Since

  • the site has up to today more than 73.750 users, so you can't follow everybody
  • you can't qualify users by his reputation since it doesn't tell's you if a user is good or bad, but how much the system trust in the user, so you can't guide yourself by user's reputation
  • and this site is intended to be a mixed of blog with other things, so you can learn things reading answers
  • Users with highest reputation are knowledgeable, but they aren't the only ones wich are involved, so you must not know about somebody who has low reputation (ie Jhon Resig)

what users would you be interested to follow? Or, which users are you following right now or you have followed?

This would be a good resource in learning, as blogs are.

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belongs on stack overflow, possibly as a wiki – nb69307 Jul 4 '09 at 20:07
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Neil: I just closed this there as belongs on meta. Why this belongs on SO? – Mehrdad Jul 4 '09 at 20:08
Yeah, this is definitely Meta, although I would prefer this as a feature request than a discussion question. – Kyle Cronin Jul 4 '09 at 20:09
because as the questioner points out, it would (to them - I'm not convinced) be a useful resource. I don't see that user names are intrinsically meta, but if they are, let's get rid of that "skeet facts" thing. – nb69307 Jul 4 '09 at 20:10
@Neil: The "Jon Skeet Facts" post was created long before Meta existed, and will likely be moved over here once Jeff tweaks the migration process. – Kyle Cronin Jul 4 '09 at 20:12
should this question be a wiki? I don't really understand when a question must be wiki in meta-stackoverflow – eKek0 Jul 4 '09 at 20:12
@eKek0: That's fine. I don't understand that either. – Mehrdad Jul 4 '09 at 20:14
@eKek0: I don't think this has to be wiki. We really should save that distinction here for stuff that other people need to be able to edit (i.e. what Wiki really means) – Kyle Cronin Jul 4 '09 at 20:15
@Kyle I agree. So maybe SO needs a third class of question - a poll. – nb69307 Jul 4 '09 at 21:02
You can follow anyone through RSS. – Brad Gilbert Jul 5 '09 at 4:56
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10 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Like Tom, I would use it to follow people who post relatively rarely, but are likely to be interesting, such as:

Eric in particular appears to have fingers which only ever type pure gold.

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It's more like "pure precise gold." ;) – Mehrdad Jul 4 '09 at 20:47
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Eric has never upvoted anything! He has made 6 down votes, but no up... – Dan J Nov 10 '09 at 21:47
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I rate the answers based on their content, the person that answered it or their rep has very little meaning to me. (Well, still waiting for my first answer from Jon Skeet or Joel Spolsky...)

What I often do is look up some other answers of somebody who's answer I find to be especially brilliant. That's where I learn something really interesting, much more than in browsing through the questions that seem interesting.

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+1 I couldn't agree more. – balpha Jul 4 '09 at 21:03
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Straight down the middle for me ... Jon, Marc, Jared, Mehrdad ... consistently great answers to threads that interest me.

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I would actually follow people I know personally, from other sites and stalking celebs (although not Jon Skeet!). IMO, such a feature would be more useful for following people who post infrequently.

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I don't follow anyone. Nor do i use the tag filters. I think it'd be useful to do both, i just haven't gotten around to it...

That said, JavaScript fascinates me. So if i was going to follow anyone, it'd be Paolo Bergantino.

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I would follow

Anthony Williams is author of the new book "C++ Concurrency in Action" and maintainer of boost::thread.

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I don't follow people's answers on Stackoverflow, but I have added a few blog feeds to my iGoogle page based on SO and the podcast -- notably Jon Skeet, Marc Gravell, JaredPar, and Uncle Bob. I've always enjoyed hearing Uncle Bob talk, but didn't think about following his blog until the brouhaha on the podcast.

And, now, thanks to this question I'm following Eric Lippert...

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I would follow cult leader jQuery author John Resig. The guy knows his stuff.

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I don't follow anyone, just read the first 3-10 highest rated answers.

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It basically depends on what subject interests you. I work in Perl, so I know a question isn't fully answered until Brian D Foy has chipped in.

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