User Tom Ritter - Meta Stack Overflow most recent 30 from meta.stackoverflow.com 2009-11-23T11:03:31Z http://meta.stackoverflow.com/feeds/user/8435 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30484/is-there-a-way-to-see-the-most-popular-favorite-questions/30486#30486 4 Answer by Tom Ritter for Is there a way to see the most popular "favorite" questions? Tom Ritter 2009-11-20T20:01:40Z 2009-11-20T20:01:40Z <p>Why <a href="http://stackql.net/default.aspx?qid=12767" rel="nofollow">yes there is</a></p> <pre><code>id count Title 9033 1185 Hidden Features of C#? 234075 918 What is your best programmer joke? 84556 877 What's your favorite "programmer" cartoon? 72394 816 What should a developer know before building a public web site? 1711 706 What is the single most influential book every programmer should read? 58640 632 Great programming quotes 194812 483 List of freely available programming books 184618 479 What is the best comment in source code you have ever encountered? 662956 397 Most useful free .NET libraries? 38210 388 What non-programming books should programmers read? 164432 376 What real life bad habits has programming given you? 101268 367 Hidden features of Python 182112 364 Funny loading statements to keep users amused 406760 354 What's your most controversial programming opinion? 1644 338 What good technology podcasts are out there? 76364 309 What is the single most effective thing you did to improve your programming skills? 78756 302 What do you use to keep notes as a developer? </code></pre> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30411/what-can-stackoverflow-do-to-persuade-female-programmers-to-participate-more/30416#30416 6 Answer by Tom Ritter for What can StackOverflow do to persuade female programmers to participate more? Tom Ritter 2009-11-20T04:28:12Z 2009-11-20T04:28:12Z <p>Why is <a href="http://media.www.thesandspur.org/media/storage/paper623/news/2005/02/18/Sports/New-Vikings.Owner.Reggie.Fowler.Makes.Nfl.History.As.First.Black.Owner-868708.shtml" rel="nofollow">only 1 football owner black</a>?</p> <p>Take a minority (like blacks in america <a href="http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html" rel="nofollow">(12.8%)</a> or women in programming) and apply another minority (football team owners or active users of stackoverflow). At this point, you're <em>may not</em> even have a statistically valid sample, but whatever you have is skewed to a certain degree by the filtering. So what I'm getting at it <strong>how do you know it's not random noise?</strong></p> <p>Now, perhaps you want to take Jeff's approach that he stresses on the podcast so often: 'Programmers love games', they 'love rules', they 'love numbers'. If you want to take that approach, the question (or perhaps the conclusion drawn but that's definitely not the scientific method at work) is that women don't seem to be as drawn to the 'game' aspect of Stackoverflow as men. Which might be the case. Are there any scientific studies about women preffering or not preffering RPGs in a different skew than men? Might be relevant.</p> <p>And that case might be true, but it also might not. All that said... <a href="http://girldeveloper.com/waxing-dev/shut-up-and-build-something/" rel="nofollow">maybe they're out building something?</a></p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/8479/post-your-boat-programming-pics 6 Post Your Boat Programming Pics! Tom Ritter 2009-07-23T13:13:29Z 2009-11-18T15:16:08Z <p>This is a <strong>for-fun, community-building thread.</strong> </p> <p>I, like an estimated 4.7% of developers, ply a non-trivial amount of my trade aquatically. We are a growing number, and our issues, concerns, and loneliness affect us, just as much as your buggy Visual Studio (or Eclipse) affects you. This is your opportunity to reach out to fellow boat programmers.</p> <p>As directed by <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/8208/does-so-sf-mso-and-su-make-enough-support-from-ads/8238#8238">Jeff Atwood</a> please comply with the following guidelines:</p> <ul> <li>Proof of today's date, prefferably with a printed newspaper</li> <li>Proof that you belong to meta.stackoverflow.com</li> <li>Proof of Programming</li> <li>Proof of Boating</li> </ul> <p>You can see me here considering Naked Cowboy's bid for mayor, while pondering a bug in some collision detection code while <strong>ON A BOAT</strong>.