500 plus questions in a week? Is there really that much interest in meta discussion or are we just asking questions to get our rep up here? If the latter, do we need a fundamentally different "scoring" system that doesn't encourage questions for questions' sake? Since it's meta discussion, for most questions there doesn't really seem to be a rationale for upvoting -- or perhaps I need to think of it a different way, more like scoring points in a debate than having the correct answer. The best way to get rep seems to be to ask questions that are interesting, but if you didn't already have the question before you got here, why ask it?

Is the interest in Meta artificially high now and will it ebb as time goes on or is the rep system going to drive artificial discussion?

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"doesn't encourage questions for questions' sake" - like this one? ;) – Ladybug Killer Jul 5 '09 at 17:00
I knew that this could be perceived this way and thought about actually referencing that in the text, but you can either ask or not ask. I'm actually interested in whether the scoring system is really appropriate for a fundamentally different kind of forum. – tvanfosson Jul 5 '09 at 18:00
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6 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

I do suspect that there is a bit of a 'land rush' (so to speak) with people trying to be the first to raise certain topics of discussion and suggest certain features, much as there was with StackOverflow and ServerFault, and will be with SuperUser. It's human nature to want to be the first, to shape the discussion of your pet topics for others to follow in.

There is also the fact that, being exclusively about StackOverflow and related sites, that there's much less of a subject area than either programming or system administration, so it's also possible that we'll simply run out of things to discuss and the site will drop in activity or we'll start rehashing the same old subjects with different players.

However, ultimately I don't think this will happen, at least not to the extent that it happened on UserVoice. Since StackOverflow is in a constant state of change, I think that we'll always have new subjects to explore, features to suggest, and bugs to report.

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Not to mention, it's actually reasonably easy to find previously-declined suggestions here, vs. attempting to search the never-never-land that was UV... – Shog9 Jul 5 '09 at 1:04
Bingo. Searching here isn't quite as easy as searching SO due to Google's somewhat limited index of Meta, but all that will take is time to fix. – Kyle Cronin Jul 5 '09 at 1:11
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Can't speak for anyone else, but i'm spending time here because i kind of ignored UV at first, and afterword felt that a handful of shrill users had managed to encourage changes i wasn't happy with. Possibly a misconception - but no sense in taking chances when there's a way to make myself heard.

Also, i'm kinda burned out on SO at the moment. Nothing major, a few personal issues, etc. MSO is my methadone...

Oh, and i want to get full editing capabilities here, so i can fix typos and grocers' apostrophes. Those things really bug me.

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BTW, I think you mean "grocers' apostrophe's" – Kyle Cronin Jul 5 '09 at 1:43
Ha! No, actually meant: grocer's apostrophes'... – Shog9 Jul 5 '09 at 2:18
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I find the idea of being able to be some sort of small driving force in the future development of the StackOverflow paradigm very rewarding. It does feel as if my input on the Meta is taken more seriously than it would be on UserVoice (perhaps because of the more active participation by those actually in charge of the development).

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I, for one, seem to be running out of things to discuss. I've migrated everything over from uservoice, as well as a few things that I never mentioned on UV but have been bugging me. It's a little sad, because I'm actually in the top 20 users but probably won't be for much longer. Oh well. :-/

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I'm not brilliantly technical (I ask mostly questions rather than answer them on SO), but I actually feel I can answer MSO questions...

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I personally find uservoice hard to understand and this so much easier to look through.

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