| bio | website | earlz.net |
|---|---|---|
| location | Cleveland, OH | |
| age | 22 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 7 months |
| seen | May 18 at 0:20 | |
| stats | profile views | 607 |
Hello there! My name's Jordan Earls and I'm a programmer. Recently, I've been doing almost exclusively work in .Net with C#, a bit of raw IL, and in some cases a hefty serving of code generating T4(it's the meta-future!). Sometimes I do a bit of embedded/electronic work with C and C++(http://mbed.org rocks, btw). And finally, I have at least some competence in Ruby, Delphi, and Javascript.
I currently work for PreEmptive Solutions on the Dotfuscator team and troll the dotfuscator tag on occasion.
Most of my personal projects are open source and BSD licensed. The majority of them are at bitbucket with the rest of them being listed on my projects page
Also, you can follow me on the twitters @earlzdotnet
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Apr 29 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Mar 12 |
awarded | Good Question |
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Mar 12 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Feb 27 |
comment |
Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? @BenBrocka look at my pros/cons question. I did research. I stated my arguments in a fairly unbiased manner. I asked nicely "should X be treated the same as Y". Still downvoted 10 times because it discussed something that's apparently unpopular. |
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Feb 27 |
comment |
Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? @BenBrocka no, I edited my title to better reflect the question. I commonly do that because I type the title from the beginning, but usually the question goes in a slightly different direction by the time I'm done typing. |
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Feb 27 |
revised |
Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? added 165 characters in body; edited tags; edited title |
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Feb 27 |
comment |
Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? @Bart I don't think the rep loss really matters though. Most people don't care. I think it's a symptom of shoe-horning a very subjective set of topics into something that's designed for questions that aren't subjective. You can see this right now. Hover over the downvote button. You get "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful". Not "I disagree with the topics discussed in this question" |
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Feb 27 |
comment |
Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? @Bart it's a psychological thing I think. I've come to associate downvoted questions with bad/poor quality questions, not necessarily unpopular ones. Probably because I don't post things on meta as much as I once did so my mind adjusted to the "regular" stackexchange mindset of downvote=bad quality |
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Feb 27 |
asked | Downvoting unpopular, but good questions into oblivion. Why? Can we fix it? |
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Feb 26 |
asked | Pros/Cons lists comparing two methods/technologies/etc. Constructive or not? |
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Feb 25 |
comment |
Should we strive to edit or preserve very old low-quality questions? btw, @Won't, I nominate you for best profile page of the year. |
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Feb 25 |
comment |
Should we strive to edit or preserve very old low-quality questions? @Won't the notion of "create duplicate and close old question as duplicate of new question" has been discussed a lot in the past. I've done it exactly once in the past. However, this is definitely not behavior most people think is "appropriate", even if most of the people at meta do think it's a good solution |
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Feb 25 |
comment |
Should we strive to edit or preserve very old low-quality questions? @JoshMein in some cases it can be hard to judge what the original meaning was, making improvements hard to tell if they are changing or sticking with meaning. I'd think that "not changing meaning" is a rule all edits should abide by, but in this case there is no one to defend the question if I do accidentally change the meaning |
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Feb 25 |
asked | Should we strive to edit or preserve very old low-quality questions? |
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Feb 13 |
awarded | Necromancer |
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Jan 28 |
comment |
Should extremely basic edits to perfectly fine posts be approved? @Bart well, is something like that an "improvement"? It actually provides a bit less information. At least with the raw link you can see the domain and sometimes the URL is half readable. When they convert it to here though you have to hover over or click through to figure out what it could be |
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Jan 28 |
comment |
Should extremely basic edits to perfectly fine posts be approved? Related: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/164796/… although that's with links pointing to other stackexchange sites specifically |
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Jan 28 |
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Should extremely basic edits to perfectly fine posts be approved? @MartinSmith no, it was clickable. It was just a raw link though, like saying example.com instead of this link |
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Jan 28 |
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Should extremely basic edits to perfectly fine posts be approved? @Bart well, I don't frequent MSO much I guess :P Close as duplicate if appropriate then |
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Jan 28 |
asked | Should extremely basic edits to perfectly fine posts be approved? |