</p> <p><img src="http://ritter.vg/misc/stuff/boat-programming.jpg" alt="Boat Programming" /></p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/29765/option-to-make-public-resume-non-indexable-by-google/29775#29775 1 Answer by Tom Ritter for Option to make public resume non-indexable by Google? Tom Ritter 2009-11-14T22:07:16Z 2009-11-14T22:15:00Z <p>Your scenario is assuming that your current employer is draconian. </p> <p>Your public 'resume' is not a resume - it's a <strong>CV</strong> and isn't presence <em>doesn't</em> imply you're looking for a job anymore than an "About Me" page on a blog does. I'm interested in people knowing <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/tomritter" rel="nofollow">who I am</a> - but I'm not looking for a job. If your boss can't understand that... why would you <em>want</em> to keep working there?</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/29776/can-a-public-careers-cv-be-an-associated-account 4 Can a Public Careers CV Be an "Associated Account"? Tom Ritter 2009-11-14T22:14:33Z 2009-11-14T22:14:33Z <p>If you have a public Careers CV, it would be awesome if you could link it to your SO/SF/SU/Meta Account, and it'd be listed either at the bottom of the Name/Member Since/.../Age Column <em>or</em> on the Associated Accounts section (although that's really "below the fold").</p> <p>Yes, I know you can put it in your about me box, or as your "website", but you could say the same thing for associated accounts. It'd be a good point of integration (although low on the priority list).</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/28867/what-recourse-do-i-have-if-i-believe-a-moderator-has-abused-his-privileges/28902#28902 7 Answer by Tom Ritter for What recourse do I have if I believe a moderator has abused his privileges? Tom Ritter 2009-11-06T20:36:03Z 2009-11-06T20:36:03Z <p><img src="http://img.alibaba.com/photo/10276575/Ring%5FOctagon%5FUltimate%5FFighting.jpg" alt="The Octagon"></p> <p><strong>I'm Ready.</strong></p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/3615/should-downvoting-be-allowed-on-comments/17643#17643 0 Answer by Tom Ritter for Should downvoting be allowed on comments? Tom Ritter 2009-08-26T11:52:48Z 2009-11-05T12:36:52Z <p>Originally, I thought everyone was right - we don't need to complicate it. But I changed my mind. </p> <p>When the site first launched - 5 offensive tags would get a post removed. Over time, even a non-offensive post would garner some flags, and since they weren't reset - as t=infinity every post would be deleted. So a decay was added.</p> <p>Comments now work the same way. <strong>Even a bad comment generates a few upvotes over time</strong> and users have no way to indicate <em>no, this is a bad comment, it does not deserve upvotes.</em> It may not be offensive, but it certainly doesn't contribute anything positive or funny.</p> <p>So I think comment downvotes should be allowed in order to <strong>make comments more worthwhile</strong>. It will help filter the <em>really good</em> comments the way God intended while leaving the poor comments - the ones people disagree with - "below the fold".</p> <p><strong>Edit</strong>: I know this topic is old and crusty but I'm <em>hoping</em> the system works, and that by edits and additions I can raise more awareness.</p> <p>This is another example of why we need comment downvoting, from the Moderator flagged comment screen: <img src="http://ritter.vg/misc/stuff/why-we-need-comment-downvotes.png" alt="Comment Flagging Example"></p> <p>It is <em>unreasonable</em> to make the claim that these comments are "noise, offensive or spam". You may not <em>agree</em> with them, and whoever flagged them certainly didn't, but comments are flagged because we can't downvote them, and it adds a lot of noise to the Moderator screen, plus the necessity to go through and clear the flags.