Would it be possible to have community wiki answers with over 100 or so upvotes to be worth at least a couple points?
Maybe 100 is not the right number... any thoughts?
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Would it be possible to have community wiki answers with over 100 or so upvotes to be worth at least a couple points? Maybe 100 is not the right number... any thoughts? |
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I won't speak for anyone but myself, but I don't feel that there is any need to offer more encouragement or reason for posting non-technical opinion, random [best|worst] of lists, fluff, or crap. People participate in CW content questions because they get some personal satisfaction from the interaction. I like helping people, even in the absence of rep. I understand that other people find satisfaction in just the interaction of opinion. I'd rather they took it to a traditional forum, but I can live with the way things are now. I might also mention---by way of historical orientation---that the distinction between "hard" and "soft" content as sources of reputation was the first big source of tension in this community. The current CW-if-it-doesn't-have-one-right-answer regime is one of several adjustment and compromises that were made at that time. |
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The whole reason community wiki posts came about was because people thought that certain types of posts should be allowed, but should have no effect on reputation. Reversing that would require a very, very good reason. |
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Honestly, now that the site is up and running I have a hard time understanding the whole point of rewarding points for questions. When you're in bootstrap mode and no one has points, getting rep for questions is pretty much necessary. That was especially true, and still is somewhat, in meta, although here it makes a little sense -- you're essentially expressing agreement or disagreement with a feature request or point of view. In SO and the others, though, it does little except encourage people to dream up questions -- thus the flood of poll/best/worst/funniest, etc. stuff. I mean does anyone really look at the votes on a question when trying to find an answer to a problem you are having? The only thing that is really meaningful is whether the problem is close to your own so that the answers might be of some use. A question with 1500 upvotes is pretty meaningless to me if it doesn't deal with the same problem I'm having. Frankly, it's about 50/50 whether any of the most popular questions on SO would actually be useful in solving a real-world problem....unless your problem is what programmer cartoon or joke to use in your next presentation. I wonder if SO has reached the point where the reward of getting answers is sufficient and we ought to stop giving out rep for them. I think we'd still probably see about the same number of questions per day and those we'd lose wouldn't be particularly valuable anyway. We'd still get some fluff, but I think they'd be more driven by curiosity and, somehow, that makes them more palatable to me. We could still allow voting on them, but the votes wouldn't translate to rep -- much like CW questions now. |
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