| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Netherlands | |
| age | 23 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 8 months |
| seen | Mar 21 '11 at 17:15 | |
| stats | profile views | 9 |
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Nov 16 |
comment |
Propose a new 20k reputation privilege I propose the inability to answer questions that don't already have several answers. This is to take the stress of always needing to be the first to give a decent answer off their backs. (With the added bonus that other people on stackoverflow also get a chance to contribute) ;) |
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Sep 22 |
comment |
Can I get my gold badge revoked? Don't feel guilty. It's the stackoverflow users that are crazily vote-happy, not your fault for indulging them. If it makes you feel better, I downvoted the question, because I think polls are worse than worthless. ;) |
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Apr 24 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Apr 24 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Sep 22 |
comment |
What is Stack Overflow? Stackoverflow is not meta stackoverflow. |
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Sep 19 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? @Chris: I can fully agree with that :) |
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Sep 17 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? Since when does someone have to think about a problem for it to exist? Of course there is an infinite number of problems, and it's trivially shown. Every statement of the form "What is n + 1?" for n some natural number is a problem. Since there is an infinite amount of natural numbers, there is an infinite amount of such problems. But why is this discussing going on? This has nothing to do with the original topic. |
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Sep 16 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Sep 16 |
accepted | Are demands on new users continually increasing? |
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Sep 16 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? @Joel Sorry, I clearly hadn't read your post carefully enough. I didn't notice you said no increase in difficulty seems to be happening. I'll trust your word on this, so I suppose this answers my question. |
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Sep 16 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? Yes, demands are increasing equally for all users. But there is a difference: reputation is relatively more important to new users because of reputation restrictions. Also, shouldn't demands on new users indeed be lower than demands on other users, to give them time and leeway to adjust? It makes more sense to me to have demands for new users in the past and new users in the future to be equal, than to have demands for new users to be equal to other users at any time. |
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Sep 16 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Sep 16 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? Yes, I agree. For purely the quality of the site there is no necessity for new users. Is quality of content the only major importance, or should there also be a focus on generating a userbase that grows in size? >I've also noticed that every now and then pretty basic/easy questions still appear. Yes, indeed I've seen a few myself already. But as they were answered excellently in minutes of being asked, there was no need for me to contribute. Of course if a user sticks around long enough, he will find questions to be the first to answer. But this gets increasingly harder as the userbase grows. |
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Sep 16 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 16 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? True. But what do you think about the main question: Are demands increasing and is it an issue that might be relevant to how the site works? |
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Sep 16 |
comment |
Are demands on new users continually increasing? Yes. I was talking about easy problems. You know, something suitable for new users. |
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Sep 16 |
asked | Are demands on new users continually increasing? |