I was just wondering why generally non-programming questions get many responses and votes on SO.
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Jan 8 '10 at 12:31
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It's called Parkinson's Law of Triviality:
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Non-programming questions don't require any kind of technical expertise. Anyone on SO is qualified to answer these questions, so far more people than usual participate. |
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Because there's a much lower entry level for these questions. Everybody has an opinion, everybody loves to argue and you don't need any technical knowledge to do it. |
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Because you get to say stuff you don't really mean or know anything about :) On the serious side: the questions that you classify as "non programming related" might actually be software related. Such topics get more answers and opinions because the question does not pertain to a specific language/product/technology. |
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