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/28450/password-for-public-cv/28494#28494 8 Answer by Tom Ritter for Password for "public CV" Tom Ritter 2009-11-04T03:18:24Z 2009-11-04T03:18:24Z <p>In response to Jeff, I wouldn't be the least surprised if google crawled Stackoverflow so aggressively that it somehow 'found' people's CV's. <a href="http://www.seroundtable.com/archives/016288.html" rel="nofollow">Them's sneaky</a>.</p> <p>If you <strong>really</strong> want a password protected CV - I would publish it, save the HTML, and then unpublish it. Put the HTML, with some formatting tweaks as needed, on a site you control.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26684/searching-for-similar-questions/28488#28488 0 Answer by Tom Ritter for Searching for similar questions Tom Ritter 2009-11-04T02:21:41Z 2009-11-04T02:21:41Z <p>If I remember correctly, Jeff said that the search on the 'Ask Question' page only searches the title, while the upper left search searches the entire post. So the results wind up being different, and sometimes better.</p> <p>However, that was a while ago, it might have changed.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/27964/warning-people-when-you-are-planning-to-immediately-self-answer-your-question/27983#27983 0 Answer by Tom Ritter for Warning people when you are planning to immediately self answer your question? Tom Ritter 2009-10-31T15:14:35Z 2009-10-31T15:14:35Z <p>Why don't you post both at the same time? Whenever I post a question I'm going to answer, I compose the question <strong>and</strong> the answer, make sure I thought of all the nuances, and then post them both in rapid fire. </p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/27644/careers-fields-markdown-trim-bug 2 Careers Fields Markdown Trim Bug Tom Ritter 2009-10-29T00:54:19Z 2009-10-29T01:53:31Z <p>The careers markdown fields trim the whitespace at the beginning of the field too aggressively. For instance if I want to put bullets I put</p> <pre><code> - One - Two - Three </code></pre> <p>Which is trimmed to </p> <pre><code> - One - Two - Three </code></pre> <p>Which results in</p> <ul> <li>One <ul> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> </ul></li> </ul> <p>I miss my bullet lists! =(</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/5436/direct-link-to-a-comment/27369#27369 1 Answer by Tom Ritter for Direct Link to a Comment Tom Ritter 2009-10-27T00:51:57Z 2009-10-27T00:51:57Z <p>This would actually be really helpful for people who flag comments - being able to move directly to the item flagged.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26820/any-plans-to-restrict-recruiter-access-in-careers-stackoverflow/26821#26821 6 Answer by Tom Ritter for Any plans to restrict recruiter access in careers.stackoverflow? Tom Ritter 2009-10-21T17:45:35Z 2009-10-21T17:45:35Z <p><a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/25275/will-agents-be-allowed-to-use-careers/25694#25694">This answer</a> by Joel on the question <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/25275/will-agents-be-allowed-to-use-careers">Will agents be allowed to use careers</a> is pretty encompassing.</p> <blockquote> <p>There are two kinds of recruiters working in the tech industry: <em>contingency</em> and <em>retained search</em>.</p> <p>A contingency recruiter only gets paid if they place a candidate. Companies that use contingency recruiters tend to use <em>dozens</em> of them, because it's free until they actually find someone. The recruiter stands to make so much money that it's in their interest to spam the universe trying to throw any and all candidates at the company hoping that one of them sticks in which case they hit the jackpot and make, typically, 1/4-1/3 of the first year salary.</p> <p>A retained search recruiter is paid to fill the position <em>whether or not they are successful.</em> The retained search relationship is also exclusive, meaning, only one recruiter will be hired by the company to find someone to fill a position.