Well, it's been a few months since I posted the tag-wiki for database-design.
I haven't gotten any feedback on that tag-wiki. How useful has it been to others? How many people have even read it? How did it affect my reputation?
One thing I have observed is that it hasn't been revised by anybody. That could mean that it's pretty good, but it could also mean that it is not seen as worth improving. It could also mean that the only people looking at it are people who don't trust themselves to revise it, or have not been granted that capability.
If it was wasted effort, that's one thing. But if it prevented the evolution of a better tag-wiki, that's an entirely different thing.
One aspect of this is that very few people who are designing their first database think of this as the beginnig of a whole new phase of their career. Most of them think of the database they are designing as one small aspect of a project they are taking on. For someone in that mental set, the tag-wiki I wrote may seem kinda long and tedious.
For someone giong into database-design big time, he or she needs to know everything in the tag-wiki, and probably in greater depth than what I wrote.
So what's the mechanism for tag-wiki authors to get rewarded or not rewarded based on the quality of their input?
Added in response to a response:
I've thought about trying to make the database-design tag-wiki shorter and better, but I don't know how to do it. There are plenty of people besides me who could edit it. Maybe some of them are better wordsmiths than I am. Or have a better understanding of database design than I do. Or are more in tune with current methodologies than I am. Or have a better handle on what to leave in and what to leave out when constructing a tag-wiki.
Then again, maybe database-design needs a longer explanation than Java does, for example.