This is a series of entries about the sites that I call "ASE." While Aron Schatz Dot Com may comprise part of that, it is mostly reserved for the sites under ASE Publishing. The first site I ever create was ASE Labs.
ASE Labs was released, in full, on September 2001 (bad month). That wasn't the actual start, though. I always read through many different hardware review sites at the time and I wanted to figure out how they posted their articles and generally was interested in computers. I wanted to create a site to post my own reviews of hardware with the added bonus of having to write the site from the ground up. I really didn't do any research on content management systems at the time (and if I did, I probably wouldn't be using my own), but this was fine as I was very interested in scripting with PHP.
I started with PHP3 which became PHP4 after finding out the new functions that PHP3 didn't have. This created a problem back in 2001 as many hosts supported PHP3, but not PHP4. For a few months of development, I ran the website out of my home connection. There were a few visitors here and there and I actually had a following since a few of us left a forum in protest over some things.
It's too bad the original people that help the site in the early days are no longer there. One of them still checks in from time to time, though.
After getting most of the site in working order (finishing a programming project is never 100% done in my book), one of the people I knew online had a hosting company. For $10 a month, ASE Labs was hosted on a shared hosting service with PHP4. I was still a Windows person back then, but the server was running Linux. This was my first real experience with Linux and it was positive.
aselabs.com was not originally registered by myself. Chris (the hosting person) registered it for me. I didn't take ownership of the domain for a year or so after.
ASE Labs might have been a computer hardware review site, but the real motive behind its creation was to make a site by myself. I've always had a thing for doing backend programming and it continues to this day. Today, I try to keep away from the publishing side to work on being a traditional editor that checks and reviews articles as well as doing the programming.
ASE Labs has had four versions of the site (not counting the numerous upgrades to those) and the latest, Version 4, is the best one yet.
ASE Labs started as a hobby and I'm trying to morph it into a true publication business. In addition to that, ASE Labs has spawn a few other things that are good. It was ASE Labs that spawned ASE Adnet, but I'll have another entry on that.
There's more to ASE Labs, but that's all you get for now. I've enjoyed the trip down memory lane.