</p> <p>In general, you will find that:</p> <ol> <li>most of the problematic recruiters you have dealt with as an employee are contingency recruiters, because they are literally just looking to throw as many resumes as they can at a company, without much regard to quality, which is why they're so annoying to good candidates</li> <li>the companies that do not know how to hire tech employees and wish to outsource that will use retained search recruiters, who have a much higher standard and work to a higher standard of ethics--they are, for all intents and purposes, indistinguishable from the hiring company's own employees</li> <li>it is very easy to detect contingency recruiters, as they will not reveal the name of the company they are recruiting for, out of fear that you will go straight to them and they will lose their fee.</li> </ol> <p>Because of fact #3, there's an easy way to get contingency recruiters out of the system: (a) charge them money, and (b) require that they disclose the name of the company for which they are hiring. We're going to do both, so I don't expect to see many contingency recruiters in our system.</p> </blockquote> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26707/what-free-open-source-projects-should-we-financially-support/26709#26709 4 Answer by Tom Ritter for What free, open source projects should we financially support? Tom Ritter 2009-10-21T04:32:51Z 2009-10-21T04:32:51Z <p>As I thought more and more about what open source needs, I kept coming around to <strong>grunt-work</strong>. No one enjoys writing documentation, guides, and so on. So if the money could somehow fund <em>that</em>, it'd be great. But that'd basically be paying people to contribute. That's an idea, but I don't know if it fits well.</p> <p>But what about <strong>bribing people</strong>? I don't know the exact mechanism, but say approximately - I go and talk to a project about what they need but don't want to do. Let's say it's documentation. I then go write some great documentation for Putty, or cygwin, or IronPython, or some other great open source project that might have a large barrier to entry or otherwise lacking something. And in recognition of my contribution - <strong>you donate an amount of money to a (legit) charity of my choice</strong>. I win - I learn more about a project. The project wins - they get some great stuff. The charity wins - they get money.</p> <p>Now I know this doesn't answer your question of what projects, but it does solve the problem of <em>finding projects that can use help</em>. You don't donate the money until the group is satisfied, and I bet every project has some work they'd love to get around to but can't find time or desire to work on.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26689/how-do-we-grow-the-server-fault-and-super-user-communities/26702#26702 0 Answer by Tom Ritter for How do we grow the Server Fault and Super User communities? Tom Ritter 2009-10-21T03:38:14Z 2009-10-21T03:38:14Z <p>I wonder if you would reach your target audience with Trade Publication advertisements. SQL Server Magazine and InfoWorld. Or if that would hit more of the 'policy' guys and less of the 'trenches' guys.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26239/how-to-deal-with-i-need-a-hug-type-questions/26241#26241 21 Answer by Tom Ritter for How to deal with "I need a hug" type questions? Tom Ritter 2009-10-16T17:38:00Z 2009-10-16T17:38:00Z <p>I'm going to sound callous, but this is a Q&amp;A site. Not a suicide prevention hotline. Close it as 'Not Programming Related' or Subjective or whatever else, and if you're worried about the guy, post the hotline and move on. We're a community, but we're not really a community at the same time.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26021/what-was-released-with-build-4983/26026#26026 2 Answer by Tom Ritter for What was released with build 4983? Tom Ritter 2009-10-15T15:48:52Z 2009-10-15T15:48:52Z <p>There are not, <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/547/could-we-see-a-changelog-of-deployments">but I really want them</a> =(</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/25854/is-the-number-of-developers-counter-being-disingenuous/25858#25858 3 Answer by Tom Ritter for Is the number of developers counter being disingenuous? Tom Ritter 2009-10-14T16:13:02Z 2009-10-14T16:13:02Z <p>I think this is the difference between programmers and advertising. </p> <p>By our very nature, programmers want everything to be exactly correct - especially when it comes to numbers. Even large numbers. If we say 12,347,132 we damn well mean 12,347,132, and if there was an epsilon we'd bloody say 12,347,132 +/- 2!