I am thinking it will be good if we can start a monthly magazine in which all the top voted questions & answers will be published and explained.
It will be useful for people who are travelling or who don't have internet access on free time places.
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I am thinking it will be good if we can start a monthly magazine in which all the top voted questions & answers will be published and explained. It will be useful for people who are travelling or who don't have internet access on free time places. |
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Doing something like this would be moving us backwards as a society. In my workplace, we've just about eliminated the use of paper. Everything we do is paperless. Even HR forms that we fill out are done digitally. I can barely remember how to print anything anymore as it's been so long since I've printed anything. I'd like to think that Stack Exchange is just as progressive, forward-thinking, and green when it comes to reducing their carbon footprint. The amount of paper that would go into these magazines, for worldwide distribution, would be staggering. Plus, it would be a waste of time, as darvidsOn says, since the Internet and the digital world have enabled content to constantly improve. Printed media just cannot compete. As for being away from the Internet, perhaps there's another solution you could think about and propose. For instance, if the Weekly Site Newsletters could be downloaded, that would be a good possible first start. Anything that would involve downloading content to your smartphone before you go on that Arctic vacation could solve this issue. ;) You don't need Internet to read content offline. ;) |
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I don't see the point of actually publishing a magazine for all the reasons already stated plus one more. There is already a forum where this can occur, the blogs. Rebecca Chernoff's original blog post outlining the "official" site-specific blogs explicitly encourages this:
If you'd like to do an in-depth analysis of a question then submit something! Unless of course you'd like someone else to do all the work? If that's the case then you're going to have to encourage them to do so. Unfortunately blog.stackexchange.com and block.stackoverflow.com are currently the same thing. There is no dedicated Stack Overflow blog, so you might have to do as Rebecca suggest in order to get a Stack Overflow specific blog started:
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I don't think this is a good use of SE employees' time. Even if it was done on a volunteer basis, the combined knowledge required to explain top questions across all SE network sites means that at least |
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