I focus more on reputation than badges, what about you guys?
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I care about giving good answers, and learning from other people's answers (and questions). The rest is window dressing; sure it helps keep me competitive, but I don't care about it. With my ♦ hat on, I also care about trying to keep the dross off the site; we seem to do OK on that front, with lots of help from the community flagging and editing (cheers guys). caveat: of course, if I could get that darned reversal... |
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I find myself caring neither about badges or points, but I do find I care a very great deal about downvotes, especially on subjective questions (I mean seriously, that just doesn't make sense). Strange that negative motivation affect me more. Perhaps that's something I should worry about. But then, who has the time? |
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I like it when I get a badge for the first time; I remember being excited when I finally got my first Enlightened badge nearly a year ago. But the novelty wears off. I think I got yet another one in the last week or two, but I couldn't say for sure. And tag badges represent quite an accomplishment, so if I ever got another, I would be happy about it. However, I have become much less active than I used to be, mainly because I have much less time for SO than I had before. At 20k, I don't need points anyway, but I still get a little thrill from the competition. I'd like to get back onto page 2 if I can. |
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I fundamentally agree with Marc and annakata's answers, but between badges and rep... I like milestones of any variety. A gold badge is always a milestone. A silver tag badge is a bit of a milestone in that it's something new. 100K rep was a milestone, as was 1000 badges total. Finally getting the Fanatic badge will be a nice milestone, when it happens. The next "numbers" milestone I'm idly contemplating is 1000 bronze badges, partly because I want to see what the display will do. I'm not really sure what comes after that :( Pure rep isn't particularly interesting now, although "rep gained per day without bounty" is an interesting challenge. I think my record is 468. It would be nice to get to 500, but that's really, really tough. |
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Points definitely, badges come along. I mean, a great answer will give you more points than a lame answer, and you'll get a golden badge in the process. |
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The tag badges have been my focus for a while (though my "focus" is often pretty hazy). They're really hard to get, even the silver ones, especially in less-popular areas of the site (ie. not C#/.NET/Java/PHP). And the only way to get them is to provide lots of really good answers. I finally got the "git" and "svn" silver tag badges a few weeks ago, but my next one is a ways off still (I don't even recall which is next, that's how hazy my focus is!). Of course, if you're Jon Skeet then you can get weird badges like "string" without even trying. :) |
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Focusing on reputation at the broadest level seems to be pointless if you're competing with anyone but yourself. Jon Skeet et al are essentially impossible to catch even for us in the top 50 unless they completely stop participating for a year or so. Consequently, I try to focus on being a top contributor in my areas of expertise (.NET & ASP.NET if anyone's curious). This also is slightly more meaningful than pure "rep" - it's well-established that reputation points alone is not indicative of any technical ability - just participation. But evidence shows that people who are not strong in a given category (say, c#) cannot break onto the stats page for that tag. People who are very strong in that topic - and are generally helpful, kind and good teachers - dominate the stats page. It's a challenge to maintain, but an honor for me to be listed alongside such people. |
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It would be nice to get enough rep to be able to edit questions or answers every time I see a typo (that happens fairly often). But it's a very high number, so I'm just forgetting about both rep and badges and just answering questions when I happen to know the answer. |
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For me, rep is important, because you need certain amounts of rep to do certain things. Badges are just window dressing as far as I'm concerned. (Although, it is nice to get them.) |
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badges were cool for the first 500 rep points; after that it became too difficult to tell where they came from so now they all get ignored [was that part of your design, @Jeff? ;-)] rep matters most: badges are shiny, but rep gives you powers beyond belief! |
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Both. Helping and learning is the key part of hanging around in SO. But tbh, I do care about anything that boosts my programmer's ego - that includes even a 'thank you' comment from the OP. Now that I've 2K reps but just 9 bronze badges, I'm keen on getting my first silver badge. They are hard to earn unless you are concentrating on popular badges. My domain is flash/flex and most of flashers and flexers hang out in actionscript.org, flashkit and other flash specific forums. How about this - I'm considering learning regex/javascript/php to boost my reps in SO? Did I just hear "man, get a life"? |
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