</p> <p>Advertisers... well I probably can't say anything without it sounding like a criticism, so I'll just say they <em>aren't</em> as exact, especially when it comes to numbers. And I think anyone doing advertising understands that.</p> <p>Moral of the story? Don't let programmers make advertisements, and don't expect every advertisement you see to be exact. That's what contracts are for.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/25302/how-large-is-the-developer-team-of-stackoverflow/25304#25304 14 Answer by Tom Ritter for How large is the developer team of StackOverflow? Tom Ritter 2009-10-09T13:59:03Z 2009-10-13T03:21:52Z <p>With some more context for roles played:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Jeff Atwood</strong> - Full Time, Half-Owner, Lead Developer, Designer, and all-around Benevolent Dictator for Life , employed by StackOverflow</li> <li><strong>Joel Spolsky</strong> - Half-Owner, Designer/Consultation/Opinionista , employed by Fog Creek</li> <li><strong>Jarrod Dixon</strong> - Full Time, Developer , employed by StackOverflow</li> <li><strong>Geoff Dalgas</strong> - Full Time, Developer, employed by StackOverflow</li> <li><strong>Aaron</strong> - Full Time, Developer, focused on StackExchange, but probably porting code into SO also, employed by Fog Creek</li> <li><strong>Brent Ozar</strong> - Once-in-a-while DBA Consultant</li> <li><strong>Jeremy Kratz</strong> - Once-in-a-while Graphic Designer</li> <li><strong>Jin Yang</strong> - Once-in-a-while Graphic Designer</li> <li><strong>Alex Papadimoulis</strong> - Full Time, Ad Guy, partially employed by Stackoverflow, oversees: <ul> <li><strong>Bill Gilmore</strong> - Full Time, VP of SO Ad Sales</li> <li><strong>Michael Goulis</strong> - Full Time, Account Exec</li> <li><strong>Brendan Sorg</strong> - Full Time, Account Exec</li> </ul></li> </ul> <p>The <strong>Stackoverflow Family</strong> is run by Jeff, Jarrod, Geoff and partly Joel and consists of</p> <ul> <li>Stackoverflow</li> <li>Serverfault</li> <li>SuperUser</li> <li>Meta</li> </ul> <p>The <strong>League of Justice</strong> Members run and coded by their own companies/organizations are:</p> <ul> <li>How-To Geek</li> <li>Doctype</li> </ul> <p>The <strong>Stackexchange Platform</strong> is a commercial product based off the SO Codebase and sold by <strong>FogCreek</strong>. There are a <strong>lot</strong> of Stackexchange sites, you can learn more about it at <a href="http://meta.stackexchange.com" rel="nofollow">http://meta.stackexchange.com</a> and that's what Aaron works on.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/25494/highlight-already-visited-questions/25499#25499 2 Answer by Tom Ritter for Highlight already visited questions Tom Ritter 2009-10-11T14:01:35Z 2009-10-11T14:01:35Z <p>You can use Greasemonkey or Stylish to change the a:visited links to something much more obnoxious if you like. I'm sure someone will come along with a script soon enough ;)</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/6365/vote-ordering-of-accepted-answers-has-changed-accepted-below-top-voted 5 Vote ordering of accepted answers has changed: Accepted below top voted Tom Ritter 2009-07-16T21:00:29Z 2009-10-06T13:30:11Z <p>On <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/1306/add-year-to-question-and-answer-dates">this question</a>, sorted by votes, the accepted answer is #3 in order of votes. It appears as number 3 in the list as well. Is this new behavior intended? Did I miss something?</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/24641/best-way-to-get-to-devdays-london/24648#24648 2 Answer by Tom Ritter for Best way to get to DevDays London? Tom Ritter 2009-10-05T19:30:43Z 2009-10-05T19:30:43Z <p>See if you can <a href="http://couchsurfing.org" rel="nofollow">crash on someone's couch</a>! </p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/24643/rate-the-quality-of-the-ads/24647#24647 10 Answer by Tom Ritter for Rate the quality of the ads Tom Ritter 2009-10-05T19:28:18Z 2009-10-05T19:28:18Z <p>One of the problems with this is that if you don't like an ad, you're going to downvote. If you don't like <strong>any ads</strong> you're going to downvote. If you get <strong>offended</strong> by ads, or this ad, you'll downvote. If you do like an ad, you'll upvote. If you don't care, you won't do anything.