- and the most important - it keeps my brain in good shape and holds me updated with the open source development trends
What is the future?
- I will keep polarhome online, free and open until my last breath.
- It will be as good as much I (and funds from donations) can appreciate
- It will serve any developer, organization and project that need such an environment for creative work.
Future plans?
- keep the servers online (it sounds simple, but it is a hell of a job)
- provide education and development platform for anybody who needs it.
- develop
http://www.jenkinsfarm.org that will provide CI (continous integration) across whole polarhome server architecture - that will provide more compatible and stable software for the whole open source World at least
...as you see. The main conclusion could be that I am not sad that polarhome does not have 200.000 active users today - because:
1. I cannot provide a whole customer service to answer their quesries, solve their problems
2. servers have more resources left for valuable development
3. satisfaying one polarhome user like Perl's Jarkko Hietaniemi produces many millions satisfied users worldwide indirectly - and this is the polarhome's contibution for the better World