Please see the most recent updates in the "Where did the .com name go?" thread. Posts number 16 and 17.


:toilet:Many of our staff offered assistance and a helping hand as well as many key Community members with experience. I read several post where well renowned code writers and web developers offered their service for free.
Sitting here and looking at this from my perspective I can't understand not letting people help. The only answer I can come up with is a matter of trust. I think the flight simulator community that supports fan sites are a bunch of kind and helpful people. At SOH we try to include everyone in the site and give them a say in its direction or even in it being on-line or closed.
There is one difference that may change the game, advertising revenue. SOH can remain a pure Community site and owe no favors to anyone because we have never ran a PAID ad, banner, preview or review. Our only advertising is self promotion and Donationware whereas ALL proceeds go directly into buying bandwidth. I could never figure out whether AVSIM and FlightSim are commercial sites or just plain community supported sites. It seems to me with the number of ads and knowing the type of revenue to expect from visitors there should be a profit and not a loss.
In my mind a site is either Public Service or Commercial and if Commercial the site should be a legal business with public profit/loss statements. Business don't take public donations!
I'm sorry if I have pissed anyone off, this is all my personal opinion and not the views of Sim-Outhouse or any other members of the staff.

as we have hats off this is my viewI'm sorry if I have pissed anyone off, this is all my personal opinion and not the views of Sim-Outhouse or any other members of the staff.
The AVSIM Convention was canceled about 10 days ago.
They did hire a volunteer to help with their systems but he was promptly sacked when it was suspected and alleged that he stole email addresses of AVSIM members. This was only days before AVSIM was hacked but I'm sure that was just a coincidence.
The reason it is taking so long is that each .zip file is being checked individually for integrity. Try to imagine how long it might take five people to check >150,000 zip files...
Once satisfied that all the files are intact, the plan is to restore/reindex the original library routines, and then proceed to design the new library routines.