</p> <p>Voting on ads will be canted towards downvotes. The only way you'd be able to uncant it would make it a rep cost I think.</p> <p>Besides all that - what would it actually accomplish? Give feedback to the advertiser that we didn't like their ad? That might be useful, but I think it's one of those "The only people who will give you feedback will be the people complaining" scenarios.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/22670/the-amount-of-comments-gets-out-of-control-sometimes 3 The Amount of Comments gets out of control sometimes... Tom Ritter 2009-09-18T21:46:19Z 2009-09-18T21:58:29Z <p>This may be one of those, "Is it just me?" questions that gets buried, but on some questions, there are a ton of comments. And annoyingly enough, <strong>enough comments are shown that it's just noise</strong>. The whole point of the show comment link and the fancy ajax whizbangery is to keep the noise minimal, while showing you a <em>few</em> comments you might care about.</p> <p>But a lot of times I go to a thread, and see a giant wall of comments blocking the answers. I don't like it sir. Here are <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/7572/why-do-incorrect-answers-keep-getting-accepted">two</a> <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/19890/visual-toys-for-so">examples</a> and a screenshot:</p> <p><img src="http://ritter.vg/misc/stuff/so/so-wall-of-comments.jpg" alt="wall of comments" /></p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/22097/can-the-profile-page-remember-the-last-active-tab/22102#22102 1 Answer by Tom Ritter for Can the profile page remember the last active "tab"? Tom Ritter 2009-09-16T02:19:33Z 2009-09-16T02:19:33Z <p>How mad will you be if I say you can use greasemonkey to change your username link to <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/615?tab=favorites">skip directly to a tab</a>? ;)</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/21375/fill-in-the-blank-hitting-the-rep-cap-is-like/21377#21377 10 Answer by Tom Ritter for Fill in the blank: "Hitting the rep cap is like ____" Tom Ritter 2009-09-11T15:22:31Z 2009-09-11T15:22:31Z <p>Hitting the rep cap is <strike>like</strike> Jon Skeet's before-breakfast stretch.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/20570/stickers-for-stackers-i-e-post-your-sticker-shots/21007#21007 6 Answer by Tom Ritter for Stickers for Stackers (i.e. post your sticker shots!) Tom Ritter 2009-09-09T14:00:10Z 2009-09-09T14:18:01Z <p><img src="http://ritter.vg/misc/stuff/nameplate2.jpg" alt="Co-Worker Envy" /> co-worker envy</p> <p>I'm going to stick 1 of each on my laptop, but this is the glamor shot for work. I'm leaving all but the Meta here.</p> <p><strong>Edit</strong>: For those unaware, yes the correct address is <a href="http://ritter.vg/misc/stuff/nameplate.jpg" rel="nofollow"><em>Sir Tom Ritter</em></a>, but I generally don't use it. The nameplates were ordered for us from our corporate paperwork. I collected the other nameplates from various co-workers who lost bets (and their souls).</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/18941/where-should-i-ask-wordpress-questions/18949#18949 3 Answer by Tom Ritter for Where should I ask WordPress questions? Tom Ritter 2009-08-30T15:43:48Z 2009-08-30T15:43:48Z <p>Am I the only one who thinks wordpress.org? They have <a href="http://wordpress.org/support/" rel="nofollow">forums</a> for the base install and some plugins have forums and mailing lists. If that fails, there's the <a href="http://wordpress.org/support/forum/10" rel="nofollow">wordpress plugin forum</a> and e-mailing the author; besides all the usual googling you do about your problem before asking.