Qhub offered a "turnkey" solution. Within minutes, a user could sign up and have a fully functional, sleek-looking question-and-answer website. It wasn't just a feature on a blog; it was a destination.
Recognizing the changing tides, Qhub underwent changes. In the mid-2010s, the platform was acquired by , a company looking to aggregate Q&A data. qhub.com
Qhub gained traction just as the "Q&A Revolution" was taking off. Around the same time, sites like (2005) and later Stack Overflow (2008) were exploding. Qhub offered a "turnkey" solution
The challenge for Qhub began around 2012. The "community" dynamic was moving away from independent websites and onto social media platforms. Recognizing the changing tides, Qhub underwent changes
The final blow came not with a bang, but with a silence. The servers became unreliable, and the domain eventually became inactive as a service.