</p> <p>There are a ton of open source apps - phpBB, wordpress, and so on, and they all have evolved their <strong>own</strong> support channels. These types of questions: "I can't get plugin X of Semi-Obscure App Y working" tend to interest a very few people, and grow the size of the active and new pages to the point where for 95% of the people the signal to noise ratio is way low. (Or at least lower than it used to be 4-5 months ago)</p> <p>I'm not picking on you, and I <em>do think</em> there are <em>some</em> wordpress or phpBB related questions that are worth putting on Stackoverflow, but not the majority of them. <strong>Your two questions are worthwhile</strong>, because you abstract them very far away from wordpress. I think that's the key. When you abstract the problem far enough away where it's a question you don't need any specialized knowledge about, it becomes obvious which site to post it on.</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/18693/what-is-the-minimum-complexity-required-for-a-question-in-this-community/18702#18702 0 Answer by Tom Ritter for What is the minimum complexity required for a question in this community? Tom Ritter 2008-11-25T13:13:57Z 2009-08-29T09:45:33Z <p>Another good judge is "can it wait an hour?" If you can find the answer yourself in less than an hour, don't post it. This includes writing a skeleton program to test assumptions, etc. Just because you can get an answer in 45 seconds doesn't mean you should abuse it. <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/175961/does-listindexof-compare-by-reference-or-value">Here's an example of that</a> (by myself).</p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/18266/is-there-a-way-to-contact-another-member-of-stack-overflow/18267#18267 2 Answer by Tom Ritter for Is there a way to contact another member of stack overflow? Tom Ritter 2008-09-30T14:12:23Z 2009-08-27T18:05:48Z <p>If the user doesn't give a website, besides googling their nick, I think your best bet is to put a comment on one of their recent posts and hope they find it. </p> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30411/what-can-stackoverflow-do-to-persuade-female-programmers-to-participate-more/30416#30416 Comment by Tom Ritter on What can StackOverflow do to persuade female programmers to participate more? Tom Ritter 2009-11-20T04:50:03Z 2009-11-20T04:50:03Z Quantcast also says this site attracts a &quot;Less Affluent audience&quot; with 61% of us making under 60K, that we're 2.9 times more likely to be interested in &quot;Home &amp; Gardening&quot; than the average person, as well as strong affinity to &quot;Diet &amp; Fitness&quot;, &quot;Shipping&quot; (?), &quot;Politics and Commentar[sic]&quot;. Yes, lots of students, and maybe foreign workers whose wages convert to less, but frankly, I don't trust them if they're not willing to say how they determine gender. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30411/what-can-stackoverflow-do-to-persuade-female-programmers-to-participate-more Comment by Tom Ritter on What can StackOverflow do to persuade female programmers to participate more? Tom Ritter 2009-11-20T04:02:54Z 2009-11-20T04:02:54Z Well I know why there's so few on Meta - this place looks like a dungeon! Even I don't like coming here, and I get scared when the sun's out. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30343/why-do-people-keep-posting-annoying-mildly-offensive-comments-about-reasonable-q Comment by Tom Ritter on Why do people keep posting annoying, mildly offensive comments about reasonable questions? Tom Ritter 2009-11-19T21:18:06Z 2009-11-19T21:18:06Z This is why I support downvoting comments: <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/3615/should-downvoting-be-allowed-on-comments/17643#17643" rel="nofollow" title="should downvoting be allowed on comments">meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/3615/&hellip;</a> Some comments are not helpful or contributive and do not deserve upvotes, yet still garner some. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/30193/tag-badges-exploit Comment by Tom Ritter on Tag-badges exploit Tom Ritter 2009-11-18T12:57:10Z 2009-11-18T12:57:10Z I forsee him getting gold &quot;Ponies&quot;, &quot;jon-skeet&quot;, and &quot;waffles&quot; badges. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/10682/are-reputation-lotteries-good-or-bad/10755#10755 Comment by Tom Ritter on Are reputation lotteries good or bad? Tom Ritter 2009-11-17T02:44:57Z 2009-11-17T02:44:57Z You appear to be pretty good at Java. Kudos. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/28984/could-we-see-the-intro-video-that-was-used-in-the-devdays/28999#28999 Comment by Tom Ritter on Could we see the intro video that was used in the devdays? Tom Ritter 2009-11-08T07:29:09Z 2009-11-08T07:29:09Z Joel doesn't strike me as a person to shy away from controversial statements, surprised he wouldn't want an obviously over-the-top (hilarious) joke video seen. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/28483/feature-to-help-other-devs-with-cv-typos-etc Comment by Tom Ritter on Feature to help other devs with CV typos etc Tom Ritter 2009-11-04T02:20:09Z 2009-11-04T02:20:09Z Kinda, but not really honestly... http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/27761/squatting-vanity-urls/27763#27763 Comment by Tom Ritter on Squatting Vanity Urls Tom Ritter 2009-10-29T18:21:52Z 2009-10-29T18:21:52Z It's hilarious how much flack I got for this. After she tweeted it - someone literally started trying to hack my website. I nabbed it as a joke when we were talking about it in <i>her</i> WAN Party - I'm obviously going to give it back to her, I'm waiting for her to get a CV ready so no one else squats it and to give time for everyone to see the joke. Yeesh! http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/27367/devdays-reviews-washington-dc/27396#27396 Comment by Tom Ritter on DevDays reviews - Washington DC Tom Ritter 2009-10-27T17:10:51Z 2009-10-27T17:10:51Z HOPE is full of win. Watching Rambam get cuffed and walked out by the Feds right before he was supposed to give a presentation was a gut-shot straight to my fragile little mind 3 years ago. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/27453/how-do-i-find-out-what-i-got-nice-answer-badge-for Comment by Tom Ritter on How do I find out what I got "Nice Answer" badge for? Tom Ritter 2009-10-27T16:25:33Z 2009-10-27T16:25:33Z The short answer is: no. The long answer as well as requests for it, are in the question linked. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26707/what-free-open-source-projects-should-we-financially-support/26709#26709 Comment by Tom Ritter on What free, open source projects should we financially support? Tom Ritter 2009-10-21T16:03:29Z 2009-10-21T16:03:29Z Open Office was a poor example I'll admit - no one will single handily produce PHP's docs or MSDN. But look at jQuery's or mootol's documentation. Now look at IronPython's. I don't suggest things I'm not willing to do myself. I would make IronPython documentation in return for a donation to my charity. Now yes, $500 wouldn't make me jump (especially considering if I'm going to do something, I want to make sure it's really good), but considering the last donation was $5K I thought we were talking in the couple thousand range. http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26569/how-do-you-deal-with-vote-for-my-answer-here-social-techniques Comment by Tom Ritter on How do you deal with "Vote for my answer here" social techniques? Tom Ritter 2009-10-20T15:24:22Z 2009-10-20T15:24:22Z I actually want to encourage people to vote for another person's answer - I'm 4 bloody votes away from getting the Populist badge... http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26540/why-was-my-question-about-the-matrix-closed/26594#26594 Comment by Tom Ritter on Why was my question about The Matrix closed? Tom Ritter 2009-10-20T15:04:34Z 2009-10-20T15:04:34Z Thank you. That was quite helpful http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26540/why-was-my-question-about-the-matrix-closed/26591#26591 Comment by Tom Ritter on Why was my question about The Matrix closed? Tom Ritter 2009-10-20T15:02:52Z 2009-10-20T15:02:52Z I would love to see this answer reposted here: <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26014/" rel="nofollow">meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26014</a> http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/26557/how-do-i-dump-the-stack-overflow-database/26562#26562 Comment by Tom Ritter on How do I dump the Stack Overflow database? Tom Ritter 2009-10-20T11:52:41Z 2009-10-20T11:52:41Z Actually, I would call. Her number is 646-826-3879 and try and be sensitive.